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Zaha Hadid Architects design a prismatic energy and environmental research campus, the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC), in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
KAPSARC is a non-profit institution founded by the Saudi Council of Ministers, in order for an international group of expert researchers to advance studies of domestic and global energy challenges and opportunities. ZHA created a 750,000 square foot structure to house these opportunities for researchers to explore the potential of effective and productive energy use.
With sustainability in mind, the campus is made into a honeycomb cellular structure with courtyards. ZHA worked with Arup to form buildings that “turn their back to the sun” in order to minimize heat and take advantage of the desert winds. The campus features five main facilities such as the Energy Knowledge Centre, the Energy Computer Centre, a Conference Centre with an exhibition hall and 300-seat auditorium, a Research L
KAPSARC workshop on Green Growth Pathways for Saudi Arabia held
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Research looks at boosting Saudi jobs in the private sector
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Saudi Arabia targets 1 million b/d domestic oil demand reduction
Saudi Arabia plans to reduce domestic consumption of liquid hydrocarbons by 1 million b/d for use “in a better way”, the kingdom’s Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said on March 16.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the kingdom the Gulf’s largest economy was consuming around 491,000 b/d of oil for industrial use and power generation during the height of its summer demand in 2019, according to previous S&P Global Platts Analytics estimates. The US Energy Information Administration had estimated the figure to be closer to 1 million b/d in 2015 at the peak of summer during a record year for demand.
Dozens of dolphins rescued at Ras Al-Shabaan in Saudi Arabia’s Umluj
What happened in Umluj would require investigation and research to establish the real reason why the dolphins were stranded, expert says
Updated 27 March 2021
March 26, 2021 23:39
Strong winds and tides caused the deaths of a number of dolphins in Ras Al-Shabaan region, 35 kilometers south of Umluj governorate, while dozens more were rescued and returned to their natural habitat in the Red Sea.
Members of the Saudi Border Guard and the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture, with a number of volunteers, participated in the rescue operation.
“A man from the village spotted the dolphins nearby and reported the incident to us, a group of 14 people. We rushed to the place right away,” said Mohammed Nami Al-Hamdi, one of the rescuers in Ras Al-Shabaan.