Pure Harvest secures $64.5m investment; Saudi Arabia expansion continues

Sky Kurtz, the CEO and founder of Pure Harvest, says the company’s entry into the Kingdom will involve several farms in a number of cities. He was one of the panelists at the Future Investment Initiative.
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Updated 29 October 2021
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Pure Harvest secures $64.5m investment; Saudi Arabia expansion continues

RIYADH: Pure Harvest Smart Farms has secured a $64.5 million investment from Korean private equity company IMM, it was announced on Thursday at the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh.
Now one of the highest-funded agribusinesses in the UAE, Pure Harvest aims to use the investment to expand its farms and the advanced technology it uses to further its food security mission through the use of sustainable and localized hybrid-farming with limited water usage.
“Most countries want both localized food security and food sovereignty, where they actually have sovereign access and protection for food,” said Sky Kurtz, the CEO and founder of Pure Harvest.
The company designs and operates climate-controlled greenhouse systems that allow for the localization of food production anywhere in the world, regardless of climate.
“This is a marriage of real-estate development, agronomic science, technology and manufacturing consumer-packaged goods,” Kurtz said.
Pure Harvest began in the UAE and is now expanding into Saudi Arabia and Kuwait with the aim of producing affordable and natural produce across the region. Kurtz said that the company’s entry into the Kingdom will involve several farms in a number of cities to provide as many consumers as possible with reliable access to fresh and sustainable produce.
“Saudi Arabia is a big country and our goal is to have multiple assets across the country serving the major population centers,” he added.

HIGHLIGHT

The company, one of the highest-funded agribusinesses in UAE, uses technology to improve food security through the use of sustainable and localized hybrid farming.

Kurtz told Arab News that the first Pure Harvest farms in the Kingdom will be located in NADEC City, in Haradh.
“We are partnered with NADEC (the National Agricultural Development Company),” he said.
“It’s a very large-scale existing farm and we are able to leverage NADEC’s existing infrastructure.”
The partnership will allow Pure Harvest to use a 30 megawatt solar power plant that is already in place to power its climate systems at the site near Riyadh.
“It makes economic sense, resulting in affordable produce to the consumer, but also it’s much more sustainable using solar power, leveraging existing infrastructure and food miles, and that’s where we are starting,” Kurtz said.

Over time, he added, the plan is to expand and establish farms in Jeddah, Makkah and other locations in the Kingdom to provide more sustainable farming options.
“If Saudi consumers embrace it, we will build non-stop,” Kurtz said. “I believe we can build 100 hectares of capacity (in the next few years).”
He added that the company has already hired 20 people in Saudi Arabia and plans to hire another 20 each month, eventually creating thousands of jobs at each farm.
“I encourage young Saudis to join Pure Harvest Farms; this is the future of farming,” said Kurtz.


Closing Bell: Saudi Arabia’s main index closes in red at 10,364 

Updated 04 January 2026
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Closing Bell: Saudi Arabia’s main index closes in red at 10,364 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index closed lower on Sunday, shedding 185.05 points, or 1.75 percent, to end the session at 10,364.03. 

Total trading turnover on the benchmark index stood at SR2.55 billion ($680 million), with 20 stocks advancing and 237 declining. 

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu also retreated, falling 0.63 percent, or 147.19 points, to close at 23,371.82. 

The MSCI Tadawul Index slipped 1.71 percent to 1,369.56. 

Saudi Industrial Export Co. was the top gainer on the main market, with its share price jumping 9.87 percent to SR2.56. 

Shares of Naqi Water Co. rose 2.53 percent to SR58.80, while Shatirah House Restaurant Co. advanced 2.18 percent to SR9.39. 

On the downside, Gulf Union Alahlia Cooperative Insurance Co. posted the steepest decline, with its share price falling 4.61 percent to SR10.14. 

On the announcements front, Scientific & Medical Equipment House Co. said it had been awarded a contract valued at SR260.98 million by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development to supply uncooked food materials and catering items to beneficiaries at the ministry’s residential branches across the Kingdom.  

The project scope also includes providing cooked meals to selected anti-begging offices over a 24-month period, according to a Tadawul statement. The company added that the financial impact of the contract will begin in the fourth quarter of this year. 

It said further developments would be disclosed in due course after all relevant parties sign the final contract and a copy is received. 

Shares of Scientific & Medical Equipment House Co. edged up 0.31 percent to SR32.44. 

Separately, Dr. Soliman Abdel Kader Fakeeh Hospital Co. and its subsidiaries signed an agreement with Oloof Development Co., a wholly owned subsidiary of Jazan Municipality, to lease a strategic land plot in Jazan City for SR217.99 million. 

According to a Tadawul statement, the land, which spans 34,581 sq. meters, will be used to develop an integrated healthcare facility under a 50-year lease. 

The company said the financial impact of the agreement is expected to begin once the medical facility is completed and becomes operational. 

Shares of Dr. Soliman Abdel Kader Fakeeh Hospital Co. fell 1.92 percent to SR33.74.