This is a temporary backup site for TRENDS MENA while our primary website is being restored following a regional disruption affecting Amazon Web Services cloud infrastructure in the GCC.

Search Site

ADNOC Distribution 2025 dividend $700m

The company had reported EBITDA of $1.17 bn in 2025.

Empower okays $119.1m H2 2025 dividend

The dividend is equivalent to 43.75% of paid-up capital.

Alujain widens 2025 loss

The increase in loss is due to impairment charges, weaker prices.

Masar 2025 net profit $262m

Higher land plot sales boost revenue and operating income.

Tasnee’s 2025 losses deepen

The petrochemicals' company's revenue also fell 17.7 percent.

Saudi could go carbon-neutral before 2060: Minister

  • The kingdom is promoting the circular carbon economy at the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh.
  • Saudi Arabia also has announced a $1 billion contribution to initiatives to fund the CCE and provide "clean" fuel for the world's poor.

Saudi Arabia could go carbon neutral before its 2060 target if technology evolves quickly enough, its energy minister said on Wednesday, days before the COP26 climate summit.
Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said new processes enabling the “circular carbon economy” — a concept where waste carbon is captured and repurposed — were key to the world’s top oil exporter achieving net zero.
The desert kingdom is heavily promoting the virtues of the circular carbon economy (CCE) at the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh, an elite business gathering dubbed “Davos in the desert”.
“CCE first and foremost depends on the evolution of technology,” the minister told the conference, describing 2060 as a “dynamic baseline”.
“Actually, if technology evolves even faster, we may not have to wait until 2060. It could bring it earlier.”
On Saturday, Saudi Arabia pledged to go carbon neutral by 2060. Two days later it announced a billion-dollar contribution to initiatives to fund the circular carbon economy and provide “clean” fuel for the world’s poor.
The United Nations says more than 130 countries have set or are considering a target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by mid-century, an objective it says is “imperative” to safeguard a liveable climate.
World leaders will gather in Glasgow from Sunday for the UN’s COP26, a historic summit billed as humanity’s “last best chance” to get devastating climate change under control.
“The most daunting challenge that we are all faced with is climate change,” the energy minister said, before adding that he did not expect any drop in demand for oil.
“I still argue it would not happen,” he said.
Oil production remains the fundamental plank of Saudi energy policy. This month, state-owned giant Saudi Aramco said it planned to raise production by a million barrels a day by 2027.