Scientists Reveal Saudi Arabia Desert Is NOT What We Thought

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  • čas přidán 27. 01. 2023
  • With a geographical area of 2.14 million square kilometers, Saudi Arabia is the 14th biggest nation in the world and is more than one-fifth the size of America. This makes it nearly as big as Western Europe. The nation is well-known for its harsh climate and little rainfall. The region has been far from green due to its composition of largely desert and somewhat dry lands. An astonishing phenomenon, however, is now taking place in the desert. Surprisingly, the desert is fast transforming into rich farmlands, a phenomenon that even experts find perplexing.
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @uwpartnersUK
    @uwpartnersUK Před rokem +4

    1400 years ago prophet mohammed (pbuh) predicted one of the signs of the end of the world would be that Saudi will return to country with Rivers & Meadows.

  • @nml4546
    @nml4546 Před rokem +70

    I'm not a geologist, but don't aquifers eventually dry up if keep pumping out the water. My understanding is that they get replenished with water from above, usually rain, a lot of it.

    • @karlrovey
      @karlrovey Před rokem +3

      That's why they're using recycled water and desalination. The plants also help pull moisture from the air.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem +4

      @@karlrovey Nothing like enough and extremely expensive and polluting. The CO2 released through burning the oil needed to keep it going just contributes to global warming, a downward spiral.

    • @pvajit1109
      @pvajit1109 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Australia should study this. They have vast areas that could be retrieved from desert, revived, and afforested changing lives of its population.

    • @hornerfarah2282
      @hornerfarah2282 Před 10 měsíci +5

      ​@@rogerphelps9939 well Saudi Arabia is not even in the top 10 countries who contribute to global warming. The western countries and China alone contribute close to 70% of the global warming.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@hornerfarah2282 True but it produces a lot of the stuff that causes global warming.

  • @Globodyne
    @Globodyne Před 9 měsíci +122

    I spent the whole video wondering where they got this water to grow crops from, and it just turns out "oh we took it from an aquifer that will never replenish itself because its a desert where it doesn't rain". Yes that is really sustainable.

    • @sampowell6240
      @sampowell6240 Před 9 měsíci +7

      Quite ironic. A future built on sand

    • @charlespartrick528
      @charlespartrick528 Před 9 měsíci +6

      The hubris of the human species is immeasurable. Don't build large cities or development in deserts. Common sense should tell you that.

    • @000Dragon50000
      @000Dragon50000 Před 9 měsíci +3

      They are investing in more renewable methods of obtaining water like desalination, but not NEARLY at the rate they need to because the Saudi royal family would rather spend their money on huge construction projects that definitely aren't compensating for anything /s

    • @andrewsmith8729
      @andrewsmith8729 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I believe we could put water back into aquifers. Imagine a funnel. If the weight of water in the funnel is greater than the pressure in the aquifer.... it might push the water through the spout and back into the ground.. Use the desalinated water.
      Or we create large dams with a series of bore holes in the lowest point. What we would need to do is figure out how to prevent these bore holes from silting up and a way to filter the flood water at the same time.
      If the holes were deep enough and the pressure created by the weight of water in the dam is greater than in the aquifer, the flood water could be used to refill the aquifers.
      I think we are creative enough to figure out how to create a serviceable enclosure around a bore hole under water. Two pipes, One rotates around the other. Open it allows water to filter into the inner created by the other. Closed, it seals the inner and allows the inner to be drained so the filters can be removed and serviced.

    • @ordinaryman1904
      @ordinaryman1904 Před 9 měsíci +5

      They’re feeding their dairy cows with alfalfa grown in Arizona.
      Another desert farming operation using irreplaceable ground water.

  • @gauravnmathur
    @gauravnmathur Před rokem +103

    The aquifers are drying up. The video omits that part and many of those farms have closed down. Also desalination is not energy efficient, even for an oil rich country. There just isn't enough water for all this agriculture. That is why Saudi Arabia is buying arable land in other countries to support farming and maintain its food security.

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Před rokem +4

      I would create large bassins in the desert, pump water from the ocean and let the water evaporate. Desalination is way too expensive to apply on a really large scale. It's techno babble.

    • @HenriBourjade
      @HenriBourjade Před 9 měsíci +5

      Wheat exports from this country ceased nearly 10 years ago. Either for lack of water, or because of the rise of salt on the surface from the basement.

    • @JV-pu8kx
      @JV-pu8kx Před 9 měsíci +7

      Growing alfalfa in Arizona to feed their cattle.

    • @jean-marclamothe8859
      @jean-marclamothe8859 Před 9 měsíci

      You can aquifer my…eyes!

    • @hessidave
      @hessidave Před 9 měsíci +1

      The video sounds like an advertisement commissioned by the SA government...

  • @JackPitmanNica
    @JackPitmanNica Před rokem +21

    To give you some perspective of how dry Saudi Arabia is; I lived there for 4 years in Jeddah... I was there when it rained for the first time in 15 years... It rained for an hour or so... Everything turned into rivers... the streets flooded and everything shut down! There is no irrigation in Saudi Arabia usually

    • @creativeideas012
      @creativeideas012 Před rokem +6

      It rains atleast a few times every year in Jeddah
      15 years?! & you are claiming that while saying you lived there for 4 years
      Ok

    • @JackPitmanNica
      @JackPitmanNica Před rokem +7

      @@creativeideas012 These days, it rains more often in Jeddah. But that's a new thing. I lived there 20 years ago. I lived in Jeddah from 1997 to 2002. Back then rain was less common. And yes, I was exaturating when I said "it never rains". What I meant was that it rarely rains for real. You get a lot of heat lightning and clouds in Jeddah but multiple hours of rain are really rare; or at least they were back then.

    • @Slebo_19SeventySomething
      @Slebo_19SeventySomething Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@JackPitmanNica Yes, because they now cloud seed and steal moisture from other area's to make it rain.

    • @jashsylde8136
      @jashsylde8136 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Slebo_19SeventySomething This is devastating for the natural ecology. When nature decides there shud be a desert somewhere u shud not artificially try and force it to turn green, damage will be done elsewhere

    • @giraffe8554
      @giraffe8554 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Slebo_19SeventySomethingso offensive for them to steal a cloud. Les go grow up

  • @AGhostRiderR
    @AGhostRiderR Před rokem +84

    Mean time in us farmers are being forced to give up their farm or being bought out by tech giant bg, and most of the industry and resources that would make us a self sufficient is being run out.

  • @shawnoberem3302
    @shawnoberem3302 Před rokem +417

    What this documentary fails to mention is that the aquifers are emptying out at an astonishing rate, so much so that the agriculture is being reversed. As for the desalination of water, this is an environmental nightmare and the brine (the super salty runoff) is pumped back into the ocean - removing something else used for food - fish.

    • @mansour127
      @mansour127 Před rokem +23

      We're working on that, that should be sorted out in the coming years we have some modernization projects in the works for to address water supply issues

    • @mcdermottpa
      @mcdermottpa Před rokem +31

      The desalination plants also use massive amounts of power, much of in produced with fossil fuels. The kingdom is investing heavily in solar, but carbon emissions are still growing.

    • @tulayamalavenapi4028
      @tulayamalavenapi4028 Před rokem +10

      I was wondering about their source of fresh water...

    • @pyrolight7568
      @pyrolight7568 Před rokem

      @@mcdermottpa
      Unless there are restrictions, go nuclear, solar will never keep up. California is proof of that.

    • @Fundamental_Islam.
      @Fundamental_Islam. Před rokem +5

      They need that ground water!

  • @joshuagenes
    @joshuagenes Před rokem +103

    The plants themselves attract water out of the air by cooling the air and acting as a moisture net. If this continues the river will once again flow in Saudi Arabia.

    • @Serkant75
      @Serkant75 Před rokem +3

      Moist farming like Luke Skywalker

    • @joshuagenes
      @joshuagenes Před rokem +4

      @@Serkant75 Uh Sure. I did not know they were moisture farmers till I looked it up. I am more familiar with the moisture nets put up by NGOs in Peru and stuff. Also Permaculture and Regenerative farming practices Which use various techniques to "Green the Desert". Some of these desert places were once jungles with rivers flowing...and could be again.

    • @monitoot
      @monitoot Před rokem +18

      "The Last Hour will not come… till the land of Arabia once again becomes meadows and rivers." From the miracles of the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ is that the Arabian Peninsula was once a lush green land full of trees and rivers. There was no way Prophet Muhammad who was illiterate could have known, given the limitation of scientific and technological capabilities at the time, such a fact by himself. Studies in geology and archeology have recently confirmed to a degree beyond any doubt that the Arabian Peninsula once had a much cooler climate and that it truly was a lush green area full of trees, lakes and rivers. Such is based on the following:
      1) In 2014 researchers in Saudi Arabia discovered fossilized remains of an elephant in the Nafud Desert. With over 60% of the elephant’s fossilized bones intact, including an entire tusk, it remarkably indicates that the Nafud desert once had a climate suitable for elephants to live in. It is also worth mentioning that the discovered elephant was 50% larger in size and about twice the weight of the current day elephant. More so, in 2017 Saudi Arabia’s Centre for International Communication announced the discovery of fossils of other creatures including crocodiles and seahorses, and more remarkably the discovery, in total, of 10,000 ancient lake and river beds across the Arabian Peninsula.Furthermore, in 2017 Dr. Eid Al Yahya, a well-known archeologist, discovered the first ever fossilized mammoth in Saudi Arabia; and throughout the past decade has discovered and documented over a thousand flint spearheads (made of silica) and other advanced large-prey hunting tools in remote desert locations that indicate that civilizations once hunted in these now barren areas.The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage reported that in the 1990’s "Landsat" provided imagery of eastern and southern parts of Saudi Arabia, including the Empty Quarter. The satellite images revealed old trade routes, river paths and valleys; all of which are now covered by sand dunes.
      In conclusion, geological and archeological discoveries confirm the saying of the Prophet Muhammad, that the Arabian Peninsula was once full of meadows and rivers; a fact that Prophet Muhammad could not have known by himself except through revelation from God Almighty.

    • @kensmechanicalaffair
      @kensmechanicalaffair Před rokem +1

      The air dry.

    • @joshuagenes
      @joshuagenes Před rokem +3

      @@kensmechanicalaffair Saudi is a peninsula surrounded by water which evaporates and wind blows it over. If the temperature is brought down enough and moisture nets (in this case plants) are high enough water will condensate in the form of dew. Biomass and the shade of the plants will help lock the water in the soil for future use.

  • @timmenard7745
    @timmenard7745 Před rokem +34

    Amazing Achievement by the Saudi Govt for their Citizens. Truly Exceptional

  • @seancoyote
    @seancoyote Před 9 měsíci +11

    The problem with aquifers is that it isn't limitless, and they take a very long time to refill, so basically when they drain them, its gone, and it basically saps many springs as well, and it causes earthquakes when done a massive scale.

  • @adnaanmohamed6209
    @adnaanmohamed6209 Před rokem +2

    Hadith Prophet Muhammad said: The Last Hour will not come before wealth becomes abundant and overflowing, so much so that a man takes Zakat out of his property and cannot find anyone to accept it from him and till the land of Arabia reverts to meadows and rivers.

  • @AA-zm4ow
    @AA-zm4ow Před rokem +17

    That's great we can learn from failure of oil & wealth & to invest in the proper investments like nature survival food, un like Mexico Venezuela, Cuba Soviet union & many more, wise decision a very great one

  • @edwardovaleriano6117
    @edwardovaleriano6117 Před rokem +42

    When I'm was in Saudi Arabia in 1981 it was totally a desert and now times change and it became a greeny land, Saudi Arabia is blessed and hope that too many Pilipino will be hire especially in agriculture job.

    • @ammaldivesvic4309
      @ammaldivesvic4309 Před rokem +10

      Perhaps you people dont know its a sign of doomsday Qayamah Sign .... As Per islam

    • @patronzulfan
      @patronzulfan Před rokem +2

      ​@@ammaldivesvic4309 yeah, it's a sign 👍

    • @Nawa11YT
      @Nawa11YT Před rokem

      ​@@ammaldivesvic4309 good.

    • @az000zf3
      @az000zf3 Před rokem +2

      🇸🇦❤️ 🇵🇭 brother

  • @marius404
    @marius404 Před rokem +15

    Awesome video, I learned a lot.

  • @samlair3342
    @samlair3342 Před rokem +12

    The water for crops comes from aquifers, a finite resource.

    • @mano2432
      @mano2432 Před rokem

      Finite yes, but fossil water, not from aquifers.

  • @kevinhime-knowles5198
    @kevinhime-knowles5198 Před rokem +15

    Thank you so much for that video .
    It is heartwarming to see that the house of Saud are investing in their own people

    • @Nawa11YT
      @Nawa11YT Před rokem +2

      They always have.
      But biased media would tell you otherwise

    • @HungryLoki
      @HungryLoki Před rokem

      @@Nawa11YT Of course it's the free media that's biased, and definitely not the media of a country that cuts up journalists who don't play ball.

    • @RunaroundAtNight
      @RunaroundAtNight Před rokem

      Saudi Arabia is a monarch, not a democracy. The monarchy can decide to do what ever it chooses without input from the people. It does help its population a lot as they are wiser than other dictators in the area, see Iraq and Syria. But freedoms taken for granted in other democracies around the world don't exist in Saudi Arabia. Such as freedom of the press, women's rights, freedom of religion. You can argue if you think this is working for the best for the population, but the reality is they have little input. It isn't bias media, it's reality.

  • @chadnice
    @chadnice Před rokem +5

    Excellent video and audio!

  • @brucespanner6756
    @brucespanner6756 Před rokem +12

    As a kid I used to think that we could build pipe line from the wets countries to the driest . And turn them into huge farm lands . Bit of a dream

    • @derekking7319
      @derekking7319 Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah…and the same with the oil!

    • @stanbarnes7284
      @stanbarnes7284 Před 9 měsíci

      Quite possible. A huge project but doable. They build oil pipelines across continents they could do it with water as well. We need to build runoff lakes world wide and then pump it to where it’s needed.

    • @derekking7319
      @derekking7319 Před 9 měsíci

      @@stanbarnes7284 yes…let’s forget about world division, and concentrate on giving away potential assets to those who are capitalising on theirs!! Let’s get the politics fixed first eh!

  • @jimmy_flaps
    @jimmy_flaps Před 9 měsíci +1

    Fascinating video mate, looking forward to more content from you.

  • @roselynblancaflor704
    @roselynblancaflor704 Před rokem +21

    I worked in KSA for 34 years. The land is blessed with natural wealth God has given them. They have almost everything. Their prayers are heard...becomes more progressive while the world is in hardship. Thanks be to Allah!

    • @joeblailock6669
      @joeblailock6669 Před rokem

      You really have misunderstood The God of the universe. His Name is Jesus. The Bible teaches that Moses brought the Law but Jesus brought Grace and Mercy.

    • @thendino1
      @thendino1 Před rokem +1

      Water?

    • @JimNichols
      @JimNichols Před rokem +1

      @@joeblailock6669 Depending on which magic book you believe Joe... there are over 4,000 recognized religions in the world. Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism are the main 5 so you picked the one your family taught you, that doesn't mean you are right it just means you accept that particular dogma. Let everyone do their thing brother, if you are right then God (the one you worship) will judge them, not you.

    • @JimNichols
      @JimNichols Před rokem

      @roselynblancaflor inshallah As-Salaam-Alaikum

    • @carlbarron1186
      @carlbarron1186 Před rokem

      Saudi Arabia's Governments puts many others like Corrupt UK to shame as we the public have never felt the benefit of our Oil fields as croaked MP's run such Extortion Rackets that by allowing utilities to make massive profits and thus damaging both the UK economy and Public health. I congratulate Saudi Arabia's Governments using its Natural Assets for the benefit of all.

  • @simonmcneilly55
    @simonmcneilly55 Před rokem +7

    Saudi food is grown overseas and and directly shipped to Saudi Arabia which is not counted as a food import. They own huge ranches in Australia.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      That is not surprising.

    • @Chris-pv2ht
      @Chris-pv2ht Před 9 měsíci

      They own land in US and its doing damage to the eco system due to water extraction, it was banned there because of it

    • @notoriousjay013
      @notoriousjay013 Před 9 měsíci

      I live in Arizona USA and they also have 1000s of acres of farmland here. It is also a desert and using our aquifers to grow their alfalfa. Our politicians are worthless, selling our water to big business and creating a future crisis for residents. I feel you, So much more should be said about their enterprises in other places

  • @stevenm3141
    @stevenm3141 Před rokem +172

    It's so good to hear about some leaders who actually care enough to help themselves and the people living in the country. Blessings to all.

    • @flodjod
      @flodjod Před rokem

      they only did it because they knew the citizens would have their heads as soon as the oil ran out if they didnt this is a society that stones to death its fellows for looking at another sex that not married to

    • @camazotzz
      @camazotzz Před rokem +39

      This video is propaganda, the Saudi government is pretty awful.

    • @alanblanes2876
      @alanblanes2876 Před rokem +10

      @@camazotzz On creating a verdant nation they appear to be making great headway. When they are able to develop good relations with Israel, they will see how important it is to support the development of a pluralistic society and to not allow jihadist/wahhabists to control society.

    • @littleowldme
      @littleowldme Před rokem +2

      Yes... Help themselves to every other countries' riches!

    • @Meshari_
      @Meshari_ Před rokem +21

      @@camazotzz Nah that’s wrong, I’m Saudi and i can till our government is done everything to us and it’s have plans to help the country more and more every single day, self-sufficiency in terms of food and water, Health care is free, education is free, and we have the best universities in the Middle East, 3 of them are in the top 10, and King Abdul Aziz University ranks first among them, and it is in the top 20 of the best universities in the world. And the cost of living is paid to most of the low-to-middle-income population other than social security for low-income people, so your words are completely incorrect ❤.

  • @jakeglenn2246
    @jakeglenn2246 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent post !!

  • @christianlee576
    @christianlee576 Před rokem +10

    My Opinion, Is That The People Of Saudi Arabia, Are An Amazing People...And Are Very Intelligent Indeed...I Hold A Great Deal Of Respect For Them Indeed

  • @AhyanRahmanYT
    @AhyanRahmanYT Před rokem +9

    As the great prophecy stands truer than ever:
    “The barren deserts of Arabia will revert to lush, greenlands again” Alhamdulilah! 👍🏻

    • @nathanfloyd781
      @nathanfloyd781 Před rokem

      yup! this is written in major religious books as well! all of them.

    • @harry130747
      @harry130747 Před 9 měsíci

      But only while there's any ground water and oil . After that, back to desert.

  • @namirahzainab9314
    @namirahzainab9314 Před rokem +25

    "The Last Hour will not come till the land of Arabia reverts to meadows and rivers." Indeed the Prophet (ﷺ) said the truth!
    Astonishing how prophet Muhammed predicted this and everything is coming out to be true
    Allahh Akbar .

    • @aldinoruswandi
      @aldinoruswandi Před rokem

      😢

    • @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights
      @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights Před rokem

      ​@@chuckseminskiThe "Last hour" usually refers to the hour before judgement day. The earth will come to an end and everything in it will die or come to an an ended as predicted by our prophet Muhammad (SAW). Before the last hour, there will be signs as told by our prophet Muhammad (SAW) and this is one of those signs. Allah is the greatest!

    • @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights
      @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights Před rokem

      @@chuckseminski What do you mean "much later hour"?

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před rokem

      @@NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights I think he means that you are saying that according to your religion we will all be dead soon. Which isn't exactly ideal is it?

    • @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights
      @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights Před rokem +1

      @@Purple_flower09 We will be all dead and gathered together again on the day of judgement. Only God has knowledge of the hour not any human or anybody else. The prophet Muhammad (SAW) just told us about the signs and we're still witnessing most of the signs. But yes nobody can live forever in this world no matter how advanced in technology we are. Allah clearly says in the Holy Qur'an "Verily, every soul shall taste death". So yes everything will eventually die and then we will be resurrected again.

  • @kasunmahesh1862
    @kasunmahesh1862 Před 10 měsíci +1

    While many countries try to forget about self-sufficiency and agriculture sector and try to move forward with only industrial sector, this country with remarkable leaders has identified the importantance of agriculture sector and first they focused on oil and finance sector and they made billions of money then they realize money cannot feed the nation so they have to grow something to feed their nation. Mark this day and realize it, Saudi Arabia is gonna be on top of the world within new 3 decades. They are advanced in technology. Now they have opened their borders for tourists. They are futuristic and most importantly anti-corrupted which is remarkably contributing to their success. Great leaders and great nation.

  • @anirudhbhaskar7290
    @anirudhbhaskar7290 Před rokem +7

    Only Agricultural operation can save humanity till the day of eternity...

  • @johnfritz7497
    @johnfritz7497 Před rokem +5

    This is a beautiful success story. So positive.

  • @niltip5309
    @niltip5309 Před rokem +115

    Damn !!! This is really astonishing!! Great initiatives from the Saudi government.

    • @robertjohnston8690
      @robertjohnston8690 Před rokem +10

      The extra Co2 in the atmosphere is what plants love, they pump it into greenhouses to up the production size of the vegetables.

    • @shamimmalik4883
      @shamimmalik4883 Před rokem +3

      Astonishing. Good governance n honest population in using loans in such a productive way. Alhamdulila

    • @walidsai3164
      @walidsai3164 Před rokem +1

      Abu Hurayrah, may Allaah be pleased with him, narrated that the Messenger of Allaah, sallallaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, said: “The Hour will not come before wealth becomes abundant and overflowing so much that a man will take the Zakaah due on his property but will not find anyone to accept it from him and till the land of Arabia becomes meadows and rivers.

    • @carlbarron1186
      @carlbarron1186 Před rokem

      Saudi Arabia's Governments puts many others like Corrupt UK to shame as we the public have never felt the benefit of our Oil fields as croaked MP's run such Extortion Rackets that by allowing utilities to make massive profits and thus damaging both the UK economy and Public health. I congratulate Saudi Arabia's Governments using its Natural Assets for the benefit of all.

    • @jagpilotohio
      @jagpilotohio Před rokem +2

      Yes. It’s amazing what you can do with a billion dollars a day of oil coming out of the ground.

  • @joealcamo8901
    @joealcamo8901 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Outstanding! Way to be beneficial!

  • @liberty-matrix
    @liberty-matrix Před rokem +2

    "There are huge non climate effects of carbon dioxide which are overwhelmingly favorable which are not taken into account. To me that's the main issue that the earth is actually growing greener. This has been actually measured from satellites the whole earth is growing greener as a result of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. So it's increasing agricultural yields, it's increasing the forests, it's increasing all kinds of growth in the biological world and that's more important and more certain than the effects on climate." ~Freeman Dyson, Institute of Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.

  • @matthewmohri9990
    @matthewmohri9990 Před rokem +19

    Also recently I believe Saudi Arabia was one of the 53 Nations that dropped The US Petrol Dollar for the Chinese Yuan in oil trade.

    • @donvoll2580
      @donvoll2580 Před rokem +1

      Good day Matthew I am from Canada . So what does that mean? Thanks

    • @laxlubega1625
      @laxlubega1625 Před rokem +7

      @@donvoll2580 it means there’s a war coming soon

    • @bobjarvis2041
      @bobjarvis2041 Před rokem +5

      No they're trading gold back and forth

    • @krashthiskar
      @krashthiskar Před rokem +1

      Sounds like misinformation

    • @matthewmohri9990
      @matthewmohri9990 Před rokem +1

      @@krashthiskar Not really it's a fact, if you choose to not believe it then no worries.

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    @ashleighking9073 Před rokem +11

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      @francisfrags9922 Před rokem

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      @garyjesus1387 Před rokem

      I heard so many millionaires like Mr elon are investors in the crypto space

    • @miaejaita7119
      @miaejaita7119 Před rokem

      Wow!! Impressive you trade with Mrs Claudia Walter's too! I thought people don't know her that well.... She's really awesome!

    • @Kateschrad
      @Kateschrad Před rokem

      Who's this professional trader and how can I get In Touch with her? Can I start with 2000$?

    • @brianboogie9700
      @brianboogie9700 Před rokem

      Make a note to Mrs Claudia Walter's regarding your interest in investing in Bitcoin

  • @LTC59
    @LTC59 Před rokem +20

    Well done SaudiArabia! Keep doing that kind of positive things!

    • @nomanrafiq1000
      @nomanrafiq1000 Před rokem +3

      Give me a blank checkbook and i can build you a farm in the middle of pacific ocean.

  • @Bduh2
    @Bduh2 Před rokem +8

    Help me out here for a sec. If oil is found in abundance wouldn't that mean that, at one time, there was a huge amount of animals and flora there before the drought and heat sat in?

    • @Name-yb7hn
      @Name-yb7hn Před rokem +2

      At one time this area was full of greenery and rivers and it will return like this again. There is evidence of elephant, cows, and many other species’ fossils found in the Arabian peninsula that belongs to thousands of years ago.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem +4

      Only hundreds of millions of years ago. Absolutely nothing to do with the current environment.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yes that’s why Prophet Muhammad’s prophetic words specifically mention this land will ‘return’ to being lush & green as it once was.

  • @sherryaleshire9187
    @sherryaleshire9187 Před rokem +38

    That is amazing !! USA better get it together on the desalination process. Might be too late. Great video. Thank you !!

    • @alimerhi5531
      @alimerhi5531 Před rokem +2

      I wonder how many desalination facilities are operating in the US

    • @alimerhi5531
      @alimerhi5531 Před rokem +2

      17,000 in the US

    • @icac6122
      @icac6122 Před rokem +2

      ​@@alimerhi5531 nice. Sounds like we need about 40 thousand more

    • @ikafmedia2007
      @ikafmedia2007 Před rokem +1

      US is busy sanctioning deprived/poor countries that dare try to beat the odds and be self sufficient...
      IMPLOSION is always the end of rich & powerful empire. Now it has begun, nothing really gonna stop it...

    • @sandragordon6219
      @sandragordon6219 Před rokem +2

      They would just poison it

  • @bunch_o_racket
    @bunch_o_racket Před rokem +6

    that's so great! and the first time I've heard of this

  • @worldview730
    @worldview730 Před 5 měsíci

    Great documentary, I learned so much from this info.

  • @DisEnchantedPersons
    @DisEnchantedPersons Před rokem +19

    That's how to make a country, well done!

    • @jagpilotohio
      @jagpilotohio Před rokem

      This is a blatant piece of propaganda. It’s hysterical actually. The regime does a good job of brainwashing people

  • @birgitmitchell5648
    @birgitmitchell5648 Před 10 měsíci +22

    I lived and taught in Saudi2016,17,19,20,21,22. It has transformed itself and will be and is an upcoming country force to be admired. They're seeding the clouds and have rainfall frequently now as well as the reality that they've planted thousands of trees in and around Riyadh during these years ( i watched daily with my own eyes!!)
    Saudi is one of the loveliest, kindest, most crime free places in the world. They are smart as is their Governing Royalty.

    • @rahrahrobbbieee
      @rahrahrobbbieee Před 9 měsíci +1

      You are kidding right?

    • @iancouper3644
      @iancouper3644 Před 9 měsíci +2

      O it’s lovely. If you’re a straight man. Anyone else is goosed

    • @mosschopz156
      @mosschopz156 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Obvious fawning sycophantic post is obvious.

    • @matthewbittenbender9191
      @matthewbittenbender9191 Před 9 měsíci

      You really mean this of the same country that brutally forces women to be subservient to men, has no free press, believes that all non-Wahabbists are infidela AND has a murderous, entitled authoritarian millennial running the country is the same muscle of progressiveness you've described? With all die respect, you need to travel more to other countries.

  • @robinchoudhury9089
    @robinchoudhury9089 Před rokem +4

    Prophet Mohammed ( peace be upon him ) over 1400 years ago said this will happen in Saudi Arabia.

    • @modar9524
      @modar9524 Před hodinou

      No he did not he said it will be a forest not that the prince will start making farms ffs

  • @Qwertyuiop4409
    @Qwertyuiop4409 Před rokem +25

    Unfortunatelly all of this is archieved through heavy overuse of undeground water which Saudi Arabia does not have in abbundance. In 10 years if they find no way to replenish what they take they will be left with no water at all. Already the traditional agriculture in SA is suffering terribly because of falling water levels.

    • @kevinkelly7078
      @kevinkelly7078 Před rokem +5

      Miles and miles of rusting abandoned center pivot irrigation sprinklers beside the Inter State I8 Highway east of Yuma, Arizona, USA. The irrigated land has returned to desert. Is this what hat happens when underground water extraction is regulated with laws that were designed for oil extraction?

    • @mansour127
      @mansour127 Před rokem +1

      That's the new big project, addressing water supply issues optimizing existing lines and maybe even looking into new ways to address the problem

    • @bahamutstear1369
      @bahamutstear1369 Před rokem

      They did something similar in Arizona an now they’re out of water already all the farms they’ve built will be reclaimed by the desert and they don’t have enough water to support all the children of the old arthritic folks that moved there in the 50’s and 60’s no one should have invaded the desert but people are extremely ignorant

    • @loganleborgne420
      @loganleborgne420 Před rokem

      It seems that they found a way to exchange water against petrol...the worse French president in history made a deal with them...they said it was a scam but by an incredible coincidence French underground water reserves were lower than ever dangerously low...and they started to talk about restrictions...now it rain all over France since a week it will save this year...but what about next

    • @getyourphxnow
      @getyourphxnow Před 11 měsíci

      I’m glad you called this video out for this issue. What a fluff piece! Everybody should read the book Cadillac Desert. The salaries are simply following the same nearsighted path as the Americans did over the last 150 years. Aquifers are finite.

  • @josephhartwell6214
    @josephhartwell6214 Před rokem +16

    I'm disappointed that we haven't seen more on this projects current developments this is all old it's really awesome and I would like to be kept more to date

    • @charlenefrench5404
      @charlenefrench5404 Před rokem +1

      I just watched a video claiming that they import 80% of their food and have no water. They desalinate the water.

    • @josephhartwell6214
      @josephhartwell6214 Před rokem +2

      @@charlenefrench5404 I find it odd that in a world so much intellectual intelligence starves to death

    • @josephhartwell6214
      @josephhartwell6214 Před rokem

      Greed has destroyed every civilization on earth people if power inbreeding to keep the wealth not Caring as long as it stays in the family

    • @josephhartwell6214
      @josephhartwell6214 Před rokem

      @@charlenefrench5404 if you look at the lineage of people with gross wealth and power well it's gross most the trees go straight up with deformity

    • @josephhartwell6214
      @josephhartwell6214 Před rokem

      @@charlenefrench5404 glad I don't have to f***,"':s my cousins (.)(.) To keep the $$$$#& family

  • @oneeyedjack8525
    @oneeyedjack8525 Před rokem +3

    Wow. I did not know this

  • @johnarmon7818
    @johnarmon7818 Před rokem +42

    Amazing how a venture is not taken when taxes are present, but remove the taxes and shazzaam, the venture can be done. This should be a quite a learning lesson to everyone.

    • @Rat-Builder
      @Rat-Builder Před rokem +6

      ONLY if your population has other means to support its self. I get it that you do not like taxes, nobody does, BUT, you like to drive on paved roads. You like to cross rivers on bridges. You like to have clean water to drink. Something has to pay for all of those things. Saudi Arabia has oil to pay for all of that. We have taxes to pay for all of that. If you have a way to keep the lights on without taxes, please let us know what it is.

    • @terryrose6208
      @terryrose6208 Před rokem +6

      @@Rat-Builder One flat tax.

    • @mathewdeleon7303
      @mathewdeleon7303 Před rokem

      I work in Saudi Arabia for seven years and the price of foods in supermarkets are very cheap and the price was controlled by the government the price will.not increased for many years that's why you can buy and eat whatever you want from fruits,vegetables,meat ,fish and others

    • @jagpilotohio
      @jagpilotohio Před rokem +4

      Hahahaha. Yeah. As long as you’re pumping a billion dollars of oil a day out of the ground you can do lots of stuff without taxes.

    • @rogerjamespaul5528
      @rogerjamespaul5528 Před rokem

      Foreign workers have been raped, exploited, under- or unpaid, physically abused, overworked and locked in their places of employment. The international organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) describes these conditions as "near-slavery" and attributes them to "deeply rooted gender, religious, and racial discrimination".
      In 2021, the total number of non-national employed workers in the private sector of Saudi Arabia totaled to around 6.17 million workers. Foreign nationals made up around 76.4 percent of the private sector workforce in Saudi Arabia.

  • @flossypark3169
    @flossypark3169 Před rokem +2

    Wow! Saudi supporting farmers rather than trying to close farms down, brilliant!

  • @colinsteam
    @colinsteam Před 9 měsíci +14

    It always amazes me that extracting water from aquifers in areas with little or no rain is thought to be remotely sustainable long term.

    • @grantkruse1812
      @grantkruse1812 Před 9 měsíci

      Well, they did it with the oil and it just recently passed the "peak oil" stage so they must think "peak water" is a long way off.

  • @anthonypettit3713
    @anthonypettit3713 Před rokem +6

    And that is how a government should truly be working tor the betterment of its people and the nation and the future

    • @mandrews1245
      @mandrews1245 Před rokem

      Most nations are trying to do better for its people. Unfortunately, they don't have the funds from natural resources to accumulate the wealth needed to finance these projects. MBS project of sustainable city in the desert will cost BILLIONS $$ before they know if it will be successful.

  • @shawnstangeland3011
    @shawnstangeland3011 Před rokem +138

    Loved exploring the Tabuk region and the wadis around Riyadh. Sadly this place is getting hotter and approaching the human limit in Riyadh. Most of the farming has shut down since it relies on desalinisation plants.. the water is still very salty and contaminates the land

    • @Malet-Anatole
      @Malet-Anatole Před rokem +7

      Have you any studies and sources for that?

    • @Kopie0830
      @Kopie0830 Před rokem +18

      I don't know man, I've been to Riyadh lately, the food and weather is still the same. Or maybe I couldn't tell because I'm always either inside the car or go out at night. They could probably create underground cities like Coober Peity in Australia with underground roads just hire europeans to dig and drill underground with an cross spanning the whole middle east where the middle of the cross is an underground city

    • @anazi
      @anazi Před rokem +7

      I think they are making the world largest central park in the middle of Riyadh which will that issue for sure. They have shutdown an air-force base that was in the middle of Riyadh and working on converting it to a central park.

    • @shawnstangeland3011
      @shawnstangeland3011 Před rokem +1

      @@anazi yes I love that!! It was being built when I left in December 2021

    • @Umayyadazi
      @Umayyadazi Před rokem +4

      Riyadh is expanding real big and it won't reach maximum capacity because it's a flat desert situated on the middle of najd plateau, land is everywhere and can be urbanized easily, farming is expanding too, companies like Red Sea Farms are using sea water to irrigate farms and cut down overall cost of agriculture, there's also plans going on the Arabian Gulf. What are you talking about?

  • @rayant9767
    @rayant9767 Před rokem +1

    great video.

  • @user-oz3hs9nh4z
    @user-oz3hs9nh4z Před 9 měsíci

    Great video. Thank you for enlightening the rest of us.

  • @Rick-qf5de
    @Rick-qf5de Před rokem +3

    The man with food is King until the skies are dimmed,, and the switches are turned off,. no electricity for 2,000 years...

  • @josebenitez3732
    @josebenitez3732 Před rokem +38

    Glad to hear their agricultural sector is growing.
    No mention of Permaculture techniques.
    All is based on intensive use of oil.
    And the heavy reliance on the aquifers really worries me.

    • @paulwest499
      @paulwest499 Před rokem +1

      Dude there moving forward ,,,!! What ??

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před rokem

      I hear what you're saying. But Saudi also has a plan to plant 10 billion trees. And as it's a very top-down country it's almost certain to actually happen.

    • @shelbyseelbach9568
      @shelbyseelbach9568 Před rokem +4

      The aquifers will never replinish at the rate they are extracting from them. Making it basically a nonrenewable resource in the terms of human scale. Reliance on them is an Achilles heel in human plans anywhere.

    • @gabrielclark1425
      @gabrielclark1425 Před rokem

      @@shelbyseelbach9568 They're not meant to, once the plants are in place they'll lower the ground temperature and allow humidity from the surrounding oceans to begin condensing again rather than just passing over the hot desert sand.

    • @shelbyseelbach9568
      @shelbyseelbach9568 Před rokem

      @@gabrielclark1425 LMFAO.

  • @NBAHighlightsNBAHighlights

    Look at how truthful the Hadith of our beloved prophet Muhammad (SAW) is! Allahu Akbar(Allah is the greatest)!

    • @Mariusmjvr
      @Mariusmjvr Před rokem

      Rather thank western technology.

  • @Dj-ey8bp
    @Dj-ey8bp Před rokem +2

    1400 years ago. Prophet Mohammad pbuh knew that Arabi will become once again green at the end time and it's become true 👍.

  • @jaynorris3631
    @jaynorris3631 Před rokem +419

    What an amazing world this would be if all governments were for the people.

    • @beaudidly5347
      @beaudidly5347 Před rokem

      Israel did this since 1948, a Canadian friend of mine worked on the kibbutz's in the 70s, it's interesting look it up.

    • @mqultra5150
      @mqultra5150 Před rokem

      All you need is a couple trillion dollars and a social contact that treats the locals like the rest of the people in the 17th century

    • @nobody687
      @nobody687 Před rokem

      Are you serious, it's a kingdom. Where they kill anybody who complains about it

    • @kristopherhylleberg3880
      @kristopherhylleberg3880 Před rokem +30

      Are you saying Saudi Arabia has a government for the people arab spring ring a bell

    • @quiztherapy6851
      @quiztherapy6851 Před rokem +8

      ​@Kristopher Hylleberg what is with instigated by USA Arab spring?

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Před rokem +3

    This is brilliant!

  • @kiev786
    @kiev786 Před rokem +1

    Venezuela and Columbia are also rich in oil but good governess makes a difference. Saudia is an expample for us.

  • @bennieknape4857
    @bennieknape4857 Před rokem

    Solid planning and helpful banking and ressnable goals and you have domething like this .good job.

  • @tadalasabe4349
    @tadalasabe4349 Před rokem +4

    Wow this is breath taking I love it

  • @sorennilsson9742
    @sorennilsson9742 Před rokem

    That is impressive. Good work.

  • @havenmist2216
    @havenmist2216 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks C02 for that.

  • @tomholland6528
    @tomholland6528 Před rokem +23

    what a wise country that has spent there wealth for the good of there people and helps feed the world well done

    • @Lynnefromlyn
      @Lynnefromlyn Před rokem +2

      You are having a laugh aren’t you? 🙄

  • @oraoffice9562
    @oraoffice9562 Před rokem +50

    This is so good! I wish every nation on the earth strives to increase its green cover and arable land. Kudos to the Saudi government.

    • @Rich.psychopath
      @Rich.psychopath Před rokem

      This is upsetting that he doesn't recognise bahrain as a neighbour of ksa 😭

    • @jakewebdev6428
      @jakewebdev6428 Před rokem +4

      Prophet Muhammed (ﷺ) said in a hadith, "The Last Hour will not come before wealth becomes abundant and overflowing, so much so that a man takes Zakat out of his property and cannot find anyone to accept it from him and till the land of Arabia reverts to meadows and rivers."

    • @bekabeka71
      @bekabeka71 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jakewebdev6428yeah keep believing it 🤣

    • @HenriBourjade
      @HenriBourjade Před 9 měsíci +1

      Wheat exports from this country ceased nearly 10 years ago. Either for lack of water, or because of the rise of salt on the surface from the basement.

    • @bekabeka71
      @bekabeka71 Před 9 měsíci

      @@HenriBourjade yes their wheat product is really bad quality

  • @user-ur3vl7li5m
    @user-ur3vl7li5m Před rokem +1

    Excellent and informative post Thanks 🙏🏿 for sharing 💚🇸🇦💚

  • @clintonsmith9931
    @clintonsmith9931 Před rokem +2

    The sand will produce well only for a short time.
    A example is our desert land here in the US.
    Tru the 1930 through the 1950s with deep wells in Arizona
    Produced very well . The nourishment for plants run out in time.
    With fertilizers production can continue for some time.
    There is a big but, greenies a trying to stop the production of fertilizers.
    All the water in the world will not do any good on farmed out land.
    A example would be from the 1800s till mid 1950s the growth of cotton moved from the Deep South to the western states.

  • @michaelbagala9979
    @michaelbagala9979 Před rokem +29

    Quite informative. I learnt a lot about Saudi Arabia that I didn't know.

  • @ravenfrogsuperk
    @ravenfrogsuperk Před rokem +18

    Thank you so much for the positive work you do every day!

    • @jdog1297
      @jdog1297 Před 11 měsíci +1

      who are you thanking? LOL

  • @reubennmama3103
    @reubennmama3103 Před rokem +1

    For us muslim that is not surprising 1400 yrs ago Prophet Muhammad (pbuh ) told us in his hadith all what is happening now and til the end of the world in details

  • @con.doriano5008
    @con.doriano5008 Před 3 měsíci +1

    “The Final Hour will not come before wealth becomes abundant and overflowing so much so that a person takes Zakat out of his property and will not be able to find anyone to accept it from him and till the land of Arabia reverts into meadows and rivers.” (Sahih Muslim-157c)

  • @monitoot
    @monitoot Před rokem +9

    📌"The Last Hour will not come… till the land of Arabia once again becomes meadows and rivers." From the miracles of the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ is that the Arabian Peninsula was once a lush green land full of trees and rivers. There was no way Prophet Muhammad who was illiterate could have known, given the limitation of scientific and technological capabilities at the time, such a fact by himself. Studies in geology and archeology have recently confirmed to a degree beyond any doubt that the Arabian Peninsula once had a much cooler climate and that it truly was a lush green area full of trees, lakes and rivers. Such is based on the following:
    1) In 2014 researchers in Saudi Arabia discovered fossilized remains of an elephant in the Nafud Desert. With over 60% of the elephant’s fossilized bones intact, including an entire tusk, it remarkably indicates that the Nafud desert once had a climate suitable for elephants to live in. It is also worth mentioning that the discovered elephant was 50% larger in size and about twice the weight of the current day elephant. More so, in 2017 Saudi Arabia’s Centre for International Communication announced the discovery of fossils of other creatures including crocodiles and seahorses, and more remarkably the discovery, in total, of 10,000 ancient lake and river beds across the Arabian Peninsula.Furthermore, in 2017 Dr. Eid Al Yahya, a well-known archeologist, discovered the first ever fossilized mammoth in Saudi Arabia; and throughout the past decade has discovered and documented over a thousand flint spearheads (made of silica) and other advanced large-prey hunting tools in remote desert locations that indicate that civilizations once hunted in these now barren areas.The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage reported that in the 1990’s "Landsat" provided imagery of eastern and southern parts of Saudi Arabia, including the Empty Quarter. The satellite images revealed old trade routes, river paths and valleys; all of which are now covered by sand dunes.
    In conclusion, geological and archeological discoveries confirm the saying of the Prophet Muhammad, that the Arabian Peninsula was once full of meadows and rivers; a fact that Prophet Muhammad could not have known by himself except through revelation from God Almighty.

    • @mandrews1245
      @mandrews1245 Před rokem

      It might show there were civilizations before us who had greater scientific knowledge and those civilizations were wiped out.... and we had to start over again. When the current human beings have managed to annihilate ourselves, do you think our computers and flimsy papers will survive for a thousand years until the species can build itself again?

    • @monitoot
      @monitoot Před rokem

      @@mandrews1245 what are you talking about? It’s already starting to happen, as a Muslim I don’t deny the existence of creations before human who inhabited the earth, but what does that have to do with Arabia being green land once again? The prophecy doesn’t mention how that will happen, God doesn’t need human or any of his creations to make things happen.

    • @annalouisebay4397
      @annalouisebay4397 Před rokem

      OK and when God told Abraham he would have a son, Abraham should not do anything eather?

    • @monitoot
      @monitoot Před rokem

      @@annalouisebay4397 I don’t understand what that does have to do with what I said?

    • @annalouisebay4397
      @annalouisebay4397 Před rokem

      @@monitoot You said that God do not need anybody to do anything!

  • @martynhaggerty2294
    @martynhaggerty2294 Před rokem +17

    Need more on the depletion of the aquifers.
    Here in Australia we have the same problem...they take thousands of years to replenish.

    • @mano2432
      @mano2432 Před rokem +2

      Farms in central plateau use fossil water, not aquifers (no recharge).

    • @kevinkelly7078
      @kevinkelly7078 Před rokem

      Do we know if the floods in the Australian Murray-Darling Basin are recharging their aquifers?

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem +1

      @@ibrahimel-awady5965 Thank you for telling the truth.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      @@kevinkelly7078 One year's worth of floods isn't going to do very much. You need rainfall and extraction to be in balance and that is far from the case in most places where irrigation is necessary for agriculture.

    • @jean-marclamothe8859
      @jean-marclamothe8859 Před 9 měsíci

      😂😂😂😂

  • @hilarywerdebaugh8523
    @hilarywerdebaugh8523 Před rokem +2

    What a concept? A government that understands that the farmers actually feed the people who make the world go around...

  • @BERWAZN
    @BERWAZN Před rokem

    Amazing video

  • @nickdouglas9298
    @nickdouglas9298 Před rokem +23

    It's amazing how much good can be done when humans commit themselves on this path.

    • @carlbarron1186
      @carlbarron1186 Před rokem

      Saudi Arabia's Governments puts many others like Corrupt UK to shame as we the public have never felt the benefit of our Oil fields as croaked MP's run such Extortion Rackets that by allowing utilities to make massive profits and thus damaging both the UK economy and Public health. I congratulate Saudi Arabia's Governments using its Natural Assets for the benefit of all.

  • @JavierFernandez01
    @JavierFernandez01 Před rokem +26

    Scientists create agricultural land in Saudi Arabia.

    • @walidsai3164
      @walidsai3164 Před rokem +2

      Abu Hurayrah, may Allaah be pleased with him, narrated that the Messenger of Allaah, sallallaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, said: “The Hour will not come before wealth becomes abundant and overflowing so much that a man will take the Zakaah due on his property but will not find anyone to accept it from him and till the land of Arabia becomes meadows and rivers.

    • @phoenix5054
      @phoenix5054 Před rokem

      Or they could just invest and diversify farmlands from various sources: east Africa, Europe, South Asia, etc. I don't know if this would go anywhere.

  • @ReubenAStern
    @ReubenAStern Před rokem

    I like hearing news like this. I'm glad the algorithm is doing it's job and isn't just pure evil.

  • @Mr-J...
    @Mr-J... Před rokem +2

    Who would have thought; investing in your own country first, instead of every other, would pay off. Maybe the western countries should pay attention to that strategy instead of ignoring and screwing over their indigenous populations.

  • @davidariamirroarkyoung
    @davidariamirroarkyoung Před rokem +70

    I live in a small town in California on central coast it's population is about 48,000 there are many farms surrounding the town and amazing enough this small area produces over 90% of all of the worlds brussel sprouts no matter where in the world you live if you're eating brussel sprouts you have a 9 in 10 chance it came from this small costal town in central coast of California the other amazing thing is this isn't the main crop grown here pinqunto beans and some other bean varieties along with strawberry and other crops are grown much larger scales in area including flower seeds when you manage farm land correctly for the environment weather water resources etc the yields are vastly increased we do have some cattle and thirty minutes away is a extremely large egg farm that exports eggs around the world I have been in London market and in Israel seeing brussel sprouts that have a band showing they were grown in the town I live it also has one of two or three extremely large scale mines that produce diatomaceous earth. Land management is important you should not raise cattle if your area can't support growing feed having to import things from outside areas will decrease profit and eventually make it into a failure this is from growing up on a ranch and farm and amongst ranchers and farmers the majority of my life.

    • @flodjod
      @flodjod Před rokem +2

      good gracious fancy admitting that

    • @icxc88
      @icxc88 Před rokem +2

      All you have to do is one thing and do it well.
      -JJ

    • @sindento1942
      @sindento1942 Před rokem

      '' Brussels sprouts are grown year-round in California, and 90 percent of all Brussels sprouts found on American tables come from California (and from Monterey, Santa Cruz and San Mateo'' Not the world.

    • @davidariamirroarkyoung
      @davidariamirroarkyoung Před rokem +1

      @@sindento1942 I'm sorry your right we are no longer the largest growers in the USA but for many decades we were it was over at least a decade since I checked apparently still in top for organics but not brussel sprouts completely like used to be

    • @jbgood7694
      @jbgood7694 Před rokem

      I am from California too and have been through your town. It is astonishing how much agriculture and ranching there is in California. It is a powerhouse of food production.

  • @merlecharge5303
    @merlecharge5303 Před rokem +5

    Fantastic news

  • @AC_Milan1899
    @AC_Milan1899 Před 9 měsíci

    Well done guys, amazing work. Future superpower

  • @endangsetiawan2325
    @endangsetiawan2325 Před rokem +2

    Subhanallah alhamdulillah. (from Indonesia)

  • @648Roland
    @648Roland Před rokem +4

    How long will the aquifers last till salt water is drawn into them?

  • @co7013
    @co7013 Před rokem +3

    How sustainable is agriculture when the water is provided by depleting the aquifer and using desalinated water (which requires a lot of energy)?

    • @tulayamalavenapi4028
      @tulayamalavenapi4028 Před rokem

      Isn't there natural underground water? Like a spring never dries up...?

    • @co7013
      @co7013 Před rokem

      @@tulayamalavenapi4028 yes that's the aquifer. That's mostly fossil water, so water that has been there for a long time. And it will dry up. That's a spring that will dry up.

  • @sikazwejerry4620
    @sikazwejerry4620 Před rokem

    Thanks for lost knowledge but now discovered.

  • @laurice8056
    @laurice8056 Před rokem +1

    Congratulations, what a wonderful Blessing!🤗

  • @jivanselbi3657
    @jivanselbi3657 Před rokem +12

    its encouraging development and hopefully will be inspiring to other countries as well

    • @Caskchap
      @Caskchap Před rokem

      Isreal has been doing this since 1947

    • @rogerjamespaul5528
      @rogerjamespaul5528 Před rokem

      Foreign workers have been raped, exploited, under- or unpaid, physically abused, overworked and locked in their places of employment. The international organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) describes these conditions as "near-slavery" and attributes them to "deeply rooted gender, religious, and racial discrimination".
      In 2021, the total number of non-national employed workers in the private sector of Saudi Arabia totaled to around 6.17 million workers. Foreign nationals made up around 76.4 percent of the private sector workforce in Saudi Arabia.

    • @HenriBourjade
      @HenriBourjade Před 9 měsíci

      Wheat exports from this country ceased nearly 10 years ago. Either for lack of water, or because of the rise of salt on the surface from the basement. Same in Egypt and Algerian Sahara.

  • @billcarton7976
    @billcarton7976 Před rokem +11

    Incredible, why haven’t we seen this before!

    • @johnsyler8580
      @johnsyler8580 Před rokem

      This goes against the popular narrative in the United States and our government.

    • @AKAOOB
      @AKAOOB Před rokem

      Because the media doesn’t want you to see the truth about Saudi Arabia

    • @Nawa11YT
      @Nawa11YT Před rokem +2

      Media, they don't want you to see our success

  • @paulwest499
    @paulwest499 Před rokem +2

    Wow !!!!! Those People are Thinking,, I'm going to move there,, I'm a thinker

  • @caseyremeysen2552
    @caseyremeysen2552 Před rokem +2

    what a marvelous land, and lovely hardworking smart people

    • @rogerjamespaul5528
      @rogerjamespaul5528 Před rokem

      Foreign workers have been raped, exploited, under- or unpaid, physically abused, overworked and locked in their places of employment. The international organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) describes these conditions as "near-slavery" and attributes them to "deeply rooted gender, religious, and racial discrimination".
      In 2021, the total number of non-national employed workers in the private sector of Saudi Arabia totaled to around 6.17 million workers. Foreign nationals made up around 76.4 percent of the private sector workforce in Saudi Arabia.

  • @anthonyreves7022
    @anthonyreves7022 Před rokem +4

    I'm glad to see that countries and proving things to the world so they don't depend so much on just the United States

  • @anthonypettit3713
    @anthonypettit3713 Před rokem +12

    Amazing how well the country is doing when the government is working for its people and not just for themselves and other countries

  • @chishikiendeavourer8663
    @chishikiendeavourer8663 Před 2 měsíci

    Saudi Arabia has transformed a dry nation into a big exporter is a miracle ❤

  • @jakewebdev6428
    @jakewebdev6428 Před rokem +1

    Prophet Muhammed (ﷺ) said in a hadith, "The Last Hour will not come before wealth becomes abundant and overflowing, so much so that a man takes Zakat out of his property and cannot find anyone to accept it from him and till the land of Arabia reverts to meadows and rivers."

  • @girousbig9426
    @girousbig9426 Před rokem +22

    The Sahara (/səˈhɑːrə/, /səˈhærə/) is a desert on the African continent. With an area of 9,200,000 square kilometres (3,600,000 sq mi), it is the largest hot desert in the world and the third-largest desert overall, smaller only than the deserts of Antarctica and the northern Arctic.[1][2][3]

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Před rokem

      Let's say it's somewhat smaller than China.

    • @salecousin5470
      @salecousin5470 Před 9 měsíci

      @@wolfgangdevries127 its bigger , even USA,china and India combined are smaller then Africa

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Před 9 měsíci

      @@salecousin5470 it's about Sahara, though :)

  • @normanweimer8333
    @normanweimer8333 Před rokem +6

    God Bless

  • @joandelur4407
    @joandelur4407 Před rokem

    amazing!

  • @you99tubejimking
    @you99tubejimking Před rokem

    Very impressive!

  • @robertharrison1601
    @robertharrison1601 Před rokem +3

    Something good just heard