Who’s Who: Dr. Maryam Ali Ficociello, chief governance officer at Red Sea Development Company and AMAALA

Dr. Maryam Ali Ficociello
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Updated 12 May 2021
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Who’s Who: Dr. Maryam Ali Ficociello, chief governance officer at Red Sea Development Company and AMAALA

Dr. Maryam Ali Ficociello has been the chief governance officer at The Red Sea Development Company (TRSDC) and AMAALA — a tourism project on Saudi Arabia’s northwestern coast — since 2017, leading the governance, risk and compliance department. 

She is also a board member of several committees, including the audit committee of the Royal Commission of AlUla and the risk committee of the Health Sector Transformation Program. 

Before joining TRSDC and AMAALA, Ficociello worked as director of governance practice and risk assurance services at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) from 2013 to 2017.

Ficociello also worked as head of research and assistant professor at the School of Business at Dar Al-Hekma University in Jeddah from 2012 to 2013. She played a key role in the establishment of Dar Al-Hekma’s first research center.

Ficociello also worked as a research associate of genomics and bioinformatics at the School of Communication, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada and a lecturer in management information systems, Beedie School of Business, also at Simon Fraser University, from 2010 to 2012. 

She served as an adviser and research fellow at the National Health Service in London from 2009 to 2011 and worked as an external examiner for the University of London from 2005 to 2010.

She received a doctorate in innovation and organizational change in 2010 and obtained a master’s degree in the analysis, design and management of information systems in 2005 from the London School of Economics and Political Science. She earned a bachelor’s degree in management information in 2003 at Dar Al-Hekma University.


Saudi Arabia led green building performance regionally in 2025: Report

Updated 18 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia led green building performance regionally in 2025: Report

  • Saudi Arabia achieved the highest regional score of 76.31 points and certified more than 1.03 million sq. meters of sustainable building space
  • Results reflect measurable efficiency gains across 6,662 projects completed since 2010, marking a new regional benchmark for measurable sustainability progress

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia led the region in sustainable building performance and environmental impact in 2025, according to the Saaf index developed by the Saudi Green Building Forum.

Saudi Arabia achieved the highest regional score of 76.31 points and certified more than 1.03 million sq. meters of sustainable building space, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Wednesday.

These results reflect measurable efficiency gains across 6,662 projects completed since 2010, marking a new regional benchmark for measurable sustainability progress and institutional excellence.

The achievement underscores Saudi Arabia’s growing influence in advancing sustainable construction across the Middle East and supports the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 objectives for cleaner growth, resource efficiency and climate resilience through data‑driven environmental performance.

Faisal Al‑Fadl, secretary‑general of SGBF, said that 2025 represented a major turning point toward a measurable, institutional sustainability strategy that united policy, technology and practice.

He added that the approach extended beyond renewable energy, clean water and eco‑friendly materials to embed sustainability in economic planning and public development programs, made possible through integrated efforts with regional governments and public institutions.

The Saaf index provides a specialized regional framework for measuring efficiency and resilience through the Sufficiency and Resilience Composite Index, or SCI, enabling precise performance assessments.

Findings show that the sector has evolved into a cohesive strategy integrating project delivery, professional capacity building, market innovation and climate action.

According to the SGBF review, Saudi  Arabia’s achievements reflect its ability to combine quality implementation, institutional maturity and scale.

Environmentally, green building projects achieved an estimated 62,800 tonnes  of  carbon‑equivalent annual reduction and earned 29 professional recognitions, reinforcing growing international acknowledgment of Saudi leadership in sustainability.

The data also underscore SGBF’s role as a professional partner in advancing methodologies, applications and impact measurement within non‑governmental frameworks that link policy and practical execution.

More than 7,300 professionals across 22 Arab countries engaged with the Saaf platform in 2025, alongside numerous business‑driven initiatives expanding the region’s sustainable‑development footprint.

Al‑Fadl said that the period from 2025 to 2026 would act as a bridge toward Vision 2030, strengthening a model in which sustainable buildings were managed by impact, measured through indicators and implemented via lasting partnerships.

SGBF serves as the Kingdom’s leading platform for advancing sustainable construction and green design. It unites experts, innovators and practitioners dedicated to building environmentally responsible and high‑performance structures.

Through continuous education, certification and collaboration, SGBF drives the transformation of Saudi Arabia’s building sector — minimizing environmental impact, promoting resource efficiency and improving overall quality of life for communities nationwide.