New environmental monitoring technologies used for this year’s Hajj

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The National Center for Environmental Compliance is using high-tech satellite technology to monitor the environment at Hajj sites. (Supplied)
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The National Center for Environmental Compliance is using high-tech satellite technology to monitor the environment at Hajj sites. (Supplied)
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Updated 03 June 2025
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New environmental monitoring technologies used for this year’s Hajj

  • High-tech monitoring systems analyze air, water and soil quality
  • Satellites allow center to dispatch emergency teams rapidly

Jeddah: Saudi Arabia’s National Center for Environmental Compliance has begun using new satellite monitoring technologies to protect the environment for this year’s Hajj.

The NCEC uses satellite data to monitor and analyze environmental media, including air, water and soil quality. 

The center relies on satellites to monitor environmental challenges across wide geographic areas at high speed, enabling emergency teams to quickly reach affected sites.

Hani Al-Subhi, director-general of the Makkah Region branch, spoke to Arab News about the center’s use of satellite technology.

“These technologies help pinpoint the precise locations of environmental challenges, facilitating a rapid response and enhancing the provision of a healthy, pollutant-free environment for pilgrims,” he said

Meanwhile, Abu Talib Zaki, a technical expert in monitoring, spoke about how the center cooperates with King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology to collect two types of satellite imagery.

The first is passive remote sensing, which measures reflections of light emitted from other objects.

The second is active remote sensing, which uses light from the satellite itself to create images.

The spatial resolution of the images used reaches 30 cm, meaning that each pixel of the image covers 30x30 cm, allowing for high-precision monitoring of environmental phenomena.

The National Center for Environmental Compliance earlier this week completed 90 percent of the preemptive inspections to ensure the safety of water, air, and soil for Hajj.

Monitoring efforts will continue until pilgrims complete their rituals in a healthy, pollutant-free environment.

The center also uses nine air quality monitoring stations — six located in Makkah and the holy sites and three in Madinah.

These stations operate around the clock to measure air quality, and if any pollutant is detected, field teams are dispatched immediately to the site to identify the source and coordinate with the authorities to eliminate the cause of pollution.


Iran welcomes any process to prevent war, president tells Saudi crown prince in phone call

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed ‌bin ‌Salman and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian. (File/SPA/AFP)
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Iran welcomes any process to prevent war, president tells Saudi crown prince in phone call

DUBAI: Iranian President ​Masoud Pezeshkian told Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed ‌bin ‌Salman ‌in ⁠a ​phone ‌call that Tehran always welcomes any ⁠process, ‌within the ‍framework ‍of international ‍law, that prevents war, ​Iranian media reported on Tuesday. 
Pezeshkian also told Prince Mohammed that the “unity and cohesion” of Islamic countries can guarantee “lasting security, stability and peace in the region.”

The president added that US threats against the Islamic republic would only result in instability.
“The threats and psychological operations of the Americans are aimed at disrupting the security of the region and will achieve nothing other than instability for them,” Pezeshkian told Prince Mohammed, according to his office,