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  • It's home to one of the biggest contemporary

  • nature conservation efforts.

  • Sir Bani Yas — a desert island packed with wildlife.

  • Animals from multiple continents roam freely on the island.

  • Sir Bani Yas is part of Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates, or UAE.

  • The reserve was established by Shaikh Zayed Al Nayhan,

  • who created a kind of Noah's Ark for one of the

  • rarest species at the time, the Arabian oryx.

  • ThisIsland of the White AntelopebecameAbu Dhabi's Natural Oasis”.

  • The emirates have seen development at break-neck speed.

  • A dhow against the modern backdrop of Abu Dhabi symbolizes

  • the rapid growth from fishing settlement to booming metropolis.

  • The UAE is a record breaker when it comes to

  • the consumption of energy, resources and water.

  • So even in my own lifetime it got difficult to keep up with the

  • with the changes that we're seeing.

  • You know I can point at something unique and beautiful and

  • enormous and tell you that this was desert five years ago.

  • So I can - I can't even imagine what it's like for my father or

  • his father before him to see where we were and what we've become.

  • It began in the oases of Rub al-Khali,

  • the largest uninterrupted sand desert in the world.

  • It brought the Arab Bedouin Federation of the Bani Yas to

  • the glass palaces of Abu Dhabi and Dubai.

  • The name Sir Bani Yasthe island of the Bani Yas

  • harks back to the political union from which the

  • ruling families of Abu Dhabi and Dubai came.

  • The first recorded mention of the

  • Liwa Oasis dates to the 17th century.

  • It's located in the part of the Rub al-Khali that borders

  • Saudi Arabia and now belongs to the UAE.

  • In the desert, water is the most precious commodity.

  • Only in places where there is enough water can

  • settlements develop and people survive.

  • But locating it isn't easy.

  • Luckily, people in the region had some outside help?

  • The Arabian oryx, which is, is the white one, is the best one

  • best animal to find the water source in the desert,

  • so in the past people that would follow the tracks of oryx,

  • went on the wild they find the water source so maybe that could be

  • a reason why they choose Arabian oryx

  • as a national animal of the UAE.

  • It's no coincidence that the name Abu

  • Dhabi meansfather of the gazelle”.

  • During a hunting trip in the 18th century,

  • a gazelle led the Liwa Oasis Bedouins to a freshwater spring.

  • There they established a fishing village.

  • According to legend, it was the dawn of a new era.

  • In the mid-19th century, the coastal settlement experienced

  • its first boom through the pearl fishery.

  • It exists somewhere between tradition and modernity.

  • The visible contradictions are proof of the

  • rapid changes the emirate has gone through.

  • Abu Dhabi has long outgrown its geographic area.

  • Its skyscrapers and other magnificent

  • buildings require a lot of space,

  • which is reclaimed from the sea.

  • The Shaikh Zayed Grand Mosque,

  • the city center around the Etihad Towers,

  • and the Qasr al Watan Presidential palace,

  • are statements in the global contest for influence and prestige.

  • Even the locals gaze on with astonishment.

  • The main island on which Abu Dhabi is located has more than doubled

  • in size over the past 50 years, thanks to land reclamation concepts.

  • For a long time, the race into the future knew no bounds

  • until climate change began to demand otherwise.

  • There are many way to express luxury.

  • But here, one thing takes center-stage is water.

  • The desert's most precious commodity has become a symbol of excess.

  • One of Shaikh Zayed's

  • many achievements is free access to water,

  • which according to the Koran, every Muslim is entitled to.

  • But climate change is making the desert ever harsher.

  • So it makes sense to limit private water use in favor of irrigation.

  • When Sheik Zayed was ascended to be ruler of

  • Abu Dhabi he was having big vision in his mind,

  • which he started at from Al Ain,

  • which is the greening of the desert and then he moved it here in 1971,

  • which means he started planting trees on the island

  • and preparing a nice environment for the animals.

  • Many species of animals from different regions of

  • the world have found a home here.

  • For one particular species from the Arabian Peninsula,

  • the wildlife refuge was a matter of life and death.

  • At the time when Sir Bani Yas was established,

  • the Arabian oryx was one of the very endangered species,

  • Sheikh Zayed basically decided to allocate this island,

  • which is a huge island, for protection of this species.

  • Almost 40 years later from the establishment of this island,

  • today the Arabian oryx is no longer an endangered species.

  • For the Arabian oryx, Sir Bani Yas became a safe haven,

  • paving the way for an amazing comeback.

  • The desert is considered to be Allah's garden,

  • from which he removed everything that was superfluous.

  • But wild animals were by no means a part of that.

  • Sir Ban Yas island is 87 square kilometers and half of

  • all land is nature resort, animals free roaming inside.

  • There are mountains, grass patches areas

  • on the plantations, on the trees, yeah.

  • The island reserve also provides protection for eland antelopes?

  • Barbary sheep from North Africa?

  • and blackbuck antelopes during mating season.

  • Unlike elsewhere, the animals here don't face poaching

  • or other harmful human influences.

  • That's reflected in their relaxed demeanor.

  • We do have different species in the island, mostly from like Africa,

  • middle east asian or likely from India,

  • most of the animals are gifted or

  • donated to the Sheikh Zayed, because he used to save his own species

  • at the beginning and neighbor countries realize

  • why don't we ask him to take our species.

  • It's no secret that striped hyenas and

  • cheetahs are severely threatened.

  • But it's less well-known that giraffes are also endangered.

  • In some countries, even gazelles have died out.

  • The biggest challenge is the harsh climate.

  • High temperatures and then humidity.

  • Apart from these natural challenges we have the challenges of

  • different species which are not from this region.

  • Providing them with the ecological requirements that

  • they need to survive here on the island.

  • The abilities of wild animals to learn and adapt can be studied here.

  • It's not only the herbivores that wait for their daily feeding?

  • ?so do the predators.

  • Once in the day the truck going to pass, they drop of the food in

  • the feeding stations, the animals they do know

  • what time or when they get their food.

  • So, they do more on pretty much the mornings

  • quite active in the feeding sessions.

  • And water, we don't want to make a big pond,

  • then animals get to lay on that water,

  • then they need water all the time kind of.

  • We want animals to roam around on the island,

  • to look for the water from the grass patches area.

  • African cheetahs have been known to incorporate safari vehicles and

  • even airplanes into their hunting strategies.

  • So knowing daily feeding times is child's play.

  • Still, not every hunt ends in success.

  • All around the world, most of the conservation plans on conservation

  • reintroduction fail because the animals were directly taken from an

  • institution that is extensively taking care of the animals

  • and then immediately releasing them to the wild.

  • So, they don't survive there because they don't have the

  • the skills to survive in the wild.

  • Sir Bani Yas is the result of extensive landscape

  • planning based on scientific research.

  • The same can be said for urban planning in Abu Dhabi.

  • The architecture reflects the idea of harmoniously combining the past,

  • present and futurefollowing the notion ofEtihad,”

  • the Arabic word for community.

  • And the animal depicted on the UAE's emblem reflects that too.

  • Falcons are a big part of Emirati heritage and tradition.

  • And that can be seen on our crests.

  • And having a falcon hospital just shows you how serious we are about

  • protecting this heritage that goes hand in hand with the

  • nature that this heritage is tied to as well.

  • The head doctor at this unique animal clinic

  • is a German veterinarian.

  • She was awarded the highest civilian

  • distinction by the Crown Prince himself.

  • With over 11,500 falcons per year,

  • we're the largest falcon hospital in the world.

  • Falcons have a different significance here.

  • In Europe, falconry was the sport of kings in the Middle Ages.

  • It was for the aristocracy.

  • Here, falconry has a completely different background.

  • Just 40, 50, or 60 years ago, most Emiratis

  • were Bedouins living in the desert.

  • They used falcons to hunt for meat for their families.

  • They couldn't have survived without falcons.

  • The birds were never just a piece of sporting equipment.

  • They were integrated into the family.

  • Falcons had the status of a family

  • member, and that's still the case today.

  • We're not just caring for birds here.

  • We're caring for the children of the Bedouins.

  • Because that's how falcons are still seen today.

  • The UAE was the first Arab state to make private ownership

  • and trade in wild animals punishable by law.

  • The move was all the more significant because big cats,

  • in particular, were considered status symbols.

  • Genuine efforts to stop illegal wildlife trade,

  • as well as an international commitment to species conservation,

  • are showing clear signs of success.

  • We have Scimitar Horned Oryx, which was declared as extinct

  • in the wild in 2000 and we have around

  • more than a thousand individuals

  • herd of Scimitar Horn Oryx on the island

  • we see that our success is very good for captive breeding

  • and preparing a population for future reintroductions.

  • The environment agency of Abu Dhabi they took up a project of

  • reintroducing them in wilding Chad by contributing a breeding herd.

  • The project is basically going very

  • successful and they have been able to

  • revert the status from extinct to critically endangered.

  • So, it's a big success story.

  • The repopulation in Chad shows that Sir Bani Yas is much more than

  • a safari park where peacocks walk side-by-side with cheetahs.

  • The scimitar oryxnot to be confused with the Arabian oryx

  • was once widespread throughout the Sahara.

  • It was later eradicated from its last refuge, in Chad.

  • There still seems to be little concern among people that up to

  • a million species are on the brink of extinction.

  • They include the East African or Beisa oryx,

  • one of four species of oryx on Sir Bani Yas.

  • Here on the island we have multiple species and we have species that

  • can interbreed and we don't want hybrid so we have separated them

  • in different zones and then we have some

  • enclosures that have different sexes,

  • because we need to control the population,

  • to maintain quality rather than going for the quantity.

  • Sir Bani Yas is now home to some 16,000 wild animals.

  • The reserve's management cooperates closely with

  • international conservation organizations.

  • That's one of the reasons why the successes and setbacks experienced

  • here provide valuable information for

  • wildlife parks around the world.

  • That also applies to the elaborate system of hoses used for irrigation.

  • We aim to have a genetically viable population that is not the victim of

  • gene deficiency and we are

  • processing this strategy through blood line

  • exchange and then we are doing some rewilding projects where we start

  • modifying the behavior of animals.

  • The white antelopes don't actually need any

  • fencing to protect them from the cheetahs.

  • The purpose of the fences is to separate an

  • older pair of brothers from their own offspring.

  • Otherwise there would be fights over territory and prey.

  • The Oryx have no reason to fear the cheetahs.

  • Nor does the ranger, who accompanies them on their daily hunt for food.

  • It's his job to observe whether they catch prey and get enough to eat.

  • The older they get, the more difficult hunting becomes.

  • Peacocks and cheetahs once shared the same habitat

  • until cheetahs became victims of human activity in Asia.

  • Not only were they hunted

  • excessively for their beautiful coats;

  • they were also captured and trained to hunt.

  • The pair of brothers on Sir Bani Yas came from a zoo.

  • They had no experience with either peacocks or giraffes.

  • After some training from humans, they learned to hunt.

  • They've now been self-sufficient for nearly a decade.

  • Our three cheetahs at the present, they can't really make

  • control the number of animals but it can make a difference,

  • so cheetahs can keep our animals in natural fear.

  • Cheetahs -- and probably striped hyenas as well

  • are extinct on the Arabian Peninsula.

  • Giraffes and Beisa oryx face a similar fate in

  • some of their native African habitats.

  • We take animals from captive bred

  • institutions, we bring them on the island.

  • And then we raise them, once they are

  • adapted to the climate on the island.

  • We start rewilding we start stepping back and we provide more of a

  • natural habitat to them,so that they

  • can learn how to survive in the wild.

  • Whereas peacocks have multiplied,

  • it's been difficult to find suitable

  • females so the cheetahs can reproduce.

  • Even though there's room for improvement,

  • the successful reintroduction of animals into the wild is the kind of

  • high-profile success that means a lot to the Emirates.

  • With sufficient capital, it can be easier to create

  • artificial habitats than to preserve natural ones.

  • The oil boom catapulted the Emirates to being

  • one of the world's most dynamic economies.

  • In just five decades, black gold created ostentatious wealth

  • and steadily increasing CO2 emissions.

  • Despite all the similarities, there are also differences between

  • the seven emirates that make up the UAE.

  • Sharjah, for example, aims to differentiate itself from Dubai.

  • Skyscrapers dominate the cityscape here too.

  • But instead of chasing records, the focus

  • here is on preserving cultural identity.

  • This can be seen in the costly renovation of entire districts.

  • For that, Sharjah was named

  • Cultural Capital of the Arab Worldby UNESCO.

  • Heritage sites have been restored and can once again be admired,

  • like these historic wind towers.

  • Alcohol is prohibited here.

  • The focus is on Islamic cultural heritage and individual tourism.

  • That's helped it become more resilient against

  • global crises like the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • And it reduces resource consumption.

  • The advent of tourism on Sir Bani Yas came just a few years ago.

  • Before that it was exclusively a nature reserve.

  • It doesn't rely on income from tourism,

  • so a drop in visitors isn't an existential

  • threat, like with other wildlife parks.

  • Guests can enjoy really being in a hotel

  • in the middle of nature and animals.

  • We have a Desert Island Resort and Spa

  • that has a historical background;

  • it was the guest house of Sheik Zayed,the

  • late ruler of United Arab Emirates,

  • that was converted afterwards to a hotel.

  • The desert island is located eight kilometers off

  • the mainland of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi.

  • It's 180 kilometers from the capital.

  • Due to the low number of visitors, the animals are hardly disturbed.

  • So it's possible to observe them close up, without startling them.

  • The Arabian oryx's calm behavior is a

  • clear indication of the lack of threat.

  • In places where they are hunted,

  • wild animals demonstrate a fear of humans by fleeing immediately.

  • Despite being an island, Sir Bani Yas

  • is part of the desert tourism industry,

  • which often uses motifs from the “1001 Nightsfolk tales.

  • Ecotourism is still a relatively new concept in the UAE.

  • Until now, the focus has been on the kinds of

  • services that often contribute to global climate change.

  • But guidelines forgreen hotelsand a system for awarding

  • environmental prizes in the tourism sector aim to change that.

  • There are hopes thatsustainability

  • will become more than

  • just a buzzword, and will be properly assessed.

  • We try to work with the different stakeholders,

  • including hotels for example to have certain programs in place to

  • reduce their water wastage, their recycling capabilities.

  • We even have a specific licensing process for how

  • environmentally sound their practices are on the ground.

  • A camel ride gives a glimpse into the world of the Bedouins.

  • Traditionally, their lives were determined by water and the desert.

  • The absence of one, and the omnipresence of the other.

  • The infinite desert and finite water

  • supplies were like two sides of a coin,

  • that together created high risk. That's still the case today.

  • The desert's underground water reserves

  • may only last another half-century.

  • In 1960, Abu Dhabi's first

  • desalination plant went into operation.

  • Its processing capacity was 50 cubic meters of water per day.

  • Now, a new plant is under construction,

  • with a capacity 18,000 times greater.

  • Processing enough water to fill 360 Olympic-sized swimming pools,

  • it's set to be the world's biggest.

  • It's a sign of how much economic development and

  • population growth the nation has seen.

  • Over the same time period,

  • the population of the emirate of Abu Dhabi

  • has grown from 25,000 to over three million.

  • About half of the inhabitants live

  • in the capital city of the same name.

  • One of the most lovely experiences that

  • you can have here is escape from

  • the hustle and bustle of city life and from work life and when

  • you come here you can really switch off.

  • I've worked and lived in so many different

  • places, in Asia, in Africa, Europe,

  • in Middle East now, and you feel like you come into this beautiful

  • sanctuary and you have experiences that you will not have

  • anywhere else. It's like a fairytale.

  • It's less of a fairytale for the cheetahs on

  • the lookout for food in this picnic area.

  • The wild cats are especially good at

  • hunting sand gazelles and chital deer.

  • They pay no mind to the tourists riding by.

  • In fact, it might provide a useful distraction for their prey.

  • But, it seems they'll still have to wait a while for their dinner.

  • The tourists have it much easier when it comes to that.

  • An opulent Arabian buffet awaits them every evening.

  • They can also choose from a

  • selection of specialties from farther afield,

  • such as Indian Mughlai cuisine or South African braai.

  • Tourism is an international business,

  • and when it comes to the workforce,

  • the UAE is especially global. Almost all of the Emiratis here are guests.

  • The staff are from all over the world.

  • We've got a total of 250 employees and

  • they are from the five continents.

  • We are covering every continent in the world

  • and it's a total of 34 nationalities.

  • So you can imagine having all these

  • nationalities with different backgrounds,

  • different mindsets, different cultures, working in one area,

  • in one unit, in one environment,

  • with no problems, everybody respects the

  • culture of his colleagues, the culture of others.

  • The UAE officially declared 2019 theyear of tolerance”.

  • It wasn't long before the slogan was

  • put to the test. TheAbraham Accords

  • with Israel are controversial in the Arab world,

  • in part because the agreement is being co-opted by others.

  • But the symbolism of Abraham or Ibrahim is clear.

  • A call to focus on what unites the groups,

  • rather than what divides them.

  • On Sir Bani Yas, theArabian Nightis a small step in that direction.

  • A sustainable future demands another difficult reconciliation

  • one between economy and ecology.

  • Here, slogans certainly won't be enough.

  • Achieving climate neutrality is a far more difficult undertaking than

  • erecting the world's tallest building,

  • especially in a place where

  • energy demands are met by burning fossil fuels.

  • The climate crisis is taking its toll on the region

  • through rising temperatures and sea levels.

  • While cities are at risk of sinking into the sea,

  • entire stretches of land are drying up even more.

  • With temperatures well over 40 degrees Celsius in the summer,

  • air conditioning consumes huge amounts of fossil fuels.

  • So does the extraction of drinking and

  • industrial water through desalination.

  • Another result of desalination is higher

  • salt concentrations in coastal waters,

  • affecting coral reefs and marine fauna.

  • These must be drastically reduced.

  • It's not only the UEA that needs to solve this problem.

  • Worldwide, over 140 million cubic meters of brine are

  • released into the environment every day.

  • A switch to ecotourism could bring relief.

  • Places like Sir Bani Yas are a positive sign.

  • Always, to me, ecotourism highlights the

  • conservation efforts and if you see the

  • economical perspective of eco-tourism,

  • if it's in a sustainable manner

  • it also supports financially the project for conservation.

  • Preserving and improving the environment

  • are no easy tasks in desert regions.

  • The objectives are complex, and often conflicting.

  • It's hoped that reclaiming desert through reforestation will have a

  • positive impact on the local climate while combatting global warming.

  • Every day, around 30 tons of feed are brought in

  • for the animals, to spare the local vegetation.

  • And the three million trees planted on Sir Bani Yas need a lot of water?

  • We getting the water from the mainland underwater

  • sea pipeline from the desalination plant, from the main land.

  • It's about of nine kilometers distance, we getting water here,

  • storing it on the tank, same time irrigate.

  • The investments might pay off in the long run.

  • In the UAE, environmental policy is based on scientific data,

  • and Sir Bani Yas is a living, breathing research center.

  • So we at the Department of Culture and Tourism try to help,

  • promote the protection of our environment,

  • whether it's in the sea or on the land.

  • And we do have several initiatives to conserve our wildlife but also

  • have a sustainable ecosystem for this life to thrive in.

  • Ever since Shaikh Zayed established the wildlife reserve in 1977,

  • ecologists and wildlife biologists have been working to improve it.

  • Their experiences provide valuable insights about nature preservation

  • and climate protection in desert environments.

  • The land here called salt dome or salt valley, so full of salt in here

  • and other minerals, like gypsum, dehamotides, magnesium, kind of,

  • so we need the animals poop here to fertilize the soil.

  • So, if the animals near by the grass

  • patches areas, where irrigation times,

  • that water, it helps the area to fertilize.

  • So, year by year the sand getting fertilized better,

  • so we need less water, the trees or the grass to grow naturally.

  • Providing wild animals with enough living space is

  • an effective means of climate protection.

  • For one thing, it means putting a halt to mining in an area.

  • And it also preserves natural resources,

  • like these dry valleys, known aswadisin Arabic.

  • Mining happened in the past, Sheikh Zayed is

  • the one who's stopped mining in the island.

  • And the best thing he done,

  • he didn't expose to the world much about minerals in his land,

  • so he know that if the next generation, they know,

  • they might start looking for minerals.

  • Then they might destroy what are we have done in the nature.

  • Increasingly, major efforts are being made to reduce emissions of

  • CO2 and other greenhouse gases, to prepare this

  • oil-and-gas-reliant economy for a future without fossil fuels.

  • In a nutshell, climate change and environmental challenges are

  • viewed very seriously in the UAE because it touches

  • the people day to day activities.

  • People recognize the harsh environment we live in,

  • but also the urgency to take actions on these issues.

  • In a country of wonders, where marble palaces and

  • white mosques rise from the desert sand,

  • it's also a wonder that the Arabian oryx was saved from extinction.

  • Its rescue on the desert island of Sir Bani Yas was a historic success.

  • And other species are thriving here too.

  • Even the two cheetahs have finally landed some prey.

  • The return of thewhite antelopemarked the first time that a

  • species once again flourished after having gone extinct in the wild.

  • They are the national animal of UAE.

  • If you take our 50 dirhams note, this is the Arabian oryx.

  • As a national animal.

  • So a lot of the things that you see happening on the ground today

  • derive from the vision of our founding

  • father, the late Sheikh Zayed al Nayhan.

  • It was actually his private reserve that was

  • turned into the Sir Bani Yas, as we see it now.

  • He understood the criticality of the species

  • that were being hunted out in the wild.

  • The story of an island being dedicated

  • to the antelope is more than

  • just a parable for Abu Dhabi, the so-calledfather of the gazelle”.

  • It's also a step towards coexistence between animals and humans,

  • and a better planet for all living creatures.

It's home to one of the biggest contemporary

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