How Oman's First Commerce Minister Built a 60-Company Empire
Mohammed bin Ali Al Zubair served as Oman's inaugural Minister of Commerce and Industry, then spent five decades building a private conglomerate of over 60 subsidiaries, Oman's first private museum, and an SME development centre that has supported thousands of Omani entrepreneurs.
Mohammed bin Ali Al Zubair is one of the architects of modern Oman. Born in Salalah in 1938, he went from a junior manager at Petroleum Development Oman to the Sultanate's first-ever Minister of Commerce and Industry, and then spent five decades building a private conglomerate of over 60 companies that still shapes everyday life in Muscat. His story is not just a business biography; it is a blueprint for what private-sector nation-building can look like.
๐ Key Takeaways
- Al Zubair started his career at Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) before founding one of Oman's first private enterprises in 1967.
- He was appointed Oman's inaugural Minister of Commerce and Industry in 1974, helping draft the legal foundations of the modern private sector.
- The Zubair Corporation today operates over 60 subsidiaries across automotive, energy, hospitality, IT, and finance.
- He opened Bait Al Zubair in 1998, Oman's first private museum, which now receives over 40,000 visitors a year.
- The Zubair Enterprises Development Centre (EDC), launched in 2013, provides mentoring and advisory services to Omani SME founders.
- Al Zubair authored two major encyclopaedic works commissioned directly by the late Sultan Qaboos, documenting Oman's geography and history across thousands of years.
๐ From Salalah to Muscat: Early Life and Formation
Mohammed bin Ali Al Zubair was born in 1938 in Salalah, the capital of Dhofar, into a family with generations of commercial and governance experience. His grandfather had served as a financial intermediary between the Omani ruling establishment and Zanzibar, part of the wider Indian Ocean trading network of the early 20th century. His father, Sheikh Al Zubair bin Ali, advised three Sultans and helped establish Oman's first two public companies in 1911: one for power generation and one for ice manufacturing. The family home, built in 1914 in historic Muscat near the Sultan's Palace, would later become the Bait Al Zubair museum.
After completing secondary school in Muscat, Al Zubair studied in Kuwait in 1962, returning to join Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) as a manager. His five years at PDO gave him an insider view of Oman's emerging oil economy and the logistical complexity of building infrastructure from scratch. That experience would inform every subsequent business decision he made.
๐ข 1967: Breaking from Government Employment
In 1967, Al Zubair left PDO and founded the Muscat Trading Company, one of Oman's earliest formally incorporated private businesses. Operating from a small office in the Muttrah Souq, the company supplied industrial machinery, tools, paints, and construction materials. His first major client was PDO itself. The company's founding principle, as Tharawat Magazine recounted, was simple honesty: "Whenever I begin a business I always make sure it is honest and does not affect the family name."
Just as Sheikh Suhail Bahwan spotted opportunity in Oman's post-oil opening, Al Zubair understood early that the country's modernisation drive would require a broad ecosystem of private suppliers. By 1973, the Muscat Trading Company had been rebranded as the Zubair Corporation, and three major new subsidiaries had launched: Zubair Automotive Group, Zubair Furnishings, and Zubair Telecommunications.
โ๏ธ Oman's First Minister of Commerce and Industry
When Sultan Qaboos came to power in 1970 and launched the Sultanate's modern renaissance, he needed experienced Omani technocrats to build the institutions of a modern state. In 1974, Mohammed Al Zubair was appointed Oman's inaugural Minister of Commerce and Industry. He simultaneously joined the Supreme Councils of Development, Finance, and Energy, according to his profile on the Takreem Foundation, placing him at the centre of national economic policy in Oman's critical first decade.
During his nine years in ministerial office (1974 to 1983), Al Zubair helped draft the commercial and banking legislation that underpins Oman's private sector to this day. He chaired the founding committee of the Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry, founded the National Transport Company, and served as chairman of Omani Ports Company, Oman Air Services, Ominvest, and Oman Arab Bank. In 1983, he stepped down from his ministerial role. A year later, Sultan Qaboos appointed him as his Adviser for Economic Planning Affairs, extending his influence over national economic strategy into a new era.
From 1997 to 2001, he served as Chairman and President of Sultan Qaboos University (SQU), where he established five research centres covering communications, earthquake studies, petroleum and gas, water resources, and environmental studies, according to the university's official records.
"Whenever I begin a business I always make sure it is honest and does not affect the family name."
- Mohammed bin Ali Al Zubair, Founder, The Zubair Corporation
๐๏ธ The Zubair Corporation: 60+ Companies Across Eight Sectors
The Zubair Corporation today is one of the Sultanate of Oman's largest private conglomerates, with over 60 subsidiaries, more than 2,500 employees, and operations spanning the Middle East, India, East Asia, Europe, and the United States. According to Family Business Histories, the group's diversification was a deliberate design choice, with the logic that different sectors decline at different times, allowing the portfolio to remain stable through economic cycles.
| Division | Key Entity | Founded |
|---|---|---|
| Automotive | Zubair Automotive Group | 1973 |
| Energy / Oil & Gas Services | Zogas (Zubair Oil and Gas) | 1991 |
| Real Estate & Hospitality | Barr Al Jissah Resort (Hilton, DoubleTree, Waldorf Astoria) | 2005 |
| IT & Electrical | OCS Infotech (Oman Computer Services) | 1981 |
| Finance & Banking | Ominvest, Oman Arab Bank | 1970s |
| Furniture & Manufacturing | Majliya (formerly Jawahir Oman) | 1977 |
| Telecommunications | Zubair Telecommunications | 1973 |
| Engineering & Contracting | Infrastructure and industrial projects | 1970s |
The group's flagship hospitality project is the Barr Al Jissah resort complex on Muscat's coastline, a 700-room, 450,000-square-metre development that opened in 2005 under the Shangri-La brand and transitioned to Hilton, DoubleTree, and Waldorf Astoria management in January 2026.
๐๏ธ Bait Al Zubair: Oman's First Private Museum
Beyond commerce, Mohammed Al Zubair made one of his most lasting contributions to Omani culture by converting his family's ancestral home in historic Muscat into the Bait Al Zubair Museum, which opened in 1998 as Oman's first private museum. The 1914 building sits near the Sultan's Palace and Al Jalali Fort, and the late Sultan Qaboos personally gifted two antique cannons for the inaugural collection.
The museum received the first-ever HM Sultan Qaboos Award for Architectural Excellence in 1999, according to the Bait Al Zubair Foundation's official website. Today it attracts more than 40,000 visitors annually and operates multiple venues including Bait Al Bagh, Bait Al Oud, Gallery Sarah, and a dedicated Learning Centre. The foundation's four pillars are arts, education, heritage, and culture, a framework that reflects Al Zubair's conviction that economic prosperity must be paired with cultural preservation.
๐ฑ Building Oman's Next Entrepreneurs
In 2013, the Zubair Corporation launched the Zubair Small Enterprises Centre, now rebranded as the Zubair Enterprises Development Centre (EDC). The EDC provides SME advisory services, mentoring, business plan workshops, networking events, and connections to financing partners. It reflects the corporation's view that private enterprise must invest in national capacity. Khalid Al Zubair, the founder's son and Managing Director of the corporation, articulated the philosophy in an interview with The Worldfolio: "As a country, we have to build sufficient incubators, venture capital venues and robust mentoring programmes."
Al Zubair also founded the Oman Youth Fund, an early private-sector vehicle for young Omani entrepreneurs, predating by decades the government-led programmes that are now central to Vision 2040.
๐จโ๐ฉโ๐งโ๐ฆ A Succession Masterclass
Mohammed Al Zubair had seven children, six of whom joined the business. His succession approach is widely studied as a model of family business governance across the Gulf: children joined only after completing international degrees, started as trainees, and advanced through the ranks on merit. He reportedly refused to use a company credit account at a family-owned petrol station without paying in cash, personally modelling the strict separation of family interests from company resources.
Second-generation leadership is now firmly established. Rashad Al Zubair serves as Deputy Chairman of the corporation and Chairman of Ominvest. Hani Al Zubair has led the Zubair Automotive Group as Executive Chairman since 1992. Khalid Al Zubair serves as Managing Director overseeing group strategy and the SME support agenda. The founder stepped back completely from management to give the second generation full authority, an uncommon discipline in Gulf family business culture.
โ๏ธ Scholar, Author, and Encyclopaedist
Al Zubair's intellectual contributions extend well beyond commerce. Commissioned by the late Sultan Qaboos, he authored two landmark encyclopaedic projects: Mountains of Oman, a three-volume, 1,700-page work documenting 409 mountain peaks with coverage of geology, geography, tourism, and mining potential; and Oman since Antiquity, a four-volume illustrated scientific encyclopaedia spanning 7,000 years of Omani history. He also produced the Sultan Qaboos Encyclopedia of Arab Names and the Encyclopedia of the Land of Oman. As the Times of Oman noted, his efforts stand as "a landmark through time, and one that has written its name into the annals of history."
His honours include the Renaissance Medal, Oman's highest national decoration; honorary doctorates from the University of Nottingham (2001) and the University of Central Lancashire (2005); and the Takreem Foundation Special Distinction Award in 2023.
๐ด๐ฒ Why This Story Still Matters in 2026
Mohammed Al Zubair's career spans the full arc of Oman's modern era: the oil discovery, Sultan Qaboos' renaissance, the commodity cycles of the 1990s and 2000s, and now the digital transformation drive under Vision 2040. His choices at each inflection point, leaving secure government employment to start a trading company in 1967, volunteering to draft commercial law as the country's first commerce minister, converting a family home into a public museum, and funding a centre to help small businesses, represent a coherent philosophy of private-sector responsibility.
For founders and professionals building Oman's technology and startup ecosystem today, that philosophy remains directly relevant. The Zubair EDC's emphasis on mentoring, access to finance, and business fundamentals addresses exactly the support gap that today's accelerators and incubators are still working to close. The difference is that Zubair was doing it a decade before it became government policy.
The broader lesson: the most durable Omani businesses were not built on oil contracts or government connections alone. They were built on diversification, disciplined governance, and a long-term commitment to national development. That model is as relevant in the age of AI and data centres as it was in the age of trading companies and automotive dealerships.