海角直播

Half of Saudi transport budget to fund rail expansion for mining, industry: minister

Saudi Minister of Transport and Logistics Services Saleh Al-Jasser speaks at the Future Minerals Forum in Riyadh on Wednesday.
Saudi Minister of Transport and Logistics Services Saleh Al-Jasser speaks at the Future Minerals Forum in Riyadh on Wednesday.
Short Url
Updated 15 January 2025

Half of Saudi transport budget to fund rail expansion for mining, industry: minister

Half of Saudi transport budget to fund rail expansion for mining, industry: minister

RIYADH: 海角直播 plans to allocate half of its government spending in the transport and logistics sector to rail infrastructure, with a primary focus on bolstering the minerals and industrial sectors, according to Saleh Al-Jasser, the Kingdom鈥檚 minister of transport and logistics services.

Speaking at the Future Minerals Forum in Riyadh, Al-Jasser underscored the strength of 海角直播鈥檚 infrastructure and ongoing investments in transport systems. 鈥淥ur roads, for example, are the most connected network globally,鈥 he stated.

海角直播鈥檚 expansive rail network, which spans 5,500 km, plays an integral role in the logistics and mining sectors. Al-Jasser pointed out that over the past year, more than 25 million tonnes of cargo, primarily minerals, were transported via the Kingdom's rail system.

鈥淎bout 50 percent of our government funding in transport and logistics will be directed to rail, and that is largely to support industry and minerals,鈥 he added.

In addition to rail advancements, Saudi ports have seen a significant uptick in international connectivity, with the number of international liners visiting Saudi ports rising from 53 to 115 over the past three years.

Al-Jasser emphasized the importance of logistics in the mining sector, noting that efficient transportation of raw materials is crucial for linking mines to processing facilities and facilitating global trade through rail, ports, and supply chains.

During another panel discussion at the event, Sarah Jones, UK minister for industry, stressed the need for a clear strategy to ensure a stable supply of critical minerals amid growing global uncertainty.

Jones outlined a three-pronged approach that includes identifying industrial priorities, leveraging financial mechanisms such as the National Wealth Fund and UK Export Finance to attract private investment, and fostering global partnerships.

鈥淭he plan is to work collectively,鈥 Jones said, underlining the importance of collaboration with international allies to drive progress.

Finland鈥檚 Minister of Economic Affairs Wille Rydman also addressed the issue of diversifying supply chains for critical raw materials. He linked this need to both geopolitical stability and the ongoing clean energy transition.

鈥淭here will be no clean transition without electrification of our societies,鈥 Rydman stated, stressing the crucial role of critical materials in supporting electrification. He also cautioned against over-reliance on single providers, noting that 鈥淚f we are too dependent on single providers, that creates tensions that are not welcomed in this world.鈥

Rydman praised international forums like the Future Minerals Forum for fostering important discussions on supply chain resilience.




Pakistan鈥檚 Minister of Petroleum and Water Resources Musadik Malik.

Pakistan鈥檚 Minister of Petroleum and Water Resources Musadik Malik voiced concerns about the potential rise of 鈥済reen barriers鈥 in global trade that could marginalize developing nations.

He highlighted a significant disparity in green financing, with 75 percent concentrated in a few developed countries, while regions such as Africa, Central Asia, and South Asia remain largely excluded.

Malik warned that without equitable financing, resource-rich but developing nations may struggle to comply with green policies. 鈥淭hese countries would not be able to cross (this hurdle), and therefore they will naturally gravitate toward blocks, which would further polarize the world,鈥 he said.

He urged global stakeholders to address these disparities to avoid exacerbating existing trade imbalances.


Can AI really serve the public good?

Can AI really serve the public good?
Updated 17 October 2025

Can AI really serve the public good?

Can AI really serve the public good?
  • Ethical human use of AI is vital, says CISCO鈥檚 Guy Diedrich
  • Welcomes tight regulations but warns of stifling innovation

DUBAI: As artificial intelligence reshapes economies and societies at unprecedented speed, global technology leaders meeting at the GITEX Global conference have been debating the rapid acceleration of AI disruption.

One of the more poignant conversations on Wednesday this week tackled whether innovation can truly serve the public good, in a session titled 鈥淒igital Futures: Global Impact at the Speed of Innovation.鈥

Guy Diedrich, senior vice president and global innovation officer at Cisco鈥檚 Digital Impact Office, argued that the future of AI and emerging technologies depends as much on trust, ethics, and human capital as on algorithms and investment.

He was speaking to Australian journalist and CNBC Anchor Amanda Drury during a live session at the conference.

鈥淐reative Destruction is when you come up with a new innovation, when AI is released, when quantum comes and all of a sudden everything before it gets churned out,鈥 Diedrich said.

鈥淚t goes away because you have to make room for that new innovation, for that new economic growth, for that new opportunity.鈥

He warned that progress will stall if societies fail to invest in people, arguing that there was a symbiotic relationship between social good and capital gains.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e never going to get the full value of that innovation unless you have developed your population, unless they have that intellectual capital in place,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he two have to go side by side.鈥

Central to that balance is trust as the true 鈥渆ngine鈥 that drives the digital economy, he said.

Without it, he argued there could be no movement as people would begin opting out 鈥 choosing not to share data which would be detrimental to the evolution of AI.

Several high-profile cases, such as a Samsung data leak via ChatGPT in 2023 have created doubt over whether AI can be trusted with sensitive information.

Many have called on governments to place heavier regulations on tech companies, which Diedrich welcomed but cautioned that it could result in hindering innovation.


Future Investment Initiative Foundation and Guggenheim Investments announce partnership

Future Investment Initiative Foundation and Guggenheim Investments announce partnership
Updated 17 October 2025

Future Investment Initiative Foundation and Guggenheim Investments announce partnership

Future Investment Initiative Foundation and Guggenheim Investments announce partnership

RIYADH: The Future Investment Initiative Foundation has announced a strategic partnership with Guggenheim Investments, a global asset management and investment advisory firm.

This partnership builds on the firm鈥檚 role as Summit Partner for the third Priority Summit in Miami in February, and reflects a deepening collaboration to support the Foundation鈥檚 mission of 鈥淚mpacting Humanity,鈥 according to the Saudi Press Agency.

Richard Attias, chairman of the executive committee and CEO-in-Chief, FII, said: 鈥淧artnerships with leading firms like Guggenheim Investments enhance our ability to solve our most critical challenges.

鈥淭heir focus on long-term value creation and innovation aligns directly with our mission, and we are delighted to welcome them as a strategic partner as we prepare for the Future Investment Initiative conference.鈥

Dina DeLorenzo, president of Guggenheim Investments, said: 鈥淥ur goal is to provide long-term investment strategies that help build lasting value for communities and clients alike. 

鈥淭he Future Investment Initiative Foundation鈥檚 vision of 鈥業mpacting Humanity鈥 reflects our commitment to stewardship and sustainable progress, and we look forward to contributing our perspectives and insights to this important global platform.鈥
 

 


Dalal Al-Matrudi: Young Saudi innovator using science to ease pain and inspire change

Dalal Al-Matrudi: Young Saudi innovator using science to ease pain and inspire change
Updated 17 October 2025

Dalal Al-Matrudi: Young Saudi innovator using science to ease pain and inspire change

Dalal Al-Matrudi: Young Saudi innovator using science to ease pain and inspire change
  • This combination of compassion and technology earned Al-Matrudi鈥檚 team multiple global awards this year

Alkhobar: For Dalal Al-Matrudi, innovation began not in a lab but at home, watching a loved one battle multiple sclerosis. What started as empathy soon turned into invention, leading her and her team to develop a smart medical device that is now winning awards on international stages.

鈥淥ur innovation is a smart medical device designed to assist patients with multiple sclerosis by providing localized muscle massage controlled through a mobile application,鈥 said Al-Matrudi. 鈥淚t helps relieve pain, reduce muscle stiffness and improve patients鈥 comfort and daily mobility.鈥

The device also connects patients directly with their doctors for real-time monitoring. 鈥淚n emergency situations, it can instantly alert healthcare providers to ensure the patient receives immediate assistance,鈥 she said.

This combination of compassion and technology earned Al-Matrudi鈥檚 team multiple global awards this year, including the Gold Medal with Jury鈥檚 Honor, the GCC Patent Office Award, and the Grand Prize at the International Invention Fair of the Middle East, or IIFME, hosted by the Kuwait Science Club. The invention was also recognized at the Geneva International Exhibition of Inventions, one of the most prestigious global platforms for innovation.

For Al-Matrudi, 21, who hails from Riyadh, the project was deeply personal. 鈥淥ur inspiration came from personal experience 鈥 one of my family members suffers from multiple sclerosis, and seeing their daily struggle with pain and mobility challenges deeply affected me,鈥 she said.

Together with her teammates, she transformed that emotional drive into a purpose-driven invention. 鈥淲e wanted to create something practical and compassionate that could truly improve patients鈥 lives,鈥 she said.

Under the mentorship of Prof. Dr. Kholoud Al-Muqrin, a distinguished professor of nuclear physics known for empowering young Saudi innovators, the team refined their prototype into an award-winning solution. 鈥淗er continuous guidance and scientific insight played a vital role in shaping our project and transforming our idea into a tangible, award-winning innovation,鈥 Al-Matrudi said.

She believes the foundation of every great innovation is care. 鈥淲e believed that technology should serve humanity, and that small ideas born from care can evolve into meaningful advancements that bring relief and hope to many,鈥 she added.

Months of research, design and testing culminated in an unforgettable moment at IIFME 2025.

鈥淭he most emotional moment was standing on stage when our team鈥檚 name, Team May, was announced as the Grand Prize Winner,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 remember holding my teammates鈥 hands tightly, feeling both disbelief and overwhelming pride.鈥

For Al-Matrudi, the victory symbolized much more than recognition. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just about the prize 鈥 it was about realizing that months of dedication, late nights and countless trials were finally worth it,鈥 she said.

She recalls how their mentor鈥檚 tears turned the win into a collective triumph. 鈥淚 could see tears in everyone鈥檚 eyes, especially our supervisor鈥檚, which made it even more special,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat moment reminded me that passion and persistence can turn ideas into achievements that reach beyond borders.鈥

Although the invention is not directly tied to her academic major, medical physics, Al-Matrudi says her background gave her the edge she needed to design effectively.

鈥淪tudying medical physics enhanced my scientific thinking and deepened my knowledge of how the human body interacts with medical devices,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his understanding helped me design a solution that is both safe and effective.鈥

She believes the key to meaningful innovation lies in combining technical knowledge with emotional intelligence. 鈥淕aining international recognition encouraged me to continue combining my medical knowledge with creative thinking to develop innovations that make healthcare more compassionate, practical and accessible for all,鈥 she said.

Al-Matrudi鈥檚 story reflects a growing wave of young Saudi women who are redefining the global image of innovation.

鈥淚 hope my journey shows Saudi women that ambition and creativity have no limits,鈥 she said. 鈥淪cience and innovation are not exclusive fields 鈥 they welcome curiosity, persistence and passion.鈥

Her experience also underscores how inclusion fuels progress. 鈥淲hen women step into these spaces, they bring empathy and fresh perspectives that drive real progress,鈥 she said.

Her message is simple but powerful: 鈥淚 want every Saudi girl with a dream to believe that she can represent her country globally, no matter her field. Our achievements are proof that with teamwork, guidance and confidence, Saudi women can lead the way in shaping the future of science and technology.鈥

Today, Al-Matrudi stands as one of the brightest examples of how Saudi youth are translating Vision 2030鈥檚 goals into real-world impact. Through her invention, she鈥檚 proving that innovation is not just about devices, it鈥檚 about dignity, hope and humanity.

As she proudly waved the Saudi flag on stage in Kuwait, surrounded by fellow inventors and mentors, Al-Matrudi鈥檚 message was clear: Saudi women are not just participating in the global innovation movement, they鈥檙e leading it.


Middle East VC defies global slowdown with record $2.77bn raised in first 9 months of 2025

Middle East VC defies global slowdown with record $2.77bn raised in first 9 months of 2025
Updated 17 October 2025

Middle East VC defies global slowdown with record $2.77bn raised in first 9 months of 2025

Middle East VC defies global slowdown with record $2.77bn raised in first 9 months of 2025

RIYADH: Venture capital funding in the Middle East surged to a record $2.77 billion in the first nine months of 2025, defying a global downturn, according to MAGNiTT. 

Funding jumped 152 percent year on year, with the number of deals rising 10 percent to 388, highlighting the region鈥檚 growing appeal to global investors even as capital flows into Southeast Asia, Africa, and Pakistan weakened. 

The surge reflects broader trends in the Middle East venture capital ecosystem, where early-stage and non-mega funding showed robust growth despite global headwinds.

In the third quarter alone, capital surged to $1.2 billion 鈥 its highest quarterly total on record 鈥 propelled by three mega rounds: XPANCEO鈥檚 $250 million series A and Airalo鈥檚 $220 million series C in the UAE, and Hala鈥檚 $157 million Series B in 海角直播.  

Philip Bahoshy, CEO of MAGNiTT, said: 鈥淭he first nine months of 2025 marked the recovery of the MENA venture capital ecosystem. Not only did the region cross $3 billion in funding by September, but it also outperformed Southeast Asia for the first time for the first nine months of the year.鈥  

He added: 鈥淭he strength of Series A and B pipelines, combined with sovereign-backed support and global investor interest, reinforces MENA鈥檚 position as one of the fastest-maturing ecosystems in emerging markets.鈥 

XPANCEO founders Valentyn Volkov and Roman Axelrod. File/Supplied

Within the MENA region, the Gulf states led the gains. The UAE attracted $1.43 billion in the first nine months of 2025, up 188 percent year on year, with strength across both mega rounds with $653 million and non-mega with $775 million.  

海角直播 followed at $1.29 billion, up 158 percent year on year, underpinned by $571 million in mega deals and a near-doubling of non-mega funding to $719 million.  

Deal momentum also broadened: 海角直播 recorded 173 transactions, a 38 percent yearly increase, while the UAE posted 164, a 5 percent rise, with both ecosystems expanding at the early stage. Egypt, by contrast, saw funding contract 37 percent year on year.  

Sector trends across MENA were led by fintech and enterprise software. Fintech funding in the Middle East climbed to $880 million, up 248 percent year on year, supported by scale rounds such as Tabby鈥檚 Series E and Hala鈥檚 Series B.  

Enterprise software accelerated to $320 million across 52 deals, including a $183 million mega round by Cadena, while non-mega activity doubled year on year.  

Elsewhere in MENA and across Africa, signals were mixed. Africa鈥檚 nine-month funding rose 8 percent to $839 million even as deal count fell 14 percent to 228, with pre-seed activity weakening and seed/series A value inching higher.  

Mergers and acquisitions activity continued to consolidate across the region, with the Middle East leading nine months of dealmaking with 26 transactions and Egypt posting 13 acquisitions, up from three a year earlier.  

Outside MENA, Southeast Asia endured the sharpest pullback. Funding dropped 48 percent year on year to $2.5 billion across 319 deals in the nine-month period of 2025.  

The third quarter was the weakest quarter in over seven years, with $541 million across 80 deals and no mega rounds; the share of capital from international investors also fell markedly from the second quarter.  

Pakistan and Turkiye proved comparatively resilient in value terms, amassing $450 million in nine months, up 40 percent yearly, despite a 32 percent drop in deals to 121.  

Across all EVMs, venture funding reached $6.56 billion in nine months, down 6 percent year on year, with total deals sliding 18 percent to 1,056. The decline was concentrated in mega rounds with a 19 percent yearly drop, while non-mega funding was broadly flat. 

International investors drove a larger share of venture capital flows into the Middle East in the third quarter, supplying 59 percent of total funding and 64 percent of all $20 million-plus rounds.  

Founded in 2018 by Esam Al-Nahdi and Maher Loubieh, HALA offers SME banking and freelancer solutions. File

In 海角直播, non-Saudi investors accounted for a record 55 percent of active backers, with the number of unique investors up 44 percent year on year.  

Despite the dominance of large deals, non-mega funding in the region rose 14 percent quarter on quarter and 71 percent year on year, signaling broader momentum.  

Across the EVMs, early-stage activity hit its lowest level since 2016, though the Middle East again bucked the trend, with pre-seed and seed rounds up 17 percent year on year鈥 led by record deal counts in 海角直播 and the UAE.  

Series dynamics also shifted. Series A totals were inflated by XPANCEO鈥檚 $250 million round; excluding it, Series A funding fell 17 percent year on year, while Series B rose to $1.34 billion on stronger non-mega activity.  

Africa鈥檚 mid-stage gap widened, with Series A and B funding down 81 percent quarter on quarter to $39 million.  

Turkiye, Vietnam, and South Africa all recorded sharp gains from smaller bases, while Singapore, Egypt, Indonesia, and Kenya posted declines. 

M&A softened to 72 deals in the first nine months 鈥 down from 78 a year earlier 鈥 with the third quarter marking the lowest quarterly total in more than five years. 


UAE turns to AI to bridge legal language gaps

UAE turns to AI to bridge legal language gaps
Updated 17 October 2025

UAE turns to AI to bridge legal language gaps

UAE turns to AI to bridge legal language gaps
  • A new translation tool aims to make the country鈥檚 multilingual legal system more accessible and inclusive

DUBAI: The UAE鈥檚 Federal Public Prosecution has launched a new artificial intelligence-powered translation service aimed at improving accessibility and inclusivity for non-Arabic speakers.

Speaking at GITEX Dubai this week, Khalifa Ibrahim Al Hammadi public prosecution member in the public procsecution of uae told Arab News the country hoped to become a world leader in integrating AI into the legal system. He cited the Bayan translation service, launched at the event in conjunction with Emirati AI company, Presight.

鈥淚t is designed to support investigations and trials by offering seamless two-way voice and text translation, with dialect recognition 鈥 including the Emirati dialect,鈥 said Hammadi.

The UAE鈥檚 courts are often difficult to navigate for the country鈥檚 enormous expat population, which includes over 200 nationalities. Arabic is the official language of the UAE鈥檚 legal system, while English is common in business and commercial contracts, and translations are needed. In disputes, UAE courts give precedence to the Arabic version of any contract.

The public prosecution office hopes the new AI service will make the process much easier.

鈥淭he platform features speech-to-text and text-to-speech capabilities, extracts text from documents and images, and includes a multilingual legal dictionary,鈥 Hammadi said.

鈥淚t also comes with an intelligent governance dashboard for auditing and quality assurance. Ultimately, it enhances translation accuracy, speeds up legal procedures, and strengthens the overall efficiency of our judicial system."

AI is being used in legal systems globally to speed up case processing, help in legal research, and improve access to justice. China has seen the rise of virtual smart courts while tools for contract analysis have rapidly gained popularity in the US.

The UAE is hoping to become a leader in the field, launching its own internal legal chatbot and undergoing a mass legal filing digitization campaign.

Some challenges remain with using AI in legal proceedings, particularly due to risks of bias, lack of transparency, data privacy concerns and unclear accountability when errors occur. However, Hammadi says he is confident the UAE鈥檚 systems will adapt and evolve.