The National - News

SHEIKH’S MISSION TO SAVE THE WORLD’S BEES TAKES FLIGHT

▶ Sheikh Salem’s OneHive aims to ensure the survival of these critically important insects

- GILLIAN DUNCAN

Sheikh Salem bin Sultan Al Qasimi is a man on a mission to save the honeybee.

The avid beekeeper, who has been interested in the insects since he was a child, has set up numerous companies over the past few decades in the beekeeping industry.

But he has now consolidat­ed them into one, called OneHive, which he hopes will become a global ambassador in the project to save bees from extinction.

“My interest started when I was young,” said Sheikh Salem, who is also the chairman of Ras Al Khaimah Internatio­nal Airport.

“I liked bees and had a passion for them. My father used to bring hives from the mountains for food. So the connection started there and later on I got into this industry.”

His company produces and sells honey produced from the nectar of the sidr tree, wildflower­s, the ghaf tree and even mangroves. But its primary purpose is to ensure the survival of the bee.

“Our main focus is to educate the young generation­s about the importance of bees and their survival and how we can sustain them, especially with the challenges we have in the area with the hot weather, the scarcity of water and all these things,” he said at Abu Dhabi Agricultur­e and Food Security Week, where his company was one of the participan­ts.

“So this is very important, how we can produce more bees, sustain them and produce our own local honey to have as a food security product here in the UAE.”

Bees are important pollinator­s, carrying pollen from one plant to another, thereby helping fertilise plants so they can produce fruit and seeds.

Bees pollinate 70 of the 100 fruit, vegetable and nut crop species that feed 90 per cent of the world’s population. If they die, so would the plants they pollinate.

And if this happens, experts say the world would lose half the vegetables and fruits that are available today.

Over the past few decades the world has recorded massive declines in the numbers of honeybees.

One global study earlier this year estimated that a quarter of all bee species known to science – which is about 20,000 – have not been seen, despite improved and expanded monitoring programmes.

Another study conducted at the University of Ottawa and University College London found that the likelihood of a bee being at any given place in Europe or North America has dropped by a third since the 1970s.

OneHive put several initiative­s in place to help ensure bees’ survival here, including creating a bee reserve near Hatta with more than 8,000 sidr trees.

It has also created an educationa­l garden – OneHive Honeybee Garden and Discovery Centre in Hatta – to help people understand the importance of the species.

It is starting to build partnershi­ps with local companies, such as Dubai Airports, to broaden its reach. The partnershi­p seeks to build an educationa­l centre to further raise awareness.

OneHive is also working with producers to save bees that are no longer needed after the short honey production season.

Shadi Zakhour, the company’s managing director, said “a lot of bees” are brought in to the UAE from countries such as Egypt “for the season, for maybe one month and then they let the bees die”.

“This is something we are really against. We have created a buyback programme. We purchase the bees from the beekeepers after the season ends. So it gives us the opportunit­y to save some bees.

“It also helps our production to sustain them. No one wants to sustain them over the hot months. Bees are like us, they need protein and carbohydra­tes and if they can’t get that in the environmen­t, they die.”

Sheikh Salem said about half of beekeepers operate only for the season. Out of that number, OneHive buys about 30 per cent of the bees, which would have otherwise been allowed to die.

It moves them to cooler areas to ensure their survival.

“We have to care about bees,” he said.

“If they disappear from Earth, life will follow and disappear after four years. That means it is a big impact on our life, our sustainabi­lity, our culture, our health, our food system, our security.”

 ?? Khushnum Bhandari / The National ?? Sheikh Salem bin Sultan Al Qasimi says if bees were to become extinct, life would disappear after four years
Khushnum Bhandari / The National Sheikh Salem bin Sultan Al Qasimi says if bees were to become extinct, life would disappear after four years

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