Lowest bidders emerge for Oman Sinaw-Duqm road

15 September 2025

 

Oman’s Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology has opened bids for two contracts covering the upgrade of sections three and four of the Sinaw-Mahout-Duqm road.

According to results published by the Oman Tender Board, local firm Galfar Engineering & Contracting submitted the lowest bid of RO51m ($215.6m) for section three of the project.

The other bidders are:

  • Strabag ($206m)
  • Galfar Engineering & Contracting ($216m)
  • Sarooj Construction ($245m)
  • Rimal Global Group ($286m)
  • Oman Gulf Company (undisclosed)

The third section spans 83 kilometres (km) and extends from the Al-Jouba roundabout in the Wilayat of Mahout towards Duqm. It consists of a single carriageway with two lanes, each lane measuring 3.75 metres in width. 

For the fourth section, the Austrian firm Strabag submitted the lowest bid of RO79m ($206m).

The other bidders for this section include:

  • Galfar Engineering & Contracting ($132m)
  • Strabag ($138m)
  • Sarooj Construction ($168m)
  • Rimal Global Group ($188m)
  • Oman Gulf Company (undisclosed)

This section of the project spans about 49km, stretching from Sarab to the boundaries of the Special Economic Zone at Duqm near Nafun.

This project will serve as a key piece of infrastructure linking North Al-Sharqiyah to the Special Economic Zone at Duqm.

UK analytics firm GlobalData expects the Omani construction industry to register an annual average growth rate of 4.2% from 2025 to 2028, supported by investments as part of the Oman Vision 2040 strategy. Under this strategy, the government plans to allocate RO20bn ($52bn) to the tourism sector and aims to attract 11 million visitors annually by 2040. 

The infrastructure construction sector was estimated to grow by 6.1% in 2024 and is projected to record an annual average growth rate of 5.4% from 2025 to 2028. Growth will be driven by Muscat’s efforts to upgrade the road, railway and airport infrastructure to improve connectivity across the sultanate.


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Yasir Iqbal
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