Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Tourism Project Aims to Plant over 15 Mln Plants

A view of the giant planting project of the Red Sea tourism project in western Saudi Arabia. (SPA)
A view of the giant planting project of the Red Sea tourism project in western Saudi Arabia. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Tourism Project Aims to Plant over 15 Mln Plants

A view of the giant planting project of the Red Sea tourism project in western Saudi Arabia. (SPA)
A view of the giant planting project of the Red Sea tourism project in western Saudi Arabia. (SPA)

The Red Sea Development Company (TRSDC), the operator of the giant Red Sea tourism project in western Saudi Arabia, seeks to plant more than 15 million plants and saplings to enrich the green cover in the project’s environment, through its one-million square meters nursery.

Head of Corporate Environment and Sustainability at TRSDC Raed al-Baseet confirmed that environmental monitoring is the permanent companion for the project from the planning, initial and construction phases until its completion.

The company is seeking to increase the percentage of seaweeds that absorb carbon dioxide and increase the percentage of mangrove trees and coral reefs.

“This is in addition to its endeavors to identify areas with high environmental values, something that the company has already achieved through approving the development of 22 islands out of 90 at the location to make them a tourist destination with a different environmental character.”

Since the beginning of the project, the area was designed to become a destination for renewable tourism with its sensitive ecological system, said Baseet.

“To ensure achieving ecological diversity and balance, which we aspire to realize by 2040, we have conducted comprehensive ecological surveys for all the lands of the project, taking into consideration the long-term environmental impacts of the operational actions of the scheme,” he noted.

The ecological team at the company plays a vital role in most aspects of the project and focuses on enhancing the environment through choosing the proper engineering designs and abiding by environmental considerations, according to Baseet.

He indicated that these considerations were either adopted before or after any phase of developing the project, noting that the team cooperated with relevant external organizational bodies to guarantee the implementation of sustainable commitments in the project in an appropriate manner.

As for ecological initiatives, Baseet said that the company had launched the “Blooming the Red Sea” initiative that was implemented in cooperation with the National Center for Vegetation Cover and Tabuk University.

The initiative is working to incubate 17,000 saplings of local plants in the nursery, through which the company trained university student volunteers to take care of the saplings until they are grown enough to be planted at the project location.

Baseet noted that the company has also contributed to the Green Saudi Arabia and Middle East Green Initiatives that aim to reduce carbon emissions, decrease noise, achieve ecological balance, provide natural environments and safe havens for organisms, and improve natural views.

In February 2020, the company inaugurated the project’s nursery, which is the largest in the region, to plant whatever can serve the environment of the project.



French People Need to Work More to Boost Growth, Minister Says

French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
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French People Need to Work More to Boost Growth, Minister Says

French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)

People in France must work more, Finance Minister Antoine Armand said on Monday, adding that the fact that French people worked less than their counterparts in Europe was harming the economy due to lower tax contributions and social security payments.

The government is examining reforms to speed up its sluggish economic growth, although changes to work practices are often opposed by trade unions.

"On average, a French person works clearly less than his neighbors, over the course of a year," Armand told C News TV.

"The consequence of this is fewer social security payments, less money to finance our social models, fewer tax receipts and ultimately fewer jobs and less economic growth."

France, the euro zone's second biggest economy, wants to cut its public deficit to a targeted 5% of GDP by 2025.

The country's 35-hour work week, introduced in 2000, has typically been fiercely defended by trade unions, while reforms to France's pension system have also faced widespread protests.

"Let's all work a bit more, collectively speaking, starting off by making sure that everyone respects the working hours that they have been given, in all sectors," Armand said.