Oman to tender Musandam airport

19 March 2025

Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access 

The design works for the proposed Musandam airport development in Oman have been completed and tendering activity is expected to start shortly, according to an announcement made by the Governor of Musandam, Sayyid Ibrahim Bin Said Al-Busaidy, earlier this week.

In March last year, Oman’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) appointed Swiss engineering firm Renardet SA & Partners to prepare designs for the proposed development of Musandam airport in the northern peninsula of the country, which is separated from the rest of Oman by the UAE.

The airport is planned to be developed in two phases. The first phase involves the construction of a 2.5-kilometre-long and 45-metre-wide runway, a terminal building capable of handling 250,000 passengers annually, an air traffic control tower and other associated facilities.

A new 7 kilometre (km) road will also be constructed as part of the first phase.

The second phase includes the expansion of the runway to 3.3km and the expansion of the terminal building and associated facilities.

The timeline to implement the designs is 18 months, and the main construction work will take three years. 

The implementation period for the second phase is 18 months. The airport is expected to be completed in 2028.

The estimated $250m Musandam airport project features two runways, an airstrip, a terminal, aircraft parking bays, service buildings, an air traffic control tower, cargo zones, taxiways and a service and hangar area suitable for Airbus 320 and Boeing 737 aircraft.

It also includes commercial and retail units, parking and associated facilities.

In 2020, Oman announced its National Aviation Strategy 2030, which aims to attract an investment of $3.6bn in airport cities over 20 years.

The country plans to expand its navigation infrastructure and open the sector to private international investors by granting concessions for managing and operating local airports and aviation-related services.

Oman's aviation sector has demonstrated positive growth and recovery, according to GlobalData.

A recent report by the National Centre for Statistics & Information shows that airports in Oman have witnessed a significant increase in inbound and outbound passenger numbers.

By November last year, Oman's airports had experienced a 3.1% increase in passenger traffic, with a total of 13.3 million passengers travelling on 98,933 flights, compared to 12.9 million passengers on 97,802 flights during the same period in 2023.

This data reflects the resilience and rebound of the aviation sector in Oman, indicating a recovery in travel and tourism activities that makes it necessary for the sultanate to invest in new airports.

https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/13507478/main.jpg
Yasir Iqbal
Related Articles
  • Aramco and Emerson partner for corrosion management

    3 June 2026

    Saudi Aramco has entered into a partnership with US-based industrial automation provider Emerson to jointly develop corrosion management systems.

    As part of the corrosion research and development collaboration, Aramco will “combine its expertise and intellectual property with Emerson’s advanced corrosion solutions to digitalise and transform corrosion management”, Emerson said in a statement.

    For Aramco, corrosion management is a strategic priority that is closely linked to operational performance, safety and environmental stewardship. Continuous corrosion monitoring can replace labour-intensive and potentially hazardous manual inspections while providing a reliable stream of digital data to support decision-making and asset integrity management.

    The collaboration builds on the companies’ existing relationship. In May, Emerson announced the deployment of an artificial intelligence-driven optimisation system for Aramco.

    The current phase of that initiative focuses on expanding a hybrid modelling approach for hydrocracker units across Aramco’s operations. The expansion is expected to improve model accuracy while demonstrating the scalability and robustness of the AI-driven optimisation strategy across the company’s asset base.

    Emerson has steadily expanded its presence in Saudi Arabia over the past 16 years. Key milestones include the opening of facilities in Jubail, Dammam and Dhahran, as well as the launch of a manufacturing hub at King Salman Energy Park (Spark) in 2024.

    https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/17091834/main4428.jpg
    Indrajit Sen
  • Iranian drones hit Kuwait International airport’s Terminal 1

    3 June 2026

    Kuwait International airport was struck by a fresh wave of hostile drone attacks on 3 June. The drones caused significant structural damage to Terminal 1 and wounded several individuals.

    Brigadier General Saud Abdulaziz Al-Otaibi, official spokesman for the Ministry of Defence, blamed the strikes on “criminal Iranian aggression”. He confirmed that the injured had been evacuated for medical care and stated that the armed forces remain in a state of complete readiness to secure the state.

    The incident is the third major drone strike on the hub in recent months. On 1 April, a drone strike hit fuel tanks managed by Kuwait Aviation Fuelling Company, sparking massive fires. On March 28, another multi-drone raid severely damaged the airport’s primary radar systems.

    The airport is being expanded with the construction of a new terminal, and works on the project are expected to be completed by 2027. It consists of three packages.

    These are:

    • Package 1: Main works – $4,329m
    • Package 2: Multistorey car park building, connection roads, bridges and landscaping works – $550m
    • Package 3: Aircraft parking, runways and service buildings – $950m

    Turkiye’s Limak Holding is executing the main works.

    The terminal building was designed by Foster+Partners and Gulf Consult.

    https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/17089683/main.gif
    Colin Foreman
  • Consortium signs PPA for Taweelah C power plant

    3 June 2026

    Emirates Water & Electricity Company (Ewec) has confirmed it has signed a power-purchase agreement (PPA) with a developer consortium for the Taweelah C independent power producer (IPP) project.

    The agreement, which will run through to 2050, was signed with Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa), Al-Jomaih Energy & Water Company (Saudi Arabia) and Sembcorp Industries (Singapore), the utility said in a statement.

    Taqa will own a 60% stake in the project, with the international consortium holding 40%. The ADX-listed company will also own 40% of the project’s operations and maintenance company, while the international consortium will own 60%.

    Last month, MEED exclusively revealed that the winning consortium had been selected for the project, with the PPA initially expected to be signed in mid-May.

    It is understood that China Energy Engineering Corporation (CEEC) will be the engineering, procurement and construction contractor.

    The combined-cycle gas turbine plant will have a capacity of about 2.5GW. It will be located at the Al-Taweelah power and desalination complex, about 50 kilometres northeast of Abu Dhabi city.

    Taweelah C is part of Ewec’s wider programme to support the UAE’s Net Zero by 2050 Strategic Initiative and the Abu Dhabi Department of Energy’s Clean Energy Strategic Target 2035.

    Ewec plans to raise solar power capacity to 18GW and wind capacity to 2.6GW by 2035, while reducing the carbon intensity of its power generation by more than half compared with 2019.

    The Taweelah C IPP is now expected to start commercial operations in 2029. The facility had previously been scheduled to begin commercial operations in the fourth quarter of 2028.

    https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/17089163/main.jpg
    Mark Dowdall
  • Local contractor wins Oman water transmission contract

    3 June 2026

     

    Local contractor Al-Jesr United has won the main engineering, procurement and construction contract to reinforce Oman’s Sur water transmission system.

    The contract, awarded by state-owned utility Nama Water Services (NWS), forms part of a project to improve the reliability of potable water supply to Sur, a coastal city about 200 kilometres southeast of Muscat.

    The scheme, estimated to cost $80m, is designed to strengthen the network’s resilience during peak-demand periods and emergencies.

    The scope of work includes upgrading the pumps at the Sur DP Pump Station with variable frequency drive units and replacing ductile iron pipes and fittings within the facility. It also covers about 17km of new transmission pipelines.

    According to regional projects tracker MEED Projects, at least five local firms submitted commercial bids for the contract, which was tendered in August 2025.

    These include:

    • Al-Jesr United
    • Al-Rafaa Trading & Contracting
    • Gulf Petrochemical Services & Trading
    • Professionals Trading
    • Sarooj Construction Company

    In June 2024, NWS awarded a $1.3m contract for the project’s design and construction supervision to Muscat-headquartered Ibn Khaldun Almadaen Engineering Consultants.

    Sur is home to one of the sultanate’s key desalination plants, which supplies potable water to communities across eastern Oman. 

    The water transmission project will support network expansion in areas such as Al-Aigah and Ahiae, as the existing ductile iron pipeline serving Wilayat Sur is no longer sufficient to meet current and future demand.

    Construction is expected to start in the third quarter of 2026 and take about two years to complete.

    https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/17088454/main.jpg
    Mark Dowdall
  • Syria to tender gas plant contract

    3 June 2026

     

    Syria is preparing to tender a project to rehabilitate the Conoco gas plant in Deir ez-Zor province in the east of the country within the next 10 weeks, according to a document published by the US-Syria Business Council.

    The gas plant was reclaimed by Syria’s military during an offensive in January this year.

    It is Syria’s largest gas plant, but is severely damaged and cannot be operated in its current condition.

    Before the country’s civil war, it processed 13 million cubic metres of gas a day.

    The US-based companies ConocoPhillips and Novaterra signed a memorandum of understanding with the state-owned Syria Petroleum Company (SPC) to restore the facility in November last year.

    Syria is currently in the midst of a push to ramp up oil and gas production and establish itself as a regional energy hub.

    Earlier this year, Yousef Qiblawy, chief executive of SPC, said that his organisation was aiming to double national oil production before 2027 and boost output to 800,000 barrels a day by the end of 2029, not including offshore production.

    https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/17088320/main.jpg
    Wil Crisp