Who’s Who: Dr. Marwan Alahmadi, board member at Dhawiyat Integrated Telecommunications and Information Technology Co.

Dr. Marwan Alahmadi
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Updated 10 December 2021
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Who’s Who: Dr. Marwan Alahmadi, board member at Dhawiyat Integrated Telecommunications and Information Technology Co.

Dr. Marwan Alahmadi has been a board member at Dhawiyat Integrated Telecommunications and Information Technology Co. since 2018.

He is also the founder of Alkhalijiah for Consulting and Information Technology, which offers cloud and cybersecurity services to clients in the MENA region, and has been company chairman for the past seven years.

Alahmadi was chairman and CEO of Virtustream MENA for four years from 2014.

Before that, he was chief business officer at Mobily for four years, reporting to the CEO with a mandate to transform and reorganize the corporate segment business unit.

From 2007 to 2009, he was CEO of Zain Saudi Arabia, and oversaw a project to acquire a third mobile operator license in the Kingdom in 2007.

Alahmadi was chief strategy officer at MTC Group (2004-2007), responsible for strategic business planning, merger and acquisition, innovation lab, regulatory affairs, and the group intelligence unit.

In 2005, he worked at MTC-Vodafone (Bahrain) as chief operating officer, and took the  company from a net financial loss to a positive financial performance.

Formerly, Alahmadi was director at Abdul Latif Jameel Group, executive manager at Al Rajhi Banking & Investment Corp, and held the position of assistant professor at KFUPM.

He earned a Ph.D. in computer science from the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, and a master’s degree in political science and economics from the London School of Economics in the UK.


Experimental farm in Al-Lith looks into future of Saudi Arabian agriculture

Updated 01 February 2026
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Experimental farm in Al-Lith looks into future of Saudi Arabian agriculture

  • Research initiative reflects strategic transformation

JEDDAH: An experimental farm in Saudi Arabia’s Al-Lith Governorate is one of the research initiatives reflecting the strategic transformation taking place in the Kingdom’s agricultural sector.

The farm uses highly efficient, sustainable production models that combine scientific research with commercial application, contributing to strengthening the country’s food security system and the sustainability of water resources.

Located in the Ghumaiqa Center on an area of about 10 hectares, the cutting-edge farm is a testing platform for modern agricultural technologies that tackle the challenge of water scarcity.

The farm includes developed open fields and modern greenhouses, supported by smart irrigation encompassing drip and sprinkler irrigation alongside surface and subsurface technologies.

All the systems operate via smart controls that enable the monitoring of water consumption and ensure improved efficiency, thereby achieving a balance between agricultural production and water conservation.

The farm also uses treated and diluted low-salinity seawater.

It aims to diversify agricultural water sources, reduce reliance on freshwater, and open new horizons for agriculture in coastal and semi-arid environments.

The project represents a promising investment opportunity in the field of smart agriculture, enabling the development of commercially scalable production models, particularly for high-value vegetables and fruits, while reducing operational costs associated with water and energy, enhancing the economic feasibility of future agricultural projects.

In addition, the project contributes to transferring and localizing agricultural expertise, supporting local food supply chains, and creating an attractive environment for agricultural investment.

This aligns with Sustainable Development Goals and enhances the efficiency of the private sector in adopting innovative agricultural solutions.

Yahya bin Abdulrahman Al-Mahabi, the director of the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture office in Al-Lith Governorate, told the Saudi Press Agency that the project represented the future of agriculture in the Kingdom.

He explained that the vision was based on investing in technology, enhancing the return on water per unit, and integrating scientific research with investment opportunities.

Al-Mahabi spoke of the experimental farm as a modern, scalable and replicable model applicable in several regions of the Kingdom, particularly in coastal environments.

Al-Mahabi highlighted the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture’s commitment to supporting distinctive projects that contributed to achieving food security while developing rural areas and enhancing agricultural production efficiency, in line with the objectives of the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.