Saudi Arabia vows to protect, restore biodiversity

    13 Jul 2021

    Saudi Arabia on July 4 reiterated its commitment to preserve and restore its marine biodiversity, Arab News reports.

    Deputy Minister of Environment, Water and Agriculture Dr. Osama Faqeeha, the inaugural chairman of Global Coral Reef R&D Accelerator Platform, said Saudi Arabia is home to the Red Sea’s most resilient coral reefs it will continue to take measures to protect the marine life.

    Faqeeha was talking at the inaugural meeting of the governance committee of the platform.

    The platform is an innovative action-oriented initiative aimed at creating a global research and development (R&D) program to advance research, innovation, and capacity building in all facets of coral reef conservation, restoration, and adaptation, and strengthen ongoing efforts and commitments made to enhance coral reefs conservation and their further degradation.

    During the meeting, Faqeeha was elected chairman of the platform’s governance committee, and Jennifer Koss, director of the Coral Reef Conservation Program at the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, deputy chairman.

    The Saudi deputy minister highlighted the importance of the platform in accelerating scientific research and conversation and restoration of coral reefs around the world using the latest technologies.

    The Red Sea hosts some of the most productive and most prosperous coral reef ecosystems with a coral reef framework along its entire coastline.

    “Saudi Arabia is home to the Red Sea’s most resilient coral reefs.”, said Dr. Osama Faqeeha.

    Scleractinian, reef-building corals are the foundation species of the coral reef ecosystem. The reef framework provides shelter to thousands of fish and invertebrate species.

    In September 2018, a framework agreement between the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation and the Public Investment Fund’s Red Sea Collection was signed concerning sustainable development and marine conservation. The agreement paves the way for an exchange of expertise to help safeguard marine biodiversity, protect coral reefs, and combat plastic pollution.

    These protections will be essential as Saudi Arabia moves forward with sustainable development plans for the West Coast, including the NEOM smart city project and the Farasan Islands tourism initiative. Major environmental studies have already been done to ensure the area’s sensitive ecology will be protected.

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *