Shrimp fishing season starts in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province

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Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province launched shrimp-hunting season on Tuesday with its first catch of shrimps. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province launched shrimp-hunting season on Tuesday with its first catch of shrimps. (SPA)
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Updated 01 August 2023
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Shrimp fishing season starts in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province

  • Amer bin Ali Al-Mutairi: The ban on shrimp fishing for half of the year aimed at giving the shrimp colony the opportunity to reproduce and preserve numbers

RIYADH: The first catch of shrimps hit the local markets in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province on Tuesday to mark the start of the shrimp-hunting season, which begins on the first day of August each year and lasts for six months.

Amer bin Ali Al-Mutairi, director general of the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture in the region, said that the ministry was keen to preserve natural resources while working on making stocks sustainable.

He added that the ban on shrimp fishing for half of the year aimed at giving the shrimp colony the opportunity to reproduce and preserve numbers.

He said that the ministry’s Eastern Province branch was continuing to issue shrimp fishing permits to all shrimp boats along the region’s coast, which extends from Al-Khafji in the north to Uqair in the south of Al-Ahsa.

Waleed Alshwared, head of fish farms at the Fisheries Research Center of the Eastern Province, said that 10,000 tons of shrimps were caught in the province during the 2022 season.

He expected that the cost of 16 kg would be around SR400 ($106) for small shrimps this time, SR500 for medium-sized, SR700 for large, and SR1,000 for the biggest size.

Salah Al-Muhaishi, a fish and shrimp salesman, said that allowing shrimp fishing following the six-month ban was a wise course of action, adding that the season was an opportunity for fishermen, traders and shoppers.

 


SDAIA president says Saudi Arabia is building an integrated AI ecosystem

Updated 20 February 2026
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SDAIA president says Saudi Arabia is building an integrated AI ecosystem

RIYADH: Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority President Abdullah Al-Ghamdi says that Saudi Arabia is moving steadily to establish artificial intelligence as a trusted national capability, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Guided by the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030, Al-Ghamdi said the goal is to use AI to help develop government services, enhance competitiveness, build human capacity and improve quality of life through a comprehensive strategy based on three main pillars that unlock the potential of this technology and achieve sustainable developmental impact.

“The first pillar focuses on building human capacity and enhancing readiness to engage with AI technologies,” he said.

The second pillar is building an integrated national AI ecosystem that drives expansion and innovation by developing advanced digital infrastructure that enables various sectors to adopt AI applications efficiently, consistently and with effective governance, Al-Ghamdi said.

The third pillar, he said, is governance that ensures responsible and measurable AI through a national framework aligned with international standards.

This came during Al-Ghamdi’s speech at a high-level ministerial session held on Thursday on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi.

He is heading the Saudi delegation, and the session saw broad participation from heads of state, decision-makers and technology leaders from around the world.

Al-Ghamdi also had a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday evening, discussed AI cooperation and expressed his gratitude for hosting the summit and for the hospitality extended to the participants.