LNC for Date palms
Saudi date palm operations are among the Kingdom's most water-intensive crops — and the ones with the strongest economic case for LNC.
A mature date palm grove consumes up to 20,000 m³ of water per hectare per year. Combined with depleting fossil aquifers and rising pumping lifts, water has become the dominant operational cost for many Saudi date operations.
LNC coats the sand grains in the root zone of each palm, dramatically improving water and nutrient retention. This reduces irrigation frequency and volume while supporting more stable growth — especially important for flowering and fruit-set phases where moisture stress directly hits yield and grade.
What to expect on date palms
- −40 to −50% irrigation volume across Khalas, Barhi, Sukkari, Medjool varieties
- +15 to +25% yield uplift depending on grove age and baseline stress
- Improved fruit quality (higher first-grade share, fewer stress deformities)
- One-time application effective 4 to 5 years — amortized across multiple harvest cycles
Application notes
- Compatible with drip, bubbler, and pivot irrigation systems
- Best applied at the start of the dry season or during soil preparation for young plantings
- No pruning or harvest disruption — application runs through existing irrigation
- Formulation adapted to the local soil profile (coarse sand, calcareous sand, loamy sand)
Seasonality
In KSA conditions, the optimal window is typically November to February, ahead of the main water-demand peak. Monitoring spans the full spring-summer production cycle.
Date palms FAQ
- Does LNC affect date fruit quality or taste?
- Independently — no. LNC does not change the fruit chemistry. Indirectly — yes, positively. Better root-zone moisture means less plant stress and higher first-grade share.
- What is the payback period on a commercial date grove?
- With water at SAR 3.5/m³ and typical yield economics, most Saudi date operations see payback within 6 to 12 months. See our water calculator for a project-specific estimate.
- Is LNC compatible with our existing fertigation program?
- Yes. LNC does not bind or block applied nutrients; in fact, nitrogen and potassium retention improves, often allowing modest fertigation reductions.

