KAUST and Arabian Petroleum Supply Company Partner to Advance Sustainable Aviation Fuel Adoption

KAUST and Arabian Petroleum Supply Company Partner to Advance Sustainable Aviation Fuel Adoption
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KAUST and Arabian Petroleum Supply Company Partner to Advance Sustainable Aviation Fuel Adoption

KAUST and Arabian Petroleum Supply Company Partner to Advance Sustainable Aviation Fuel Adoption

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) has signed a new material transfer agreement (MTA) with the Arabian Petroleum Supply Company (Apsco), under which Apsco will supply KAUST with sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) for research on next-generation low-emission fuels.

According to a KAUST press release, the collaboration comes at a critical time for the aviation industry.

Under the ReFuelEU Aviation regulations, airlines are required to use a 2% SAF blend by 2025, increasing to 6% by 2030 and 70% by 2050—targets that remain out of reach with today’s fuel technologies. Meanwhile, global SAF demand is expected to surge from 2 million metric tons in 2025 to 10 million in 2030 and 75 million by 2040, SPA reported.

Professors Mani Sarathy, Thibault Guiberti, Aamir Farooq, and Hong Im will lead the research, which will focus on the chemical properties, reaction pathways, and combustion behavior of the provided fuels. The new data on fuel behavior, emissions characteristics, and performance metrics will build a comprehensive database that will develop models for the creation of future SAF formulations of higher efficiency and lower environmental impact.

“This partnership allows us to combine world-class experimental facilities with advanced artificial intelligence to fundamentally reimagine how sustainable aviation fuels are designed,” said Sarathy. “Using the new data generated, our models will help identify efficient, cleaner, and more scalable fuel formulations that can support the aviation sector’s ambitious climate goals.”

The release also highlighted that globally, the aviation industry is increasingly turning to create predictive models for fuel behavior from partial datasets, reducing development cycles from years to months. Beyond fuel design, the project will help bridge critical knowledge gaps that currently slow SAF adoption worldwide, from understanding emissions behavior to assessing how fuels perform across a range of operating environments. By answering these fundamental questions, the partnership will enable industry and regulators to make faster, more informed decisions about future SAF deployment.

Apsco CEO Dr. Azzam Qari stated, “This collaboration with KAUST marks an important milestone for Apsco and for the future of sustainable aviation in the Kingdom. As the global aviation sector moves rapidly toward lower-carbon solutions, investing in local research and national capabilities in SAF is no longer optional; it is strategic. Through this agreement, our role goes beyond supplying fuel for testing; we are helping build the scientific and technical foundation that can enable Saudi-developed SAF technologies in the years ahead.”

Moreover, as Saudi Arabia expands its aviation network and explores domestic SAF production opportunities, the ability to test and validate fuel properties within the Kingdom scientifically becomes increasingly essential. Building local research infrastructure accelerates certification, supports national sustainability targets, and strengthens the country’s position in the future global aviation fuel market. With research facilities already in place, KAUST will provide the scientific foundation needed to accelerate domestic SAF research in the Kingdom, supporting the goals of the Saudi Aviation Strategy to advance low-carbon, next generation energy technologies.



Shell to Sell Gulf of America Assets to Two Companies for $1.7 billion

3D-printed oil pump jacks and the Shell plc logo appear in this illustration taken March 2, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration 
3D-printed oil pump jacks and the Shell plc logo appear in this illustration taken March 2, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration 
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Shell to Sell Gulf of America Assets to Two Companies for $1.7 billion

3D-printed oil pump jacks and the Shell plc logo appear in this illustration taken March 2, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration 
3D-printed oil pump jacks and the Shell plc logo appear in this illustration taken March 2, 2026. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration 

Shell said on Tuesday it had agreed to sell its interest in the Na Kika platform and associated fields in the Gulf of America, along ‌with the Coulomb tieback, to subsidiaries of Talos Energy and Ridgewood Energy for $1.7 billion.

The assets produced about 37,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day net to Shell in 2025.

The transaction has an effective date of July 1, 2025, and is expected to close by the end of 2026.

Talos said its share of the consideration is $850 million, with final net cash consideration expected at $450 million to $500 million after interim cash flow from the effective date.

It added that it will acquire a 50% working interest and operatorship in Coulomb and a 25% non-operated stake in the BP-operated Na Kika platform and ‌four ⁠associated fields -- Kepler, Ariel, Fourier and Herschel.

The assets produced about 16,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the first quarter of 2026, about 77% oil, and add roughly 23 million barrels of oil equivalent of proved reserves.

Na ⁠Kika, Shell's only non-operated Gulf of America platform, began producing in 2003, while Coulomb started production in 2005.

Shell will retain certain upside-linked payments, royalty interests on new ⁠Na Kika tiebacks, and offtake rights.

BP, operator of Na Kika, retains the other 50% stake and has a 30-day preferential purchase right.

Shell's proved ⁠reserves at the end of 2025 were 4.3 million boe for Na Kika and 7.2 million boe for Coulomb.

 

 

 

 


Saudi Arabia Retains ACAO Executive Council Seat for 2026-2028

President of the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) Abdulaziz Al-Duailej. (SPA)
President of the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) Abdulaziz Al-Duailej. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia Retains ACAO Executive Council Seat for 2026-2028

President of the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) Abdulaziz Al-Duailej. (SPA)
President of the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) Abdulaziz Al-Duailej. (SPA)

The General Assembly of the Arab Civil Aviation Organization (ACAO) has renewed Saudi Arabia's membership on the ACAO Executive Council for the 2026–2028 term, reaffirming the Kingdom's prominent position in the civil aviation sector at both the Arab and international levels, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Thursday.

The newly elected Executive Council convened its inaugural meeting, during which President of the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) Abdulaziz Al-Duailej was unanimously re-elected as president for a second consecutive term.

During its 29th General Assembly, the Arab Civil Aviation Organization (ACAO) also renewed Saudi Arabia's membership on six technical committees for the 2026–2028 term: the Air Transport Committee, Air Safety Committee, Aviation Security Committee, Air Navigation Commission, Environment Committee, and Media and Institutional Communication Committee. The decision was accompanied by broad recognition from Arab member states of the Kingdom's leadership and its significant contributions to advancing and developing the civil aviation sector at both the regional and international levels.

Al-Duailej said Saudi Arabia's renewed membership on the Executive Council reflects the Kingdom's leadership and sustained contributions to advancing the Arab civil aviation sector. He added that the council's next phase will focus on strengthening Arab cooperation, enhancing regional integration, and developing unified strategies to address the future challenges facing the air transport industry.


Saudi Arabia Underscores Importance of Digital Transformation in Water Sector

Saudi Arabia has stressed that digital transformation in the water sector has become a necessity. (SPA)
Saudi Arabia has stressed that digital transformation in the water sector has become a necessity. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia Underscores Importance of Digital Transformation in Water Sector

Saudi Arabia has stressed that digital transformation in the water sector has become a necessity. (SPA)
Saudi Arabia has stressed that digital transformation in the water sector has become a necessity. (SPA)

Saudi Arabia has stressed that digital transformation in the water sector has become an economic, environmental, and national imperative that enhances water security, improves resource management, and turns data into strategic decisions supporting sustainability.

The Kingdom noted that technology and artificial intelligence (AI) are key to reducing water losses, improving operational efficiency, and advancing the goals of Saudi Vision 2030, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Wednesday.

The remarks were made during a specialized panel discussion titled "Digital Transformation in the Water Sector: From Data to Decision," held by the Saudi Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture as part of the inaugural Saudi Water Week, a five-day event taking place in Jeddah from June 28 to July 2, 2026.

During the session, the ministry outlined its vision for an integrated data platform, AI, and digital technologies to build a more efficient and sustainable water sector, enhance the quality of government services, support decision-making, and accelerate the sector's digital transformation.

The session covered several key themes, including the role of technology in the water sector and its contribution to water security, the impact of technology and data centers on water consumption, the use of data to drive smart operational decisions, successful international and domestic case studies, the AI role in detection, forecasting, and improving efficiency, as well as water sustainability and Water Use Efficiency (WUE) indicators.

Participants stressed that digital data exists across every water network, but that the real challenge lies in collecting, analyzing, and acting on it.

They also noted that international experience shows that every Saudi riyal invested in digitalization generates a fivefold return through reduced water losses and lower operating costs, thereby enhancing the sector's efficiency and improving the reliability of its services.