Oman plans major water investments

7 April 2025

Oman intends to allocate major investments in its water treatment, reuse and distribution network in the coming years, as Qais Bin Saud Al-Zakwani, CEO of Nama Water Services, has told the ongoing Oman Water Week in Muscat.

"We are allocating major investments for water irrigation, sewage treatment and network … and to enable small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to participate in the development of infrastructure projects," Al-Zakwani said.

The executive added that the sultanate is working to develop alternative water sources, including developing deep water dams and water desalination plants as part of efforts to reuse and renew water resources to support the agriculture and industrial sectors in Oman.

"Nama will use the most advanced technologies to limit water exploitation, use drones and other advanced water technologies to monitor water leakages … and to rationalise water usage," the executive noted.

"We are attaching great importance to the water sector to achieve sustainability … and cooperation between all countries and organisations will be essential."

In late March, Nama Water Services awarded a contract to develop a water treatment plant in Oman's Wadi Dayqah, as MEED reported.

Al-Tayer Engineering Services Company won the RO55m ($143m) contract for the 20-year build, own and operate contract.

The construction of the plant and associated infrastructure is expected to take 22 months.

The facility will boast a total production capacity of 65,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d), with 35,000 cm/d channelled into Nama Water Services’ main distribution network, supplying potable water.

The remaining 30,000 cm/d will be dedicated to agricultural irrigation, distributed through a network serving farms in the wilayat of Qurayyat, in coordination with the Agriculture, Fisheries & Water Resources Ministry.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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