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First All-Female Sea Ranger Team Launches on Saudi Red Sea Coast

First All-Female Sea Ranger Team Launches on Saudi Red Sea Coast

CairoScene2 days ago
In a regional first, female rangers are now patrolling the Red Sea as part of Saudi conservation efforts. Their deployment marks a major milestone for the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve.
For the first time, women have been deployed as marine rangers along the Red Sea, joining the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve's 3,856 sq km marine zone. Previously limited to land-based roles, women gained access to marine training in July 2024 through a dedicated swimming and safety programme, which included monthly fitness assessments. Skipper training is planned as the next phase.
Now operating alongside male rangers and the Saudi Border Guard, the new all-female team patrols 170 km of coastline, monitors marine life, enforces conservation laws, and assists with ecological research. The reserve is home to nearly two-thirds of Saudi Arabia's coral species, over 20% of its fish, and endangered species such as dolphins, dugongs, and turtles.
Women currently represent 34% of the reserve's 246-person ranger corps - just 1% below Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 labour target and significantly higher than the global average of 11% for female rangers. In marine conservation specifically, women make up only 1% of the workforce worldwide. Their growing presence in the field signals a shift in who participates in frontline environmental protection.
Since 2022, rangers at the reserve have completed nearly 35,000 patrols. Their efforts contribute to Saudi Arabia's wider goal of protecting 30% of its land and marine territories by 2030.
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Designing a Riyadh That Doesn't Grow Old
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In the 1930s, American industrialist Henry Ford set out to build a perfect city in the middle of the Amazon. It was called Fordlândia, an attempt to create a rubber-producing town that would mirror American values, complete with tidy houses, paved roads, and hamburgers in the canteen. But the forest resisted. The soil wasn't suited to rubber trees, the workers clashed with imported rules, and the town quickly fell apart. Fordlândia became a cautionary tale: a city designed without understanding its people or its place. Decades later, Brazil tried again in the same region, this time with better maps and modern ideals. But the result was much the same. Urban planning, it turns out, isn't just about roads, grids and buildings. It's about understanding how people live, what they need and how communities grow over time. So, whether in the jungles of Brazil or the deserts of Arabia, the question persists: are we building for people, or are we drawing lines on paper? 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What's your view on current housing programs like Sakani, particularly in linking housing with social mobility - not just ownership? Are we achieving real sustainable development? The Sakani program targets middle-income groups with access to mortgage financing. It raised homeownership to around 63%, which is commendable. However, rising unit prices and lack of affordable housing have left many families either priced out or burdened with long-term mortgage debt. These efforts focus on increasing ownership, but without a broader urban renewal program - no plans to revitalise city centres, repair deteriorating housing, or rebalance the market. There are no strong alternatives like cooperative housing or a robust role for developmental housing aimed at those in greatest need. Saudi Arabia's housing market needs legal reform to support cooperative and developmental housing within residential neighbourhoods. 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A D.I.Y. Art Installation Reimagines Urban Repair in Riyadh
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First All-Female Sea Ranger Team Launches on Saudi Red Sea Coast
First All-Female Sea Ranger Team Launches on Saudi Red Sea Coast

CairoScene

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First All-Female Sea Ranger Team Launches on Saudi Red Sea Coast

In a regional first, female rangers are now patrolling the Red Sea as part of Saudi conservation efforts. Their deployment marks a major milestone for the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve. For the first time, women have been deployed as marine rangers along the Red Sea, joining the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve's 3,856 sq km marine zone. Previously limited to land-based roles, women gained access to marine training in July 2024 through a dedicated swimming and safety programme, which included monthly fitness assessments. Skipper training is planned as the next phase. Now operating alongside male rangers and the Saudi Border Guard, the new all-female team patrols 170 km of coastline, monitors marine life, enforces conservation laws, and assists with ecological research. The reserve is home to nearly two-thirds of Saudi Arabia's coral species, over 20% of its fish, and endangered species such as dolphins, dugongs, and turtles. Women currently represent 34% of the reserve's 246-person ranger corps - just 1% below Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 labour target and significantly higher than the global average of 11% for female rangers. In marine conservation specifically, women make up only 1% of the workforce worldwide. Their growing presence in the field signals a shift in who participates in frontline environmental protection. Since 2022, rangers at the reserve have completed nearly 35,000 patrols. Their efforts contribute to Saudi Arabia's wider goal of protecting 30% of its land and marine territories by 2030.

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