Green hydrogen as a catalyst for climate action

Green hydrogen as a catalyst for climate action

Green hydrogen as a catalyst for climate action
Chile's ex-president Michelle Bachelet visits the country's green hydrogen production plant in Santiago on Aug. 10, 2023. (AFP)
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Climate change is not a ‘future problem.’ We’re witnessing changes now and they need to be addressed more urgently than ever.

February saw a record low in global sea ice. It was also the third-warmest February on record, with average global temperatures registering more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

As we witness rapid warming in the Arctic, we have no choice but to call for immediate collective action to develop innovative solutions to decarbonize our economies.

In this decisive moment, the emergence of green hydrogen as a viable clean energy source presents a unique opportunity for global climate action.

Green hydrogen is generated solely from renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind, and when used as a fuel it only emits water vapor, emitting no greenhouse gases in its production or use.

According to the International Energy Agency, 60 governments have already adopted hydrogen strategies, signaling a global shift towards this technology. Saudi Arabia aims to become a top hydrogen supplier, reflecting its commitment to the Saudi Green Initiative.

The Kingdom is currently building the largest green hydrogen plant in the world, NEOM Green Hydrogen Company, contributing to the global fight against climate change.

NGHC is emerging as a significant contributor to job creation, technological innovation, and economic diversification in Saudi Arabia.

Wesam Alghamdi

It also reflects our goal of achieving net-zero carbon emissions, particularly in hard-to-abate applications and sectors like heavy trucks and steelmaking.

One advantage is Saudi Arabia’s plentiful wind and sunshine to power our plant, which will produce up to 600 tons of carbon-free hydrogen daily and save the planet up to 5 million tons of carbon dioxide annually. These efforts align with the goals of the Saudi Green Initiative to reduce emissions by 278 million tons annually by 2030.

However, climate change is not just about energy transformation and visible environmental changes. In this critical moment, NGHC is emerging as a significant contributor to job creation, technological innovation, and economic diversification in Saudi Arabia.

This aligns with the World Economic Forum’s prediction that the global transition to sustainable energy and climate-change adaptation will be “net job creators.”

We have a clear roadmap to attract top talent, foster a new generation of Saudi professionals, and open opportunities for women and young people in this advanced industry, as part of our goal of creating highly skilled jobs with a legacy.

Climate change is an undeniable reality and tackling this issue cannot be constrained by borders or generations. We must address it together. Global partnerships in research, development, and policymaking to accelerate green hydrogen adoption are therefore more important than ever.

Despite the scale of these challenges, I am confident that by working together to achieve mutually beneficial climate goals, green hydrogen can serve as the catalyst that guides the world into a sustainable future, and NGHC will serve as a blueprint for others to follow.

Wesam Alghamdi is CEO of the NEOM Green Hydrogen Company.

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Plan smarter to ‘unlock future prosperity,’ Saudi housing minister says

Plan smarter to ‘unlock future prosperity,’ Saudi housing minister says
Updated 15 min 44 sec ago
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Plan smarter to ‘unlock future prosperity,’ Saudi housing minister says

Plan smarter to ‘unlock future prosperity,’ Saudi housing minister says
  • Project management leaders gather in Riyadh to discuss best practices in alignment with Vision 2030
  • More than 133,000 entities in the Kingdom working on range of construction projects

RIYADH: Project management is “one of the most important drivers of national trust,” Saudi Minister of Municipalities and Housing Majid bin Abdullah Al-Hogail told a conference in Riyadh on Sunday.

Saudi Vision 2030 was created to paint a prosperous future that will reinvent the economic, social, and developmental reality of the Kingdom, Al-Hogail added.

Project management plays a pivotal role at the governmental level by improving the execution and quality control of numerous projects, in full alignment with national goals and targets, he said.

The fourth Global Project Management Forum, with Arab News as a media partner, began its first day of discussions with more than 120 speakers.

The event brings together experts for workshops and dialogue on the best practices in the industry, aligning with Saudi Arabia’s rapid development under Vision 2030.

“Today, we are witnessing accelerating changes and rising challenges … at the heart of (the solutions) is project management to reshape our spaces, meet the needs of the people, and enhance overall sustainability,” said Al-Hogail.

“At the housing and municipality sector, we design projects to meet the dreams of households.”

According to the minister, more than 133,000 entities in the Kingdom are working on a wide range of construction projects.

“This kind of momentum cannot be achieved without project management, which starts with the people and their focus on the conscious planning, flexibility in execution, and ability to adapt to new changes.”

Project management has become smarter, he said, with a strong ability to predict and plan sustainably, and with the potential to help build a strong nation with a diversified economy.

The two-day forum will feature 50 strategic and technical sessions, and include more than 40 exhibitors. A total of 60 agreements will be signed to develop partnerships between entities.


Beirut’s choice: Prime minister urges citizens to shape their city’s future

PM Nawaf Salam inspected the central operations room overseeing the electoral process at the Ministry of Interior.
PM Nawaf Salam inspected the central operations room overseeing the electoral process at the Ministry of Interior.
Updated 21 min 48 sec ago
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Beirut’s choice: Prime minister urges citizens to shape their city’s future

PM Nawaf Salam inspected the central operations room overseeing the electoral process at the Ministry of Interior.
  • Fierce contest as Lebanon holds the third round of municipal and mayoral elections

BEIRUT: Lebanon held the third round of municipal and mayoral elections on Sunday.

Sunday’s vote was held in the governorates of Beirut, Bekaa, and Baalbek-Hermel.

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam inspected the central operations room overseeing the electoral process at the Ministry of Interior and across various electoral centers in Beirut.

Defense Minister Michel Menassa and Interior Minister Ahmad Hajjar accompanied him.

After casting his ballot in Beirut, Salam said that the elections provided an opportunity for citizens to express their true wishes for the city and voiced hope for a high voter turnout.

He stated that the people of Beirut should not miss the chance to decide what kind of city they want.

“I urge them to participate in the elections in large numbers.”

Salam affirmed that the people of Beirut “are capable of ensuring representation for everyone in the municipal council.”

He said that the new municipal council is not obligated to support the government’s efforts; instead, it is the government’s responsibility to meet all the needs of the people of Beirut.

He added: “This is a developmental choice par excellence.”

In an afternoon appeal, Salam repeated his call for voters to cast their ballots, stating that the voter turnout in Beirut remained low.

MPs supporting the parties’ list in Beirut expressed concern about the low turnout during the day.

Security and military forces deployed personnel to assure the safety of polling stations and the routes leading to them.

The Lebanese Army Command announced that an army unit in Baalbek and the Douris area arrested four people found in possession of combat pistols, a quantity of hashish, and captagon pills.

In an official statement, the Army Command warned citizens “against creating trouble, firing guns, and endangering the lives of others.”

It also suspended “all gun licenses in the governorates where elections are being held for 48 hours,” stressing that it “will not hesitate to pursue and arrest all those who disrupt security across all Lebanese territory.”

During the voting process, Israeli reconnaissance planes flew over Beirut.

As the southern governorates and Nabatieh prepare for the final round of parliamentary elections on Sunday, an Israeli drone targeted a Rapid car on Sunday on Beit Yahoun Road near a Lebanese army checkpoint, wounding the driver and a soldier manning the checkpoint.

Sunday’s elections were described as “fierce,” with intense competition between political party lists and civil society.

Voters extensively crossing out party candidates cast doubt on the parties’ ability to maintain public support and raised concerns over Beirut’s ability to uphold its model of coexistence.

For example, Sunni voters were striking off Shiite candidates affiliated with Hezbollah and the Amal Movement, as well as Christian candidates affiliated with the Lebanese Forces and their allies.

The capital experienced intense competition between two main lists: the “Beirut Unites Us” list, which includes candidates from political parties with significant discord, under the slogan “Preserving Equal Representation of Muslims and Christians,” and the “Beirut Madinati” list, supported by Change deputies.

The Forces of Change is a parliamentary bloc that comprises multiple reformist parties and independent MPs.

Other lists were also running in the electoral race.

They include a list of candidates affiliated with the Future Movement, which suspended its political activity, and candidates of the Islamic Group, as well as other civilian lists.

The civilian voter turnout remained low until 2 p.m., not exceeding 13 percent.

Voters affiliated with Hezbollah, the Amal Movement, and the Al-Ahbash Association were expected to arrive at polling centers in groups before voting concluded at 7 p.m., aiming to tip the balance in favor of their party list.

Abu Al-Abed Al-Nuri, a voter in one of the Al-Mazraa electoral centers, said that “he composed his list by himself, choosing only Sunni candidates.

“All parties have wronged Beirut and caused disastrous consequences; however, they have now united and insist on sharing the benefits while ignoring our demands and problems,” he added.

MP Fouad Makhzoumi said: “We are trying to impose equal representation in voting.”

MP Hagop Terzian from the Free Patriotic Movement bloc stated: “Parties are not from Mars; they are part of Beirut and have allied to ensure equal representation.”

Hezbollah MP Amin Sherri said: “We insist on equal representation. Cross-outs are Beirut’s enemy.”

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea urged voters in Beirut to support the parties’ list “because the elections in Beirut reflect on coexistence in Lebanon, as it is the capital that represents the country’s main face.”

Competition for municipal seats was also fierce in the Bekaa, particularly in Zahle and Baalbek, raising voter turnout to 30 and 40 percent during the day.

Several people, including two members of the Internal Security Forces’ Information Branch, were injured in Zahle during a raid conducted by a patrol from the branch, supported by a Lebanese Army unit, on a Hezbollah electoral office in the area on suspicion of bribery.

Around 15 young men were present at the site during the raid.

The permits of several representatives for the non-partisan Change list in the city of Baalbek disappeared.

It was revealed that the person who hid the permits — and who was arrested by the security forces — was working for the Hezbollah list in the area.


Blast kills three, injures 11 in Pakistan’s restive southwest

Blast kills three, injures 11 in Pakistan’s restive southwest
Updated 14 min 4 sec ago
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Blast kills three, injures 11 in Pakistan’s restive southwest

Blast kills three, injures 11 in Pakistan’s restive southwest
  • The explosives were planted on a vehicle and were detonated at a market next to a security forces’ camp in the Killa Abdullah district
  • No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack that came two days after Pakistani Taliban said they had killed four troops

QUETTA: At least three people were killed and 11 others wounded after an improvised explosive device (IED) exploded in a border district in Pakistan southwestern Balochistan province, a government official said on Sunday.

The blast took place inside a market next to a security forces camp in Gulistan town of Killa Abdullah district, located close to the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

The explosives were planted on a vehicle and were detonated at around 8:30pm, according to Killa Abdullah Deputy Commissioner Muhammad Riaz Dawar.

“Majority of the shops inside the market were closed when the blast hit the market,” Dawar told Arab News.

“A wall of the security forces’ camp was also partially damaged due to the intensity of the blast.”

The bodies and injured were shifted to hospital. Two of the wounded persons were brought to Trauma Center in Quetta who were in stable condition and undergoing treatment, according to Dr. Arbab Kamran Kasi.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack in Gulistan town that is situated close to Afghanistan’s Kandahar province.

Pakistan is currently battling twin insurgencies: one led my religiously motivated groups, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), mainly in its Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province and the other by ethno-nationalist Baloch separatist groups in Balochistan.

The TTP and Daesh have also maintained some presence in Balochistan.

The latest attack comes two days after the TTP said it had targeted a security check post in Balochistan’s Khuzdar that killed four members of the Levies paramilitary force.

In Jan. 2025, Pakistan’s military said security forces had thwarted an attack on a paramilitary force’ camp in Gulistan, killing two suicide bombers among five attackers.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Addiction by Design’ by Natasha Dow Schull

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Addiction by Design’ by Natasha Dow Schull
Updated 26 min 5 sec ago
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Addiction by Design’ by Natasha Dow Schull

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Addiction by Design’ by Natasha Dow Schull

Drawing on 15 years of field research in Las Vegas, anthropologist Natasha Dow Schüll shows how the mechanical rhythm of electronic gambling pulls players into a trancelike state they call the “machine zone,” in which daily worries, social demands, and even bodily awareness fade away.

Once in the zone, gambling addicts play not to win but simply to keep playing, for as long as possible—even at the cost of physical and economic exhaustion.

“Addiction by Design” is a compelling inquiry into the intensifying traffic between people and machines of chance, offering clues to some of the broader anxieties and predicaments of contemporary life.


British climber breaks his own record with 19th Everest summit

British climber breaks his own record with 19th Everest summit
Updated 27 min 38 sec ago
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British climber breaks his own record with 19th Everest summit

British climber breaks his own record with 19th Everest summit
  • More than 50 climbers have reached the summit since the spring climbing season began this month

KATHMANDU: British climber Kenton Cool successfully climbed Mount Everest for the nineteenth time on Sunday, extending his own record for the most summits of the world’s highest mountain by a non-Nepali.

More than 50 climbers have reached the summit since the spring climbing season began this month, taking advantage of a brief spell of good weather and typically calmer winds.

Mountain guide Cool, 51, first climbed Everest in 2004 and has since had an expedition almost every year taking clients up the world’s highest peak.

“Kenton summited Everest for the 19th time at 11:00 a.m. Nepalese time on Sunday,” a post on his Instagram account said.

His 15th summit in 2021 tied him with American Dave Hahn for the most summits by a non-Nepali climber, and his summit the following year gave him a solo title.

Cool was once told he would not walk unaided again after a rock-climbing accident in 1996 that broke both his heel bones.

He told AFP in a 2022 interview after his 16th ascent that his Everest record was “not that amazing” in the context of Nepali climbers’ achievements.

“I’m really surprised by the interest ... considering that so many of the Sherpas have so many more ascents,” he said then.

Nepali climber Kami Rita Sherpa, 55, is also attempting to break his own world record for the most Everest summits with his 31st climb.