Sustainability and speed are key to fueling Saudi Arabia’s mining industry

Ministers, industry experts, and think tank representatives gathered to address ways to tackle challenges in the sector, including the crucial sustainability factor. (SPA)
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Updated 15 January 2023
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Sustainability and speed are key to fueling Saudi Arabia’s mining industry

  • Saudi Arabia has successfully ventured into a new realm of opportunities, with the mining sector in particular

RIYADH: When Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman announced the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 plan in 2016, skeptics were doubtful about how a nation which has been dependent on oil for several decades could diversify its economy successfully.

And now, seven years on, the Kingdom has successfully ventured into a new realm of opportunities, with the mining sector in particular proving to be one of the Kingdom’s growing hubs.

In this spirit, The Future Minerals Forum — which concluded in Riyadh on Jan. 12 — showcased the Kingdom’s ambitions in the mining sector and the way in which the mineral exploration industry is shaping up to become the third pillar of the country’s economy.

Ministers, industry experts, and think tanks representatives gathered to address ways to tackle challenges in the sector, including the crucial sustainability factor.

International participation to bring more investments to Saudi Arabia

The participation of over 200 speakers from various parts of the globe indicated that the Kingdom is moving in the right direction, especially after a new mining law improved the business environment in Saudi Arabia, along with the easing of the mining licensing procedure.

Paul Sullivan, lecturer at Johns Hopkins University and a senior associate fellow at King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies Energy and Environmental Security, told Arab News that the completion of the Forum with unprecedented international participation is expected to boost investments in the Kingdom’s mining sector.

“The Future Minerals Forum could act as a catalyst for greater investment in mining in Saudi Arabia. Hopefully, it could act to help create more effective legal and regulatory structures within Saudi Arabia also. But such things take time. Saudi Arabia has lots of potential for mining,” said Sullivan.

On Jan. 11, the second day of the Forum, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih talked about how Saudi Arabia is becoming the perfect destination for companies to come and operate in the mining sector.

“Saudi Arabia has brought together all of the necessary enablers in the mining sector. We have the energy solution, we have the location, we have the financing, and we have the best-in-class regulations across the world,” said Al-Falih. 




The Future Minerals Forum 2023 saw Saudi Arabian Mining Co., known as Ma’aden, sign an agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to invest in mining globally. (SPA)

As if to underline the growing international reach of the Kingdom’s mining ambitions, the FMF saw Saudi Arabian Mining Co., known as Ma’aden, sign an agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to invest in mining globally.

The mining firm — the largest in the Gulf region — also announced it has inked a deal to acquire a 9.9 percent stake in American minerals exploration and development firm Ivanhoe Electric and form a separate joint venture with Ivanhoe to explore and develop mining projects in Saudi Arabia.

Ma’aden signed another partnership agreement with Barrick Gold Limited, a subsidiary of Canada’s Barrick Gold Corp. Under the deal, a new limited liability company will be set up in Umm Ad Damar to accelerate mineral exploration activities in the Kingdom.

Sustainability in the mining sector

While critical minerals are necessary for a smooth transition to green energy, there are concerns about the environmental impact of mining.

“Saudi Arabia can become more sustainable and cleaner in many things, not just mining. Environmental and sustainability laws and regulations are important. Companies and mining will be sources of great externalities, such as pollution of the water, land, and air, without such regulations,” Sullivan told Arab News.

He added: “Saudi Arabia could benefit most from a successful and growing mining industry that minimizes externalities like pollution. It is good PR and it is good for Saudi Arabia’s people and their futures.”

Sullivan further noted that mining laws and regulations should be implemented in such a way that they will uphold the interests of the general public.

“There are some complex balances that need to be considered. Writing regulations and laws should also reflect the needs of the Saudi people, its leadership, and for the Saudis of the future, but also of the companies to allow sustainable, long-term, and effective mining to add to the future wealth of Saudi Arabia,” Sullivan added.

FASTFACT

The Future Minerals Forum — which concluded in Riyadh on Jan. 12 — showcased the Kingdom’s ambitions in the mining sector and the way in which the mineral exploration industry is shaping up to become the third pillar of the country’s economy.

In the Forum, industry leaders and top officials discussed the importance of sustainability, and Mike Henry, CEO of Australia-based mining firm BHP, said exploration of critical minerals should be accelerated to meet the energy transition goals over the next thirty years, as it is impossible to meet the rising demand if the world is moving at the current pace.

 “Over the next 30 years, in order to meet the needs of the energy transition, the world is going to need two times as much copper, four times as much nickel, two times as much steel and two times as much iron ore, as was needed over the past 30 years,” he added.

In a separate panel discussion, Suliman Al-Mazroua, CEO of Saudi Arabia’s National Industrial Development and Logistics Program, said the Kingdom is not only trying to accelerate mining operations to catalyze energy transition but is also working on innovative practices to ensure sustainable operations in the mining sector.

“Saudi Arabia is on both sides; supply and demand. We contribute on the innovation side to achieve sustainability, and we also provide the world with more metals,” said Al-Mazroua.

Moving forward and beyond

The forum also witnessed knowledge sharing of innovative ideas which could reshape the way in which the mining industry is functioning.

In a panel discussion, Saline Water Conversion Corp. Governor Abdullah Ibrahim Al-Abdul-Karim said the mining industry will need to have a different structure moving forward as the world is witnessing rapid changes in an era of energy transition, digitalization and climate change.

Al-Abdul-Karim also noted that new mining companies will be able to find abundant resources from seawater if they have “the science, the reengineering and the economy-based structure” in place.

“By figuring out how we can extract precious salts and minerals from brine water, we will be able to secure the demand for the future,” he added.

As Saudi Arabia’s mining sector continues its accelerated growth, those involved in pushing it forward will be keen to show that speed will not come at the cost of sustainability.


Saudi Arabia advances sea turtle conservation with landmark tracking program

A tagged Hawksbill turtle returns to the Red Sea. (SUPPLIED)
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Saudi Arabia advances sea turtle conservation with landmark tracking program

  • Tagging of endangered turtles is filling key knowledge gaps in the Red Sea

JEDDAH: Hawksbill turtles are among the world’s most endangered marine species and are listed as Critically Endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. 

Their populations have plummeted due to hunting for their shells and mounting pressures from climate change, pollution, fishing activities, and coastal development. Effective protection depends on understanding where these turtles feed, nest, and migrate.

In response, Saudi Arabia has intensified conservation efforts. In 2021, the government established the General Organization for the Conservation of Coral Reefs and Turtles in the Red Sea, known as SHAMS. The organization is mandated to protect, manage, and sustain coral reef ecosystems and marine turtle populations, including their nesting sites along the Red Sea coastline.

FASTFACT

Did you know?

  • The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve is home to five of the world’s seven sea turtle species.
  • Sea turtles return to the very beaches where they hatched to lay their eggs - a remarkable behavior known as natal homing.
  • All marine turtle species found in the Red Sea are protected under the Convention on Migratory Species.
  • Hawksbill turtles can spend decades traveling the oceans before returning to their nesting sites.

The Red Sea’s distinctive hydrology and relative isolation make it a globally significant biodiversity hotspot. Five of the world’s seven sea turtle species — green, loggerhead, olive ridley, hawksbill, and leatherback — use its waters.

Hawksbill and green turtles face persistent threats, including bycatch in fishing gear, direct harvesting of turtles and their eggs for meat and shells, illegal wildlife trade, and the loss or degradation of nesting and foraging habitats driven by coastal development, pollution, and climate change.

Additional risks include predation of eggs and hatchlings by native and invasive species, vessel strikes, and entanglement in or ingestion of marine debris.

Environmental change compounds these pressures. Rising sand and sea temperatures, sea-level rise, and increasingly intense storms affect hatchling survival, nesting success, and the availability of suitable habitats, posing long-term challenges to turtle populations.

Against this backdrop, the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve launched a live satellite tracking program for hawksbill and green turtles in December 2025, marking a milestone for marine conservation in the region.

The initiative includes the first known tagging of a pre-nesting, egg-carrying green turtle in the Red Sea. The resulting data will address a critical regional knowledge gap and support coordinated, cross-border conservation strategies for globally endangered turtle species.

Led by Dr. Ahmed Mohammed, a senior marine ecologist at the reserve, in collaboration with Dr. Hector Barrios-Garrido, a senior marine megafauna specialist with KAUST Beacon Development, the program successfully captured and tagged three critically endangered hawksbill turtles and seven green turtles. 

The satellite tags transmit real-time movement data, identifying foraging areas, migratory corridors, and the nesting site of the egg-carrying green turtle, enabling targeted protection and management.

The initiative builds on the reserve’s long-term commitment to marine conservation, including turtle nest monitoring and protection programs launched in 2023.

The reserve safeguards 4,000 sq. km of Red Sea waters -1.8 percent of Saudi Arabia’s marine area - and manages 170 km of coastline, the longest stretch overseen by a single entity in the Kingdom.

Together with Neom and the Red Sea Global, this creates an 800-km corridor of protected coastline. 

Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve female sea rangers record a turtle sighting. (SUPPLIED)

The area serves as a refuge for five of the world’s seven turtle species and as a breeding ground for green and hawksbill turtles.

Ranger teams monitor turtle activity both onshore and at sea, protecting nesting sites essential to natal homing, the instinct that draws turtles back to the beaches where they were born.

Andrew Zaloumis, CEO of the reserve, told Arab News that tagging a pre-nesting, egg-carrying green turtle offers rare insight into the most critical phase of a turtle’s reproductive cycle.

A Green turtle’s data is recorded by the Reserve’s marine team. (SUPPLIED)

“It enables tracking immediately before and after nesting, revealing the staging areas she relies on for feeding and recovery. These often-overlooked habitats are essential for successful reproduction and need identification, monitoring, and protection. Understanding her movements ensures that nesting beaches and staging habitats are safeguarded at the right time, optimizing breeding success, whether within the reserve or elsewhere in the Red Sea.”

Live satellite tracking also sheds light on how turtles navigate vast distances across the Red Sea. Although sea turtles are nomadic, they follow instinct-driven migrations between feeding grounds, breeding areas, and natal nesting beaches, guided by the Earth’s magnetic field and ocean currents.

“Satellite tracking reveals their critical corridors, feeding, and staging areas needed to secure species survival,” Zaloumis said. “This data enables practical conservation, including creating vessel-free or low-speed zones, adjusting shipping lanes seasonally, protecting key habitats, and managing light pollution during nesting and hatching periods. Understanding these turtles’ movements informs conservation strategies at the Reserve, national, and international levels.”

Real-time tracking data helps translate scientific research into tangible conservation action. Sea turtles have a complex life cycle that spans both land and ocean. Females lay eggs on sandy beaches, where warmth from the sun incubates them over several months. Hatchlings then emerge and instinctively move toward the sea, beginning an early-life oceanic phase often described as the “lost years.”

A satellite tagged adult female Hawksbill turtle is returned to the Red Sea. (Supplied)

“We cannot effectively protect what we do not know,” Zaloumis said. “Real-time data accelerates conservation from observation to evidence-based action. Instead of waiting months or years to analyze stored data, scientists and managers can respond immediately to unusual behaviors.

For example, an unexplained shift in a turtle’s migratory route across a shipping lane, or an unexpected stationary turtle, may indicate a need for rapid intervention by sea rangers,” he added.

“Smarter science also delivers greater impact in a financially stretched conservation sector. Knowing where turtles are allows patrols, zoning measures, and awareness programs to be deployed efficiently, resulting in stronger protection outcomes and more sustainable use of conservation resources.”

Because turtles routinely travel thousands of kilometers each year — feeding in one country’s waters and nesting in another — effective conservation requires international cooperation.

All five turtle species in the Red Sea cross multiple jurisdictions, oblivious to political boundaries.

“Red Sea countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Sudan, Yemen, and Jordan are signatories to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, acknowledging that conservation must extend beyond borders.

Holistic management requires shared data, aligned policies, unified plans, and coordinated action, which is why the reserve is committed to open collaboration and data sharing with regional partners and the global conservation community,” Zaloumis said.

Green turtles also play a crucial role as sentinel species for marine ecosystems. Often described as “ocean lawnmowers,” they graze on seagrass meadows, indirectly guiding scientists to these habitats.

 

 

“With satellite tracking, they can reveal previously unknown seagrass ecosystems, including deepwater meadows at 30–50 meters, which then require follow-up surveys using remotely operated vehicles,” Zaloumis said.

Mapping these ecosystems highlights their importance for turtles and dugongs, as well as their role in carbon sequestration. Seagrass meadows are among the most effective blue carbon sinks on the planet, making turtle tracking a valuable tool for protecting biodiversity and enhancing climate resilience.

Tagging and monitoring turtles also underscores the Red Sea’s ecological connectivity, linking seagrass meadows, coral reefs, and migratory routes into a single, living system. This understanding supports adaptive, evidence-based conservation at national, regional, and global levels.

“By providing access to real-time data, the Reserve allows other agencies to enhance management effectiveness, improve Red Sea-wide ecosystem alignment, and support turtle population recovery across the region, securing a sustainable future for both turtles and the Red Sea as a shared, living ecosystem,” Zaloumis said.