Riyadh Metro breaks Guinness World Record as longest driverless metro network

A metro train arrives at King Saud University station in Riyadh, Apr. 27, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 27 November 2025
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Riyadh Metro breaks Guinness World Record as longest driverless metro network

  • Riyadh Metro features six integrated lines with 85 stations and incorporates state-of-the-art technologies
  • Public transport system in Riyadh, including the metro and buses, supports the city’s traffic, economy, urban development, and social life

LONDON: The Guinness World Records has officially certified Riyadh Metro as the world’s longest driverless metro network at 176 kilometers, highlighting Saudi Arabia’s rapid progress in modern transportation.

The Riyadh Metro is a crucial component of the public transportation initiative in the Saudi capital. It features six integrated lines with 85 stations and incorporates state-of-the-art technologies.

The system operates through an automated driverless model, managed by advanced control rooms that ensure high precision, safety, and quality standards, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

The annual reference book said that the Riyadh Metro was “designed to enhance urban mobility, reduce traffic congestion, and promote sustainability through eco-friendly transportation solutions.”

The public transport system in Riyadh, including the metro and buses, supports the city’s traffic, economy, urban development, and social life.

The achievement highlights the Royal Commission for Riyadh City’s efforts to adopt innovative and sustainable urban transport concepts, showcasing its commitment to modern infrastructure that improves the quality of life and supports Saudi Vision 2030, the SPA added.


Airbus seeks to strengthen Saudi defense ties

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Airbus seeks to strengthen Saudi defense ties

MALHAM: Airbus is aiming to deepen its strategic relationship with Saudi Arabia, a “core customer” in the region, according to Head of Air Power, Airbus Defense and Space Jean-Brice Dumont.

“Saudi Arabia is one of our customers in the region that we have a very strong link with,” Dumont told Arab News on the sidelines of the World Defense Show in Riyadh.

“We have a very strong link with decades of history of Airbus in the country, be it for helicopters, but in my case for military aircraft.

He said the Kingdom was “sort of a hometown for us for these flying platforms and for the maintenance, repair, and overhaul of these platforms.”

Airbus has a longstanding partnership with Saudi Arabia in both commercial and defense aircraft that dates back nearly 50 years.

“We have already invested quite significantly in the region,” Dumont said. “Notably, we have a JV (joint venture) with SAMI (Saudi Arabia Military Industries) in Saudi Arabia and that, I believe is the beginning of a longer journey. But so far, when we see what’s happening in the region, it’s already quite good.”

In 2021 SAMI, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Public Investment Fund and the National Champion of Military Industries Localization, and Airbus signed an agreement to form a joint venture on military aviation services and maintenance, repair and overhaul capabilities.

During the interview Dumont also looked ahead, detailing the strategic roadmap for 2026–2030 that moves beyond traditional hardware toward a digitally-dominant battlefield.

“I think we are reaching the end or the limits of the ‘fighter goes alone’ kind of model,” he said. “Now, the fighters need to communicate, to command drones, to be themselves receiving information by a mass, high-throughput data link so that they can play their role — their new role — in the battlefield.”

He also spoke about how the A330 aircraft was moving beyond its basic reputation as a “flying gas station” to become a high-tech “command center” in the sky.

“The A330 can be first much more automated. The air-to-air refueling can be automatic, and we have developed that capability,” he explained.

“On the other hand, it’s a big platform flying high, which can act as a command-and-control node in the system of systems that the air forces are all aspiring to.”

On the Eurofighter, he said it was “a bit symmetrical,” while speaking about the “buzz” around artificial intelligence he said that while neural networks have been embedded in Airbus platforms for nearly 20 years, the next decade would see AI move to the forefront of decision-making.

From mission preparation to real-time command, he said, the goal is to process vast amounts of data to act faster than the adversary.

“The one who gets that right has won,” he said.