Valvoline by Aramco joined National Auto Award 2025 as the official lubricant partner

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Updated 28 November 2025
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Valvoline by Aramco joined National Auto Award 2025 as the official lubricant partner

Valvoline by Aramco served as the official lubricant partner for the 13th edition of the National Auto Award, held on Nov. 3 in Jeddah.

The partnership brought together a globally trusted lubricant brand with one of the Kingdom’s most prominent automotive recognition platforms, a collaboration anchored in shared values of performance, reliability, and industry excellence.

Organized by PR Arabia, a specialized automotive communications agency with more than 20 years of experience, the National Auto Award recognized top performers across Saudi Arabia’s automotive landscape. 

The ceremony brought together manufacturers, dealers, distributors, and sector representatives in a night celebrating innovation and technical leadership.

Walid Karanouh, founder of the National Auto Award, said the participation of Valvoline strengthened the event’s mission to honor achievements that drive the industry forward.

Ahmad Abu Ragheb, country manager KSA, noted that Valvoline was pleased to support the award, adding that Saudi Arabia remained a key market for the brand’s advanced lubricant solutions and mobility technologies.

The National Auto Award is a platform that reflects industry trends, highlights leading brands, and contributes to sector growth. 

The participation of Valvoline underscored a shared commitment to quality, innovation, and customer trust.

Valvoline, the world’s first branded motor oil, delivers mobility solutions and advanced lubricant technologies in more than 140 countries. 

Together with Aramco Lubricants & Retail Company, the official licensee of Valvoline in Saudi Arabia, the brand continues to develop innovative products that support the needs of consumers and industry partners.

Established by PR Arabia, the National Auto Award is the Kingdom’s foremost platform recognizing excellence in the automotive sector. 

Held annually in Jeddah, the award honors leading vehicles, technologies, and brands across multiple categories, remaining a trusted benchmark for industry leadership and innovation.


More crop per drop: NADEC and EF Polymer deploy breakthrough technology to cut agricultural water use by 40%

Updated 14 January 2026
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More crop per drop: NADEC and EF Polymer deploy breakthrough technology to cut agricultural water use by 40%

Following a strategic technology-scouting framework led by Universal Materials Incubator, the National Agricultural Development Company has entered into a partnership to launch large-scale field trials of EF Polymer, marking a significant step in deploying deep-technology solutions to strengthen the Kingdom’s food and water security.

The collaboration initiates field trials of EF Polymer’s proprietary solution — a 100 percent organic, biodegradable powder that performs like a “soil battery” upcycled from food waste. Engineered to address water scarcity in arid and semi-arid regions, the material can absorb up to 50 times its own weight in water and gradually release moisture directly to plant roots. This mechanism has the potential to reduce irrigation water use by up to 40 percent, while enhancing crop yield and long-term agricultural productivity.

Beyond water efficiency, EF Polymer improves nutrient retention by minimizing fertilizer leaching, thereby reducing overall fertilizer requirements. After approximately one year in the soil, the material fully biodegrades into organic carbon, organic matter, and trace nutrients such as magnesium, calcium, and nitrogen — contributing directly to improved soil health and long-term fertility.

The solution is affordable, easy to apply, and suitable for a wide range of crops, making it viable both for individual farmers and for industrial-scale agricultural operations such as NADEC’s. 

EF Polymer has already achieved significant commercial adoption across multiple global markets, including Japan, the US, India and Turkiye, where it is actively used by farmers and agribusiness operators to improve water efficiency, soil health, and crop resilience under varying climatic conditions.

Its organic credentials are certified by OMRI and Ecocert, reinforcing its alignment with sustainable and regenerative agricultural practices.

The stakes for this alliance are high. By 2030, global freshwater demand is projected to exceed supply by 40 percent. In Saudi Arabia, the challenge is localized but intense: the agricultural sector alone consumes approximately 11.4 billion cubic meters of water annually. This partnership underscores NADEC’s commitment to adopting innovative, scalable technologies that conserve natural resources while supporting resilient food systems across the Kingdom.

Mohamed Al-Rajhi, VP of supply chain sector at NADEC, said: “Strategic agriculture today requires a long-term commitment to soil health and resource circularity. NADEC is leading the shift toward regenerative practices that restore our natural capital rather than merely consuming it. By diversifying our crop portfolio and investing in closed-loop nutrient management, we are insulating our operations against global price volatility and environmental shifts.”

“We are aggressively deploying AI-driven irrigation systems and satellite-based crop monitoring to optimize every drop of water and every hectare of land. This strategic pivot toward agri-digitization allows us to mitigate climate risks in real-time while significantly reducing our carbon footprint. Our commitment to sustainability is our greatest competitive advantage, ensuring that NADEC remains the cornerstone of the Middle East’s agri-food sector for decades to come. These trials focus on strategic scalable crops like wheat and olive trees to ensure the future of the Kingdom’s food security is both sustainable and locally rooted,” he added.

Strategic trial milestones:

  • Wheat: Trials have commenced to demonstrate water retention in this water-intensive crop.
  • Olive and blueberry: Specialized testing is scheduled for March to evaluate yield improvements and nutrient efficiency.

This collaboration supports Saudi Vision 2030 goals of reducing non-renewable groundwater use by 90 percent.