KSrelief ends medical project for burn patients in Port Sudan

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KSrelief's team of medical volunteers performed 92 specialized surgeries during the week-long medical mission in Port Sudan. (SPA)
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KSrelief's team of medical volunteers performed 92 specialized surgeries during the week-long medical mission in Port Sudan. (SPA)
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KSrelief's team of medical volunteers performed 92 specialized surgeries during the week-long medical mission in Port Sudan. (SPA)
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Updated 22 September 2025
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KSrelief ends medical project for burn patients in Port Sudan

  • 17 specialist volunteers participate in the initiative
  • Team conducts 92 surgeries, trains 40 Sudan medics

PORT SUDAN: Saudi Arabia’s aid agency KSrelief has concluded its volunteer cosmetic-surgery project in Port Sudan for patients with burns and disfigurements.

Seventeen specialist volunteers from the Kingdom participated in the initiative, which ran from Sept. 13 to 20, according to a recent Saudi Press Agency report.

The team performed 92 surgeries and trained 40 Sudanese medical personnel, the report stated.

The project is a part of Saudi Arabia’s ongoing voluntary medical initiatives, through KSrelief, aimed at assisting vulnerable communities worldwide.




A young Sudanese receives treatment at a hospital in Port Sudan during the KSrelief medical mission. (SPA)

Since its establishment as Saudi Arabia’s main humanitarian body in 2015, KSrelief has delivered 172 aid projects in 33 nations, with Yemen as the largest beneficiary.

The other major beneficiaries include Syria, Palestine, Somalia, Pakistan and Sudan.

KSrelief has worked in partnership with 98 partners to carry out projects on food security, shelter, camp management, education, health, nutrition, water and sanitation, emergency communications, and logistics.


Saudi Arabia looks to become carbon trading hub for Global South

Updated 13 December 2025
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Saudi Arabia looks to become carbon trading hub for Global South

  • Kingdom eyes partnerships with Asian companies

TOKYO: Saudi Arabia is looking to become a carbon trading hub for the Global South and is eyeing partnerships with Asian companies to trade on its exchange, Japan’s Nikkei newspaper has reported.

Saudi Arabia’s Voluntary Carbon Market recently signed a memorandum of understanding with Japanese trading house Marubeni “for collaboration on carbon markets,” and has also linked up with Climate Bridge International, a Singapore-headquartered carbon finance company, as an advisory partner.

Fadi Saadeh, acting CEO of Saudi Arabia’s Voluntary Carbon Market company, said it was important for Saudi Arabia to have a market to trade carbon credits that arise from the phasing out of coal.

A carbon credit represents a tonne of CO2 or CO2-equivalent greenhouse gases reduced or removed by verified projects like reforestation or carbon removal schemes. In the voluntary carbon market, companies can buy the credits to offset their emissions to meet their net-zero goals, while the sellers of the credits can use the funds received to invest in more green projects.

VCM was set up in 2022 by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and the Saudi Tadawul Group, the country's exchange operator.

Saadeh said VCM was geographically well located to capture demand from the Global South and could leverage existing relationships and investments that companies like Saudi Aramco have forged over the years.

“In Saudi Arabia three years ago there were zero project developers for carbon credits,” Saadeh said. “Today, because of VCM and the ecosystem around the world, we have more than 25 project developers in Saudi Arabia.” He added that the energy transition would take time.