Skip to content
Environment

Nabat, New Abu Dhabi Climate Tech Venture, to use AI and Robotics to Restore Mangroves and Boost Climate Resilience

Nabat 3 mins read

New startup by the Advanced Technology Research Council’s VentureOne uses AI and autonomous robotics to conserve natural ecosystems, beginning with mangroves and expanding to other habitats


ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates--BUSINESS WIRE--

The Advanced Technology Research Council’s VentureOne has unveiled Nabat, a new climate tech venture that will conserve and restore mangroves and other ecosystems across the region using AI and robotics, at the International Mangrove Conservation and Restoration Conference in Abu Dhabi.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241211709642/en/

Nabat, New Abu Dhabi Climate Tech Venture, to use AI and Robotics to Restore Mangroves and Boost Climate Resilience (Photo: AETOSWire)

Nabat, New Abu Dhabi Climate Tech Venture, to use AI and Robotics to Restore Mangroves and Boost Climate Resilience (Photo: AETOSWire)

Nabat showcased their advanced technology, including drones, AI-powered software, and flexible seeding mechanisms, which they will use to conserve and restore thousands of hectares of mangroves across the UAE over the coming seven years. Mangroves store up to five times more carbon than rainforest trees and are a vital component of the UAE’s ecosystem and the world’s fight against climate change.

“Nabat exemplifies how the UAE is leveraging advanced technology to benefit humanity,” said H.E. Faisal Al Bannai, the Secretary General of the Advanced Technology Research Council (ATRC). “By merging innovation with science, we’re driving efforts to restore ecosystems, enhance biodiversity, and strengthen climate resilience to accelerate our country’s journey to net-zero.”

“Technology and nature are often seen to be at odds—but when we combine technology with science-based research to solve critical problems, technology can become one of nature’s most powerful allies,” said Dr. Najwa Aaraj, the CEO of the Technology Innovation Institute, ATRC’s applied research arm and the developer of the technology behind Nabat. “Our system is helping solve several critical challenges related to conservation, one of the most important being data gathering. No two ecosystems are alike—each needs a customized, data-driven approach.”

Nabat’s AI and robotics enable precision mapping, seeding, and monitoring, ensuring conservation and restoration is tailored to each ecosystem’s unique and complex needs. Unlike traditional mangrove planting, which is labor-intensive and can even harm surrounding ecosystems, Nabat’s system touches habitats as lightly as possible.

During the mapping stage, Nabat’s technology provides vast amounts of data about soil as well as the density, elevation, and hydrology of natural habitats. The drone’s seeding mechanism uses optimized trajectory planning and flexible seeding patterns to ensure seeds are planted precisely and only as they are needed. The system also has monitoring capabilities to help ensure planted trees grow safely.

Nabat’s technology works even in hard-to-reach, remote areas, allowing conservation and restoration efforts to scale efficiently while minimizing costs.

Reda Nidhakou, the Acting CEO of VentureOne, Nabat’s parent company, said, “The soul of VentureOne is launching startups that bring groundbreaking technology to the world. The most valuable technology isn’t just innovative, efficient, or profitable—it most importantly makes a measurable positive impact. It’s been a privilege to work hand-in-hand with the team and our broader ecosystem to contribute to the UAE’s sustainability journey in such a fundamental way.”

While the company’s initial focus will be on mangroves in the UAE, they plan to expand to other parts of the region and service additional ecosystems, including desert areas, farmland, forests, and coral reefs.

*Source: AETOSWire


Contact details:

Audrey Fernandes
Audrey.fernandes@edelman.com

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Oil Mining Resources
  • 12/12/2024
  • 06:04
Climate Media Centre

Tim Winton, John Butler, leading reef scientists and conservationists visit one of Australia’s most spectacular coral reefs to highlight Woodside’s risky gas drilling plans

Scott Reef is Australia’s largest offshore coral reef, supporting over one thousand five hundred species, including endangered turtles, sea snakes & pygmy blue whales. Woodside plans to drill up to fifty gas wells around Scott Reef, some as close as two kilometres from this vital reef ecosystem. Stunning unreleased video, photos and audio content captured of Scott Reef isavailable here* - all TV news content is embargoed until 7pm. Content includes extraordinary underwater and drone vision, b-roll and interviews with Tim Winton, John Butler, Brinkley Davies, Dr Ben Fitzpatrick and leading campaigners, as well as high-res still images and audio…

  • Environment, Property Real Estate
  • 12/12/2024
  • 06:00
The ImPossible House

Boundary-pushing sustainable home launches to showcase opportunities for more sustainable inner-city living

A ground-breaking sustainable home project that showcases the future of sustainable inner-city living has officially launched in Sydney. Nestled in the heart ofNewtown, The…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Science
  • 11/12/2024
  • 16:11
Sunshine Coast Council

Saving lives, darkening skies: Dr Wishaw’s incredible history

11 December 2024 Doctor Ken Wishaw is a hero of many forms. As a doctor, anaesthetist, Australia’s first full-time helicopter rescue doctor, medevac officer…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.