Daily sales of high-quality dates from KSA’s Buraidah worth more than $400k

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Buraidah city has become an important location for dates traders. (SPA)
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Buraidah city has become an important location for dates traders. (SPA)
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Updated 13 August 2021
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Daily sales of high-quality dates from KSA’s Buraidah worth more than $400k

BURAIDAH: Dates grown in Buraidah, the capital of Qassim region, are increasingly popular in the Kingdom and internationally, thanks to their high quality and abundance.

More than 400 refrigerated trucks transport hundreds of tons of the dates, including more than 45 varieties, each day.

They are taken to specialized factories in Jeddah, Riyadh and Madinah and other places for sorting and packing, before being delivered to Saudi and international buyers.

Daily sales of dates from Qassim are estimated to be worth more than SR1.5 million ($400,000).

As a result, the city of Buraidah has become an important location for dates traders, marketers, investors and consumers, which generates a significant amount of economic activity.

A festival is also held there that celebrates local heritage and culture.


Saudi-Yemen program provides $81.2m to operate more than 70 power plants

Updated 21 January 2026
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Saudi-Yemen program provides $81.2m to operate more than 70 power plants

  • Grant will improve reliability of electrical power to critical facilities, including hospitals, medical centers, roads, schools, airports and ports
  • Move follows last week’s announcement by the SDRPY of a larger aid package totaling $506 million to support Yemen

LONDON: A tripartite agreement was signed on Wednesday between the Saudi Development and Reconstruction Program for Yemen, the oil company Petromasila, and Yemen’s Ministry of Energy and Electricity to supply petroleum derivatives for the country’s power plants.

SDRPY is supporting the Yemeni government with an $81.2 million grant to purchase 339 million liters of diesel and mazut from Petromasila to operate more than 70 power plants across various Yemeni governorates.

The grant follows last week’s announcement by the SDRPY of a $506 million aid package to support Yemen’s education, health, government and infrastructure sectors.

The SDRPY highlighted that the grant will improve the reliability of electrical power to critical facilities, including hospitals, medical centers, roads, schools, airports and ports. Additionally, the funding will stimulate the Yemeni economy and support the Central Bank of Yemen by easing the pressure on foreign exchange reserves.

It reduces the Ministry of Finance’s fuel-related financial burden and supports the Ministry of Electricity and Energy in improving the efficiency of power plants in Yemen, the SDRPY said.

In 2018, the SDRPY provided $180 million, in addition to $422 million in 2021 and another $200 million in 2022, as grants to Yemen to purchase oil derivatives and operate vital sectors of the country.