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Transport in Oman

This article is about transport in Oman.

Highways


total: 62,240 km
paved: 29,685 km (including 1943 km of expressways)
unpaved: 30,545 km (2012)[1]

Oman has two expressway grade highways, with the first 8 lane expressway set to open in 2017. Al Batinah Coastal Road runs along the Batinah Coast of the Sea of Oman. It forks near Shinas, with one leading inland to Wadi Hatta and another to Fujairah. The speed limit is generally 120 km/h. In the Muscat area, this highway is known as Sultan Qaboos Street, and it is the trunk road running through the city. Outside the Muscat area, the interchanges take the form of roundabouts spaced approximately 7 km apart. Each roundabout contains unique features to enliven the streetscape. The roundabouts are named for driver navigation.

The other highway is Muscat Expressway, a 54 kilometre[2] highway running from Al Qurum area of Muscat to Halban area on the outskirts of Muscat. Al Batinah Expressway is a 256 kilometre, 8-lane highway that continues from the Muscat Expressway in Halban up to the Oman-UAE border at Khatmat Malaha.[3]

Other roads in Muscat Governorate and some cities such as Sohar and Salalah are dual-carriageways, with four or six lanes each with a speed limit ranging from 60 to 120 km/h; while in the rest of Oman, the roads are mostly single-carriageways.

Links to neighboring countries

  • United Arab Emirates: Oman has several good road connections at Buraimi (Al Ain), Waddi Hatta (Wajaja), Khamat Mulahah (Fujairah) and Bukha.
  • Yemen: Route 47: Raysut to Sarfait in Oman - Yemen border. The road then goes to Hawf, Al Faydami, Al Ghaydah. Another road is from Thumrait to Al Mazyonah in Oman - Yemen border. The road then goes to Shisan, Al Kurah, Al Ghaydah.
  • Saudi Arabia: Desert road through Al Mashash. However, there is a new road under construction to link the two countries.

Railways

There are no mainline railways in Oman, but some are planned, including links to adjacent countries. The narrow gauge Al Hoota Cave Train takes tourists into the cave complex in a journey of 4 minutes and distance of 400m. The estimated total length of the future Oman National Railway network is 2,135 km. It will be divided into several segments linking Oman's borders with the UAE to Muscat, as part of the GCC Railway Network and also to the southern parts of the country - Port of Al Duqm, the Port of Salalah and the Yemen border.[4] However, the Gulf Railway project was suspended in 2016. The government of Oman announced it will proceed with its own planned national railway network.

Timeline

2008

Joint Gulf Railway proposed to link gulf states at cost of $14 billion by 2014.[5]

2010

Bids are invited for construction of a rail network in three phases: The first phase would be a double-track electrified coastal route from Masqat to Suhar; the second phase would be an extension from Masqat to Daq; the third phase an extension from Suhar to Al Ain in the UAE.[6] Later, an extension to Salalah was considered. The construction was expected to start in 2012, and to be completed by 2018.[7]

2011

In September, the Supreme Committee for Town Planning, which was in charge of the project since the beginning, handed it to the Ministry of Transport and Communications (MOTC). Shortly, the Ministry of Transport began preparing for launching initial tenders for project design and consultancy.[8]

2012

In September, the Ministry of Transport and Communications, through the Government Tender Board, announced it will re-float its tender for the first phase into three stages: one to get the preliminary design, another for the detailed design and building, and third for the management consultancy and supervision services.[9]

2013

In March, the Ministry of Transport announced the opening of a tender for the preliminary design of nine freight yards for the first phase of the project. The largest yards, at Sohar and Duqm, are planned at either end of the network, as they will be intended to manage the freight volumes handled by the industrial ports at those sites.[10] In July, through assistance from German company Dorsch-Gruppe, the Government Tender Board opened the competition for the first stage with a 13.6 million Omani riyals (US$35.3 million) contract that covers preliminary design consultancy services, which was awarded to Italian company Italferr.[11][12][13]

In September, Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Futaisi, the Omani Minister of Transport and Communications, asked private companies to think about investing in the railway project.[14] At this point, the project was reported to have created 70,000 new jobs in the Sultanate.[15]

2014

In 2014, Oman Rail announced a pre-qualification tender for the initial stage of the network, which includes providing infrastructure technology systems and the construction of the first section that extends from Oman's border to Al Buraimi, UAE, to the port of Sohar. The cost of this stage was estimated at $2.6 billion, out of the estimated total cost of $14 billion.[16] The first phase was supposed to include a 242-km line from Al Misfah in Muscat to Sohar Port, with a 20-km link to Muscat Central Station and an 8-km spur to a railway yard at Sohar. There is also a 486-km line from Muscat to Duqm Port and 84 km between Sinaw and Ibra in Oman’s east. In addition to a 136-km track from Suhar to Al Ain in the UAE, with a 27-km spur to the town of Buraimi, and a 58-km track from Suhar to Khatmat Al Malaha, another border crossing.[17]

2015

In February 2015, the Government Tender Board selected a consortium headed by Spanish engineering contractor Técnicas Reunidas to provide project management consultancy services for the network.[18]

2016

The GCC Railway project was suspended in 2016 after some partner countries decided to hold their rail plans due to the decline in oil price.[19] However, the government of Oman had announced that it will continue with its national rail network.[20][21]

2021

In June 2021, the government of Oman announced the planning for the first metro and passenger rail services that would link Muscat City and its major airports. The metro network would extend from Ruwi and Muttrah to Muscat International Airport and Seeb.[22][23]

Pipelines

crude oil 1,300 km; natural gas 1,030 km

Ports and harbors

Gulf of Oman

Arabian Sea

Merchant marine


total: 3 ships (1,000 GT or over) totaling 16,306 GT/8,210 tonnes deadweight (DWT)
ships by type: cargo 1, passenger 1, passenger/cargo 1 (1999 est.)

Airports

Airports with scheduled air service

Airports - with unpaved runways


total: 136
over 3,047 m: 2
2,438 to 3,047 m: 6
1,524 to 2,437 m: 56
914 to 1,523 m: 37
under 914 m: 35 (1999 est.)

See also

  This article incorporates public domain material from World Factbook. CIA.

References

  1. ^ "Middle East :: Oman — the World Factbook - Central Intelligence Agency". The World Factbook. CIA. 19 October 2021.
  2. ^ . Parsons Corporation. Archived from the original on 2012-05-06.
  3. ^ . Times of Oman. Archived from the original on 2015-05-28.
  4. ^ . 2015-07-15. Archived from the original on 2015-07-15. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  5. ^ "Railways Africa".
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-07-13. Retrieved 2010-07-20. Suhar to Al-Ayn in UAE
  7. ^ "Oman officials announce further rail project plans". Construction Week. August 8, 2010. Retrieved 2021-10-11.
  8. ^ "Unwin, Sir Raymond, (2 Nov. 1863–1940), late Chief Technical Officer for Building and Town Planning. Ministry of Health", Who Was Who, Oxford University Press, 2007-12-01, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u218445, retrieved 2021-10-09
  9. ^ "Oman rail project retendered as three packages". Construction Week. September 11, 2012.
  10. ^ "Oman tenders nine GCC rail network freight yards". Construction Week. March 4, 2014.
  11. ^ "Oman signs $35 mln railway consultancy deal with Italferr - ONA". Reuters. 2014-02-06. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  12. ^ "Oman's great transformation: expanding rail networks to form ME transportation hub". Al Bawaba. July 21, 2013. Retrieved 2021-10-09.
  13. ^ railwaysignalling.eu (2014-02-10). "Italferr wins the bid for Oman's rail project". railwaysignalling.eu. Retrieved 2021-10-08.
  14. ^ "Introduction of railway in Oman is keenly awaited". Al Bawaba. Retrieved 2021-10-09.
  15. ^ "Oman railway to create 70,000 jobs: report". Construction Week. March 11, 2013.
  16. ^ "Oman's rail project on track". Oxford Business Group. 2014-03-05. Retrieved 2021-10-08.
  17. ^ "Track to the future: A regional rail network is expected to help realise trade potential". Oxford Business Group. 2014-01-09. Retrieved 2021-10-09.
  18. ^ "Oman Rail project management contract awarded". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 2021-10-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  19. ^ "Oman rail 'still on track' say officials". Times of Oman. Retrieved 2021-10-09.
  20. ^ "Oman suspends railway project". International Railway Journal. 2016-05-03. Retrieved 2021-10-08.
  21. ^ "Oman's national railway ambitions chug on despite delay in GCC rail network completion". Al Bawaba.
  22. ^ "Oman plans first metro and passenger rail service". Global Construction Review. 2021-08-06. Retrieved 2021-10-08.
  23. ^ "Muscat plans light rail metro". Times of Oman. Retrieved 2021-10-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  24. ^ "India accedes to Ashgabat agreement". The Hans India. March 24, 2016. Retrieved 2021-10-11.

External links

  • Omani Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • UNHCR Atlas Map
  • UN Map


transport, oman, this, article, about, transport, oman, contents, highways, links, neighboring, countries, railways, timeline, pipelines, ports, harbors, gulf, oman, arabian, merchant, marine, airports, airports, with, scheduled, service, airports, with, unpav. This article is about transport in Oman Contents 1 Highways 1 1 Links to neighboring countries 2 Railways 2 1 Timeline 3 Pipelines 4 Ports and harbors 4 1 Gulf of Oman 4 2 Arabian Sea 5 Merchant marine 6 Airports 6 1 Airports with scheduled air service 6 2 Airports with unpaved runways 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHighways Edit Sultan Qaboos Street total 62 240 km paved 29 685 km including 1943 km of expressways unpaved 30 545 km 2012 1 Oman has two expressway grade highways with the first 8 lane expressway set to open in 2017 Al Batinah Coastal Road runs along the Batinah Coast of the Sea of Oman It forks near Shinas with one leading inland to Wadi Hatta and another to Fujairah The speed limit is generally 120 km h In the Muscat area this highway is known as Sultan Qaboos Street and it is the trunk road running through the city Outside the Muscat area the interchanges take the form of roundabouts spaced approximately 7 km apart Each roundabout contains unique features to enliven the streetscape The roundabouts are named for driver navigation The other highway is Muscat Expressway a 54 kilometre 2 highway running from Al Qurum area of Muscat to Halban area on the outskirts of Muscat Al Batinah Expressway is a 256 kilometre 8 lane highway that continues from the Muscat Expressway in Halban up to the Oman UAE border at Khatmat Malaha 3 Other roads in Muscat Governorate and some cities such as Sohar and Salalah are dual carriageways with four or six lanes each with a speed limit ranging from 60 to 120 km h while in the rest of Oman the roads are mostly single carriageways Links to neighboring countries Edit United Arab Emirates Oman has several good road connections at Buraimi Al Ain Waddi Hatta Wajaja Khamat Mulahah Fujairah and Bukha Yemen Route 47 Raysut to Sarfait in Oman Yemen border The road then goes to Hawf Al Faydami Al Ghaydah Another road is from Thumrait to Al Mazyonah in Oman Yemen border The road then goes to Shisan Al Kurah Al Ghaydah Saudi Arabia Desert road through Al Mashash However there is a new road under construction to link the two countries Railways EditThere are no mainline railways in Oman but some are planned including links to adjacent countries The narrow gauge Al Hoota Cave Train takes tourists into the cave complex in a journey of 4 minutes and distance of 400m The estimated total length of the future Oman National Railway network is 2 135 km It will be divided into several segments linking Oman s borders with the UAE to Muscat as part of the GCC Railway Network and also to the southern parts of the country Port of Al Duqm the Port of Salalah and the Yemen border 4 However the Gulf Railway project was suspended in 2016 The government of Oman announced it will proceed with its own planned national railway network Timeline Edit 2008Joint Gulf Railway proposed to link gulf states at cost of 14 billion by 2014 5 2010Bids are invited for construction of a rail network in three phases The first phase would be a double track electrified coastal route from Masqat to Suhar the second phase would be an extension from Masqat to Daq the third phase an extension from Suhar to Al Ain in the UAE 6 Later an extension to Salalah was considered The construction was expected to start in 2012 and to be completed by 2018 7 2011In September the Supreme Committee for Town Planning which was in charge of the project since the beginning handed it to the Ministry of Transport and Communications MOTC Shortly the Ministry of Transport began preparing for launching initial tenders for project design and consultancy 8 2012In September the Ministry of Transport and Communications through the Government Tender Board announced it will re float its tender for the first phase into three stages one to get the preliminary design another for the detailed design and building and third for the management consultancy and supervision services 9 2013In March the Ministry of Transport announced the opening of a tender for the preliminary design of nine freight yards for the first phase of the project The largest yards at Sohar and Duqm are planned at either end of the network as they will be intended to manage the freight volumes handled by the industrial ports at those sites 10 In July through assistance from German company Dorsch Gruppe the Government Tender Board opened the competition for the first stage with a 13 6 million Omani riyals US 35 3 million contract that covers preliminary design consultancy services which was awarded to Italian company Italferr 11 12 13 In September Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Futaisi the Omani Minister of Transport and Communications asked private companies to think about investing in the railway project 14 At this point the project was reported to have created 70 000 new jobs in the Sultanate 15 2014In 2014 Oman Rail announced a pre qualification tender for the initial stage of the network which includes providing infrastructure technology systems and the construction of the first section that extends from Oman s border to Al Buraimi UAE to the port of Sohar The cost of this stage was estimated at 2 6 billion out of the estimated total cost of 14 billion 16 The first phase was supposed to include a 242 km line from Al Misfah in Muscat to Sohar Port with a 20 km link to Muscat Central Station and an 8 km spur to a railway yard at Sohar There is also a 486 km line from Muscat to Duqm Port and 84 km between Sinaw and Ibra in Oman s east In addition to a 136 km track from Suhar to Al Ain in the UAE with a 27 km spur to the town of Buraimi and a 58 km track from Suhar to Khatmat Al Malaha another border crossing 17 2015In February 2015 the Government Tender Board selected a consortium headed by Spanish engineering contractor Tecnicas Reunidas to provide project management consultancy services for the network 18 2016The GCC Railway project was suspended in 2016 after some partner countries decided to hold their rail plans due to the decline in oil price 19 However the government of Oman had announced that it will continue with its national rail network 20 21 2021In June 2021 the government of Oman announced the planning for the first metro and passenger rail services that would link Muscat City and its major airports The metro network would extend from Ruwi and Muttrah to Muscat International Airport and Seeb 22 23 Pipelines Editcrude oil 1 300 km natural gas 1 030 kmPorts and harbors EditGulf of Oman Edit Al Wajajah Port Sultan Qaboos Muttrah Mina al Fahal Port of SoharArabian Sea Edit Port of Salalah Duqm Port Mina RaysutMerchant marine Edittotal 3 ships 1 000 GT or over totaling 16 306 GT 8 210 tonnes deadweight DWT ships by type cargo 1 passenger 1 passenger cargo 1 1999 est Airports EditAirports with scheduled air service Edit Muscat International Airport Salalah International Airport Duqm Jaaluni Airport Khasab AirportAirports with unpaved runways Edit total 136 over 3 047 m 2 2 438 to 3 047 m 6 1 524 to 2 437 m 56 914 to 1 523 m 37 under 914 m 35 1999 est See also EditList of airports in Oman Oman Air Railway stations in Oman North South Transport Corridor Ashgabat agreement a Multimodal transport agreement signed by India Oman Iran Turkmenistan Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan for creating an international transport and transit corridor facilitating transportation of goods between Central Asia and the Persian Gulf 24 This article incorporates public domain material from World Factbook CIA References Edit Middle East Oman the World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency The World Factbook CIA 19 October 2021 Muscat Expressway Parsons Corporation Archived from the original on 2012 05 06 Oman s 8 lane Batinah Expressway to be ready by 2017 Times of Oman Archived from the original on 2015 05 28 Oman Rail 2015 07 15 Archived from the original on 2015 07 15 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Railways Africa Railway Gazette News in Brief Archived from the original on 2019 07 13 Retrieved 2010 07 20 Suhar to Al Ayn in UAE Oman officials announce further rail project plans Construction Week August 8 2010 Retrieved 2021 10 11 Unwin Sir Raymond 2 Nov 1863 1940 late Chief Technical Officer for Building and Town Planning Ministry of Health Who Was Who Oxford University Press 2007 12 01 doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 u218445 retrieved 2021 10 09 Oman rail project retendered as three packages Construction Week September 11 2012 Oman tenders nine GCC rail network freight yards Construction Week March 4 2014 Oman signs 35 mln railway consultancy deal with Italferr ONA Reuters 2014 02 06 Retrieved 2021 10 10 Oman s great transformation expanding rail networks to form ME transportation hub Al Bawaba July 21 2013 Retrieved 2021 10 09 railwaysignalling eu 2014 02 10 Italferr wins the bid for Oman s rail project railwaysignalling eu Retrieved 2021 10 08 Introduction of railway in Oman is keenly awaited Al Bawaba Retrieved 2021 10 09 Oman railway to create 70 000 jobs report Construction Week March 11 2013 Oman s rail project on track Oxford Business Group 2014 03 05 Retrieved 2021 10 08 Track to the future A regional rail network is expected to help realise trade potential Oxford Business Group 2014 01 09 Retrieved 2021 10 09 Oman Rail project management contract awarded Railway Gazette International Retrieved 2021 10 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Oman rail still on track say officials Times of Oman Retrieved 2021 10 09 Oman suspends railway project International Railway Journal 2016 05 03 Retrieved 2021 10 08 Oman s national railway ambitions chug on despite delay in GCC rail network completion Al Bawaba Oman plans first metro and passenger rail service Global Construction Review 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2021 10 08 Muscat plans light rail metro Times of Oman Retrieved 2021 10 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link India accedes to Ashgabat agreement The Hans India March 24 2016 Retrieved 2021 10 11 External links EditOman at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Omani Ministry of Foreign Affairs UNHCR Atlas Map UN Map Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transport in Oman amp oldid 1127989537 Railways, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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