DUBAI: Boksha, an Emirati-founded e-commerce platform selling Khaleeji-themed fashion items, has raised $1 million in early-stage funding, state news agency WAM reported.
This is the first funding the company received since its founding in 2018. Boksha now has more than 15,000 products by more than 800 designers, and ships to dozens of countries worldwide.
The startup will use the fund to improve its operations, and invest in technology to further expand across the Gulf and the wider Middle East.
“We are very excited about our next chapter post-funding closing and see tremendous growth opportunities in the region,” Yahya Mohamed Saleh, co-founder and CEO, said.
“Not only do we see this as a largely scalable business, but also one with significant social impact in terms of job creation, individual empowerment and export of regional talent,” he added.
The term Boksha, which comes from an Arab Gulf dialect, refers to a piece of fabric traditionally used as a pouch or head carrier by female merchants for storage of their goods.
The company aims to help local designers catapult their careers into a big platform – particularly Emirati women.
“More than 90 percent of our designers are Emirati females between the ages of 18 and 35, we expect to see a very similar demographic as we expand regionally,” Saleh said.
“Through our platform and tools, we believe we can give our designers access to a multi-billion-dollar fashion market globally – something most of them didn’t have access to before,” he added.
Investors who took part in the funding round included Emirati group Sandooq Al Watan.
“Sandooq Al Watan is a national initiative launched by prominent Emirati businessmen to support innovators and talented Emiratis, and create every opportunity for them to thrive and unleash their full potential,” its director-general, Hind Baker, said.
Emirati-owned e-commerce startup raises $1m in seed funding
https://arab.news/njwxg
Emirati-owned e-commerce startup raises $1m in seed funding
- Boksha now has more than 15,000 products by more than 800 designers, and ships to dozens of countries worldwide
Saudi Arabia exports 1st industrial water treatment plant with nanotechnology to Europe
JEDDH: Saudi Arabia’s GI Aqua Tech is set to export its first industrial wastewater treatment plant using nanotechnology in early 2026, the company’s CEO, Sherif Desouky, told Al Eqtisadiah.
The project, which operates on a per-cubic-meter treatment system, is valued at approximately €5 million ($5.9 million), with the first plant set for France, marking the first nanotechnology-based water treatment and reuse system manufactured and exported from Saudi Arabia to the world.
Expanding exports to GCC states in Q1 2026
These plants are designed for 100 percent reuse of industrial wastewater, and the expansion plan includes exporting several units to Bahrain and other Gulf countries with a combined capacity of 10,000 cubic meters in the first quarter of next year.
Desouky noted that the plant being exported to France will be installed at a cosmetics manufacturing facility, one of the most challenging industries for wastewater treatment.
Previously, wastewater had to be collected and transported for incineration at high costs, but nanotechnology now allows on-site treatment and reuse with higher operational efficiency.
He added that the technology directly contributes to reducing liquid waste disposal costs, saving up to 80 percent of energy, and replacing conventional disposal with reuse solutions compliant with strict environmental standards.
Desouky stated that the technology was fully developed and manufactured in Saudi Arabia with government support, enabling the project to move from local implementation to exports to European and global markets.
The plant, located in Al-Kharj Industrial City under the Saudi Authority for Industrial Cities and Technology Zones, known as Modon, spans 23,000 sq. meters and is the first in the Middle East to combine nanomaterial production with wastewater treatment plant manufacturing, according to Desouky.
Investments reach €150m, with 50 percent of workforce Saudi nationals
The CEO explained that the project investments are expected to reach €150 million upon completion, with 54 percent of the workforce currently Saudi nationals.
He added that the technology has already been deployed across major projects in Saudi Arabia, successfully integrating large volumes of industrial and sanitary wastewater, including at Riyadh’s Third Industrial Area, where it achieved 100 percent water reuse in a global first.
He added that while Modon allocated 40,000 sq. meters for the project, the technology required only 4,000 sq. meters, allowing the remaining land to be transformed into a public park irrigated entirely with treated, odor-free water, underscoring the high environmental standards achieved.
Decentralized plants in areas not connected to sewage networks
Desouky highlighted the world’s first decentralized nanotechnology wastewater treatment plant within a residential neighborhood in Al-Mousa district, northern Jeddah.
He explained that the plant was constructed and became operational in just 10 days to address the issue of areas not connected to the central sewage network, which previously relied on tankers, and it now serves 8,000 residents.
This model represents a global first as a rapid solution for water and environmental crises, with the added advantage that the plant can later be relocated without leaving any negative impact.
According to the CEO, applications of the technology have also included the world’s largest plant for treating concrete factory wastewater in Neom and the Samhan Hotel plant in Riyadh, which has successfully treated all types of hotel wastewater for a year, including kitchen, laundry, and blackwater — not just greywater, as is common in hotels.
He added that this has opened avenues for collaboration with the global Marriott chain, noting that exporting this technology allows Saudi Arabia to achieve record energy savings of 80 percent, reduce space requirements by 90 percent, and ensure water meets the highest quality standards.










