Who’s Who: Ahmed Al-Zahrani, vice president of business and services at Sadara Chemical Co.

Ahmed Al-Zahrani
Short Url
Updated 11 December 2022
Follow

Who’s Who: Ahmed Al-Zahrani, vice president of business and services at Sadara Chemical Co.

Ahmed Al-Zahrani has been the vice president of business and services at Sadara Chemical Co. since November 2021. In this role, he is responsible for four main functions — information technology, procurement, site logistics and commercial operations.

Al-Zahrani also serves as the engagement lead for third-party agreements with King Fahad Industrial Port, Saudi Rail, King Fahad Commercial Port, Jubail Royal Commission, and other major Sadara stakeholders in Jubail.

Al-Zahrani is a senior executive at Saudi Aramco and has a wealth of IT experience, impressive functional expertise, and in-depth planning and performance management knowledge. He also worked with Aramco affiliates, including Saudi Basic Industries Corp. and Aramco’s international offices.

He was named the Aramco IT function lead in 2019. This was part of the “New Journey” project, which was started when Aramco bought SABIC.

Al-Zahrani’s job is to look for synergies that come from integration activities, find IT value-creation initiatives, and help the business organization create value through IT system integrations.

At Aramco, he had a number of important leadership and management roles, the most recent of which was manager of the communications operations department. Previously, he was assigned to work with the finance business line, leading support services planning and performance management.

Since 1991, when he joined Aramco, he has worked in many different business and leadership roles. He was in charge of the Centralized IT Program, where he played a key role in laying the groundwork and developing the logistics needed to combine the IT functions at Aramco’s international offices — Aramco Services Co., Aramco Overseas Co., and Saudi Aramco Asia Co. — with the Aramco corporate IT function.

Al-Zahrani was also tasked with investigating the feasibility of consolidating their IT function with the Aramco IT organization and providing full support to their operations.

He holds a master’s degree in business administration from City University in the US, and a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in Dhahran.

 


Saudi Cabinet reviews cooperation and agreements with other nations

Updated 25 February 2026
Follow

Saudi Cabinet reviews cooperation and agreements with other nations

  • Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman chairs meeting and briefs ministers on his recent meeting with Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi
  • Cooperative efforts includes projects focusing on development and education, political consultations, environmental protection, health, investment and air transport

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Council of Ministers reviewed a number of domestic and international matters during a session in Jeddah on Tuesday chaired by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The crown prince briefed the Cabinet on his recent meeting with the Egyptian president, Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, which included discussions about regional security and stability, the latest developments in the Middle East, and other topics of importance to the Arab and Islamic world, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

He also shared with ministers the contents of a letter he received from the president of Kazakhstan, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.

The council discussed progress in cooperative efforts involving Saudi Arabia and other countries including Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Armenia, Turkmenistan, Estonia, Cuba and Kiribati, and approved a number of memorandums of understanding.

The cooperation includes projects focusing on development and education, political consultations, environmental protection, health, investment and air-transport services, the press agency said. Ministers also approved an agreement between the Saudi General Authority for Awqaf and its Omani counterpart relating to endowments.

They reviewed national initiatives, including one for the promotion of charitable work, and the enhancement of humanitarian and developmental efforts across the country.

A merger of the National Competitiveness Center with the Saudi Center for Economic Business to create a combined Saudi Competitiveness and Business Center was authorized.