TheCable Fact Check
  • Home
  • Fact Check
  • Fake News
  • Check Am For Wazobia
Reading: FACT CHECK: Does video of camels show Saudi Arabia’s first snowfall in 100 years?
Share
Latest News
AI ni wọ́n fi se fídíò tó sàfihàn pé àwọn ISWAP yin ìbọn fún ọ̀gá àwọn òṣìṣẹ́ ológun kan
Video wey show as ISWAP shoot army general na AI
Bidiyon da ke nuna harbin Janar na soji da ISWAP aka yi shi ne AI
DISINFO ALERT: Video showing shooting of army general by ISWAP is AI-generated
Kò sí ẹ̀rí tó sàfihàn pé Trump halẹ̀ pé òhun yóò ‘mu’ Tinubu láàárín wákàtí mẹrinlelogun
Evidence no dey sey Trump threaten to ‘capture’ Tinubu in 24 hours
Babu wata shaida da Trump ya yi barazanar ‘kama’ Tinubu a cikin sa’o’i 24
FACT CHECK: No evidence Trump threatened to ‘capture’ Tinubu in 24 hours
Advertisement
Aa
TheCable Fact CheckTheCable Fact Check
Search
  • Home
  • Fact Check
  • Fake News
  • Check Am For Wazobia
Follow US

FACT CHECK: Does video of camels show Saudi Arabia’s first snowfall in 100 years?

Lanre Olagunju
By Lanre Olagunju Published March 31, 2023 6 Min Read
Share

A video depicting snowfall on camels in Saudi Arabia claims snowy weather is a rare phenomenon in the country.

“Global warming strikes again, first snow in Saudi Arabia in 100 years,” reads the caption of the video shared on Twitter.

The post was shared on February 26 2023 and has so far gathered over 4.1 million views. 

https://twitter.com/amuse/status/1629666434526638080?s=20

TheCable checked the correlation between snowfall and global warming, how recent the video is and if truly the last time it snowed in Saudi Arabia was in 1923. 

VIDEO OF CAMELS ENJOYING SNOW IS TWO YEARS OLD

Subjecting the keyframes of the video to reverse image search showed that it is not recent. An earlier version of the video can be found on Reuters’ YouTube handle, on Twitter and on some other news platforms, as far back as February 2021. 

هطُول كثيف للثلـوُج ❄️..
جبال الظهَـر شمال غرب #تبوك #الخميس ١٤٤٢/٧/٦ هـ
مَا أجمَــل هذه المناظر 😍⛄️🇸🇦.. pic.twitter.com/4iYPjjP1Vd

— بندر الحواس (@B_KH_H) February 17, 2021

On YouTube, Reuters captioned the video: “A group of camels were treated to a display of snowy weather in the mountains north of Tabouk, Saudi Arabia.”

According to a news report by Gulf Today, Tabuk, the region where the camels were filmed, is a tourist destination whose natural beauty is enhanced by snowfall. The report added that people come from “different regions to observe the snow and enjoy the beauty and splendour” of the destination.

Khou.com also reported the same video in 2021, stating clearly that snowfall occurrence in Saudi Arabia is “actually not that rare”.

Checks by TheCable revealed that Visit Saudi, a tourist website, encourages tourists to experience the Arabian winter.

“Yes, snow does fall in Saudi, particularly in the mountains of the northern regions. Enjoy views of frosted shrubs and blanketed mountain peaks and watch camels shuffling through winter’s magical flurries,” a post on the website reads. 

WHAT THE SAUDI GOVERNMENT HAD TO SAY

Shortly after the video first went viral in 2021, Fahad Nazer, spokesperson for the Saudi embassy in the United States, while responding to the controversy, said snowfall in the region is not a rare occurrence.

“There is no denying climate change but it’s also not that rare for this region -Tabuk – in northwestern Saudi Arabia to experience snow. Contrary to popular perception, not every region in the kingdom is warm year-round.”

FIVE REGIONS WHERE IT SNOWS IN SAUDI ARABIA DURING WINTER 

Despite being a desert climate, the temperature varies in Saudi Arabia from region to region due to the diverse land which includes, valleys, islands, deserts, caves, and mountains. 

Five regions in the country experience snow during winter. They include Rafha, Tabuk, Arar, Shaqra, and Turaif.

On January 10, 2023, Arab News reported snowfall in Jabal Al-Lawz, also known as the mountain of almonds, in Tabuk. The mountain is located in the northwestern part of the country and is 2,580 meters above sea level.

SNOWFALL IN THE DESERT REGION DOES NOT NEGATE CLIMATE CHANGE

Climate change has led to warmer oceans, extreme rainfall, and heat waves amongst other weather patterns. As a result, it is expected that climatic conditions will likely experience more irregularity touching on intensity.

A climate change portal analysed trends covering the last three decades in Saudi Arabia. The outcome revealed a general rise in temperature including the Tabuk region known for snowfall.  

Gloria Okafor, a climatologist and postdoctoral research scientist, at the Nigerian Maritime University in Delta, told TheCable that “either snow or extreme heat wave does not contradict the reality of climate change”.

The university lecturer added that human activities, essentially the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation has led to an increase in the average global temperature compared to pre-industrial levels.

A 2015 report published by the Union of Concerned Scientists, also expressed that cold weather does not negate the existence of climate change. 

“Even though the planet overall is getting warmer, snow and cold weather still occur, particularly at high elevations and latitudes. But that doesn’t disprove global warming,” the report said.

“To understand this, it’s helpful to differentiate between weather — what’s happening outside the door right now — and climate, which is the pattern of weather measured over a period of decades.”

VERDICT

The claim that snowfall in Saudi Arabia is a rarity which only occurs once in a century is false. 

Research and news reports confirmed that snowfall is a periodic occurrence in the Arabian nation. Also, the fact that Saudi Arabia experiences snow does not negate the reality of climate change or global warming. 


This fact check was produced by TheCable with support from Code for Africa’s PesaCheck, International Fact-Checking Network, and African Fact Checking Alliance network.

TAGGED: Climate Change, Climate Fact Check, saudi arabia, snowfall

Please send your feedback, claims to fact check and corrections requests to [email protected]

Lanre Olagunju March 31, 2023 March 31, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POPULAR POSTS

Advertisement

AI ni wọ́n fi se fídíò tó sàfihàn pé àwọn ISWAP yin ìbọn fún ọ̀gá àwọn òṣìṣẹ́ ológun kan

Fídíò kan tí àwọn ènìyàn ń pín kiri ti sàfihàn ìgbà tí àwọn ènìyàn kan…

November 20, 2025

Video wey show as ISWAP shoot army general na AI

One viral video don allegedly show di time wey terrorists kill Musa Uba, one brigadier…

November 20, 2025

Bidiyon da ke nuna harbin Janar na soji da ISWAP aka yi shi ne AI

Wani faifan bidiyo da aka ce ya nuna lokacin da wasu mahara suka kashe Birgediya…

November 20, 2025

DISINFO ALERT: Video showing shooting of army general by ISWAP is AI-generated

A viral video has purportedly shown the moment Musa Uba, a brigadier general, was killed…

November 19, 2025
Advertisement
Advertisement

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

DISINFO ALERT: Video showing shooting of army general by ISWAP is AI-generated

A viral video has purportedly shown the moment Musa Uba, a brigadier general, was killed by insurgents in Borno state.…

Fact Check
November 19, 2025

FACT CHECK: No evidence Trump threatened to ‘capture’ Tinubu in 24 hours

A report claims that US President Donald Trump threatened to capture President Bola Tinubu within 24 hours without his security…

Fact Check
November 13, 2025

Anambra guber: Six misconceptions about BVAS, IREV voters should know

Elections in Nigeria have always been defined by controversies. Electoral malpractice, ranging from ballot snatching to result sheet manipulations, has…

Fact Check
November 7, 2025

FACT CHECK: How true is ADC’s claim that FG is misleading Nigerians on reduced food prices?

The African Democratic Congress (ADC) claims that the federal government is misleading Nigerians by saying that food prices have dropped…

Fact Check
November 7, 2025

CableCheck seeks to provide reliable tools and resources for readers to tackle the menace of fake and misleading materials constantly pushed into the public space from various sources. We monitor the accuracy of claims made in traditional and social media. We also provide a tracker to hold politicians and policymakers accountable for the plans and promises they make to the public. CableCheck is a project of the Cable Newspaper Journalism Foundation (CNJF), supported by the MacArthur Foundation and implemented by TheCable newspaper.

Follow US: 

LINKS

  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Non-Partisanship Policy
  • Funding
  • Correction Policy
© Copyright TheCable. All Rights reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?