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AI in Oman

AI in Oman covers AI, startups, digital policy, investment, jobs, and Vision 2040 with reported stories, market analysis, practical guides, and ecosystem insights across Oman.

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Technology & AI
6 min read

Oman's First AI Road-Paving Robots Hit the Ground in Dhofar

Seven autonomous XCMG machines are laying asphalt on a major Dhofar highway — marking Oman's debut of AI-driven construction in public infrastructure.

Editorial TeamMay 31, 2026

In the desert heat of Dhofar, seven autonomous machines are quietly rewriting the playbook for public infrastructure in Oman. On May 20–21, 2026, the Sultanate marked a milestone: the first-ever deployment of AI-powered autonomous asphalt paving technology on an Omani government project, part of the Sultan Said bin Taimur Road Dualisation initiative in the Wilayat of Maqshan.

Key Takeaways

🏗 The Project: Sultan Said bin Taimur Road, Package 4

The Sultan Said bin Taimur Road Dualisation Project is a flagship infrastructure initiative linking Dhofar Governorate's communities and supporting economic connectivity across Oman's south. Package Four, underway in Maqshan, is the stretch where this historic deployment is taking place.

According to Fast Company Middle East, the autonomous machines entered routine operation in April 2026, following nearly two years of preparation. That preparation included field assessments of Oman's desert environment, communication infrastructure requirements, and local construction standards. The official public demonstration was held on May 20–21, presided over by Dr. Saeed bin Mohammed Al Saqri of the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology.

"An important step in advancing Oman's road sector and construction automation — reflecting the nation's commitment to innovation supporting economic growth under Oman Vision 2040."

- Dr. Saeed bin Mohammed Al Saqri, Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology

⚙️ The Technology: How Seven Robots Pave a Highway

The deployment involves seven XCMG autonomous machines — a combination of asphalt pavers and rollers — operating in coordinated formation on a 12-meter-wide road section. As Zawya reported in the official XCMG press release, the system integrates four core AI capabilities:

  • Coordinated fleet control: machines communicate and move in sync, avoiding collisions while maximizing coverage across the full road width
  • Localized communication networks: purpose-built on-site connectivity ensures real-time data exchange between machines, even in areas with limited public telecom coverage
  • Intelligent machine interaction: sensors and onboard algorithms allow each unit to adapt to terrain changes, temperature shifts, and asphalt mix consistency in real time
  • Real-time construction data monitoring: quality metrics are tracked continuously, reducing inspection delays and costly rework

The deployment environment is notably demanding. Temperatures exceed 45°C, sand-blown winds create visibility and mechanical stress, and ground conditions shift rapidly across the site. XCMG's preparation for Oman specifically tested their machines in comparable desert conditions over two years — which helps explain why the live operational phase has been smooth.

Compared to conventional paving, the AI-driven approach delivers higher precision in asphalt layer thickness, improved surface durability, and faster completion rates. MTCIT officials have also flagged improved occupational safety: workers no longer need to operate directly alongside or underneath heavy compaction machinery in extreme heat, as Zawya noted.

🏢 The Players: Galfar, XCMG, and MTCIT

Three organizations are driving this project forward:

  • Galfar Engineering and Contracting: one of Oman's largest and most established construction companies, and the main project executor. Their decision to adopt autonomous machinery represents a meaningful shift in procurement culture for Omani contractors. Galfar's willingness to take on new technology on a government flagship project sets a precedent for the wider industry.
  • XCMG Digital and Intelligent: the technology arm of China's largest construction equipment manufacturer. The Oman deployment is part of a broader Gulf expansion for XCMG, which has been actively targeting infrastructure projects across the region.
  • MTCIT (Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology): providing strategic oversight and positioning this deployment as a model for future public infrastructure projects across Oman.

🚀 Why This Is Bigger Than a Road

At first glance, this looks like a construction story. It is really an AI story about what happens when artificial intelligence moves out of the app store and into the physical world.

Oman has invested significantly in AI policy (the 2025–2030 National AI Strategy), AI infrastructure (the new AI Special Economic Zone in Seeb), and AI education and research. But deploying AI in a live, large-scale civil engineering project in 45°C desert conditions is fundamentally different. It is harder to simulate. When machines autonomously pave a real highway in Dhofar, that is operational proof of capability — not a pilot, not a whitepaper, not a press conference.

The implications extend beyond this one project. Each Omani engineer and project manager at Galfar who now has direct experience running an autonomous construction fleet carries that knowledge forward. When this project ends, the capability does not disappear with it.

For other Omani contractors, municipalities, and ministries watching this project, the question shifts from "can AI do this here?" to "why aren't we doing this yet?"

🤝 Parallel Signal: AmCham Oman Launches Its Technology and AI Committee

One day before the Dhofar demonstration, on May 19, 2026, a separate development took place in Muscat. As Zawya reported, the American Chamber of Commerce in Oman officially launched its Technology and AI Committee. The committee is chaired by Sheikh Saif Al Hosni, General Manager of Microsoft Oman and Bahrain, with Amr Nabil of Dell Technologies serving as Co-Chair.

The committee's stated goals cover technology workforce readiness, US–Oman AI collaboration, startup visibility, and digital readiness initiatives. It was established in coordination with MTCIT — giving it direct alignment with Oman's national digital strategy.

"Oman today has all the ingredients needed to become a leading regional hub for technology and innovation — ambitious leadership, strong digital momentum, and a rapidly evolving ecosystem."

- Sheikh Saif Al Hosni, General Manager, Microsoft Oman and Bahrain

Taken together, these two May 2026 developments paint a coherent picture: robots paving a highway in Dhofar, and US tech giants formalizing their commitment to Oman's AI ecosystem in Muscat. Oman is entering a phase where AI stops being an aspiration and starts being operational infrastructure.

📋 The Vision 2040 Connection

Oman's national development plan places digital infrastructure and smart construction among the key enablers of economic diversification. The Sultan Said bin Taimur Road project itself is a Vision 2040 initiative: it improves inter-governorate connectivity, reduces travel times, and enables economic activity in Dhofar's interior — one of Oman's most strategically important but least developed regions.

Layering AI-driven automation on top of Vision 2040 infrastructure work is not just about efficiency gains on a single project. It seeds new local expertise, demonstrates to the private sector that the government is serious about technology adoption, and creates a reference case that can be cited in future procurement decisions across the country.

🇴🇲 Why This Matters for Oman

Oman has been building the foundations for AI adoption for years: the national AI strategy, the Ma'een Arabic language model, the Seeb AI Zone established by Royal Decree, sovereign cloud through Otech, and billions in semiconductor investment opportunities. Most of these are structural, long-horizon plays.

The Dhofar road deployment is different. It is AI doing a job today, on public land, in real conditions. That kind of tangible proof point matters enormously for adoption. For every contractor, infrastructure agency, and government ministry watching this project, the question of whether AI can perform in Oman's demanding physical environment has now been answered in the affirmative.

For Oman's startup and investor community, the signal is equally important: demand for applied AI in physical industries, not just software apps, exists inside the Sultanate right now. Construction, logistics, port operations, and water infrastructure are all sectors where autonomous systems could follow. The first one has already arrived.

AI DeploymentInfrastructureConstruction TechVision 2040Dhofar
Technology & AI
6 min read

OIA's 10x Return on Crusoe: The $10B AI Bet That Paid Off

Oman's sovereign wealth fund achieved a 10.3x capital return and 68% annual IRR from its partial exit of Crusoe, a $10 billion AI infrastructure company backed by Microsoft and NVIDIA, cementing OIA as one of the world's top-performing sovereign funds.

Zaheer Al-LawatiMay 24, 2026

Oman's sovereign wealth fund has scored one of its most remarkable wins to date in artificial intelligence. The Oman Investment Authority (OIA) announced a partial exit from US-based Crusoe, an AI and cloud computing infrastructure company, generating a 10.3x return on invested capital and a 68% annual internal rate of return. Reported on May 23 by Muscat Daily, Oman Observer, and Times of Oman, the exit confirms that Oman's sovereign capital is not just keeping pace with global AI investment trends: it is setting the benchmark.

🔑 Key Takeaways

🏭 What is Crusoe?

Founded in Denver in 2018, Crusoe started with a deceptively practical idea. Oil and gas operations around the world were flaring natural gas, burning off energy because there was no cost-effective way to transport it to market. At the same time, data centers were paying premium rates for reliable power to run increasingly demanding workloads. Crusoe connected those two problems: capture stranded and underused energy, and use it to power AI computing.

The company evolved that premise into a fully vertically integrated AI infrastructure platform. According to Crusoe's website, it now designs and operates data centers powered by wind, solar, hydropower, geothermal, and captured natural gas, and offers Crusoe Cloud, an AI compute platform built on NVIDIA and AMD GPUs with inference speeds up to 9.9x faster than traditional cloud providers.

The model attracted the world's largest technology companies. In March 2026, Microsoft selected Crusoe to develop a 900 MW AI factory campus in Abilene, Texas, and NVIDIA announced an expanded collaboration covering the full AI factory stack for the agentic AI era. By October 2025, Crusoe had completed a $1.375 billion Series E funding round at a valuation exceeding $10 billion.

"We are building the infrastructure powering the next generation of artificial intelligence."

- Chase Lochmiller, Co-founder and CEO, Crusoe

📊 The Numbers: OIA's Partial Exit from Crusoe

As Oman Observer reported, OIA's partial exit from Crusoe generated:

  • 10.3x return multiple on invested capital
  • 68% annual internal rate of return
  • Crusoe's current valuation: nearly $10 billion

OIA is retaining a stake in Crusoe to capture further upside as AI infrastructure demand continues to grow. The Authority framed the move as standard capital recycling, stating as reported by Times of Oman: "Investment exits are a common global practice used when an asset reaches a stage suitable for sale, enabling investors to realise profits."

The investment sits within OIA's Future Generations Fund (FGF), focused on long-term international bets in future-oriented sectors. According to Zawya, the FGF portfolio held RO 8.57 billion in assets by end of 2025, generated RO 1.04 billion in profits at a 13.9% annual return, and spans 210 specialized investment funds across future-oriented sectors.

🏆 OIA's World-Class Standing: No. 3 Globally

The Crusoe exit is one highlight within a landmark year for OIA overall. As Muscat Daily reported, the Authority's 2025 scorecard reads:

  • RO 2.9 billion in total profits
  • 14.6% overall return on investment
  • 10.4% average return over five years
  • 3rd place globally among sovereign wealth funds for five-year average returns, per Global SWF rankings
  • 1st place worldwide for 2025 public market returns

To put this in context: OIA is outperforming sovereign wealth funds from far larger economies, including several Gulf neighbors with substantially bigger asset bases. For a fund headquartered in Muscat, this is a world-class result by any global standard.

⚡ Why AI Infrastructure Became the Winning Bet

Crusoe's success reflects where real value creation in the AI economy has been concentrated. The media cycle focuses on model builders, chatbots, and consumer applications. But the companies generating the most durable returns are those building the physical layer underneath: data centers, GPU clusters, power infrastructure, and the cooling systems that make large-scale AI possible. Crusoe identified this gap early, well before the AI infrastructure investment surge of 2024 and 2025, and built a highly defensible position by combining an environmental angle (reducing gas flaring) with a commercial one (cheap power for compute-hungry AI).

The World Bank's Senior Digital Specialist Zaki Badie Khoury made a related point at a presentation in Muscat earlier this month. As Oman Observer reported, he noted that "the factor that will make Oman move into the era of AI is the agility in moving forwards." OIA's Crusoe bet is direct evidence that Oman's sovereign capital has already been moving forward, and in exactly the right direction.

🇴🇲 What This Means for Oman's Tech Ecosystem

OIA's outsized return from an AI infrastructure company carries concrete signals for Oman's local tech and startup scene:

  • The AI infrastructure thesis is proven. A 10x return from a data center and GPU cloud company validates the same logic behind Oman's AI Special Zone in Muscat: AI infrastructure, not just applications, is where long-term value concentrates.
  • Oman's sovereign capital can back local bets. Profits recycled from exits like Crusoe can fund Omani startups, subsidize the AI Zone, or co-invest alongside international partners building in Muscat.
  • Crusoe's renewable energy model is replicable in Oman. Oman is a natural gas producer with growing renewable energy capacity. The Crusoe model, using stranded or underused energy to power AI compute, could inspire local equivalents within the AI Special Zone.
  • OIA's global reputation attracts co-investors. A top-3 global ranking and a proven AI track record will bring international funds and technology companies to the table when OIA looks for partners in Oman-based AI projects.

🔭 The Vision 2040 Connection

OIA was created as a direct instrument of Oman Vision 2040: to build a diversified, resilient economy that reduces dependence on hydrocarbon revenues. The Crusoe investment checks every box in that mandate. It diversifies Oman's sovereign assets into a high-growth technology sector. It generates returns that can be reinvested domestically. And it positions OIA as a credible, sophisticated investor in the global AI ecosystem, building the relationships Oman needs to attract AI investment at home.

The 2026-2030 Digital Economy Roadmap aims to raise the digital economy's contribution to Oman's GDP from roughly 2.4 to 2.8% today to 10% by 2040. OIA's track record of backing AI winners like Crusoe provides the financial firepower and strategic credibility to pursue that ambition with conviction.

🌟 Why This Matters for Oman

A 10x return is an abstract financial metric until you trace where the money goes. Every riyal OIA recycles from the Crusoe exit can fund Omani entrepreneurs, anchor investment in the AI Special Zone, or support the next generation of founders building in the sectors Crusoe pioneered. OIA has confirmed it is retaining a stake in Crusoe, so the upside is not over yet.

More broadly, OIA's ranking as the world's third-best sovereign wealth fund sends a clear signal to global investors: Oman's capital is disciplined, forward-looking, and ahead of the curve. That reputation will attract co-investors, technology partnerships, and talent at a time when Muscat is actively positioning itself as the GCC's next AI hub. The world is building the infrastructure for the AI age. Oman, it turns out, has already been funding it.

OIAAI InvestmentCrusoeSovereign Wealth FundVision 2040

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