The Iran war is also a climate war
War is usually narrated through maps. Front lines are drawn, strike zones are named, and theatres of operation are presented as if they have clear edges. Nature has never recognised those boundaries....
The environmental cost of the Iran war in the Gulf
A memory has been returning to me with unusual force these past days. Inside the Ukraine pavilion at COP27 in Sharm El Sheikh, war and climate were being held in the same frame. Delegates were being...
The architecture of absence
The questions arrived this past couple of weeks on the back of the Winter Olympics. Reporters were asking athletes about melting snow, about venues that may not exist in a generation, about what it...
Ramadhan returns to winter
I turned nine years old during Ramadhan. The fast had already begun, so we waited, and a date cake came out after iftar. In the warm light of our home by the sea, my mother watched me with the...
Variety of life in our environment acts as a shield
The concept of biodiversity often feels like a distant priority. In many public discussions, it is treated as a secondary concern, a niche interest for ecologists rather than a pillar of public...
The gap between degrees and dollars
We are only two months into 2026, and a lot has already shifted beneath our feet. In New York, the fourth session of the UN tax committee opened this week with an empty chair. The United States exited...
Burnout has a climate
I noticed it in the smallest place first. The way my attention started stuttering, like a car misfiring on a familiar road. The way rest stopped feeling like rest, and became a guilty pause between...
Insurance as the Gulf’s early warning system
Every year, I read the World Economic Forum Global Risks Report as if it were a weather map for the next decade. Coffee in hand, I skim the rankings, then I reread the parts that make the page feel...
All systems go, but do they speak
This week, Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week is unfolding under the theme, "The Nexus of Next, All Systems Go." It lands with honesty. In our region, the future rarely arrives as a single headline. It...
When climate finance moves slower than risk
I have started to recognise the exact moment a climate conversation changes. It is when the language moves from aspiration to allocation, from pathways to payment. The room grows careful. Everyone...
The year we could not outrun
There is a particular kind of patience you learn when you wait for turtles. The air carries salt and expectation. The sand feels blank, almost indifferent, until the first movement arrives. Soon, the...
Stone, craft, and the new luxury logic
Lately, I have had an influx of international friends visiting me in Oman. I observe myself building itineraries the way you build a story, with a beginning that feels rooted and a middle that...
The system beneath the system
On the trail from Riyam to Muttrah, the city falls away and the rock takes over. You climb past a rusted pipe that once carried diesel to an old generator station, a relic of a time when electricity...
When partnership means different things
“If hydrogen production and localisation stay in producer countries, Europeans lose jobs. And unemployment leads to fascism.”The European panellist's words hung in the air during our...
Opinion- COP30... When the house is literally burned
The fire broke out on Thursday afternoon. I watched the videos from Muscat: smoke billowing from the venue’s upper floors, delegates evacuating into Belém’s humid air, clutching laptops and...
COP30: When physics meets the price tag
One week of climate negotiations has lapsed in Belém, and to call the atmosphere charged would be an understatement. In windowless rooms reeking of instant coffee and anxiety, negotiators who speak...
COP30: When the storm outpaces the summit
Thirty years have passed since the start of climate talks. Ten years since the Paris Agreement. Now, as delegates gather in Belém for COP30, Hurricane Melissa has delivered a message louder than any...
The illusion of safe environment
The air is different this week. Heavy, ochre, thick with the weight of unseen lands. As a ghostly tide of dust blankets Muscat and much of North Oman, reducing the sky to a choking haze, we witness...
The weight of weather and its impact on people
During a guest lecture in Muscat, I asked students one question: What will Oman look like in 2100? Their answers came bright and certain. Greener, they said. Less dependent on oil. New energies...
Rooms where better thinking happens
In Al Duqm, Oman’s green hydrogen hubs are rising on a foundation of renewable energy and industrial-scale desalination. The infrastructure is already programmed: steady power, reliable water, and...