Emirates Global Aluminium (EGA) announced that 300 Hawksbill turtles have hatched at al-Taweelah beach this season, adding to approximately 7,500 successful hatchings near the company’s operations since 2011.
The critically endangered turtles are the only sea turtles that lay their eggs in the UAE. EGA’s sustainability team monitor the beach throughout the nesting season, protect the nests from predators and debris, and rescue any injured or sick turtles.
116 nests have been laid on the beach next to EGA’s operations since the monitoring programme began.
This year, four turtles were found in need of care and were transferred to the Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Centre at the Burj Al Arab, where they now receive expert treatment before being released back into the sea.
Before the nesting season, EGA brings together volunteers from across the company for a beach clean-up at Al Taweelah. In January, EGA employees volunteered in the clean-up and removed 1,300 kg of waste washed up from the sea.
The average hawksbill lifespan ranges from 30 to 50 years, with females capable of laying 100 to 150 eggs in one annual nesting season.
His Highness Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, joined foreign ministers from the region and elsewhere in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Sunday, at the first regional meeting on Syria since President Bashar al-Assad was ousted last month.
The second UAE aid ship arrived at Beirut Port on Sunday loaded with 3,000 tonnes of relief supplies, as part of the “UAE stands with Lebanon" campaign.
President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan held a phone call on Saturday with Joseph Aoun, congratulating him on his election as President of Lebanon.
Dubai's Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) has opened the second bridge as part of Phase 4 of the Al Shindagha Corridor Improvement Project, facilitating traffic flow from the intersection of Al Mina Street and Sheikh Rashid Road to the intersection of Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Street and Sheikh Rashid Road.
The Ministry of Climate Change and Environment (MoCCAE) said on Saturday it is investigating the potential contamination of beef pepperoni with listeria monocytogenes bacteria, working in collaboration with local regulatory authorities and the Saudi Food and Drug Authority.