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Royal Decree, 104,000 SQM, and a RO 100M First Investor: Inside Oman's New AI Special Zone

His Majesty Sultan Haitham bin Tarik signed Royal Decree No. 50/2026 on April 30, 2026, establishing Oman's first AI Special Economic Zone in Seeb, Muscat. Here is what it covers, who it targets, and what the inaugural investor has already committed.

Layla Al-ZadjaliMay 17, 2026

On April 30, 2026, His Majesty Sultan Haitham bin Tarik signed Royal Decree No. 50/2026 establishing Oman's first Special Economic Zone for Artificial Intelligence. The 104,000-square-metre site in the Wilayat of Seeb, Muscat Governorate, marks Oman's transition from roadmaps to real estate: a physical, legally-incentivised cluster for AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, and robotics, with a first private-sector investor already committed.

๐Ÿ“œ The Royal Decree: What It Establishes

As Oman Observer reported, Royal Decree No. (50/2026) was signed on April 30, 2026, and took effect the day following its publication in the Official Gazette. The full text is available on decree.om.

The zone is governed by the Public Authority for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones (OPAZ), working in coordination with the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology (MTCIT). OPAZ's board of directors will appoint a managing entity to operate and develop the zone. An executive roadmap covering governance structures, policy frameworks, and performance indicators is currently being developed.

The AI Zone joins an established network of Omani special economic zones. OPAZ reported that investments across all its zones grew by RO 1.4 billion in 2025, bringing total committed investments to RO 22.4 billion, a 6.8% year-on-year increase.

"A qualitative leap in Oman's transition towards a digital economy."

- Qais bin Mohammed al Yousef, Chairman, OPAZ

๐Ÿ“ Location: Seeb, Muscat, 104,000 Square Metres

The zone spans approximately 104,000 square metres in the Wilayat of Seeb, adjacent to the Civil Aviation Authority building, as Oman Observer detailed. That is roughly 10.4 hectares, or around 15 international football pitches.

The Seeb location offers practical advantages. Close to Muscat International Airport and major road infrastructure, it reduces logistics friction for companies importing high-value hardware such as servers, semiconductors, and laboratory equipment. The proximity to the Civil Aviation Authority also positions the zone for future overlap with drone logistics and aviation technology applications.

๐Ÿญ Who Can Set Up Shop: Target Sectors

According to Omanet, the zone targets a broad range of high-value technology activities:

  • AI startups and global technology companies seeking a competitive GCC base
  • Semiconductor and chip design businesses (Oman attracted three semiconductor firms through the Ithca Group in 2025)
  • Data analytics providers and platforms
  • Research institutions partnering with industry on applied AI
  • Quantum computing and cybersecurity companies
  • Robotics manufacturers and integrators
  • Sector applications spanning logistics, energy, tourism, healthcare, and urban development

The breadth of eligible industries is intentional. The government has framed the AI Zone as a multi-sector catalyst rather than a single-vertical cluster, reflecting Vision 2040's goal of diversifying the knowledge economy across multiple fronts simultaneously.

โš–๏ธ Incentives: What Companies Get

Projects in the AI Special Zone receive the incentives, privileges, and exemptions established under Royal Decree No. (38/2025) on the Law of Special Economic Zones and Free Zones. While the specific package is referenced in public announcements rather than fully itemised, Oman's standard free-zone framework typically includes:

  • 100% foreign ownership without a local partner requirement
  • Corporate and income tax exemptions for qualifying periods
  • Full repatriation of capital and profits
  • Streamlined customs and import procedures
  • Simplified licensing and regulatory approvals

This framework positions Oman's AI Zone alongside regional peers such as Abu Dhabi's Hub71 and Saudi Arabia's NEOM Tech District. The key difference is scale and focus: 104,000 sqm is sized for depth over breadth, prioritising a concentrated innovation cluster over a sprawling development that risks losing its identity.

"Digital sovereignty requires comprehensive enablers such as computing capacity, energy resources, regulatory frameworks, capital, and data governance."

- Mohammed al Tamami, Co-Founder, Mamun

๐Ÿ’ผ First Private Investor: Afouq Investment and Development United

The zone's first private-sector operator was already committed before the Royal Decree was issued. As Omanet reported, Afouq Investment and Development United, chaired by Dr. Siham Al Harthy, will operate as the inaugural private zone operator in partnership with Egypt's Prime Group, projecting an investment of approximately RO 100 million.

The Afouq concept was first revealed publicly at Comex 2025 in September 2025, months before the legal structure was formalised. Planned activities centre on semiconductors, quantum computing, and cybersecurity, targeting both multinational corporations and innovative startups as future tenants.

"Our goal is to attract major global corporations and innovative start-ups in strategic fields such as semiconductors, quantum computing, and cybersecurity."

- Dr. Siham Al Harthy, Chairperson, Afouq Investment and Development United

The Afouq-Prime Group partnership also introduces an Oman-Egypt technology corridor, creating potential for cross-border talent flows and co-investment between two Arab economies with expanding technology sectors.

๐Ÿ”’ The Digital Sovereignty Angle

Experts quoted by Oman Observer described the zone as a concrete expression of Oman's push for digital sovereignty. Dr. Seema al Kaabi, Acting Director General at the MTCIT, called it "a strategic milestone underscoring Oman's commitment to strengthening its position in advanced technologies."

Unlike the UAE's and Saudi Arabia's more expansive AI hub strategies, Oman is pursuing a focused, zone-centric model built on its established free-zone expertise. Geography adds a distinct edge: Oman's exports and data routes can bypass the Strait of Hormuz, reducing vulnerability to maritime disruptions that could affect other Gulf states. For technology companies requiring resilient connectivity and stable energy supply, that is a meaningful differentiator.

The zone also sits within a broader sovereignty ecosystem. According to GCC Business Watch, supporting initiatives include the Oman Digital Triangle, the Green AI Alliance, and Green Data City, alongside the Ma'een national AI platform. The physical zone is the most concrete layer yet of this growing digital sovereignty stack.

๐Ÿ“Š World Bank Warning: Good Foundations, Incomplete Transition

The AI Zone announcement came in the same two-week window as a pointed World Bank assessment. On May 12, 2026, Zaki Badie Khoury, Senior Digital Specialist at the World Bank Group, presented findings in Muscat, as Oman Observer reported.

Khoury acknowledged Oman's strengths: near-universal 4G, advanced 5G, sophisticated government digital services, and leading cybersecurity capabilities in the Gulf. But the core challenge remains: converting that infrastructure into measurable economic growth and employment.

๐Ÿ“ˆ World Bank: Key Numbers on Oman's Digital Economy

  • Digital economy contribution today: 2.4 to 2.8% of GDP
  • Vision 2040 target: 10% of GDP
  • A 2% GDP increase from the digital economy could generate 30,000 new jobs
  • Approximately 64% of Oman's population is under 30

Khoury identified three priorities: enhanced private-sector participation, making health, education, and energy data accessible to businesses, and accelerated AI adoption. The AI Special Zone directly addresses the third. The first two require complementary policy action to make the zone meaningful beyond its perimeter.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

Policies get published. Roadmaps get launched. Royal Decrees draw boundaries on maps with legal force, fiscal incentives, and investors already waiting.

The AI Special Economic Zone in Seeb is the most concrete infrastructure commitment Oman has made toward building a physical AI ecosystem. For Omani entrepreneurs and engineers, it creates a legal and geographic home for their companies, with free-zone advantages that reduce the friction of starting and scaling. For international technology firms weighing a GCC presence, it offers a competitive incentive package in a stable, well-governed environment with a young, tech-educated workforce.

The real measure of success will emerge over the next 12 to 24 months: how many companies set up operations, how many Omanis are hired into high-skill technical roles, and whether the semiconductor and AI ambitions attract global names alongside Afouq's inaugural RO 100 million commitment. The foundations are legally in place. The building starts now.

AI ZoneAIDigital EconomyVision 2040OPAZ
Technology & AI
6 min read

Saif Al-Essai Built Two Exits, Then Set Oman's Pre-Seed Record with Sampo AI

From a Muscat bedroom to seven MENA markets in under a year: how Saif Al-Essai and Khalifa Manaa built Sampo AI, broke Oman's funding record, and are rewriting how e-commerce businesses price their products.

Dr. Khalid Al-RashdiMay 15, 2026

In July 2024, two entrepreneurs in Muscat set out to solve a problem that costs e-commerce businesses across the Middle East millions every year: pricing guesswork. Six months later, their startup, Sampo AI, became the first Omani company to raise $750,000 at the pre-seed stage, setting a national record, attracting regional investors, and expanding across seven MENA countries before most startups have found product-market fit.

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Takeaways

  • Saif Al-Essai and Khalifa Manaa co-founded Sampo AI in July 2024, building an AI-powered dynamic pricing SaaS platform for e-commerce businesses across the Middle East.
  • In January 2025, the startup closed a $750,000 pre-seed round, the largest pre-seed investment in Oman's history, co-led by Omantel Innovation Labs and Waad VC.
  • Saif brings 15-plus years of serial entrepreneurship across advertising, cybersecurity, SaaS, and mental wellness, with two successful exits before Sampo AI.
  • Khalifa's international background spans Finland (Turku University, Aalto University) and includes prior ventures in AI-driven product design and e-commerce.
  • Sampo AI's platform draws on a proprietary database of 10-plus million regional products and uses behavioral AI to deliver pricing recommendations with predicted profit impact.
  • The company now operates across seven countries: UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, and Egypt.

๐Ÿ›’ The Problem They Are Solving

Pricing is one of the highest-leverage decisions any e-commerce business makes, and most get it wrong. Too high, and customers walk away. Too low, and margins evaporate. For businesses operating in the Middle East, the challenge is amplified by fast-moving competitive markets, fragmented data, and limited access to the enterprise-grade pricing tools common in Western markets.

Sampo AI was built to fix that. As Arab Founders reports, the platform analyzes user behavior, purchase patterns, and A/B test results to give e-commerce businesses a continuous, data-driven view of optimal pricing. The company's own tagline sums it up bluntly: "Monitoring tools show you prices. Sampo tells you what to charge."

At the core of the product sits a proprietary database of over 10 million regional products, built to reflect the realities of MENA markets. Competitor prices are tracked and refreshed up to every hour, with product matching accuracy of 99.95 percent, according to the company's own platform description.

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ’ผ Saif Al-Essai: The Serial Entrepreneur

Saif Al-Essai is the kind of founder who does not come to startups by accident. With a BTEC from The Sheffield College and a Bachelor of Science from The University of Hull, Saif returned to Oman and spent the next 15 years building companies across wildly different sectors: advertising, cybersecurity, SaaS platforms, and mental wellness. By the time he co-founded Sampo AI, he had already notched two exits.

That breadth of experience is visible in how he positions Sampo. It is not just a pricing tool. It is a statement about what Omani startups can build and where they can compete. Saif was featured on Oman FM English in January 2025, shortly after the funding announcement, and spoke at CreativeMornings Muscat in June 2025, one of the city's most respected platforms for entrepreneurial thinking, drawing an audience of 54 at Muscat University.

"We are incredibly proud to position Oman as a hub for innovation in the Middle East. This funding validates our mission and empowers us to redefine how e-commerce businesses approach pricing strategies."

- Saif Al-Essai, Co-Founder and CEO, Sampo AI

๐ŸŒ Khalifa Manaa: The International Product Builder

Khalifa Manaa's path to Sampo AI ran through Finland. He earned a Bachelor of Business Administration from Turku University of Applied Sciences, then deepened his expertise with Design Thinking studies at Aalto University Executive Education, and earned a Continuous Innovation certification from Lean Startup pioneer Ash Maurya's Lean Stack program.

Before Sampo AI, Khalifa had already shaped multiple ventures. He co-founded RideHoop, contributing to customer experience and product development. He also founded Shapr, where he applied data science and AI to enhance revenue streams. Earlier, he served as Digital Business Designer at Qvik (a Finnish digital consultancy) and as Product and Venture Consultant at Next Level. His advisory credits include Savimbo, a social enterprise focused on fair-trade climate products, and Layette Oy, an award-winning pregnancy app.

As Sampo AI's Chief People Officer (per ZoomInfo), Khalifa brings a product-first, human-centered lens that complements Saif's commercial instincts. His LinkedIn profile reflects a founder who has operated at the intersection of design thinking, lean methodology, and AI-driven product development across two continents.

๐Ÿ’ฐ The Record-Breaking Round

In January 2025, just six months after founding Sampo AI, the duo closed a $750,000 pre-seed round. As Wamda reported, the round was co-led by Omantel Innovation Labs, the innovation arm of Oman's national telecom operator, and Waad VC, with additional participation from Hexnture and a group of Saudi angel investors.

The size and speed of this raise matter beyond the headline number. As Middle East AI News and WAYA Media both noted, this was the largest pre-seed round ever closed by an Omani startup. For an ecosystem still building its track record, Sampo AI's raise sent a clear signal: Muscat-based AI companies can attract serious regional capital.

๐Ÿ— Inside the Product

Sampo AI's platform is built around four core capabilities. First, competitor monitoring: automatic product matching with 99.95 percent accuracy, with prices tracked and refreshed up to every hour. Second, AI-driven pricing recommendations that analyze hundreds of signals including competitor prices, demand, inventory levels, and seasonality, and present guidance in plain language with predicted profit impact. Third, automated dynamic repricing rules that run 24/7, with margin protection floors set per SKU. And fourth, market intelligence dashboards that surface competitive patterns, price follower behavior, and category-level trends.

As the company's own press release notes, Sampo also offers a "Golden Guarantee": a 14-day free trial plus a full refund if clients are unsatisfied within 30 days post-trial. That kind of confidence-in-product commercial positioning is rare at the pre-seed stage.

๐Ÿ—บ From Muscat to Seven Markets

By the time Saif spoke at CreativeMornings Muscat in June 2025, Sampo AI was no longer just an Omani story. According to the company's platform page, Sampo now operates across seven countries: UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, and Egypt. The expansion from a Muscat founding to a seven-market MENA footprint in under a year reflects both the regional applicability of the product and the team's ability to execute rapidly on the capital raised.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Vision 2040 and the Ecosystem Signal

Sampo AI's story fits squarely within Oman Vision 2040's push to diversify the economy through knowledge industries and technology. The involvement of Omantel Innovation Labs as a lead investor is notable: it reflects a deliberate effort by Oman's state-linked institutions to catalyze venture-backable startups, not just support small businesses. As the Rasmal analysis noted, the Omani government has raised the priority of building its own AI ecosystem, and Sampo AI's raise is one of the clearest early data points of that strategy bearing fruit.

๐Ÿ”— Follow Their Journey

๐ŸŒŸ Why This Matters for Oman

Saif Al-Essai and Khalifa Manaa are not just building a startup. They are demonstrating what Oman's next generation of tech company can look like: a deep-tech product company with regional ambition, backed by serious capital, founded by Omanis who have operated internationally and brought those skills home. Saif's two exits before the age of 40 show that the talent exists. Khalifa's Finnish education and pan-European product career show that the world-class training exists. Sampo AI, operating in seven MENA countries less than a year after founding, shows that the execution capability exists. For every aspiring founder in Muscat watching from the sidelines, that combination is a proof of concept for what is possible.

Founder ProfileSaaSAIE-CommerceStartup Funding
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6 min read

2,441% Growth: Meet Azzan Al-Kindi, the Omani Engineer Behind Rihal's Rise

After years working at Schlumberger in oil fields, Azzan Al-Kindi co-founded Rihal in Muscat. Four years later, it is the third fastest-growing tech company in the Middle East, with a Series A underway and 300-plus Omani professionals on the team.

Surah Al-BalushiMay 15, 2026

In a region where oil has long defined career paths, Azzan Al-Kindi made an unusual pivot. After years working as a field engineer for Schlumberger in the energy sector, he co-founded Rihal in Muscat, an enterprise SaaS company that went on to achieve a 2,441 percent four-year growth rate and land third on Deloitte's Middle East Technology Fast 50 list in 2024. Today, with a Series A in progress and a 300-strong team that is 90 percent Omani, Rihal is one of the most compelling founder stories to come out of the Sultanate.

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Takeaways

  • Rihal is a Muscat-based enterprise SaaS company specializing in data management, AI, and robotic process automation.
  • Co-founded by Azzan Al-Kindi (CEO), Asim Al-Shabibi (COO), and Waleed Al Harthi (CTO).
  • Ranked third fastest-growing tech company in the Middle East by Deloitte in 2024, with 2,441% four-year growth.
  • Raised $7.5 million in the first close of a $15 million Series A led by ITHCA Group in September 2025.
  • Over 300 employees: approximately 90% Omani nationals and 43% women, a rare combination in regional tech.
  • Azzan serves as Deputy Head of the Digital Economy Committee at the Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OCCI).

๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ From Engineering School to the Oil Fields

Azzan Al-Kindi's technical education began earlier than most. At age 11, he enrolled at the Royal Guard of Oman Technical College (RGOTC), where he completed a Diploma in General Engineering between 1999 and 2007. He then attended Sultan Qaboos University, graduating in 2012 with a Bachelor of Engineering in Mechanical Engineering. During his SQU years, he served as President of the Society of Mechanical Engineering, an early marker of his instinct to lead rather than follow.

His professional career began with an internship at BP-Oman as a Completion Engineer, gaining field exposure and safety training in the upstream oil sector. That was followed by a more substantial stint at Schlumberger (now SLB), one of the world's largest oil services companies, where he worked as a Directional Driller and Senior Field Engineer. The role demanded real-time data interpretation, bore property analysis, and decision-making under pressure: a set of instincts that would prove surprisingly transferable to building enterprise software.

๐Ÿš€ The Pivot: Building Rihal from a Problem Worth Solving

Rihal was not born from a hackathon or an MBA thesis. As Arab Founders reports, the company emerged from "business needs and day-to-day nuisances" that Azzan encountered working inside large organisations. Alongside co-founders Asim Al-Shabibi (COO) and Waleed Al Harthi (CTO), he identified a persistent gap: Omani enterprises, especially in government and energy, were still managing data and operations through inefficient, manually-intensive processes. Rihal was built to close that gap with locally developed software.

The company today offers a full stack of enterprise capabilities: data management, robotic process automation (RPA), AI implementation, IT staffing, and custom software engineering. Its clients span government ministries, logistics operators, telecom companies, and oil and gas entities across Oman and the wider region.

"Since our seed round, we have been laser-focused on sustainable growth, building a strong, diverse team, and delivering exceptional value to our clients."

- Azzan Al-Kindi, CEO and Co-Founder, Rihal

๐Ÿงฉ The Product Suite: Built for Oman, Designed for the Region

Beyond services, Rihal has developed a portfolio of proprietary platforms, each targeting a specific enterprise pain point:

  • Jadawal: An operations and scheduling streamlining tool for enterprise teams.
  • Eysal: A data-driven efficiency platform for enterprise analytics.
  • Hassad: An AI-powered optimization engine for complex operational decisions.
  • Iqraa: An information accessibility and knowledge management platform.

These are not off-the-shelf global products relabeled for a local audience. They were designed for the realities of Omani enterprise clients: Arabic-language environments, government procurement structures, and the specific data complexity of energy and utilities sectors.

๐Ÿ‘ฅ A Workforce That Reflects Oman's Values

Perhaps the most striking aspect of Rihal's profile is not its revenue growth; it is its team composition. As Wamda reported at the time of the Series A, Rihal's 300-plus professionals are approximately 90% Omani nationals, with 43% being women. In a regional tech industry where both Omanization and gender representation remain aspirational targets for most firms, the company appears to have made both a structural priority from inception.

This was formally recognized with the 2024 Ejada Award for Institutional Excellence in the Private Sector, presented by Oman's Ministry of Labour for outstanding performance in employment and Omanization. The company also achieved a 119% compound annual growth rate since its seed round, according to reporting at the time of its Series A.

๐Ÿ† Recognition and Funding Milestones

In 2024, Deloitte ranked Rihal as the third fastest-growing tech company in the Middle East on its Technology Fast 50 list, with a four-year growth rate of 2,441%. The company finished behind only Capital.com (4,411%) and Salla (3,550%), placing a Muscat-built enterprise SaaS firm in the same tier as some of the region's most prominent fintechs and e-commerce platforms.

Rihal has also won PDO's "Best Performing SME" award in both 2023 and 2024, recognizing its contribution to In-Country Value. The award, presented at PDO's annual In-Country Value Day, is a meaningful signal for a tech firm working inside Oman's energy sector supply chain.

In September 2025, Rihal announced the first close of a $15 million Series A round, raising $7.5 million led by ITHCA Group, the tech investment arm of the Oman Investment Authority. A second close, open to strategic investors, was announced alongside the first. The company plans to use the capital for regional MENA expansion and to scale its proprietary platforms toward international markets.

๐ŸŒ Building the Ecosystem, Not Just a Company

Azzan's commitments extend well beyond Rihal's own growth. He serves as Deputy Head of the Digital Economy Committee at the Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OCCI), and as a member of the Supervisory Board for the National Employment Programme (Tashgeel), which works to increase Omani employment in the private sector. He is also listed as an investor in Bon, an Omani startup, and previously served as Chairman of both Codeline and Transformation Pioneers.

At the company level, Rihal has partnered with Omantel to deliver RPA training to recent graduates through Omantel's Generation Z programme. At the signing ceremony, as Zawya reported, Azzan framed the collaboration in terms of national purpose: "This cooperation between Rihal and Omantel aims to enhance cooperation, share practical knowledge and experiences and develop future skills among Omani youths."

๐Ÿ”— Connect With Azzan and Rihal

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

Rihal's journey is precisely the kind of story that Oman's Vision 2040 was designed to produce: a locally-founded, locally-staffed enterprise software company growing fast enough to compete at a regional level, attracting institutional capital, and creating high-skill Omani jobs in the process. Azzan Al-Kindi's path, from a technical college in the Royal Guard at age 11 to Schlumberger rigs to Series A board meetings with ITHCA, illustrates that Oman's diversification strategy does not depend on waiting for a new generation. The builders are already here.

With $7.5 million in fresh capital, a pipeline of enterprise clients across MENA, and a 300-strong team that is overwhelmingly Omani and nearly half women, Rihal's next chapter may well define what a fully homegrown Omani SaaS company can accomplish on the international stage.

Founder ProfileSaaSEnterprise TechOman StartupsAI
Technology & AI
7 min read

How Two Omani Engineers Built Byanat: Oman's Fastest-Growing AI Startup

Ahmed Alghadani and Dr. Ahmed Albadi co-founded Byanat in Muscat in April 2022, building an AI observability platform for telecom operators and data centers. By February 2025, they had raised a Pre-Series A round led by Golden Gate Ventures and opened offices in Riyadh and Doha.

Surah Al-BalushiMay 15, 2026

In April 2022, two Omani engineers sat down in Muscat with a shared frustration: telecom operators across the Gulf were generating enormous volumes of machine data, yet had no intelligent way to act on it. That conversation became Byanat, now Oman's fastest-growing AI startup, with offices in three GCC cities and backing from some of the region's most respected investors.

๐Ÿ“‹ Key Takeaways

  • Ahmed Alghadani (CEO) and Dr. Ahmed Albadi (CTO) co-founded Byanat in Muscat in April 2022
  • The company builds an AI observability and analytics platform for telecom operators and data centers
  • Byanat raised a seed round in 2023 from 500 Global, Sanabil Investments, Omantel, and Al Jabr MENA
  • In February 2025, Golden Gate Ventures led a Pre-Series A round joined by Qatar Development Bank and Omantel Innovation Labs
  • The company now operates offices in Muscat, Riyadh, and Doha
  • Byanat ranks in the top 2% of startups accepted into the 500 Global accelerator in MENA

๐Ÿ‘ฅ The Two Engineers Who Started a GCC AI Company

Byanat is a founder-duo story, each half bringing something the other lacked. Ahmed Alghadani came from a hardware-meets-software background in mechatronics, grounded in Omani engineering education. Dr. Ahmed Albadi came from four years of PhD research at a top UK university, working on data analytics in partnership with Rolls Royce. Together, they covered the full stack: product strategy, engineering, deep research, and fundraising.

What they shared was a single insight: the data coming off connected telecom infrastructure was an untapped intelligence layer. And they were willing to build in Muscat, not London or Dubai, to prove it.

๐ŸŽ“ Ahmed Alghadani: The Mechatronics Engineer Turned Founder

Ahmed Alghadani holds a Bachelor of Engineering (First-Class Honours) in Mechatronics Engineering. Early in his career he worked as a research assistant in embedded systems, developing fluency in the physical-digital interface that would later define Byanat's core product. His LinkedIn profile shows a trajectory that moved quickly from research toward company building.

As CEO, Alghadani has led Byanat through two fundraising rounds, multiple international expansions, and the complex work of signing telecom operators as enterprise customers. He was also selected for membership in the Sultan Qaboos Academy for Management's alumni council for the period May 2025 to December 2026, a recognition of his standing in Oman's business leadership community.

One of his less-discussed accomplishments is team-building. As noted on the Byanat company page, several team members joined from organizations including Rolls Royce and Microsoft. For a startup headquartered in Muscat to attract engineering talent with that pedigree is itself a signal of his ability to sell a vision.

๐Ÿ”ฌ Dr. Ahmed Albadi: From Sheffield Research Lab to Oman's CTO

Dr. Ahmed Albadi earned his PhD in Energy, Combustion, and Digital Processing from the University of Sheffield between 2018 and 2022. His research spanned machine health monitoring, parallel programming, and high-speed imaging, carried out in collaboration with Rolls Royce and the Sheffield University Advanced Research Center. He now serves as Co-founder and Chief AI Officer at Byanat.

The leap from combustion engineering research to a SaaS startup may seem unusual, but Albadi has consistently articulated why the transition makes sense. When he addressed COMEX Oman's 2nd Big Data and Analytics Meet in December 2022, he framed his entire career around a single thesis: deep research unlocks commercial value that surface-level data tools miss. He also addressed Oman's Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology executive order on AI adoption, grounding his technical work directly in national policy. The full recap is available in Byanat's COMEX blog post.

He has since spoken at Web Summit Qatar in multiple sessions, including a panel on accelerating startup scale from validation to market, cementing his role as a regional voice on applied AI and commercialization.

"As we bridge research in data analytics and industry, we are able to uncover hidden insights and create value beyond the obvious. By leveraging advanced AI and ML techniques, we can unlock the full potential of data driving innovation."

- Dr. Ahmed Albadi, Co-founder and CTO, Byanat (COMEX Oman, December 2022)

๐Ÿ—๏ธ Building the Product: AI Observability for Telecom and Data Centers

Byanat's platform is built around what the company calls an "agentic AI architecture." According to the Byanat products page, its core capabilities include:

  • Network monitoring: Centralized visibility across multiple network vendors, with AI automatically detecting anomalies, cell degradations, and new deployments
  • Predictive maintenance: AI analysis of hardware telemetry to flag potential failures before they cause downtime
  • Capacity planning: Forecasting tools to help operators plan infrastructure investment ahead of demand
  • Data integration: A low-code console connecting disparate systems and automating workflows across platforms

The target customer is a telecom operator or data center operator managing thousands of connected assets across a geography. In the GCC, where both sectors are expanding rapidly, that is a large and well-funded buyer base.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Funding Journey: Seed, Accelerator, and Pre-Series A

Byanat's fundraising arc has moved quickly for an Omani startup. The company was incubated early at Omantel Innovation Labs, giving it direct access to one of Oman's largest telecom operators as both a proving ground and an early investor.

In June 2023, as Lucidity Insights reported, Byanat closed a seed round from 500 Global, Sanabil Investments (an investment fund owned by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund), Omantel, and Al Jabr MENA, alongside angel investors including Yaser Alghamdi. The company was simultaneously accepted into the 500 Global Sanabil MENA accelerator, ranking in the top 2% of applicants, and won the Machine Learning Award in Data at Oman's 2nd Big Data and Analytics Meet.

In February 2025, Byanat announced a Pre-Series A round led by Golden Gate Ventures, a Singapore-based fund with a strong track record in emerging markets. Co-investors included Qatar Development Bank, Omantel Innovation Labs, Salcia Oryx Fund, Waad Investment, and PlusVC. The round will fund product development, GCC market expansion, and hiring in AI and data science. Byanat was also accepted into the NextEra program run by Saudi Arabia's National Technology Development Program, providing a formalized entry into the Kingdom's tech ecosystem.

"This investment marks the beginning of a new chapter in Byanat's journey to redefine digital infrastructure observability for telecom operators and data centres. By strengthening our team and accelerating product development around our unified AI platform, built on agentic AI architecture, we are enhancing our capabilities and expanding our reach."

- Ahmed Alghadani, Co-founder and CEO, Byanat (February 2025)

The lead investor's view is equally direct. As reported by Arageek, Michael Lints, Partner at Golden Gate Ventures, stated: "Byanat is redefining how telecom operators manage infrastructure using AI-driven insights."

๐Ÿ† Recognition and Standing in the Ecosystem

  • Machine Learning Award in Data, Oman's 2nd Big Data and Analytics Meet (COMEX Oman, 2022)
  • Top 2% acceptance rate into the 500 Global Sanabil MENA Seed Accelerator
  • Incubated at Omantel Innovation Labs
  • Accepted into Saudi Arabia's NextEra program by the National Technology Development Program
  • Ahmed Alghadani appointed to the Sultan Qaboos Academy for Management alumni council (May 2025 to December 2026)
  • Dr. Albadi featured as a speaker at Web Summit Qatar
  • Recognized as Oman's fastest-growing and top-ranked tech startup by multiple regional outlets

๐ŸŒฑ Contributing to Oman's Tech Ecosystem

Beyond their own company, both founders have contributed to shaping expectations for what Omani deep-tech can look like. By presenting at public forums, engaging directly with government AI policy, and attracting international venture capital to a Muscat-headquartered company, they have helped normalize the idea that Oman can be a home base for globally relevant technology companies.

Byanat is also creating the kind of high-value technical employment that Oman's Vision 2040 explicitly targets. As the company scales its Riyadh and Doha offices, it is carrying Omani technical expertise into the region's largest markets, making the Muscat-origin story visible well beyond Oman's borders.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

Byanat's story matters for three reasons. First, the founders chose to build in Muscat rather than relocate, making Oman the origin point of a regionally competitive product. Second, they have attracted investment from credible international names including Golden Gate Ventures and Qatar Development Bank, demonstrating that Oman-based startups can compete across the region. Third, their work sits squarely within Oman's Vision 2040 priority of diversifying the economy through technology and knowledge industries.

As the GCC continues its buildout of data centers, 5G networks, and smart infrastructure, demand for intelligent monitoring and analytics will only grow. Two engineers from Muscat decided to be the ones building that intelligence layer. That is a decision worth knowing about.

Connect with the founders: Ahmed Alghadani on LinkedIn | Dr. Ahmed Albadi on LinkedIn | Byanat website

Founder ProfileAIStartupsByanatSaaS

Top 5 Free Zones in Oman for Tech Startups (2026): Where Should You Launch?

Oman now has five major free zones competing for tech investment, including a brand-new AI Special Zone launched by Royal Decree in 2026. Here is your practical guide to choosing the right one for your startup.

Omar Al-RiyamiMay 4, 2026

Oman has quietly become one of the region's most compelling free zone destinations for tech founders. With the launch of a brand-new Artificial Intelligence Special Zone in 2026 and more than RO 1.4 billion flowing into free zone investments last year, there has never been more choice, or more complexity, when deciding where to plant your flag in Oman's fast-growing tech economy.

โšก Key Takeaways

  • Oman now operates 24 special economic zones and free zones under OPAZ authority, with a new AI-specific zone added in April 2026.
  • Every major zone offers 100% foreign ownership and customs duty exemptions, but tax holiday durations vary significantly: from 10 years at KOM to 30 years at Duqm and Salalah.
  • Location matters as much as incentives: zones outside Muscat offer longer tax breaks but make talent recruitment harder.
  • The brand-new AI Special Zone in Seeb is the top pick for pure-play AI, robotics, and semiconductor companies in 2026.
  • Knowledge Oasis Muscat (KOM) remains the best all-around option for software and IT startups wanting to be embedded in Muscat's established tech ecosystem.

According to AGBI, investments across Oman's free zones rose by RO 1.4 billion in 2025, bringing total committed investments to RO 22.4 billion, a 6.8 per cent increase year-on-year. All five zones below are governed by the Public Authority for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones (OPAZ) and share the foundational benefits every tech founder needs: 100% foreign ownership, zero customs duties, and full repatriation of profits. But the differences between them are what make or break a decision for your specific business.

๐Ÿ” How We Evaluated Each Zone

Each zone was assessed across five criteria:

  • Tech focus: Is the zone purpose-built for technology, or is it primarily industrial or logistics-oriented?
  • Tax incentive length: How long is the corporate tax holiday?
  • Location and talent access: How close is the zone to Muscat's universities, investors, and skilled workforce?
  • Setup complexity: How straightforward is the registration and licensing process?
  • Ecosystem maturity: Are there other tech companies, accelerators, and investors already operating there?

๐Ÿค– 1. Artificial Intelligence Special Zone, Muscat (NEW 2026)

Overview

Oman's newest and most ambitious free zone was established under Royal Decree No. 50/2026 in April 2026. Covering approximately 104,000 square metres in the Wilayat of Seeb, adjacent to the Civil Aviation Authority building, it is explicitly designed to host AI startups, semiconductor and chip design companies, robotics firms, data analytics providers, and global research institutions. Governance sits with OPAZ, with close coordination from the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology (MoTCIT). As Arabian Business reported, the zone is designed to function as a regional hub for scaling AI startups, complete with a supply chain integration platform. It brings Oman's total to 24 zones under OPAZ authority.

"This zone represents a qualitative leap in Oman's digital economy transition and reinforces the nation's position as a regional advanced technology hub."

- Qais bin Mohammed al Yousef, Chairman, Public Authority for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones (OPAZ)

Pros

  • Purpose-built for AI, robotics, and semiconductors: no competing for space with logistics warehouses or heavy industry
  • Located in Muscat (Seeb): direct access to talent, Muscat International Airport, and government ministries
  • Highest-level government backing via Royal Decree and Vision 2040 alignment
  • Designed to create cluster effects, with an ecosystem of AI companies growing side by side
  • Directly linked to Oman's National AI Strategy 2024-2026 and the Eleventh Five-Year Development Plan (2026-2030)

Cons

  • Brand new: no established community, tenant base, or track record yet
  • Physical infrastructure is still under development in 2026
  • Specific incentive details, including exact tax holiday duration, subject to the regulatory framework being finalised
  • No reference companies to benchmark setup experience against

Best for (in Oman)

AI-native startups, machine learning product companies, chip design firms, robotics ventures, and international tech companies seeking a purpose-built Muscat base within a dedicated AI cluster. If your core product is AI, this is the natural home.


๐Ÿ’ป 2. Knowledge Oasis Muscat (KOM)

Overview

Often called the "Silicon Valley of Oman," Knowledge Oasis Muscat was established by Madayn in 2003 and is Oman's most mature technology park. Located near Muscat International Airport, KOM now hosts over 200 domestic and international companies, with total committed investment exceeding RO 266 million, according to Wikipedia. The zone offers a 10-year corporate tax holiday, 100% foreign ownership, zero customs duties on imports and exports, advanced IT connectivity, and access to on-site incubation centres. Sectors covered include IT, telecom, media, education, research, and light manufacturing.

Pros

  • Most mature tech ecosystem in Oman, with 200+ companies and over two decades of proven operation
  • Proximity to Muscat International Airport and leading universities drives strong talent access
  • Strong incubation infrastructure, co-working culture, and active networking environment
  • Connections to the Oman Technology Fund for early-stage equity financing
  • Proven track record since 2003 gives confidence to investors, banks, and enterprise clients

Cons

  • Tax holiday is 10 years, shorter than Sohar (25 years) or Duqm and Salalah (30 years each)
  • Application process requires a three-year business plan and client referral letters, which can slow onboarding for early-stage teams
  • The zone is maturing, meaning available space is tighter and real estate costs are higher than in industrial zones
  • Not explicitly focused on AI in the way the newly launched AI Special Zone is

Best for (in Oman)

Software startups, IT services firms, EdTech companies, telecom ventures, and regional tech SMEs that want to be embedded in Muscat's established tech community, access the Oman Technology Fund, and benefit from a two-decade network of local and international companies.


โš“ 3. Sohar Free Zone

Overview

Established under Royal Decree 123/2010, Sohar Free Zone spans 45 square kilometres adjacent to Sohar Port, one of the fastest-growing ports in the GCC. The zone offers 100% foreign ownership, a 25-year corporate tax holiday, zero personal income tax, no import or re-export duties, and minimal capital requirements. A standout feature is Oman's free trade agreements with the United States and Singapore: companies incorporated in Sohar can export to both markets with preferential tariffs, a meaningful edge for hardware and product-based tech companies targeting those destinations.

Pros

  • 25-year tax holiday, notably longer than KOM's 10 years
  • Access to Oman's FTAs with the US and Singapore, valuable for export-oriented tech hardware businesses
  • Large land plots available for campus-scale manufacturing, assembly, or data centre development
  • Port access is ideal for companies importing components or shipping physical products internationally
  • One-stop-shop OPAZ approval streamlines licensing

Cons

  • Located approximately 250 km north of Muscat: talent recruitment from Muscat requires relocation or long commutes
  • The zone is primarily industrial and logistics in character, so a pure software startup will feel out of place
  • Less developed tech ecosystem and investor network compared to KOM or the new AI Special Zone

Best for (in Oman)

Hardware tech companies, IoT device manufacturers, logistics technology platforms needing warehouse and office combinations, semiconductor assembly firms, and tech businesses with significant physical product export requirements, particularly those targeting the US or Singapore markets.


๐Ÿญ 4. Special Economic Zone at Duqm (SEZAD)

Overview

The largest special economic zone in the Middle East at 2,000 square kilometres, SEZAD offers Oman's most generous headline incentive package: a 30-year corporate tax holiday, 100% foreign ownership, no minimum capital requirement, full repatriation of profits, and duty-free imports. Duqm has its own deep-water port and international airport, making it genuinely self-contained. Primary focus areas are heavy industry, petrochemicals, renewable energy, and maritime services, but the zone is increasingly targeting data centres and digital infrastructure operators given its strategic position on the Arabian Sea and its access to large, affordable land plots.

Pros

  • Longest tax holiday in Oman at 30 years, tied only with Salalah
  • No minimum capital requirement, technically accessible to businesses of any scale
  • Own port and airport, providing serious logistics and supply chain advantages for large-scale operations
  • Vast available land for data centres, renewable-energy-powered computing facilities, or hardware campuses
  • Strong government backing and active international investors from China, Europe, and India already present

Cons

  • Very remote from Muscat: approximately 500 km by road
  • Overwhelmingly industrial in character, not a natural environment for early-stage software teams
  • Local talent pool is very limited; employees typically need to relocate
  • Digital and fibre infrastructure still developing relative to Muscat
  • More suited to large enterprises with significant CapEx than agile early-stage startups

Best for (in Oman)

Large-scale data centre operators, renewable energy tech companies, cloud infrastructure providers, and established tech enterprises planning major physical installations that need maximum certainty over a 30-year horizon.


๐ŸŒ 5. Salalah Free Zone

Overview

Located in Oman's southern Dhofar region, Salalah Free Zone sits adjacent to the Port of Salalah, one of the world's largest deep-water transshipment hubs, with direct shipping connections to East Africa, the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and Europe. The zone offers a 30-year corporate tax exemption, 100% foreign ownership, VAT and customs duty exemptions, no minimum capital requirement, and allows up to 80% of the workforce to be foreign nationals. According to Flamingo TMI, setup typically takes 7 to 14 working days, among the fastest in Oman. Total investments in Salalah Free Zone have exceeded OMR 4.6 billion, according to Oman's Ministry of Finance, signalling strong commercial confidence in the zone's long-term viability.

Pros

  • 30-year corporate tax holiday, matching Duqm as the longest available in Oman
  • Fastest documented setup time: 7 to 14 working days, among the quickest in the region
  • Unique geographic position as a direct gateway to East Africa and South Asia via Port of Salalah
  • Allows up to 80% foreign workforce, useful for internationally diverse founding teams
  • Over OMR 4.6 billion in committed investments demonstrates strong long-term commercial confidence

Cons

  • Approximately 1,000 km from Muscat by road, the most remote of the five zones
  • Tech talent density in Salalah is limited compared to Muscat
  • Zone character is primarily logistics, warehousing, and light manufacturing
  • Investor and VC network activity is significantly lower than in Muscat

Best for (in Oman)

E-commerce and logistics tech companies, fintech platforms serving East African or South Asian markets, digital trading businesses, and companies needing a physical distribution hub with a 30-year tax runway and fast, low-friction incorporation.


๐Ÿ“Š Quick Comparison Table

ZoneTax HolidayTech FocusSetup SpeedDistance from MuscatBest For
AI Special ZoneFree zone law (TBD)โญโญโญโญโญ AI/RoboticsTBD (new zone)In Muscat (Seeb)AI startups, semiconductors, robotics
KOM10 yearsโญโญโญโญโญ IT/SoftwareVaries (plan required)In MuscatSoftware, IT services, EdTech
Sohar Free Zone25 yearsโญโญโญ Hardware/Industrial2-4 weeks~250 km northHardware tech, IoT, export products
Duqm SEZ30 yearsโญโญ Energy/Maritime2-4 weeks~500 km southData centres, large enterprises
Salalah Free Zone30 yearsโญโญ Logistics/Trading7-14 working days~1,000 km southLogistics tech, e-commerce, Africa/Asia fintech

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

Oman's free zone strategy is maturing at exactly the right time. The country's National AI Strategy 2024-2026 and Vision 2040 both identify digital technology as a primary engine for economic diversification. The creation of the AI Special Zone in April 2026 is a clear signal that Oman is no longer competing on tax incentives alone: it is now competing on ecosystem quality and strategic focus, aiming to attract the specific category of company that will define the next decade of the digital economy.

For Omani founders and foreign investors, the practical choice is clearer than it first appears. If your product is software, AI, or digital services, start with KOM or the new AI Special Zone and benefit from Muscat's growing talent base and investor community. If your business involves physical products, hardware, large-scale infrastructure, or export logistics, Sohar, Duqm, or Salalah offer longer tax holidays and serious logistical advantages worth the distance trade-off.

With $2.5 billion in new free zone projects slated for 2026, the window to secure early positions in high-potential zones, especially the still-forming AI Special Zone, is open right now.

Free ZonesStartupsOman BusinessAI Special ZoneVision 2040
Technology & AI
6 min read

OIA Bets on the Brain: Oman's Sovereign Fund Invests in Neuralink

The Oman Investment Authority has backed Elon Musk's Neuralink, adding brain-computer interface technology to a growing portfolio that already includes xAI and SpaceX. Here is what the move signals about Oman's deep-tech ambitions.

Ahmed Al-HinaiMay 3, 2026

Oman's sovereign wealth fund made one of its most forward-looking bets yet this week. On May 6, 2026, the Oman Investment Authority (OIA) announced a strategic investment in Neuralink, Elon Musk's brain-computer interface pioneer, adding a third frontier-technology venture to a growing portfolio that already includes stakes in SpaceX and xAI. The move signals that Oman is not merely diversifying its income streams. It is building exposure to the technologies that will define the next century.

๐Ÿง  The Investment: What We Know

As Times of Oman reported, the Oman Investment Authority announced on May 6, 2026 that it had made a strategic investment in Neuralink, the U.S.-based brain-computer interface company. The size of the investment was not disclosed.

According to Muscat Daily, the move reflects OIA's initiative to enhance its portfolio with advanced and future-oriented technologies, focusing on healthcare innovation and deep technology. The authority holds investments across more than 52 countries as part of its strategy to diversify Oman's income base and support long-term financial sustainability.

"The authority recorded exceptional financial results in 2025 and ranked among leading sovereign wealth funds globally in terms of performance."

- H.E. Abdulsalam bin Mohammed al Murshidi, President, Oman Investment Authority

Founded in 2016, Neuralink develops implantable microchips that create a direct communication channel between the human brain and digital devices. Its primary goal is to assist patients with neurological conditions including ALS, stroke, and paralysis, enabling them to control computers and interact with technology using thought alone.

The technology has made extraordinary clinical progress. As HealthCare MEA reported, Neuralink had implanted devices in 21 patients as of January 2026, including 17 procedures performed during 2025 alone. Zero serious device-related adverse events have been recorded to date. The company's first human patient demonstrated the ability to control a computer and type entirely through neural signals.

Beyond motor assistance, Neuralink is also developing "Blindsight," a neural visual prosthesis designed to restore a form of vision to completely blind patients, with human trials planned for the future. The company raised a $650 million Series E in June 2025 at a reported $9 billion pre-money valuation, backed by ARK Invest, Sequoia Capital, and Founders Fund. Elon Musk has stated a goal of reaching 1,000 implant procedures by the end of 2026.

๐Ÿš€ OIA's Musk Portfolio: A Deliberate Pattern

The Neuralink investment is not an isolated bet. As Fast Company Middle East noted, OIA has been systematically building stakes across Elon Musk's ecosystem of frontier companies:

  • SpaceX: OIA holds an existing stake in the world's leading private launch vehicle company.
  • xAI (December 2024): OIA invested in Musk's artificial intelligence company and creator of the Grok AI platform.
  • Neuralink (May 2026): The latest addition, covering neurotechnology and brain-computer interfaces.

The pattern is clear: OIA is building stakes in companies operating at the edge of what is technologically possible, across the space economy, artificial intelligence, and now the human-machine interface. As Zawya reported, this mirrors the playbook of top sovereign wealth funds globally. Gulf peers including the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund have long used capital to secure early positions in frontier technology. OIA appears to be pursuing the same strategy at its own pace and scale, with a focused thesis around the ventures building tomorrow's critical infrastructure.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ What This Means for Oman

On the surface, an investment in a brain-chip company may seem removed from Oman's immediate economic priorities. But the connection to Vision 2040 operates on several levels.

Vision 2040 calls for building a knowledge-based economy, diversifying beyond hydrocarbons, and developing a globally competitive sovereign investment portfolio. OIA serves as the vehicle for that last goal. By investing in Neuralink at this stage, OIA gains three concrete advantages:

  • Financial upside. Neuralink is currently valued at approximately $9.7 billion. If the company achieves its clinical scale targets and eventually reaches a public listing, early investors stand to see significant returns that flow back into Oman's national wealth.
  • Healthcare insight. Oman is investing heavily in healthcare infrastructure. Exposure to cutting-edge neurotechnology keeps Omani institutions at the frontier of treatments that could eventually benefit Omani patients, particularly those managing neurological conditions.
  • Global signaling. When a sovereign wealth fund backs deep-tech, it sends a message to global talent and businesses: this country takes the knowledge economy seriously. That signal attracts partners and elevates Oman's international profile in ways that few other investments can replicate.

๐Ÿ“Š The World Bank Context: Oman Must Move Faster

OIA's Neuralink announcement arrived in the same week as a pointed assessment from the World Bank. On May 12, 2026, Zaki Badie Khoury, Senior Digital Specialist at the World Bank Group, delivered a presentation in Muscat that praised Oman's digital foundations but issued a clear warning, as Oman Observer reported.

Oman's digital economy currently contributes just 2.4 to 2.8% of GDP, well below the Vision 2040 target of 10%. Khoury was direct: "Oman is still on the emerging side compared to the rest of the GCC when it comes to preparing the public sector and government to fully take advantage of AI." He added that a 2% increase in the digital economy's GDP share alone could generate 30,000 new jobs. With 64% of Oman's population under 30, the human capital for that transition exists. The question is pace.

OIA's deep-tech investment strategy is one lever. Opening health, education, and energy sector data to private enterprise, upgrading AI adoption in the public sector, and building stronger government-private sector bridges are others. Both investment and deployment need to accelerate in parallel.

๐Ÿ”‘ Why This Matters for Oman

Oman is competing in a world where sovereign wealth is no longer just a reserve fund. It is a strategic instrument for determining which industries and technologies a country has influence over. OIA's investment in Neuralink, coming after its xAI and SpaceX commitments, tells a coherent story: Oman intends to be a stakeholder in the technologies defining the next century, not a spectator.

For Oman's tech and startup community, this matters beyond the balance sheet. When the national fund backs neurotechnology and AI, it creates a narrative that the country is serious about the knowledge economy. That narrative attracts talent, encourages domestic entrepreneurs, and signals to international investors that Oman is not sitting still.

The brain-computer interface may still feel futuristic to many. But with 21 patients already living with Neuralink devices and a 1,000-procedure target set for 2026, the science is rapidly becoming medicine. Oman's decision to be in the room early is precisely the kind of strategic positioning Vision 2040 was designed to enable.

OIANeuralinkDeep TechInvestmentVision 2040

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