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Red Sea Global completes Saudi's largest-ever red mangrove restoration effort

Developer has propagated and transplanted 5,000 seedlings

red sea global red mangrove restoration

Saudi Arabia's regenerative tourism developer Red Sea Global has completed the kingdom's largest-ever red mangrove restoration effort.

Advancing Saudi's leadership in coastal conservation and regenerative development, Red Sea Global has successfully propagated and transplanted more than 5,000 red mangrove seedlings within the Al Wajh lagoon, a highly biodiverse carbonate platform on the Red Sea coast.


Red mangroves play an essential role in supporting marine biodiversity, providing nursery habitats for fish and crustaceans, buffering coastlines, and storing carbon at high rates.

red sea global red mangrove restoration

Raed AlBasseet, group chief environment and sustainability officer at Red Sea Global, said "restoring red mangroves at this scale is a remarkable scientific achievement".

"This species has notoriously complex requirements, but plays a vitally important role in supporting and stabilizing local environments," he added.

"By restoring the Al Wajh population, we expect to deliver measurable environmental gains that benefit our communities, our biodiversity, and future generations."

"A remarkable scientific achievement"

Despite the red mangrove only thriving in precisely balanced saline and tidally stable environments, Red Sea Global achieved a 97 percent survival rate through its science-led restoration approach.

Rashid AlHatilah, group head of environmental sustainability at Red Sea Global, said: "The red mangrove is among the rarest species along the Red Sea.

"Our success at Al Wajh lagoon is both a national and regional breakthrough.

"We are only at the beginning of a much larger journey to restore and protect these vital ecosystems."

Red Sea mangroves

This initiative builds on Red Sea Global's wider mangrove restoration programme, which includes the successful transplantation of more than 3 million gray mangrove seedlings to date.

The Red Sea destination welcomed its first guests in 2023 and now has nine hotels open.

Red Sea Global's other development, Amaala, is on track to welcome its first guests this year.

Images courtesy of Red Sea Global