Saudi EXIM helps businesses export to 50 countries with financing worth $2.3bn 

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Updated 06 October 2021
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Saudi EXIM helps businesses export to 50 countries with financing worth $2.3bn 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia's Export-Import Bank (EXIM) helped businesses export to 50 countries by the end of September, with food, iron and steel, and plastics products leading the way.

EXIM announced it had approved 89 finance requests — up from 81 by mid-August — with a total value exceeding SR8.95 billion ($2.3 billion).

Small and medium enterprises constituted 51 percent of the total applications, SPA reported.

The CEO of Saudi EXIM Bank, Saad Alkhalb told Al Arabiya in an interview that the bank had already launched nine financing products to facilitate Saudi businessmen.

Exports reached 50 countries by the end of September compared to 46 in mid-August, led by China and India, the bank said. 

The most prominent sectors that benefited from the bank’s products are food products by 24 percent, iron and steel by 10.5 percent and rubber and plastics by 8.4 percent.

Alkhalb said that the bank is now focussed on launching insurance products for local financial institutions and exporters. 

“We aim to issue insurance documents amounting to SR500 million in the next 6 months,” he said .

He said the bank follows a model that enables local exporters to do their work conveniently. 


Lebanese social entrepreneur Omar Itani recognized by Schwab Foundation

Updated 23 January 2026
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Lebanese social entrepreneur Omar Itani recognized by Schwab Foundation

  • FabricAID co-founder among 21 global recipients recognized for social innovation

DAVOS: Lebanon’s Omar Itani is one of 21 recipients of the Social Entrepreneurs and Innovators of the Year Award by the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship.

Itani is the co-founder of social enterprise FabricAID, which aims to “eradicate symptoms of poverty” by collecting and sanitizing secondhand clothing before placing items in stores in “extremely marginalized areas,” he told Arab News on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

With prices ranging from $0.25 to $4, the goal is for people to have a “dignified shopping experience” at affordable prices, he added.

FabricAID operates a network of clothing collection bins across key locations in Lebanon and Jordan, allowing people to donate pre-loved items. The garments are cleaned and sorted before being sold through the organization’s stores, while items that cannot be resold due to damage or heavy wear are repurposed for other uses, including corporate merchandise.

Since its launch, FabricAID has sold more than 1 million items, reached 200,000 beneficiaries and is preparing to expand into the Egyptian market.

Amid uncertainty in the Middle East, Itani advised young entrepreneurs to reframe challenges as opportunities.

“In Lebanon and the Arab world, we complain a lot,” he said. Understandably so, as “there are a lot of issues” in the region, resulting in people feeling frustrated and wanting to move away. But, he added, “a good portion of the challenges” facing the Middle East are “great economic and commercial opportunities.”

Over the past year, social innovators raised a combined $970 million in funding and secured a further $89 million in non-cash contributions, according to the Schwab Foundation’s recent report, “Built to Last: Social Innovation in Transition.”

This is particularly significant in an environment of geopolitical uncertainty and at a time when 82 percent report being affected by shrinking resources, triggering delays in program rollout (70 percent) and disruptions to scaling plans (72 percent).

Francois Bonnici, director of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship and a member of the World Economic Forum’s Executive Committee, said: “The next decade must move the models of social innovation decisively from the margins to the mainstream, transforming not only markets but mindsets.”

Award recipients take part in a structured three-year engagement with the Schwab Foundation, after which they join its global network as lifelong members. The program connects social entrepreneurs with international peers, collaborative initiatives, and capacity-building support aimed at strengthening and scaling their work.