Turning Trash into Treasure: Saudi Startups Revolutionize Waste and Recycling

Jan 14, 2026

Ghada Ismail

 

For decades, waste in Saudi Arabia followed a familiar and largely unquestioned trajectory: collect, discard, and move on. Landfills expanded quietly beyond city edges, recycling efforts remained limited and fragmented, and waste was viewed almost exclusively as an operational burden rather than a recoverable resource. This approach, however, is no longer viable, either environmentally, economically, or socially.

As the Kingdom accelerates its Vision 2030 agenda, waste is being reframed as part of a broader economic opportunity. From food scraps and plastics to construction debris and industrial byproducts, materials once destined for landfill are now being reconsidered as inputs for new value chains. This shift sits at the core of the circular economy, a model that emphasizes reuse, recycling, and resource efficiency over extraction and disposal.

Driving this transition is a growing wave of Saudi startups applying technology to modernize waste management and recycling. Working alongside national entities and government-backed initiatives, these companies are reshaping how waste is collected, sorted, processed, and reintegrated into the economy. What is emerging is not simply a cleaner system, but a sustainability-driven sector aligned with Saudi Arabia’s long-term development goals.

 

Why Recycling Matters in Saudi Arabia: Cultural and Ethical Context

Saudi Arabia’s increasing focus on recycling is shaped by more than policy frameworks and economic targets. It is also influenced by long-standing cultural and ethical principles that emphasize responsibility, balance, and responsible resource management.

Within the Kingdom’s social fabric, moderation in consumption and avoidance of excess have traditionally been valued. These ideas, which are reflected in both cultural norms and religious teachings, reinforce the notion that resources should be used thoughtfully rather than wasted. In this context, recycling and circular economy practices resonate as practical extensions of deeply embedded values rather than imported sustainability concepts.

By extending the lifecycle of materials, reducing unnecessary consumption, and minimizing environmental harm, circular practices align naturally with a broader sense of accountability toward future generations. This perspective helps explain why sustainability initiatives increasingly gain public acceptance in Saudi Arabia. Recycling is not framed solely as an environmental obligation, but as a logical, responsible approach to managing growth and development in a resource-constrained world.

 

Saudi Arabia’s Circular Economy Ambition

Saudi Arabia generates millions of tons of waste each year, much of which has historically been sent to landfills. Recognizing the environmental impact and missed economic potential of this model, the government has placed waste diversion and recycling at the center of its Vision 2030 and Saudi Green Initiative objectives.

The ambition is clear: reduce landfill dependency, build advanced recycling infrastructure, and convert waste streams into sources of economic value. This includes municipal solid waste, construction and demolition materials, food waste, plastics, metals, and electronic waste.

 

At the forefront of Saudi Arabia’s effort to modernize and professionalize waste management is the National Center for Waste Management — commonly known by its acronym MWAN. Established by a Council of Ministers’ decree, MWAN serves as the Kingdom’s central regulatory authority for waste management, charged with setting strategy, regulating activities, and advancing the principles of a circular economy across the sector.

MWAN is responsible for organizing and supervising all stages of the waste lifecycle — including import, export, collection, transport, sorting, processing, storage, and the safe disposal of waste — with environmental protection and public health as guiding priorities. To drive long‑term transformation, the center issues licenses and permits to service providers and facilities, ensuring that companies operate in compliance with national standards and best practices.

A key focus for MWAN is creating an enabling environment for private investment and innovation. The center actively encourages investment in waste management systems — from recycling plants to advanced processing technologies — as a route to financial sustainability and value creation within the circular economy. Through strategic planning, research support, and training programs, it also works to build technical capability and foster partnerships with universities, research institutions, and international stakeholders.

Central to MWAN’s work is the National Waste Management Strategy, a comprehensive roadmap aimed at dramatically reducing landfill dependency, maximizing material recovery, and integrating circular economy principles into national practice. Under this strategy, the center seeks to divert the vast majority of waste from landfills through recycling, composting, and other value‑retentive pathways.

 

In doing so, MWAN plays a pivotal role not only in regulating the sector but in setting the conditions for innovative startups, investors, and service providers to thrive within a structured, forward‑looking framework that aligns with Saudi Arabia’s environmental and economic objectives.

 

National Champions Driving Scale:

Saudi Investment Recycling Company (SIRC)

One of the most influential players in Saudi Arabia’s circular economy is the Saudi Investment Recycling Company (SIRC), a subsidiary of the Public Investment Fund. Established to lead the development of the Kingdom’s waste and recycling sector, SIRC operates across multiple waste streams through specialized subsidiaries.

Its activities span municipal waste, construction and demolition debris, industrial waste, metals, and hazardous materials. Beyond collection, SIRC’s mandate is to build an integrated recycling ecosystem capable of converting waste into reusable materials, energy, and industrial inputs.

Through investments in large-scale recycling plants, advanced sorting technologies, and waste-to-value infrastructure, SIRC provides the national backbone required for a functional circular economy. Just as importantly, it creates structured pathways for startups to integrate into larger value chains rather than operating in isolation.

 

Startups Turning Waste into Opportunity

While national entities deliver scale and infrastructure, Saudi startups bring innovation, speed, and technical specialization to specific waste challenges.

Lesser for Sustainability Solutions

Lesser for Sustainability Solutions represents a new generation of Saudi startups embedding circular economy principles into operational reality. The company develops sustainability-driven solutions that help organizations reduce waste, improve resource efficiency, and adopt smarter environmental practices.

By leveraging data and system-based approaches, Lesser focuses on transforming waste streams into measurable environmental and economic outcomes. Its work reflects a broader shift within the startup ecosystem, where sustainability is increasingly treated as a core business function supported by technology, rather than a peripheral branding exercise.

 

Tadweer Saudi: Tackling Food Waste

Food waste remains one of the most under-addressed challenges in Saudi Arabia’s waste landscape, despite its high environmental and economic cost. Tadweer Saudi is tackling this issue by focusing specifically on organic waste recycling.

The startup collects food waste from retailers, hospitality venues, and commercial outlets, converting it into organic compost and fertilizers. By closing the loop between consumption and agriculture, Tadweer demonstrates how biological waste can be reintegrated into productive cycles instead of decomposing in landfills.

 

Recyclee: Tech-Driven Waste Management

Recyclee represents one of Saudi Arabia’s emerging tech‑driven waste management startups. The company leverages digital tools — including data analytics, IoT, and platform‑based waste tracking — to help businesses simplify waste collection, enhance sorting processes, and gain real‑time visibility into waste streams. 

By applying technology to traditional waste workflows, Recyclee aims to modernize operations, reduce logistical complexity, and support greater efficiency across collection and recycling processes. As Saudi cities expand and waste volumes grow, data‑enabled platforms like Recyclee are part of a broader trend toward integrating technology into waste management to help scale circular economy initiatives.

 

Technology as the Enabler

Across Saudi Arabia’s recycling ecosystem, technology is emerging as the central enabler of scale and efficiency. Digital platforms, analytics, smart collection systems, and automation are helping shift waste management away from manual, fragmented operations toward integrated, data-informed systems.

Technology enables more accurate tracking of waste flows and recycling rates, improved sorting and material recovery, optimized collection routes, and greater transparency across the value chain. For startups, this lowers barriers to entry and accelerates scaling. For national entities, it provides the data needed to measure impact and guide policy.

 

Challenges Still Ahead

Despite meaningful progress, challenges remain. Recycling infrastructure is uneven across regions, public participation in waste sorting is still developing, and scaling capital-intensive facilities requires long-term investment and confidence.

Addressing these gaps will require sustained collaboration between government entities, private investors, startups, and the public. Education, incentives, and regulatory clarity will be just as critical as technology in shaping the sector’s next phase.

 

From Waste to Value

As Saudi Arabia accelerates its journey toward a waste economy, the convergence of policy, technology, and entrepreneurial innovation is redefining what waste means. No longer merely a byproduct to be discarded, waste is being transformed into a resource; a source of economic value, industrial input, and environmental benefit.

What begins with recycling bins and digital platforms has the potential to reshape supply chains, industrial production, and consumer behavior across the Kingdom. If technology, regulation, and societal values continue to align, Saudi Arabia has an opportunity not merely to manage waste more efficiently but to redefine waste itself, transforming it into a long-term engine of economic value, environmental responsibility, and sustainable growth.

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Smart solutions, smarter facilities: Saudi sports sector enters AI era

Noha Gad

 

Transforming Saudi Arabia into a global sports powerhouse is one of the key objectives of Vision 2030. The Kingdom is moving steadily towards this goal by investing heavily in leagues, mega-events, and infrastructure, such as smart stadiums, all supercharged by leading-edge artificial intelligence (AI). Between 2020 and the first quarter (Q1) of 2025, Saudi entities injected investments worth SAR $7 billion across global and local sports assets, according to the ‘Saudi Arabia Sports Business & Tech Report 2025.’ In 2024, the Saudi sports market was valued at $8.4 billion, the report showed, anticipating the market to hit $22.5 billion by 2030. 

Regarding infrastructure development, the Kingdom is establishing smart stadiums, prioritizing renovations, smart features, and sustainable designs. Smart or digital stadiums in Saudi Arabia are advanced, technology-driven sports venues designed to create sustainable, high-performance, and immersive entertainment spaces for key sports events, notably the FIFA World Cup 2034.

These stadiums are not just structures for sports but integrated digital ecosystems featuring AI-powered operations, IoT sensors, high-speed 5G connectivity, and sustainable, energy-efficient designs.

The Kingdom’s innovative, robust, and state-of-the-art stadium strategy aims to offer fans a world-class match day experience. It comprises 15 proposed stadiums across five diverse host cities, including NEOM Stadium, the 46,000-seat arena set to be built 350 meters above ground inside "The Line" in NEOM; King Salman International Stadium, Saudi Arabia’s largest stadium with a capacity of 92,000 fans; Aramco Stadium, the 800,000 square meters facility that will catalyze health and wellness programs, featuring cutting-edge technology and an integrated cooling system; and Qiddiya Coast Stadium, the multi-purpose entertainment complex planned to be completed in 2032.

A significant milestone in advancing the Saudi sports sector is HUMAIN’s recent acquisition of ai.io, a London-headquartered artificial intelligence and sports technology company, to launch HUMAIN Sport to expand access to sport and improve outcomes at every level, from grassroots participation to elite performance. Combining the capabilities of HUMAIN and ai.io, the new joint venture will deliver integrated AI platforms designed to support the Saudi sports ecosystem. These solutions will enable broader participation in sport, data-driven athlete development, enhanced performance analysis, intelligent facilities, and new forms of digital and fan engagement.

Through this acquisition, HUMAIN will leverage ai.io’s existing products, technical expertise, and global sports relationships to accelerate international expansion, while ai.io will benefit from HUMAIN’s AI infrastructure, platforms, strategic partnerships, and commercial scale to support the delivery of AI-powered sports solutions.

This transaction marks a game-changer, enabling everything from grassroots athlete discovery, where aiScout has already generated over 750 professional trials, to elite performance analytics that track movements from any smartphone video. 

 

Key features and technologies in smart facilities

The integration of emerging technologies promises not just smarter training and fan experiences but a blueprint for AI-driven sports excellence that could redefine global competitions. For instance, AI and data analytics can be used for predictive maintenance, optimizing crowd management, and personalizing fan experience. Meanwhile, IoT sensors are deployed to monitor everything in the facility, from seat occupancy and parking to environmental conditions, ultimately improving overall operational efficiency.

For fan engagement, advanced applications, in-seat ordering, interactive displays, and 5G connectivity are standard in smart facilities, providing a 360-degree experience. Additionally, integrated command and control centers harness AI, facial recognition, and anti-drone technologies to enhance safety.

Moreover, smart sports facilities are designed for high energy efficiency, featuring smart HVAC systems, LED lighting that adjusts to crowd density, and water-efficient systems.

 

Revolutionizing talent scouting 

At the heart of HUMAIN Sport's transformative potential lies aiScout, ai.io's flagship mobile application that is revolutionizing talent identification from a labor-intensive, geographically limited process to a scalable, inclusive revolution accessible to anyone with a smartphone. By enabling aspiring athletes to record and upload simple drills, such as sprints, agility tests, or sport-specific skills, the application employs advanced computer vision and machine learning algorithms to deliver instant, objective performance metrics comparable to professional-grade assessments. 

This technology eliminates the need for costly equipment or on-site scouts, generating over 750 professional trials worldwide to date and proving its efficacy in talent discovery. Beyond discovery, aiScout's data-driven insights provide coaches with predictive analytics, ranking prospects not just on raw athleticism but on trainable traits like decision-making under fatigue, customizable to Saudi sports priorities. 

HUMAIN's integration amplifies this through Arabic-language interfaces powered by ALLaM large language models, ensuring cultural relevance and reducing barriers for non-English speakers. Eventually, the platform is democratizing opportunities, increasing participation of underrepresented regions, and positioning Saudi Arabia as a blueprint for equitable, AI-fueled sports development on the global stage.

 

Other applications

HUMAIN Sport embeds AI across the entire sports ecosystem to enhance coaching, strategy, emerging formats like esports, and athlete wellness in ways tailored to Vision 2030 goals. In coaching and tactical preparation, ai.io's aiLab platform integrates with HUMAIN's infrastructure to simulate match scenarios, analyze opponent patterns, and refine VAR decisions with predictive accuracy.

The venture pioneers AI in esports and digital leagues, leveraging real-time AI moderation, skill-matching algorithms, and AR overlays to increase participation. Meanwhile, health and wellness applications leverage wearables and AI chatbots to deliver personalized nutrition plans, monitor mental health, and support recovery protocols.

By integrating ai.io's motion tech with HUMAIN's scale, Saudi Arabia is not just adopting AI; it is exporting a holistic model that amplifies performance, engagement, and sustainability, setting a global standard for sports evolution.

While AI innovations promise unprecedented advancements, they also introduce critical challenges that demand robust ethical frameworks to ensure equitable and sustainable integration into Saudi Arabia's sports landscape. Foremost among these is data privacy, governed by the Kingdom's Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL). AI bias poses another hurdle, as algorithms trained on historical data may inadvertently favor urban, male athletes over rural or female talents. Over-reliance on AI threatens the human essence of sports, from coaches' intuition to the thrill of unscripted plays, prompting federations to adopt hybrid models in which tech informs but does not make decisions.

Transforming Saudi Arabia into a global sports powerhouse stands as a cornerstone of Vision 2030, with the Kingdom advancing through massive investments in leagues, mega-events, and cutting-edge infrastructure.

These developments signal a broader AI revolution in sports, from talent discovery and performance analytics to immersive fan experiences and sustainable operations, positioning Saudi Arabia to lead this transformation. Smart stadiums exemplify this shift, evolving into AI-powered digital ecosystems with IoT sensors, 5G connectivity, and energy-efficient designs that redefine match-day immersion.

Scaling After the Exit: Why Saudi Arabia Is Central to AlgoDriven’s Next Chapter

Kholoud Hussein 

 

When a UAE-born startup secures an eight-figure, all-cash acquisition from a San Francisco investor backed by one of America’s wealthiest business dynasties, it signals more than commercial success. It signals maturity in the region’s technology ecosystem.

That is precisely the case with AlgoDriven, the automotive AI data platform acquired by Emergence, whose backer, The Pritzker Organization, manages the business interests of the Pritzker family, known globally for building the Hyatt Hotels Corporation brand.

Operating in the $1.6 trillion global used car market, AlgoDriven analyzes over $25 billion worth of vehicles annually across 1,000 dealerships in 10 countries. It is also the market leader in Australia, where one in three used cars sold is processed through its technology. But the next phase of growth may be even more significant — particularly in Saudi Arabia.

As the Kingdom accelerates automotive sector digitization under Vision 2030, and as dealership groups consolidate and modernize operations, demand for transparent, AI-powered pricing infrastructure is rising sharply. For investors, the question is no longer whether the Gulf can produce scalable tech exits. It is whether companies like AlgoDriven can turn regional dominance into global category leadership — with Saudi Arabia as a strategic growth engine.

In an exclusive interview with Sharikat Mubasher, CEO Glenn Harwood discusses valuation drivers, GCC capital deployment, expansion plans in the Kingdom, and how the company plans to leverage new ownership to deepen its AI capabilities and geographic footprint.

AlgoDriven has been acquired in an eight-figure, all-cash deal by Emergence. From an investor perspective, what were the primary value drivers behind the transaction — revenue growth, recurring contracts, proprietary datasets, or market dominance?

As a starting spot, financial metrics drove value, such as revenue, revenue growth, and profitability.  Of course, there is nuance to all these metrics, and that is where things like recurring contracts, churn, team, proprietary data sets, and product quality all factor in.

Revenue has increased fivefold since your 2021 Series A. How sustainable is that growth trajectory, and what does your forward revenue visibility look like across the GCC?

Demand is still strong for our products, and as we continue to roll out more AI-driven offerings, we see that continuing.  On top of that, many of the GCC markets are growing – population is increasing, GDP growth is strong, and people continue to buy more and more cars.  While that remains the case, we expect strong revenue growth to continue.

How strategically important is Saudi Arabia within your GCC footprint, and what proportion of your future regional investment will be directed toward KSA?

KSA is very important within both our existing footprint and our growth plans.  We’ve seen significant changes in the new and used car markets in the Kingdom over the past few years, and we expect this to continue in the coming years.  We’re continuing to customise and adapt our product to suit that market, and as well as having more on the ground support for our customers their too.

What concrete expansion plans do you have for Saudi Arabia over the next 24–36 months, in terms of headcount, partnerships with major dealership groups, or product localization?

We already have a strong footprint in KSA and a solid sales pipeline of dealership groups looking to adopt our products.  We’re rolling out new features around vehicle pricing specific to the KSA market, as well as more integrations to have a deeper understanding of vehicle history in the Kingdom.  We expect our presence there to continue to grow.

Saudi Arabia is undergoing a rapid automotive sector transformation under Vision 2030. How large do you estimate the addressable market for AI-powered used car analytics in the Kingdom?

The numbers we’ve seen suggest the car sales market in the Kingdom could grow by up to another 50% by 2030 for where it is now. On top of that, the official dealers are becoming increasingly focused on the used car sector.  Based on these two factors, we anticipate exponential growth in demand for our AI products to help drive this adoption.

You analyze more than $25 billion worth of used vehicles annually. How does deeper penetration in the Saudi market enhance your data advantage and strengthen barriers to entry?

There is a real network effect from using our product. The more cars we value, the more data we accumulate, and the more accurate our valuations become.  Car dealers can also share and auction cars between them on our platform – the more dealers who adopt our solution in Saudi makes the more valuable the platform becomes for all of them.

Your early investors, including Global Ventures, Oman Technology Fund, and Oraseya Capital, have now achieved a full cash exit. What signal does this send about liquidity and exit maturity in the GCC startup ecosystem?

I think it is great to see more exits in the region, particularly from US private equity firms.  For many startups, private equity is a great opportunity to exit and provide liquidity to early investors.   I believe this is an important trend for US PE firms to look internationally for targets, especially in the region.

Under the backing of The Pritzker Organization, how do you see AlgoDriven evolving — remaining a pure data platform, or expanding into broader automotive fintech infrastructure across Saudi Arabia and the wider region?

The focus over the next few years is on doing more of what we’re already great at – doubling down on our software offerings for car dealers. Additionally, we intend to leverage their existing network to continue to grow internationally.

 

 

 

Run Rate: The Growth Metric Every Startup Lives By

Kholoud Hussein 

 

In startup boardrooms, few numbers are quoted as frequently as run rate. It appears in investor decks, funding announcements, and growth projections. It can signal momentum or mask volatility. Yet despite its popularity, the run rate is often misunderstood.

At its core, run rate is a projection. It takes a company’s current revenue performance over a short period — typically a month or a quarter — and extrapolates it over a full year. If a startup generates $500,000 in revenue in one month, its annual run rate would be $6 million. The assumption is simple: if performance continues at the current pace, that is the revenue the company would generate over 12 months.

The appeal lies in its clarity. Run rate offers a fast snapshot of scale. For high-growth startups, particularly those in SaaS, fintech, or marketplace models, it provides a forward-looking signal that annual historical revenue cannot yet show.

But run rate is not the same as annual revenue. It is a forecast based on present conditions. And those conditions can change quickly.

Why Run Rate Became a Startup Staple

In early-stage companies, historical financial data is limited. A startup may have been generating meaningful revenue for only a few months. Investors evaluating growth potential need a metric that reflects the current trajectory rather than incomplete annual statements.

Run rate fills that gap.

For subscription-based businesses, especially SaaS startups with recurring revenue models, run rate can be particularly meaningful. Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) multiplied by 12 creates an Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) run rate, offering investors a clean benchmark to compare companies at similar stages.

This comparability is one reason the run rate has become embedded in venture capital conversations. It creates a common language.

The Strategic Value of Run Rate for Startups

Beyond investor communication, run rate has operational value.

First, it forces discipline around revenue tracking. Startups that monitor run rate monthly develop a sharper understanding of sales velocity, churn, and pricing impact. If MRR increases steadily, leadership gains confidence in scaling marketing spend or expanding headcount. If it stagnates, corrective action can be taken quickly.

Second, run rate influences valuation. Many venture-backed startups are valued as a multiple of revenue, particularly ARR. A company with a $10 million run rate may command a significantly higher valuation than one at $5 million, even if both are unprofitable. In growth markets, revenue scale often outweighs short-term earnings.

Third, run rate helps in financial planning. Forecasting hiring, product development, and geographic expansion depends on predictable revenue streams. While not a guarantee, a stable run rate provides a framework for modeling cash flow scenarios.

The Risk of Misinterpretation

Despite its usefulness, run rate can be misleading when used without context.

A strong single month can inflate projections. A seasonal spike may not repeat. A one-time enterprise deal can distort averages. For startups in volatile sectors, the run rate may exaggerate stability.

This is why experienced investors look beyond the headline number. They examine revenue consistency, customer retention rates, and growth sustainability. A $12 million run rate built on stable subscriptions carries more weight than the same figure driven by sporadic transactions.

Run rate also does not account for costs. A company can show impressive revenue momentum while burning cash at an unsustainable rate. For startups, growth without efficiency can shorten the runway rather than extend it.

When Run Rate Is Most Meaningful

Run rate is most reliable when revenue is recurring, and churn is low. SaaS companies, subscription platforms, and fintech service providers benefit most from this metric. In these models, predictable cash flow strengthens the accuracy of annualized projections.

Marketplace startups can also use run rate effectively, particularly when transaction volumes show consistent upward trends. However, in cyclical industries, caution is warranted.

A Tool, Not a Guarantee

For founders, run rate should be treated as a strategic tool rather than a marketing headline.

It can help align teams around growth targets. It can signal readiness for funding rounds. It can support expansion planning. But it should always be paired with deeper metrics: gross margins, customer acquisition cost, lifetime value, and churn.

In disciplined startups, run rate becomes part of a broader financial narrative. It shows trajectory, not destiny.

To conclude, run rate endures because it answers a fundamental startup question: if we continue at this pace, how big can we become?

It offers clarity in early growth stages when historical data is thin. It translates monthly momentum into an annual scale. And in capital markets that reward speed and traction, that translation matters.

Yet the smartest founders understand its limits. Run rate reflects today’s performance extrapolated into tomorrow. It assumes continuity in a business environment defined by uncertainty.

Used wisely, run rate is a signal of momentum. Used carelessly, it becomes a projection detached from operational reality.

For startups navigating growth, the difference between those two outcomes can be decisive.

 

AI for Senior Citizens in Saudi Arabia

Ghada Ismail

 

Saudi Arabia is quietly entering a new demographic chapter. While the Kingdom remains widely known for its youthful majority—with more than 70 % of citizens under the age of 35—another segment of the population is steadily expanding: older adults. According to the General Authority for Statistics (GASTAT), about 1.7 million people aged 60 and above now live in the Kingdom, representing roughly 4.8 % of the total population in 2025. 

This shift is subtle compared with global aging trends but significant enough to influence how healthcare, social services, and digital technologies are designed and delivered. The World Health Organization and Saudi health authorities define the elderly as individuals aged 60 years or above, a demographic that is expected to grow in the decades ahead amid rising life expectancy and improvements in healthcare access. 

Across homes, clinics, and digital platforms, artificial intelligence (AI) is beginning to play a meaningful role in enhancing seniors’ quality of life, helping them remain independent, connected, safe, and engaged in ways that align with Saudi cultural values and Vision 2030 priorities.

 

Aging and Its Challenges

Aging often brings layered challenges. Chronic disease management, reduced mobility, memory changes, and social isolation can gradually erode independence. Traditional care systems, heavily reliant on family or institutional support, are increasingly stretched amid smaller household sizes and urban lifestyle shifts. In Saudi Arabia, these concerns are compounded by a healthcare environment preparing for the future dynamics of a longevity economy.

Yet many older Saudis are actively engaged both socially and digitally. GASTAT’s 2025 Elderly Statistics Bulletin shows that over 60 % of elderly Saudis participate actively in social events, with 63.4 % of men and 57.3 % of women reporting regular activity. Additionally, high rates of digital engagement—where about 87 % of elderly men and 78 % of elderly women use smartphones or computers—reflect a population already comfortable with basic technology. 

 

Wearables: Personalized, Continuous Support

One of the most visible intersections of AI and elder care is through wearables, smart devices capable of continuous monitoring and predictive analysis. These devices use machine learning to track vital signs such as heart rate, movement, sleep patterns, and irregular activity. The real value lies in algorithms that can detect deviations from personal norms and alert caregivers or family members before small issues become emergencies.

A notable Saudi startup leading innovation in this space is Me’kaaz, which has developed AI-enabled wearable solutions tailored to senior care. Rather than serving merely as emergency alerts, Me’kaaz’s technology focuses on early detection and prevention. It captures subtle changes in activity or routines that may signal emerging health problems—whether related to mobility, cardiovascular health, or daily function—helping families and clinicians intervene proactively.

Importantly, these technologies are linguistically and culturally localized for Saudi users. AI interfaces support the Arabic language and sensory cues that feel natural and respectful, ensuring seniors can interact comfortably with devices. This cultural resonance is crucial in a society that emphasizes family involvement and dignity in elder care.

 

AI Companions and Social Connectivity

Physical health is part of the picture, but emotional well-being is equally important. Loneliness and social isolation have been linked globally to depression and cognitive decline, particularly among seniors living alone or with limited mobility.

AI-powered digital companions are entering this space as well. These systems combine conversational capability with reminders, mental exercises, and engagement tools designed to keep elderly users mentally stimulated and socially connected. Me’kaaz and other innovators are exploring how these companions can deliver culturally relevant content, including religious and community-oriented interactions, enriching everyday life for seniors who may spend long hours alone.

Such AI companions are not a replacement for human interaction, but a supplemental presence, especially valuable for those whose families live at a distance or have demanding work schedules.

 

Training for an AI-Enabled Life

Technology adoption does not begin with advanced gadgets; it begins with confidence. Recognizing this, national and private initiatives in Saudi Arabia are increasingly focusing on digital literacy for older adults.

A notable example is the collaboration between Huawei Technologies and stc Group, which launched a senior-focused training program under Huawei’s global “Education for All” initiative. The program’s SmartTruck serves as a mobile digital classroom, traveling across regions of the Kingdom to deliver free, hands-on training for people aged 50 and above.

These workshops cover practical digital skills: using smartphones, accessing online services, understanding digital safety and fraud protection, and navigating AI-enabled tools. In its early phase, the initiative trained more than 2,000 seniors through over 150 workshops, underscoring strong enthusiasm among older adults for digital skill-building when instruction is accessible and age-appropriate.

While these sessions don’t teach deep AI theory, they build foundational confidence. For seniors, learning to interact safely with digital systems reduces anxiety, increases participation, and lays the groundwork for more sophisticated AI engagement, whether through telemedicine, smart wearables, or digital communities.

 

AI in Healthcare Systems

AI’s role is expanding beyond the home into broader healthcare delivery. Hospitals and clinics across the Kingdom are using AI tools for diagnostics, predictive analytics, and remote monitoring—beneficial for senior patients managing chronic conditions.

AI can help clinicians identify high-risk patients sooner, personalize treatment plans, and reduce unnecessary hospital visits. For seniors, this means more tailored care with less physical strain, particularly for those managing conditions like diabetes, hypertension, or cardiovascular issues.

Government entities such as the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority are central in shaping ethical AI deployment across sectors, including healthcare. Professional bodies like the Saudi Association for AI and Healthcare are also contributing research and education frameworks to align AI adoption with clinical standards and ethical guidelines.

 

Cultural and Ethical Dimensions

Despite the promise, challenges persist. Not all seniors have equal access to smartphones, high-speed internet, or ongoing support, particularly in rural areas. Digital inequality remains a real barrier to the full potential of AI adoption.

Privacy concerns also loom large. AI elder-care systems rely on sensitive personal data—from biometric readings to behavior patterns—making data protection and transparency essential. Ensuring that seniors understand how their data is used and protected is particularly important in a society where privacy and family reputation are highly valued.

Cultural compatibility remains key as well. AI systems must respect Saudi social norms, language nuances, and religious practices. Solutions that feel foreign or disconnected from daily life are unlikely to gain traction, regardless of their technical sophistication.

 

Looking Ahead

Saudi Arabia’s broader AI ecosystem—strengthened by national strategic investments, research institutes, and innovation incentives—provides fertile ground for senior-focused technologies. Future developments are likely to include more advanced predictive care models, AI-assisted cognitive health tools, and deeper integration between home-based systems and national healthcare platforms.

Demographic data indicate that the proportion of older adults in Saudi Arabia is modest but growing. According to GASTAT’s 2025 Elderly Statistics Bulletin, people aged 60 and above currently represent about 4.8 % of the population, with men slightly outnumbering women in this age group. While still a small share, demographic trends suggest this segment will expand in the coming decades as life expectancy rises and fertility rates decline, reflecting broader global aging patterns. This gradual increase highlights the need for proactive planning, innovative care models, and policies that embrace technology while maintaining human dignity and social inclusion.

 

Embracing Aging with Intelligence

AI for senior citizens in Saudi Arabia is no longer a theoretical concept; it is taking shape now through wearable devices, digital engagement programs, and healthcare innovations that respect cultural values. These technologies complement family care, empower seniors to stay connected, and enhance their ability to live independent, fulfilled lives longer.

By investing in localized tech solutions, digital literacy training, and ethical AI frameworks, Saudi Arabia is fostering an environment where aging with intelligence and intention is possible. For the Kingdom’s older adults, this means accessing tools that enrich daily life—while retaining the autonomy, dignity, and social bonds that define Saudi culture.

How SPACs revolutionize paths to public markets

Noha Gad

 

The process of taking a company public traditionally involved significant challenges, including regulatory requirements, market volatility, and high costs. Initial public offerings (IPOs) have long served as the primary method, enabling companies to achieve substantial growth. However, the rapid rise of startups in sectors such as fintech, artificial intelligence (AI), and sustainable technology increased demand for more efficient routes to capital markets. Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs) address this need.

With no commercial operations, a SPAC is essentially a shell company established to acquire companies by purchasing their shares. They are formed specifically to raise capital through an IPO, which can be used to acquire or merge with another private operating company. This approach enables private companies to become publicly traded in a matter of months rather than years, without the full burdens of a conventional IPO.

How do SPACs work?

A SPAC is created by experienced investors, known as sponsors, with the sole purpose of acquiring or merging with an unidentified private business. Unlike traditional IPOs, where a company directly lists its shares, a SPAC raises capital first and identifies a target later. This structure provides a streamlined path to public markets. 

The SPAC transaction process encompasses several key stages:

  • Formation and IPO. Sponsors form a team of industry experts and file for an IPO, then investors purchase units, typically comprising one share of common stock and a fraction of a warrant. Proceeds from the IPO are placed in a trust account to earn interest.
  • Finding a target. The SPAC has 18 to 24 months to find and negotiate a merger with a private company. During this period, the SPAC remains listed on an exchange, offering its shares for trading.
  • Merger announcement. After identifying the target, the SPAC announces the proposed deal and takes shareholders’ votes on the transaction.
  • De-SPAC and public listing: If approved, the merger will be completed, and the target emerges as a public company under a new ticker symbol.

 

Advantages of SPACs 

SPACs offer several benefits over traditional IPOs, providing efficiency and access for private companies seeking capital and investors pursuing opportunities. Key advantages are:

  • Fast access to public markets. The process usually takes 3 to 6 months from merger announcement to completion, compared to more than 12 months for a standard IPO.
  • Price stability: The SPAC sets a fixed share price during its IPO, reducing exposure to pricing volatility common in direct listings.
  • Expert guidance: Sponsors, often executives or investors with proven track records, offer strategic advice, networks, and credibility. 
  • Attractiveness in emerging markets: This model can support fintech and tech startups in emerging markets, providing liquidity without full IPO infrastructure.

While SPACs offer distinct advantages, most notably speed and efficiency, they also carry specific risks for investors and target companies. These include share dilution, inconsistent post-merger performance, potential conflicts among sponsors, and high redemption rates.

In essence, SPACs present a compelling alternative to traditional IPOs as they provide faster access to public markets and engage experienced sponsors. However, their success ultimately depends on careful evaluation at every stage. Ongoing regulatory developments continue to strengthen transparency and investor protections, contributing to a more stable environment. For investors, the key is to study sponsor track records, merger terms, and the realism of financial projections. Target companies, in turn, must ensure alignment with long-term strategic goals to mitigate potential drawbacks. As the SPAC model evolves alongside moderating deal volumes, it remains a relevant pathway for growth-oriented companies seeking to enter public markets.