Iraq signs Oman oil agreements
8 September 2025
Iraq’s State Oil Marketing Organisation (Somo) has signed two agreements with Oman’s OQ group, including one to develop an oil storage facility with a capacity of 10 million barrels.
The memorandums of understanding (MoUs) were signed during the official visit of Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani to Oman.
They mark a new chapter in Oman-Iraq energy relations and reinforce the role of both nations as “key hubs in global crude markets”, OQ said in a statement.
Under the terms of the first MoU, the OQ subsidiary Oman Tank Terminal Company (OTTCO), which operates a major crude oil storage terminal at Ras Markaz near Duqm, will collaborate with Somo on the development of an integrated crude oil project at Ras Markaz.
The company said that, in its initial phases, the project will include storage, loading and unloading facilities, with a starting capacity of 10 million barrels, expandable in the future.
OQ said: “The first memorandum establishes a large-scale crude storage project at Ras Markaz with an initial capacity of 10 million barrels, creating modern infrastructure to support global distribution.”
OTTCO said: “This strategic partnership reflects the strong relations between the Sultanate of Oman and the Republic of Iraq, and underscores OTTCO’s ambitious vision to position Duqm as a regional energy hub while opening new horizons for growth and economic integration.”
The large-scale crude storage project is expected to support the global distribution of Iraqi oil.
Under the terms of the second MoU, OQ Trading, the commodities trading arm of OQ Group, agreed to collaborate with Somo on the international marketing of Iraqi crude.
OQ said: “Together, these memoranda extend beyond trade. They embody a shared commitment to building sustainable economic ties, exchanging knowledge and advancing OQ’s ambition to grow as a trusted global partner in energy investment and trade.”
Iraq is also considering building a pipeline to export crude oil to Oman – a move that would help the country market its crude globally and keep the planned storage facility in the sultanate well supplied, according to Somo.
Somo has said that there is already an “agreement in principle” and that discussions on the pipeline’s route and capacity will be part of future contract negotiations.
The Ras Markaz terminal currently supplies the Duqm refinery via an 80-kilometre pipeline, transporting crude oil directly from Ras Markaz to the refinery.
Its storage facilities comprise eight large oil tanks, floating platforms for import and export operations, seven kilometres of subsea pipelines for receiving and dispatching oil, and a pumping station connected to the storage tanks.
In April, OTTCO signed an agreement with Royal Vopak of the Netherlands to support the development of an integrated hub at the Special Economic Zone at Duqm (Sezad) for the storage and handling of hydrocarbons, chemicals and low-carbon products. The collaboration also focuses on building industrial and energy terminal infrastructure, including storage solutions for oil, chemicals, liquefied petroleum gas, liquefied natural gas, hydrogen, ammonia and carbon dioxide.
READ THE SEPTEMBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
Doha’s Olympic bid; Kuwait’s progress on crucial reforms reinforces sentiment; Downstream petrochemicals investments take centre stage
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the September 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> OLYMPICS: Qatar banks on infrastructure for Olympic bid
> QATAR TOURISM: Olympics bid aims to extend tourism gains
> CURRENT AFFAIRS: Syria charts post-war reconstruction course
> INDUSTRY REPORT: Regional chemicals spending set to soar
> DOWNSTREAM: Adnoc set to become a chemicals major
> SAUDI STADIUMS: Stadiums become main event for Saudi construction
> CONSTRUCTION: Middle East to be a growth leader for global construction
> LEADERSHIP: Dubai’s sea-air logistics model powers resilient trade
> KUWAIT MARKET FOCUS: Kuwait’s political hiatus brings opportunity
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Lowest bidder emerges for Jebel Ali reservoir project
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India’s Dineshchandra R. Agrawal Infracon has submitted the lowest bid for a tender to build a 45-million imperial gallon (MIG) reservoir at Jebel Ali.
The firm submitted a main bid at AED197.1m ($53.7m), with an alternate offer of AED189.45m. The bidding deadline was 4 September.
Most contractors submitted alternate bids, offering slightly different designs or methods that could reduce costs or speed up delivery.
The project was tendered by Dubai Electricity & Water Authority (Dewa) under reference number 2132500052. The contract calls for an 18-month completion schedule, including a reliability run.
The bidders and their total prices are:
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AG Engineering & Power Contracting only a submitted a main bid. Unlike the other bidders, Unec proposed a 24-month completion period.
Several companies, including Binladin Contracting Group, GBH International Contracting and Oman International Telecommunication, submitted placeholder regret prices of AED0.01.
The Jebel Ali 45MIG reservoir is a mid-sized project within Dubai's broader water infrastructure development, larger than DEWA’s 30MIG Hatta reservoir but smaller than the 120MIG Enkhali reservoir, commissioned in 2024.
The contract will add significant storage capacity to Dubai’s water infrastructure, once awarded.
All bidders provided bank guarantees and confirmed offers as definite.
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Kuwait’s growth picture improves
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Bidders are still waiting for the letter of contract award to be issued by Kuwait’s Ministry of Electricity, Water & Renewable Energy (MEW) for the planned water distribution complex project in Shuwaikh, according to industry sources.
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EditorRead the September issue of MEED Business Review
Doha announced in late July that it will bid to host the 2036 Olympic Games. Hosting the world’s largest multi-sport event is a game-changing prospect for Qatar as its economy seeks a renewed sense of direction after hosting the Fifa World Cup in 2022.
While its economy has performed better than many expected, it has not maintained the vigour it enjoyed before the World Cup.
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Saudi Aramco plans to execute 85 projects over the next three years, most of which are currently in the planning phase.
These new, expansion and upgrade projects span multiple business domains at Aramco – from core oil and gas production to pipeline networks and civil infrastructure – the company announced at the ongoing Future Projects Forum in Saudi Arabia’s capital Riyadh.
“Award of these projects will translate into hundreds of contract packages located within different regions of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” Sara Alkhonaiz, contracts adviser at Aramco’s Project Management Office Department/Market Research Unit, said at the conference.
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