Have been making losses trading myself .... I THOUGHT trading on demo account is just like trading the real market .. can anyone help me out or at least advice me on what to do ?
@@flaviorighetto5753 I started investing in stocks a little while ago and I’ve come to realize nothing beats first hand experience..Investing with Juan Antonio Landa has been the best experience ever.
I am very skeptical that this will pan out with a small ecological footprint. I think the water generation and treatment plans are likely to to be inadequate to maintain such water-thirsty features as golf courses. But, I guess we’ll see…
The golf course will likely be designed in such a way to have water run off into multiple drainage points that will lead back to wherever ever the wetwell is. I image there will be some treatment involved, nonetheless it would definitely be saving water. Simply by reusing the runoff for the golf course irrigation system. This does not eliminate the need to refill the wetwell, and it is likely that any water that would be used to irrigate the course that isn’t reused runoff, would be treated municipal water.
After watching just the intro, I have a hard time believing it will only cost $5 billion. Edit: After watching the whole video, I doubt it would only cost triple that figure, especially with the large scope of remote construction, that they will need exorbitantly lavish rooms/facilities to compete with the Emirates, road networks across that area the size of Belgium, and the lofty goals for sustainability/renewables. Only thing that keeps cost down is use of cheap South Asian labor treated to terrible conditions.
The opposite don’t you see that 75% of the project is a nature preserve plus the scientific research that has been done in the last 5 years was contributing to the thrive of these coral reefs and raising awareness for protection and overfishing..
@@infernodotdash2203 I am from there and believe me the mindset of the locals there has changed completely. There used to be overfishing and destroying the nature with plastics and others now we have Environmental Police all over the place.. Also fishing is organized and many animals are forbidden to get caught and Turtles are tracked and cared for.. Hunting is also completely not allowed now and the whole place is a nature preserve.
Yeah it looks cool, but like most of these building projects in this part of the world, it's just another soul-less circle jerk destination for the uber rich. I don't see any point going there other than for the novelty.
@@augustinefaithdefender Typical stupid, you do understand that to mantain this complex you would need to terraform vast areas since over time it would return to a desert otherwise. It is a desert for a reasom the geology, enviroment, weather made it so.
@@augustinefaithdefender did you even watch the video? It's home to many rare breeds of coral and endangered marine life. I doubt they can prevent major impact to the marine ecosystem there, especially with the reverse osmosis desalination plants. We all know they'll dump the brine back into the ocean and disrupt major parts of that ecosystem
They aren't really expecting that reef to survive this project. Even IF it would survive construction arround it - as soon as some ritch people will spend theyr holidays there, this whole "eco-system" will certainly be destroyed.
What's the best way to preserve something? Turn it into a tourist attraction. Conservation becomes a lot easier once you tie people's economic self-interest into it. E.g.: Italian cityscapes, Kenyan wildlife, Californian whales, historic buildings and artefacts, etc.
@@harbl99 at least you didn't just answer with "no" like the other two. Still - i do not think you can compare these projects. A tourist attraction is pretty far away from a "resort". This is not a Park to preserver nature and wildlife. People will bath in and around these reefes. People will litter. People will have an impact on waterquality and temperature. Reefs are completely different form whales, buildings and artefacts. They outright die if the surroundings change. Just look at the great barrier reef. Why can't they just leave the reef alone and build this stuff somewhere where nothing is going on? Exactly. To attract rich guest who can enjoy it while it lasts.. for another 2-3 years. Oh and if you think like "but they will use the money they will earn with this project to protect wildlife and such" - you're wrong. Why should the saudis care about the environment? They tend to not give a shit about anything besides of their religion. Money will be spend for luxury. Nature will pay for it. The end.
@@harbl99 not true at all. Tourism to a place is what destroys the ecosystem. You give italy cityscape as an example, cruise ships are destroying and sinking venice quicker. Antarctica is experiencing faster degradation and pollution because of tourism. The best way to preserve something is to leave it alone and reduce human interaction. Of course if the thing that is destroying it is an outside factor like climate change, then you need some human interaction, but probably won't help.
B1M could be a bit more critical on these megalomane projects. How sustainable can a resort be to which everything and everyone needs to be airlifted? What will the effect be of millions of tourists covered in sunscreen polluting the red sea? Collecting rain water - all 150mm anually - what a joke. We’re in a climate crisis, rembember…
The job of B1M is to broadcast news regarding mega-construction projects. From here, other stakeholders are free to pursue whatever they'd like to pursue. The last thing the world needs is a blackout on news.
@@hussainbinshamsuddin9488 Criticizing fairly evident flaws is not the same as blocking out a topic entirely. If it's clearly stated, criticism is a valuable service to the public and stakeholders.
Red Sea project has one of the most brilliant minds under its cloak to design and build these areas. I'm pretty sure they must have thought of all possible techmologies and techniques that can be used to minimize the impact. This is also not one of a kind project, MiddleEast's climate don't give you much options really.
@@unbreakableldorado7723 stop bringing bull **** people got compensated with great amounts for the expropriation and that’s a different project. people here and Neom get scholarships for free to EHL in Switzerland and other great universities for AI and science and other parts to study! This whole project is to employ the locals.
@@knightara a small group of people get compensated great amounts. Most of the people working on it will be underpaid and subject to the same subpar working conditions that have defined the gulf countries for the past few decades.
An amazing project and one that truly pushes the boundaries of human habitation in inhospitable climates. Unfortunately, anyone who's been snorkeling in Hawaii knows that no matter what they do with the architecture/design, within 5 years, the visitors will have destroyed most of the coral by not keeping their hands off it or needing to douse themselves in sunscreen.
Also don't forget the labours will be treated like slave & will have zero rights. The key to most Middle East infrastructure success is all because of cheap availability of labours who are treated inhumanely!! Time we also see human degradation along with environment destruction in such projects.
I like how you just ignored the part that says "%75 of the islands remain untouched". and the portion that says that a part of the project is planting mangrove trees, corals and other sea plants in a carefully studied locations 🤪. Also there's a part that says that most building will be manufactured off site and would just be assembled on their designated position. I suggest that you re-watch the video because it seems that you weren't paying attention to these and many other ecological points that were mentioned and how preserving nature is a big part of this project.
Of course they would especially that 75% of the area is a natural preserve with the best scientist and scientific research being done to conserve and facilitate the thriving of these coral reefs which is the 4th largest in the world!
@@knightara lol imagine believing that “having the best scientist” is gonna fix the project’s shit after building a behemoth resort at one of the world’s largest barrier reefs with abundance of endangered species. Crooks would say anything to justify their bs. #basically
It is disappointing to see governments prioritize flashy megaprojects catering to the wealthy when they could be building sustainable and affordable cities for the average person.
Seeing the same story unfold as in other countries, such as Spain, where overdevelopment through the 70s and 80s completely destroyed coastal habitats and natural treasures is really sad, even more so when they have evidence of the terrible consequences right next to them in the Emirates. They're pushing to diversify from fossil fuels in the most bizarre ways and trying on top of that to greenwash the whole thing in an almost perversely cynical way. It should deserve more international attention.
Sounds so utopian paradise. I have a bad feeling that the eco-ness of this project is being highly oversold, and that there is in reality almost zero chance that they can build this thing without harming the local ecology. I guess we will see!
It looks nice on paper, but there's anything more sustainable that not doing that. It seems a pretty destructing project and also, I don't see how are they planning for sea rising.
I’m pretty sure the geologists have checked in on sea levels! Do you think people and companies just invest tens of billions blindly, without accountability?
I love how governments encourage poor/average people to take the environment seriously for the future, while simultaneously letting the rich devastate it.
This is pretty cool. Though tbh I got excited when I first clicked cause I thought this was all a conservation based plan. I would love to see more videos focused on construction projects based on reconstructing/protecting ecosystems
Looks amazing, would love to go, however it's pretty concerning they'd decide to put it so close to a barrier reef and other ecological red-flags, that damaging interaction with it would be inevitable, if not by the building crews, but by the drunken tourists that eventually arrive, and keep arriving, year after year - this looks quite upmarket though so I'm guessing it won't look like a bombsite at the end of a bachelor's weekend - who knows.
tourists numbers will capped at 1 million per year once the project finishes in 2030, the environment is their first priority to the point that they set a goal not to just conserve the current state of the environment but they will increase the diversity and footprint by 30%, there are already scientists in the ground planting more and more reefs and mangroves.. etc, and they will plant more than 25 million trees in the area
Im from Hawaii, and there is such thing as Reef Friendly sunscreen. The tourism might actually help the reef in the longterm as fishermen and large boats will stay away from the area.
Can’t wait to visit all parts of this marvelous project I’m truly happy to see such eco conscious approach in our region hope to see more sustainable development here & everywhere around our beautiful planet, thank you B1M for the continuous inspiration 💚
This is an amazing and beautiful project; however, I doubt the environment wouldn't be polluted or destroyed by this it seems too unrealistic honestly.
Our ancestors in the past lived a “sustainable lifestyle”, we now have the technology to do that while maintaining modernization. This project will set an example to encourage more tourist hubs to do this. And what helps it is that it has an open checkbook, so it’s really not about the revenue, but about making history… we’ll witness history after this project is done. It’ll be the pillar that pushes other projects around the world to follow to suit.
Not only coral reefs, also many Asian and African slave workers and locals like Abdul-Rahim al-Howeiti who already payed the ultimate price for protesting against relocations of the native tribes
@@unbreakableldorado7723 U stupid again! I meant the locals were compensated for expropriation. Alhowiti was armed and was shooting anyone comes close to his house!
The rich see an economic crisis as a garage sale and also the rich stay rich by investing and diversifying their portfolio with stock, crypto currency investment which is the wisest thing every individual need to do and it is really profitable.
I haven't seen someone so determined to make her client profits as Amy Robinette. How she allows you express your fears and still calm your fears is something i admire about her.i don't usually comment on video but i must put the word out there. She very great.
Architecturally beautiful, and no doubt an engineering challenge, especially with material and labour logistics. It's an incredibly ecologically sensitive region, however, so I hope their ambitions in that regard pay off. Excellent video as always!
Very beautiful, I really like the Desert Rock portion. It's nice to see such a thriving CAD (computer assisted design) program helping to make such an architectural marvel possible. Great video share, I'm very happy that I subscribed!
Okay, that construction in the rocks looks promising and the airport, amazing, if they can pull it off, but that spot at 8:29-8:24 looks mesmerizing...like a tranquil pod, even while looking slightly Bond villain-ish at the same time.
The architecture looks so beautiful like coral and shells with many complex and simple colors and also with many plants and creatures with a rock you can see out of and the rolling desert dunes with cold night breeze
The engineering for this is fascinating and I really love how vanity projects such as these are pushing the boundaries for engineering. However, the need for every project to proclaim itself as sustainable and renewable and other bollocks has become ridiculous. Nothing in that desert short of a camelhide tent shelter will be sustainable. Modern architecture and building methods are a disaster for the environment if we look at lifetime environmental footprint rather than cherry picking some period in its operational life. Building with concrete and in the desert, where all of the food and materials have to come from thousands of miles away, not to mention the energy footprint of the entire manufacturing and building process, not just that of operation is the opposite of sustainability. And I am not too sure that the reefs are going to come out of this alright. Sustainability is the hypocritical piousness of the age.
You’re wrong Alex, just like our ancestors in the past lived a “ sustainable lifestyle”, we now have the technology to do that while maintaining modernization. This project will set an example to encourage more tourist hubs to do this.
@@alialshehri6977 I hope you are right, but you did not address any of my points regarding the unsustainability of it all. I do look forward to seeing how it will fare when built. Hope it will not be vaporware.
Winter is the best time to visit the alpine resort close to where the Prophet was born! Too hot for the summer. Just right in the winter to shun blizzards!🌴
How is THIS going to be successful in ways that huge projects on the other side of the Arabian peninsula have NOT been? Also, too, ecologically friendly with a YUGE golf course taking up most of one of the islands? Yeah, no. They are one of THE largest point sources of pollution.
Why would a rich snob play golf in 50 degree Celsius heat in the middle of a desert? Maybe I'm too poor to understand. Anyone rich here to show us the light.
@@Fastest_Animal In Arizona, US, they like to say it is a "dry heat" but they get plenty of folks keeling over on the golf course from heat stroke when it is about 45C in the shade. Gotta be golfin doncha know.
@@tomjohnson9338 As a great man once said when asked about his superpower, "I'm Rich", I'm surprised being rich doesn't make you heat resistant in golf courses.
Bravo. Unlike many other developments in the region, this has the confidence to be its own unique beautiful thing influenced by the local environment and culture rather than a tasteless emulation of Western architecture and monuments. The commitment to sustainability, including solar power and working with the environment, is very impressive and I really hope this is borne out in reality long term and not just in the glossy computer graphics designed to encourage investment.
It will be interesting to see the environmental impact of this project. It’s being done with minimizing impact as a key aspect, if this doesn’t go well it will prove that we can never do it 😳
if a project for the super rich done by an oil monarchy pretending to be environmentally friendly for PR reasons, turns out to not be environmentally friendly (it wont be), it does not "prove that we can never do it"
@@dankind64 no, we won't, your premise is wrong: this project turning out to be environmentally destructive is no prove for humankinds inability to be environmentally friendly
In all honesty this project is the least essential of all kinds of projects. No one except for investors is asking for resorts to be built in the red sea. It's too hot, It's too isolated, It will probably be too expensive to visit and because it exists in a land of sharia law it also lacks several freedoms that people can enjoy in other areas. The world doesn't need more luxury, all inclusive resorts right now. We need projects that actually accomplish things that advance our future instead of lame ass vacation "hot spots" that will probably be built by slave labor.
What got me excited is regarding the battery plant, if they use the newer technologies and establish themselves as being reliable way to store energy. Then they can pave the way towards battery powered cities slowly but surely!
One of the many reasons I've become convinced they're lying about global warming and rising sea levels. Climate change and ecological destruction are obviously real, but the effects of them are not what the media tells us, nor are the solutions to them.
If this is a success and I hope it is I would love to see this kind of architecture around the world with everything they have in mind for the environment.
One thing I believe I heard was the elimination of single use food items. Banning plastic cups, utensils, bags, etc. goes a long way in minimizing waste and the garbage you see floating in the water. Since it will be built regardless of what non Saudis thinks I hope their sustainability dreams come true.
I love this channel! Id love to see a update video on this unique construction project in 5 years! And id like to see if they are following everything in their vision, minimized carbon footprint and sustainability plan! Looks amazing and im excited to see more videos by the definitive channel for construction B1M! :)
I wonder how much planning around the rising of sea levels happens for new island resorts now. Or are the project lifespans too short to worry about it (….leaving it for post-demolition successor projects) perhaps?
Great video!! This project is ambitious. I hope the men behind the money stick to the ecological mandates they set for themselves. The renderings are truly stunning. I hope it will be somewhat affordable for the everyday travelers.
Just wish that these kind of ideas can happen for regular people around the world. It will be beautiful, but only for a few very wealthy people. Also... the odds that this doesn't kill some of the endangered species is pretty low..... too much of a focus on optics than substance with these types of projects.
@@user-yj4qz5lo6k someone mentioned it in a comment, and I hadn’t thought of it the way they did but to paraphrase they never thought a bought the impacts from the tourist itself, such as sunscreen. There’s a lots of chemicals in sunscreen that promote coral bleaching, and with thousands putting on sunscreen everyday, assuming it’s not reed safe majority of the time, that is definitely going to have a huge environmental impacts. Adding onto my own assumptions, I don’t know too much about this project besides the baselines established in this video so please do correct me if I’m wrong. Solar energy is amazing and it’s a really valuable resource but there are very harmful impacts of broken or unused solar panels after 20 so years. There’s going to be a mass of solar panels thats definitely going to have a negative impact after it degrades. Another thing is the water desalination, depending on the process is used, usually there is a large amount of concentrated salt water that is pumped back into the ocean after extraction, that can also pose an issue for sea-life.
Could you build a project the size of belgium sustainably? Yes, of course you can, it will however be hard. Technically you could build a project the size of the planet sustainably, heck that's basically what we need to learn how to do, though it isn't going to be easy by any stretch of the imagination.
Our ancestors in the past lived a “sustainable lifestyle”, we now have the technology to do that while maintaining modernization. This project will set an example to encourage more tourist hubs to do this. And what helps it is that it has an open checkbook, so it’s really not about the revenue, but about making history… we’ll witness history after this project is done. It’ll be the pillar that pushes other projects around the world to follow to suit.
@@kekw5153 Jeddah tower is a prince’s project that was arrested in the ritz and the construction company went broke. It’s whole different owner. TRSDC is owned by the PIF which is the 5th largest sovereign wealth fund in the world. Plus it works with universities and scientist where 75% of the area is nature preserves. It also has different laws than the rest of the country. There is also KAEC city which parts of it is already done and has the 2nd most valuable university by endowment and one of the best with scientific research (KAUST).
@@xBox360BENUTZER Read the original comment again, and keep on doing it until you actually understand what was written. No one suggested mistakes can't be made - of course they can - he suggested they hadn't thought it through, which isn't the same thing. Try to understand the difference; it's a big one.
@@LordOfLight I understand both of your comments just fine. Arabs already failed their previous projects because of rising sea levels and erosion and because this project offers no better solution it will fail just as well and those experts clearly didn´t think it through or don´t care because it isn´t their money.
As gorgeous as this project is, resorts imo are inherently unsustainable and far from being environmental friendly. Might well take advantage of a Meta virtual resort like mentioned in your other video lol
Having worked on projects with sustainability targets, I believe this is one of the best projects in the world that has set high standards for environment conservation and sustainability. And for those who are being cynical in the comments below, this project is by far the most ambitious in the tourism sector found anywhere in the world. Even if it did not deliver 100%, it would at least have paved the way for future projects. We have been closely following the project.
Many of this project's most expensive elements seem to be only a couple of feet above sea level. Climate change could put a lot of this place under water that by mid-century.
yes, the hundreds of professionals working on this project were not able to anticipate such a thing. But you with that big brain of yours saw something they could not.
Yet another AMAZING video!Love this channel.
Have been making losses trading myself .... I THOUGHT trading on demo account is just like trading the real market .. can anyone help me out or at least advice me on what to do ?
I literally want to wake up one morning to discover my portfolio is above $60k
@@flaviorighetto5753 I started investing in stocks a little while ago and I’ve come to realize nothing beats first hand experience..Investing with Juan Antonio Landa has been the best experience ever.
Wow.Juan Antonio Landa?
I basically follow her trade pattern and haven’t regretted doing so.Hence I can confidently say I’m impressed by my returns so far.
I am very skeptical that this will pan out with a small ecological footprint. I think the water generation and treatment plans are likely to to be inadequate to maintain such water-thirsty features as golf courses. But, I guess we’ll see…
@@kp5343 A cybertron resort might be the next resort built.
Also gunna require 24/7 air conditioning etc
@@kp5343 lol i hope that'a joke.
plants do photosynthesis and provide food for everything and stuff
The golf course will likely be designed in such a way to have water run off into multiple drainage points that will lead back to wherever ever the wetwell is. I image there will be some treatment involved, nonetheless it would definitely be saving water. Simply by reusing the runoff for the golf course irrigation system.
This does not eliminate the need to refill the wetwell, and it is likely that any water that would be used to irrigate the course that isn’t reused runoff, would be treated municipal water.
The ecological Footprint is an invention from british petrol
After watching just the intro, I have a hard time believing it will only cost $5 billion.
Edit: After watching the whole video, I doubt it would only cost triple that figure, especially with the large scope of remote construction, that they will need exorbitantly lavish rooms/facilities to compete with the Emirates, road networks across that area the size of Belgium, and the lofty goals for sustainability/renewables. Only thing that keeps cost down is use of cheap South Asian labor treated to terrible conditions.
Final cost will most likely be $20 billion
just the airport alone would be $5 billion. probably $50billion at least.
@@samelmudir The airport looks very small, so maybe $2-4 billion at least.
5 billion a year
@@thomasfholland maybe 150bln
If we pretend this isn't going to devastate the local environment it's a pretty cool looking project.
The opposite don’t you see that 75% of the project is a nature preserve plus the scientific research that has been done in the last 5 years was contributing to the thrive of these coral reefs and raising awareness for protection and overfishing..
@@knightara raising awareness doesn't actually do anything besides slightly increase pressure on politicians
@@infernodotdash2203 I am from there and believe me the mindset of the locals there has changed completely. There used to be overfishing and destroying the nature with plastics and others now we have Environmental Police all over the place.. Also fishing is organized and many animals are forbidden to get caught and Turtles are tracked and cared for.. Hunting is also completely not allowed now and the whole place is a nature preserve.
@@knightara I stand corrected then
Yeah it looks cool, but like most of these building projects in this part of the world, it's just another soul-less circle jerk destination for the uber rich. I don't see any point going there other than for the novelty.
They can do it but at huge environmental costs. At this scale it's virtually impossible to avoid ecological impact.
It is a dessert, not a rainforest, no one gave a shit 💁🏻♂️😂
@@augustinefaithdefender Typical stupid, you do understand that to mantain this complex you would need to terraform vast areas since over time it would return to a desert otherwise. It is a desert for a reasom the geology, enviroment, weather made it so.
@@augustinefaithdefender Every place is important. Rainforest, desert, all of it. They all contain wildlife that needs protecting.
@@F1Fanatic76 shut it, you.
@@augustinefaithdefender did you even watch the video? It's home to many rare breeds of coral and endangered marine life. I doubt they can prevent major impact to the marine ecosystem there, especially with the reverse osmosis desalination plants. We all know they'll dump the brine back into the ocean and disrupt major parts of that ecosystem
They aren't really expecting that reef to survive this project. Even IF it would survive construction arround it - as soon as some ritch people will spend theyr holidays there, this whole "eco-system" will certainly be destroyed.
no
not true
What's the best way to preserve something? Turn it into a tourist attraction. Conservation becomes a lot easier once you tie people's economic self-interest into it. E.g.: Italian cityscapes, Kenyan wildlife, Californian whales, historic buildings and artefacts, etc.
@@harbl99 at least you didn't just answer with "no" like the other two. Still - i do not think you can compare these projects.
A tourist attraction is pretty far away from a "resort". This is not a Park to preserver nature and wildlife.
People will bath in and around these reefes. People will litter. People will have an impact on waterquality and temperature. Reefs are completely different form whales, buildings and artefacts. They outright die if the surroundings change. Just look at the great barrier reef.
Why can't they just leave the reef alone and build this stuff somewhere where nothing is going on? Exactly. To attract rich guest who can enjoy it while it lasts.. for another 2-3 years.
Oh and if you think like "but they will use the money they will earn with this project to protect wildlife and such" - you're wrong.
Why should the saudis care about the environment? They tend to not give a shit about anything besides of their religion. Money will be spend for luxury. Nature will pay for it. The end.
@@harbl99 not true at all. Tourism to a place is what destroys the ecosystem. You give italy cityscape as an example, cruise ships are destroying and sinking venice quicker. Antarctica is experiencing faster degradation and pollution because of tourism. The best way to preserve something is to leave it alone and reduce human interaction. Of course if the thing that is destroying it is an outside factor like climate change, then you need some human interaction, but probably won't help.
B1M could be a bit more critical on these megalomane projects. How sustainable can a resort be to which everything and everyone needs to be airlifted? What will the effect be of millions of tourists covered in sunscreen polluting the red sea? Collecting rain water - all 150mm anually - what a joke. We’re in a climate crisis, rembember…
The job of B1M is to broadcast news regarding mega-construction projects. From here, other stakeholders are free to pursue whatever they'd like to pursue. The last thing the world needs is a blackout on news.
@@hussainbinshamsuddin9488 but they are not just broadcasting it are they? They are very explicitly promoting it.
I prefer the optimism myself, I think it's why a lot of us come here - get away from negativity. Can do attitude.
@@hussainbinshamsuddin9488 Criticizing fairly evident flaws is not the same as blocking out a topic entirely.
If it's clearly stated, criticism is a valuable service to the public and stakeholders.
Red Sea project has one of the most brilliant minds under its cloak to design and build these areas. I'm pretty sure they must have thought of all possible techmologies and techniques that can be used to minimize the impact. This is also not one of a kind project, MiddleEast's climate don't give you much options really.
They will destroy that reef, not matter how environmentally "friendly" they sell this project.
But don't worry, they named the resort "Coral Bloom" and it took inspiration from the reef that they will destroy. It's all ok...
yep, that's litearlly what this is...destruction of one the worlds largest coral reef...can't believe what I am looking at
At the end this will ruin the nearby ecology =(
DEFINITELY !
It certainly won’t help it. But, it’ll continue to happen whether we like it or not.
And workers and locals life. Remember Abdul-Rahim al-Howeiti
@@unbreakableldorado7723 stop bringing bull **** people got compensated with great amounts for the expropriation and that’s a different project. people here and Neom get scholarships for free to EHL in Switzerland and other great universities for AI and science and other parts to study! This whole project is to employ the locals.
@@knightara a small group of people get compensated great amounts. Most of the people working on it will be underpaid and subject to the same subpar working conditions that have defined the gulf countries for the past few decades.
An amazing project and one that truly pushes the boundaries of human habitation in inhospitable climates. Unfortunately, anyone who's been snorkeling in Hawaii knows that no matter what they do with the architecture/design, within 5 years, the visitors will have destroyed most of the coral by not keeping their hands off it or needing to douse themselves in sunscreen.
Also don't forget the labours will be treated like slave & will have zero rights. The key to most Middle East infrastructure success is all because of cheap availability of labours who are treated inhumanely!! Time we also see human degradation along with environment destruction in such projects.
RIP coral reefs, hello hotels!
@@BlackHawkTejas is that any different from the foreign workers building western goods?
@@BlackHawkTejas I've heard that Saudis treat foreign workers better than Qatar and uae. Could be wrong though
@@dunnoshall824 By Middle East standards? Yes! Buy Global standards? No!
I think you will get the answer.
This is going to have a huge ecological impact. Poor reefs :/
KAUST is completely working with that
@@knightara what? Who?
@@cheftodaydjtomorrow410 KAUST just search for it 😂
apocalypse tourism
I like how you just ignored the part that says "%75 of the islands remain untouched". and the portion that says that a part of the project is planting mangrove trees, corals and other sea plants in a carefully studied locations 🤪. Also there's a part that says that most building will be manufactured off site and would just be assembled on their designated position. I suggest that you re-watch the video because it seems that you weren't paying attention to these and many other ecological points that were mentioned and how preserving nature is a big part of this project.
Oh sure, the corals are gonne LOVE this.
Of course they would especially that 75% of the area is a natural preserve with the best scientist and scientific research being done to conserve and facilitate the thriving of these coral reefs which is the 4th largest in the world!
@@knightara lol imagine believing that “having the best scientist” is gonna fix the project’s shit after building a behemoth resort at one of the world’s largest barrier reefs with abundance of endangered species. Crooks would say anything to justify their bs. #basically
@@knightara Hawaii.
@@skeletonbuyingpealts7134 what about it?
@@knightara Destroyed coral reefs
It is disappointing to see governments prioritize flashy megaprojects catering to the wealthy when they could be building sustainable and affordable cities for the average person.
They need yo make some investments to, support paying their average workers a good wage
Cheems mindset
They're actually building sustainable and affordable cities for the average person as well...
@@Bilal_is_joking I know some are. But most aren't.
@@yayayayya4731 Huh? Why don't you engage with genuine arguments instead of meme comments...
The best channel about construction, covering a projects in my country. Thanks. Sorry guys English it's not my first language 😆
Seeing the same story unfold as in other countries, such as Spain, where overdevelopment through the 70s and 80s completely destroyed coastal habitats and natural treasures is really sad, even more so when they have evidence of the terrible consequences right next to them in the Emirates. They're pushing to diversify from fossil fuels in the most bizarre ways and trying on top of that to greenwash the whole thing in an almost perversely cynical way. It should deserve more international attention.
Yes.
Nobody on TH-cam does ads like this channel. It's like you want to listen through, not skip them! Big up Fred.
Sounds so utopian paradise. I have a bad feeling that the eco-ness of this project is being highly oversold, and that there is in reality almost zero chance that they can build this thing without harming the local ecology. I guess we will see!
So beautiful, but so damaging 🙁
These projects make me so excited for the future
It looks nice on paper, but there's anything more sustainable that not doing that. It seems a pretty destructing project and also, I don't see how are they planning for sea rising.
Seems like the most stupid spot in the entire world to build a resort, a one meter high island.
I’m pretty sure the geologists have checked in on sea levels! Do you think people and companies just invest tens of billions blindly, without accountability?
@@larschristianlundstrseth3028 yes. Mostly when it comes from petrodollars
@@larschristianlundstrseth3028 Yes when it comes to oil money. just look at P$G
They might just build a dam to close the red sea
I love how governments encourage poor/average people to take the environment seriously for the future, while simultaneously letting the rich devastate it.
We are the carbon they want to reduce
TRUE.
This is pretty cool. Though tbh I got excited when I first clicked cause I thought this was all a conservation based plan.
I would love to see more videos focused on construction projects based on reconstructing/protecting ecosystems
These are the types of videos I like to watch, while on my toilet seat. Fascinating.
Looks amazing, would love to go, however it's pretty concerning they'd decide to put it so close to a barrier reef and other ecological red-flags, that damaging interaction with it would be inevitable, if not by the building crews, but by the drunken tourists that eventually arrive, and keep arriving, year after year - this looks quite upmarket though so I'm guessing it won't look like a bombsite at the end of a bachelor's weekend - who knows.
funny thing is alcohol is banned in KSA, so no drunken tourists!
Drunken tourists probably don't go scuba-diving, or swimming in general.
That's a death sentence
tourists numbers will capped at 1 million per year once the project finishes in 2030, the environment is their first priority to the point that they set a goal not to just conserve the current state of the environment but they will increase the diversity and footprint by 30%, there are already scientists in the ground planting more and more reefs and mangroves.. etc, and they will plant more than 25 million trees in the area
Im from Hawaii, and there is such thing as Reef Friendly sunscreen. The tourism might actually help the reef in the longterm as fishermen and large boats will stay away from the area.
Sustainability and environment protection is key! I am glad they are taking it into consideration. Great project!
Why do I feel like this project is just a huge waste of money and resources…
Because it serves no purpose aside from entertainment... and only for the super-rich people who can afford it.
Can’t wait to visit all parts of this marvelous project I’m truly happy to see such eco conscious approach in our region hope to see more sustainable development here & everywhere around our beautiful planet, thank you B1M for the continuous inspiration 💚
Lovely, thank you for sharing this kind of project!
Always super stoked to see a new ep! Fred you’re a legend
This is an amazing and beautiful project; however, I doubt the environment wouldn't be polluted or destroyed by this it seems too unrealistic honestly.
Our ancestors in the past lived a “sustainable lifestyle”, we now have the technology to do that while maintaining modernization.
This project will set an example to encourage more tourist hubs to do this. And what helps it is that it has an open checkbook, so it’s really not about the revenue, but about making history… we’ll witness history after this project is done. It’ll be the pillar that pushes other projects around the world to follow to suit.
This is such a good channel, so interesting and highlights engineering that's not always widely known....fantastic!
If this happens, it wil another of another coral reef that bites the dust !!🥲
Yes wtf ? "There's no coral reef" should be a reason to build a resort there not the other way around...
Not only coral reefs, also many Asian and African slave workers and locals like Abdul-Rahim al-Howeiti who already payed the ultimate price for protesting against relocations of the native tribes
@@unbreakableldorado7723 so ignorant! That’s a whole different project again.. plus people were compensated.
@@knightara sure, Al-Howeiti and dead workers were 'compensated', then it's alright of course :)
@@unbreakableldorado7723 U stupid again! I meant the locals were compensated for expropriation. Alhowiti was armed and was shooting anyone comes close to his house!
The difference between a Rich person and a Poor person is how they use their time. Your Future is created by what you do Today not your Tomorrow.
The rich see an economic crisis as a garage sale and also the rich stay rich by investing and diversifying their portfolio with stock, crypto currency investment which is the wisest thing every individual need to do and it is really profitable.
Wow, Is amazing to see people who have also invested with Amy Robinette. I thought am the only one she helped through this rough market.
Yes of course, my trader Mrs Amy Robinette she very experiences in the market i meet her at los Angeles's, her success story are everywhere
I've heard about Mrs Amy Robinette but was sceptical to invest due to fear and ignorance, anyway can i verify her service ?
I haven't seen someone so determined to make her client profits as Amy Robinette. How she allows you express your fears and still calm your fears is something i admire about her.i don't usually comment on video but i must put the word out there. She very great.
Spectacular video, the project looks wonderful, congrats, thank you for sharing.🌞🧚🏻♀️
Architecturally beautiful, and no doubt an engineering challenge, especially with material and labour logistics. It's an incredibly ecologically sensitive region, however, so I hope their ambitions in that regard pay off. Excellent video as always!
Very beautiful, I really like the Desert Rock portion. It's nice to see such a thriving CAD (computer assisted design) program helping to make such an architectural marvel possible. Great video share, I'm very happy that I subscribed!
Okay, that construction in the rocks looks promising and the airport, amazing, if they can pull it off, but that spot at 8:29-8:24 looks mesmerizing...like a tranquil pod, even while looking slightly Bond villain-ish at the same time.
The architecture looks so beautiful like coral and shells with many complex and simple colors and also with many plants and creatures with a rock you can see out of and the rolling desert dunes with cold night breeze
The engineering for this is fascinating and I really love how vanity projects such as these are pushing the boundaries for engineering. However, the need for every project to proclaim itself as sustainable and renewable and other bollocks has become ridiculous. Nothing in that desert short of a camelhide tent shelter will be sustainable. Modern architecture and building methods are a disaster for the environment if we look at lifetime environmental footprint rather than cherry picking some period in its operational life. Building with concrete and in the desert, where all of the food and materials have to come from thousands of miles away, not to mention the energy footprint of the entire manufacturing and building process, not just that of operation is the opposite of sustainability. And I am not too sure that the reefs are going to come out of this alright. Sustainability is the hypocritical piousness of the age.
You’re wrong Alex, just like our ancestors in the past lived a “ sustainable lifestyle”, we now have the technology to do that while maintaining modernization.
This project will set an example to encourage more tourist hubs to do this.
@@alialshehri6977 I hope you are right, but you did not address any of my points regarding the unsustainability of it all. I do look forward to seeing how it will fare when built. Hope it will not be vaporware.
Finally video on my country 🇸🇦❤️ alhamdulillah thanks
You guys have, yet again, outdone yourself! Bravo!!
I’m excited for this. Especially the mountain hotel
The Desert Rock resorts look like a James Bond's villain lair
Exactly 👌
Winter is the best time to visit the alpine resort close to where the Prophet was born! Too hot for the summer. Just right in the winter to shun blizzards!🌴
If it wasn't for this TH-cam channel, I wouldn't know about such amazing projects going on around the world. Awesome stuff
bro this video in particular was another level ... I loved every second of it, great job!!!
this is crazy beautiful not only for a destination but also for environmental
How is THIS going to be successful in ways that huge projects on the other side of the Arabian peninsula have NOT been?
Also, too, ecologically friendly with a YUGE golf course taking up most of one of the islands? Yeah, no. They are one of THE largest point sources of pollution.
Why would a rich snob play golf in 50 degree Celsius heat in the middle of a desert? Maybe I'm too poor to understand. Anyone rich here to show us the light.
@@Fastest_Animal are all deserts above 50 C?
The mega projects in UAE have been successful. But the situation in Saudia Arabia is very different.
@@Fastest_Animal In Arizona, US, they like to say it is a "dry heat" but they get plenty of folks keeling over on the golf course from
heat stroke when it is about 45C in the shade. Gotta be golfin doncha know.
@@tomjohnson9338 As a great man once said when asked about his superpower, "I'm Rich", I'm surprised being rich doesn't make you heat resistant in golf courses.
This channel drops dimes every time it posts.
Bravo. Unlike many other developments in the region, this has the confidence to be its own unique beautiful thing influenced by the local environment and culture rather than a tasteless emulation of Western architecture and monuments.
The commitment to sustainability, including solar power and working with the environment, is very impressive and I really hope this is borne out in reality long term and not just in the glossy computer graphics designed to encourage investment.
Crazy what construction is capable of these day. Wow.
It will be interesting to see the environmental impact of this project. It’s being done with minimizing impact as a key aspect, if this doesn’t go well it will prove that we can never do it 😳
if a project for the super rich done by an oil monarchy pretending to be environmentally friendly for PR reasons, turns out to not be environmentally friendly (it wont be), it does not "prove that we can never do it"
@@fabianstein6137 we shall see
@@dankind64 no, we won't, your premise is wrong: this project turning out to be environmentally destructive is no prove for humankinds inability to be environmentally friendly
@@fabianstein6137 oh yeah, i see what you're saying.
In all honesty this project is the least essential of all kinds of projects. No one except for investors is asking for resorts to be built in the red sea. It's too hot, It's too isolated, It will probably be too expensive to visit and because it exists in a land of sharia law it also lacks several freedoms that people can enjoy in other areas. The world doesn't need more luxury, all inclusive resorts right now. We need projects that actually accomplish things that advance our future instead of lame ass vacation "hot spots" that will probably be built by slave labor.
Looks awesome, good luck on
What got me excited is regarding the battery plant, if they use the newer technologies and establish themselves as being reliable way to store energy. Then they can pave the way towards battery powered cities slowly but surely!
Good special works footage coverage upload video officials by B1M
Creative designed;Excellent
these vids are just getting better and better!
very good journalism. keep up the good work. was waiting for your video .
Idk how/why we are still developing high end projects in coastal areas and islands with the rising sea level 🤔
One of the many reasons I've become convinced they're lying about global warming and rising sea levels. Climate change and ecological destruction are obviously real, but the effects of them are not what the media tells us, nor are the solutions to them.
It’ll take 20 years at least to go about 5cm, so I think for the next decades they’re good to go.
Neom and red sea development are two diffrent projects glad I worked for 8 months in red sea project
This is like if someone asked what the least climate friendly construction project they could imagine was
Between this and Neom, Saudi Arabia really going all in on transforming the country. I will follow with curious interest.
The new airport is stunning ✈💺🍽🍸
If this is a success and I hope it is I would love to see this kind of architecture around the world with everything they have in mind for the environment.
@@punkinhoot what are you talking about? I'm talking about the aesthetics.
One thing I believe I heard was the elimination of single use food items. Banning plastic cups, utensils, bags, etc. goes a long way in minimizing waste and the garbage you see floating in the water. Since it will be built regardless of what non Saudis thinks I hope their sustainability dreams come true.
The use of Clair de Lune in the intro vibes with the Everything Everywhere All at Once movie
There is absolutely no way it will only cost 5Billion.
The airport alone would be already more than half of that.
I love this channel! Id love to see a update video on this unique construction project in 5 years! And id like to see if they are following everything in their vision, minimized carbon footprint and sustainability plan! Looks amazing and im excited to see more videos by the definitive channel for construction B1M! :)
I wonder how much planning around the rising of sea levels happens for new island resorts now.
Or are the project lifespans too short to worry about it (….leaving it for post-demolition successor projects) perhaps?
ask the climate alarmists in the US that for some reason all end up buying beach front property in Florida
@@growndown3358 You do know global warming is real right?
@@AL-lh2ht Narrator : he doesn't
Great video!!
This project is ambitious. I hope the men behind the money stick to the ecological mandates they set for themselves.
The renderings are truly stunning. I hope it will be somewhat affordable for the everyday travelers.
Literally feels like a holiday resort on Arrakis (Dune) and I love it!
I was thinking this! Now i can live out my fremmen dreams
@@jontymonts6938 My Road Leads into the Desert.
awesome! great work fred and team
A reef that needs protecting, proceeds to build a resort for rich people literally on top of it and an airport next to it.
Marvelous projects.
Just wish that these kind of ideas can happen for regular people around the world. It will be beautiful, but only for a few very wealthy people. Also... the odds that this doesn't kill some of the endangered species is pretty low..... too much of a focus on optics than substance with these types of projects.
This is madness
I would have appreciated a bit more of your usual critique on this one. Seems like it has the potential to be highly damaging to the environment.
How?
@@user-yj4qz5lo6k someone mentioned it in a comment, and I hadn’t thought of it the way they did but to paraphrase they never thought a bought the impacts from the tourist itself, such as sunscreen. There’s a lots of chemicals in sunscreen that promote coral bleaching, and with thousands putting on sunscreen everyday, assuming it’s not reed safe majority of the time, that is definitely going to have a huge environmental impacts.
Adding onto my own assumptions, I don’t know too much about this project besides the baselines established in this video so please do correct me if I’m wrong. Solar energy is amazing and it’s a really valuable resource but there are very harmful impacts of broken or unused solar panels after 20 so years. There’s going to be a mass of solar panels thats definitely going to have a negative impact after it degrades. Another thing is the water desalination, depending on the process is used, usually there is a large amount of concentrated salt water that is pumped back into the ocean after extraction, that can also pose an issue for sea-life.
That project sounds so interesting
Could you build a project the size of belgium sustainably? Yes, of course you can, it will however be hard. Technically you could build a project the size of the planet sustainably, heck that's basically what we need to learn how to do, though it isn't going to be easy by any stretch of the imagination.
They have a website and it’s about to finish phase one
Our ancestors in the past lived a “sustainable lifestyle”, we now have the technology to do that while maintaining modernization.
This project will set an example to encourage more tourist hubs to do this. And what helps it is that it has an open checkbook, so it’s really not about the revenue, but about making history… we’ll witness history after this project is done. It’ll be the pillar that pushes other projects around the world to follow to suit.
Great video. Keep up the great work 👏
I am certain that this won’t end up happening lmao it will have the same fate as most Saudi mega projects
Like what?
@@knightara you haven't heard about the jeddah tower?
@@kekw5153 Jeddah tower is a prince’s project that was arrested in the ritz and the construction company went broke. It’s whole different owner. TRSDC is owned by the PIF which is the 5th largest sovereign wealth fund in the world. Plus it works with universities and scientist where 75% of the area is nature preserves. It also has different laws than the rest of the country. There is also KAEC city which parts of it is already done and has the 2nd most valuable university by endowment and one of the best with scientific research (KAUST).
LOL even the ad in this video is interesting and informative. Another amazing B1M video
It would be a dream to live like that. Hidden within nature instead of scarring the landscape with harsh, rectangular houses.
At the expense of nature. A really horrid project.
@@christopherpearson6105 ohhh the poor rocks are gonna get hurt 😢, you’re really naive
@@alialshehri6977 enjoy your climate catastrophe desert caves bro
@@christopherpearson8637
Oh don’t you worry about that, I will..
Getting Fyre Festival vibes from this.
I'm surprised this project was allowed to proceed with our any plans to preserve the reefs they are building near. That is ridiculous
Do you even bother to visit the website of the project? They are going to preserve the reefs. Read before making an ignorant comment.
@@akmed5020 Ignorant?? Why don't you search up what that word means 🙄
@@akmed5020 Its easier to bs about ecological preservation than actually doing it. They're going to damage the local ecosystem, guaranteed.
Beautiful video
Like your video...but hate the project! Another part of the natural world destroyed! 😭
Neom,,it is.cant wait to see how it will look like,
The rich: "Poor people will have to make a choice between paying rent and eating. There is no other way to prevent a recession."
Also the rich:
this type of project always impresses me.
I really wanna vacation there
The B1M and Kurzesagt are by far my favourite non-gaming channels
Wouldnt the rising sea levels be a problem for this kind of resort? Feels like they havent exactly thought that through
Yeah, I bet all those engineers, architects, and financiers have never thought of the very thing you thought of first. You're a goddam genius.
Hey man, don't worry, they use AutoDesk, the water around their islands won't rise an inch, guaranteed. =) haha
@@LordOfLight You mean all those experts that made sure the previous projects weren´t sinking failures?
@@xBox360BENUTZER Read the original comment again, and keep on doing it until you actually understand what was written.
No one suggested mistakes can't be made - of course they can - he suggested they hadn't thought it through, which isn't the same thing. Try to understand the difference; it's a big one.
@@LordOfLight I understand both of your comments just fine. Arabs already failed their previous projects because of rising sea levels and erosion and because this project offers no better solution it will fail just as well and those experts clearly didn´t think it through or don´t care because it isn´t their money.
Simply awesome! 😀👍🏼
As gorgeous as this project is, resorts imo are inherently unsustainable and far from being environmental friendly. Might well take advantage of a Meta virtual resort like mentioned in your other video lol
Having worked on projects with sustainability targets, I believe this is one of the best projects in the world that has set high standards for environment conservation and sustainability. And for those who are being cynical in the comments below, this project is by far the most ambitious in the tourism sector found anywhere in the world. Even if it did not deliver 100%, it would at least have paved the way for future projects. We have been closely following the project.
I❤❤❤👑👑👑MBS future city in ksa
this and neom are ridiculously ambitious
Many of this project's most expensive elements seem to be only a couple of feet above sea level. Climate change could put a lot of this place under water that by mid-century.
yes, the hundreds of professionals working on this project were not able to anticipate such a thing. But you with that big brain of yours saw something they could not.
Always love this channel
As amazing at it seems - I bet it ends up 40% complete and abandoned like so many other overly grand projects in the middle-east
definitely
I would like to inform you that the project is nearing completion and will be opened in 2023
Actually the project is way bigger than that and the almost done with tow islands and about to be ready in 2023
My daily dose of an AWESOME VIDEO has finally arrived!!!