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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
Technology & AI
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

2 Oman Tech Events You Still Can't Miss This May 2026

The month isn't over yet: DTX Oman's digital transformation summit lands May 20 at the Sheraton Muscat, while MTCIT's 'Engineer It with AI' competition is offering RO13,000 in prizes with registration open until May 29.

Layla Al-ZadjaliMay 1, 2026

Oman's May 2026 tech calendar still has plenty to offer. With two significant events remaining before the month closes, now is the time to register, apply, or simply show up. Whether you lead a digital transformation programme or want to build the next generation of AI applications, here is what you cannot afford to miss.

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Takeaways

  • DTX Oman (Digital Transformation Xcelerate) convenes 100+ senior tech leaders at the Sheraton Muscat on May 20, 2026: a curated B2B and B2G summit for CIOs, CISOs, and policymakers.
  • MTCIT's "Engineer It with AI" competition is offering RO13,000 in prizes for agentic AI solutions that address national challenges. Registration closes May 29, 2026.
  • Both events align directly with Oman's Vision 2040 and the National Programme for Digital Economy.
  • The MTCIT competition is open to teams of up to 4 members across all of Oman: a rare chance for builders to earn recognition and funding from the government itself.
  • Only 25 teams will be selected for the competition. Apply before May 29 or lose your spot for the year.

๐Ÿ“‹ Event 1: Digital Transformation Xcelerate (DTX) Oman

May 20, 2026 | Sheraton Oman Hotel, Muscat

According to the official DTX Oman website, this is "the Sultanate of Oman's foremost B2B and B2G bespoke event" focused on accelerating digital transformation across all sectors. The one-day summit is not a mass-attendance expo. It convenes over 100 carefully selected senior leaders, including CIOs, CISOs, and C-suite executives, for focused dialogue on real technology strategy.

The event is structured around:

  • Presentations from 25+ thought-leader speakers delivering actionable insights and case studies
  • Panel discussions and Q&A sessions tackling current digital transformation challenges in Oman
  • A B2B Expo where technology vendors showcase products and services tailored to the Omani market
  • Curated networking between government officials, private sector decision-makers, and global technology providers

DTX Oman has strong ties to the Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OCCI), with the OCCI's Digital Economy and Artificial Intelligence Committee involved in its organisation. The summit is aligned with the National Programme for Digital Economy, reinforcing its role as an official touchpoint in Oman's broader modernisation agenda.

How to register: Visit dtxoman.com and submit your details via the contact or registration form. Attendance is curated and by invitation, so early outreach is strongly recommended.

Cost: Not publicly disclosed. Contact the organising team directly for pricing.

Why attend: If you are a technology decision-maker in Oman, the peer cohort at DTX Oman is one of the most concentrated you will find outside a formal ministerial setting. The mix of government officials and private sector CIOs creates the kind of strategic alignment conversations that typically happen behind closed doors. For vendors and solution providers, the expo floor offers direct access to Oman's most influential IT buyers in a single room.


๐Ÿ† Event 2: MTCIT "Engineer It with AI" Competition

Registration Deadline: May 29, 2026 | Programme Runs June to September 2026

The Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology has launched its flagship 2026 AI innovation competition. As Muscat Daily reported on May 2, the competition challenges Omani innovators to develop solutions powered by agentic artificial intelligence that address real national and global problems.

This is not a weekend hackathon. It is a structured four-month programme with professional training, mentorship from the ministry, and a public finale at COMEX 2026 in September.

Who can apply: Open to all innovators in Oman. Teams of up to 4 members. Only 25 total teams will be selected, so a strong application matters.

Full timeline:

  • Registration closes: May 29, 2026
  • Official programme launch: June 24, 2026
  • Training bootcamp: June 28 to July 2, 2026
  • Initial prototype presentations: End of July 2026
  • Final presentations: August 24-25, 2026
  • Winners announced: September 6, 2026 (at COMEX 2026)

Prize pool: RO13,000. According to Muscat Daily, selected projects may also receive support for further development and commercial deployment beyond the competition itself.

How to register: Registration is through MTCIT's official platform. Visit mtcit.gov.om for details and the registration link. The deadline is May 29, 2026 and no extensions have been announced.

Why this competition matters: Agentic AI, where AI systems take autonomous, multi-step actions to complete complex goals, is the frontier of artificial intelligence in 2026. MTCIT's decision to build a full competition around this specific capability signals that Oman wants homegrown talent fluent in next-generation AI architectures, not just classical machine learning. Having winners announced at COMEX in September guarantees national-level visibility for successful teams, and the prize money is meaningful for early-stage builders.


๐ŸŒ GCC Context: A Busy Month for Tech

Earlier in May, Abu Dhabi hosted the AI Everything summit (May 11-13) at ADNEC, one of the region's largest AI gatherings. That window has now passed, but it underlines how May has become the Gulf's premier tech conference season. Oman's remaining May events fit directly into this regional momentum, offering local access points into conversations that are reshaping digital economies across the GCC. Omani founders or professionals who missed Abu Dhabi can still engage with the same themes, closer to home, before the month ends.


๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

Oman's AI and Digital Future Programme (2024-2026) is entering its final year. Both remaining May events reflect how the country is converting high-level strategy into practical action on the ground. DTX Oman operates at the boardroom layer, aligning organisational strategy with national digital goals. The MTCIT competition operates in the build layer, finding and funding the engineers who will actually create the systems of Oman's digital future.

Together, they represent a full-stack approach to digital transformation: the leaders who commission change and the builders who create it. If you operate anywhere in that chain, May 2026 still has something valuable for you. The window is closing, but it is not closed yet.

EventsDigital TransformationAI CompetitionDTX OmanMTCIT
Technology & AI
6 min read

Oman's Space Economy Takes Off: AI Satellite, $200M Investment, and a National CubeSat Programme

From an AI-powered Earth observation satellite launching in H1 2026 to a $200 million sovereign connectivity deal, Oman is rapidly building a space economy with artificial intelligence at its core.

Zaheer Al-LawatiMarch 26, 2026

Oman is quietly assembling one of the most ambitious space programmes in the Gulf. With an AI-equipped satellite set to launch in the first half of 2026, a $200 million sovereign connectivity deal, and a new national CubeSat training programme, the Sultanate is positioning itself as a regional hub for space technology, satellite data, and AI-driven geospatial services. A detailed analysis published by Zawya on 25 March 2026 laid out the scale of the opportunity: the global space economy is projected to exceed OMR 1.5 trillion within the next decade, and Oman intends to capture a meaningful share.

๐Ÿ“Œ Key Takeaways

๐Ÿ›ฐ๏ธ Oman Lens: AI-Powered Earth Observation From Orbit

The centrepiece of Oman's space push is the upcoming launch of a new satellite by Oman Lens, a company specialising in satellite technologies and artificial intelligence. Building on the success of the OL1 mission launched in November 2024 (which delivered 1-metre resolution imagery), the new satellite represents a significant leap in capability.

Technical Specifications

  • Imaging: 50-centimetre panchromatic and multi-spectral (RGB and NIR) resolution
  • AI computing: Onboard artificial intelligence platform exceeding 400 trillion operations per second
  • Processing: Data is analysed in orbit, reducing transmission costs and enabling near-real-time insights
  • Timeline: Launch planned for H1 2026

Ali bin Nasser Al Wahaibi, Marketing and Sales Director at Oman Lens, described the launch as representing "a historic moment in the Sultanate of Oman's journey into space."

The satellite's applications span agriculture, urban planning, environmental monitoring, flood prediction, vegetation analysis, and disaster response. Key partners include Star Vision Space, the Bahrain Space Agency, and Sultan Qaboos University, which collaborated on developing an algorithm for onboard cloud segmentation processing.

๐Ÿ“ก MB Group's $200 Million Sovereign Connectivity Play

In a parallel development announced at the Middle East Space Conference 2026 in Muscat, the Mohammed Al Barwani Group signed a strategic agreement with US-based Astranis to develop Oman's first dedicated MicroGEO communications satellite.

The deal is part of a broader $200 million investment by MB Group toward Oman's Vision 2040 space programmes, covering the satellite itself, ground stations, and supporting infrastructure. The satellite is contracted under Astranis' Block 3 launch with SpaceX, with services expected to begin by early 2027.

"We're entering a new era of satellite connectivity with Astranis."

- Usama Al Barwani, Vice Chairperson, MB LLC

This sovereign connectivity initiative means Oman will have its own dedicated communications satellite rather than relying entirely on shared international infrastructure, a strategic advantage for both national security and commercial applications.

๐ŸŽ“ National CubeSat Programme: Building Local Expertise

Oman Lens also unveiled a national CubeSat programme during the Middle East Space Conference 2026, designed to build domestic satellite manufacturing capabilities from the ground up.

The programme operates in two phases:

  • Phase 1: Practical training through the assembly of the satellite's engineering model in Oman, with students and academics participating directly
  • Phase 2: A select group travels to Star Vision's headquarters in China for advanced training in assembling the final satellite model in an industrial environment, followed by launch preparation and operational testing

The initiative, developed in cooperation with Omani academic institutions under the MTCIT's National Space Programme, aims to empower Omani students, academics, and engineers with hands-on experience across all stages of satellite development: design, assembly, testing, and operation.

๐ŸŒ Middle East Space Conference 2026: A Regional Milestone

The three-day Middle East Space Conference in Muscat, organised by MTCIT, brought together 85 speakers, hosted 17 panel discussions and 15 keynote addresses, and produced five major agreements:

  1. Artemis Accords: Oman signed the international agreement with the United States for peaceful space exploration cooperation, including lunar and Mars missions
  2. Omantel and OQ Gas Networks: Satellite services for monitoring gas pipeline networks
  3. MB Group and Astranis: The $200M MicroGEO satellite deal
  4. Adasat Oman and ATCO: Earth observation and remote sensing services
  5. Sohar University and ATCO: Capacity building in satellite systems and AI-driven data analysis

Dr Mohammed Ibrahim Al Asiri, CEO of the Bahrain Space Agency, noted "significant expansion in both the number of participating partners and companies." Salem Butti Al Qubaisi, Director General of the UAE Space Agency, called the 2026 edition "a qualitative leap" compared to the previous conference.

๐Ÿš€ 25 Space Startups and a Growing Market

According to Zawya's analysis, approximately 25 emerging space startups now operate in Oman, working across satellite analytics, AI-driven geospatial services, maritime tracking, climate intelligence, and precision agriculture.

The commercial opportunity is substantial. The global satellite data market is valued at approximately OMR 115 billion. The Arab region's market potential is estimated at OMR 1.1 to 1.5 billion over the next decade. Even capturing 3 to 5 percent of the regional market could generate OMR 33 to 75 million annually for Oman.

Oman's geographical advantages play a role here too. Its extensive subsea cable network and position as a connectivity crossroads between the GCC, East Africa, and Central and South Asia make it a natural candidate for satellite data services and space logistics.

๐Ÿ—๏ธ Connection to Vision 2040

Oman's space investments align directly with several pillars of Vision 2040:

  • Economic diversification: Space technology creates high-value industries beyond oil and gas
  • Knowledge economy: The CubeSat programme and university partnerships develop local technical talent
  • Innovation: AI-powered satellites represent cutting-edge technology development
  • Sustainability: Earth observation supports environmental monitoring, climate modelling, and disaster preparedness
  • Regional leadership: Signing the Artemis Accords places Oman in an elite group of space-cooperating nations

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

The convergence of these developments signals that Oman's space sector has moved well beyond the announcement phase. Real hardware is being built, real money is being invested, and real partnerships are being signed.

For the broader technology ecosystem, space creates demand for AI engineers, data scientists, hardware specialists, and software developers. It feeds into adjacent sectors like agriculture, logistics, urban planning, and energy, all priorities under Vision 2040.

For entrepreneurs and investors, the message is clear: Oman is serious about space, and the window to participate is open now.

๐Ÿ“š Sources

  • Zawya, "How innovation expands Oman's space economy," 25 March 2026
  • Times of Oman, "Oman to launch AI-equipped satellite, platform in 2026," September 2025
  • Oman Observer, "Oman Lens launches national CubeSat programme," 27 January 2026
  • Zawya, "Middle East Space Conference 2026 concludes, reinforcing Oman's regional ambitions," January 2026
  • Via Satellite, "Oman's MB Group Orders Astranis MicroGEO Satellite," 26 January 2026
  • SpaceWatch Global, "Astranis and The MB Group Partner to Deliver Sovereign Satellite Connectivity to Oman," January 2026
  • Oman Observer, "Oman to get dedicated MicroGEO satellite by 2027," January 2026
Space TechnologyArtificial IntelligenceOman LensVision 2040Satellite
Technology & AI
8 min read

SpaceX-xAI's $1.25T Merger, Seven Frontier Models, and $189B in Funding: February 2026 Was Unreal

February 2026 broke every record in AI: the largest merger in history, seven frontier models launched in a single month, $189 billion in funding, and Oman's Omantel launched its sovereign cloud platform. Here is everything you need to know.

Layla Al-ZadjaliMarch 23, 2026

February 2026 was the month the AI industry stopped making incremental progress and started rewriting the rules entirely. A $1.25 trillion merger. Seven frontier models launched in 28 days. The largest private funding round in history. An industrial espionage scandal between rival AI labs. And in Oman, Omantel unveiled a sovereign cloud platform that positions the Sultanate at the center of regional data sovereignty. If you blinked, you missed a turning point.

๐Ÿ“Œ Key Takeaways

๐Ÿš€ SpaceX Acquires xAI in the Largest Merger in History

On February 2, Elon Musk's SpaceX completed the acquisition of his AI company xAI in a deal valued at $1.25 trillion, according to CNN. SpaceX was valued at $1 trillion and xAI at $250 billion, making it the largest merger of all time.

The strategic logic is striking: as TechCrunch reported, the combined entity aims to build space-based data centers to meet AI's rapidly growing compute demands. The deal also sets the stage for what could become the largest tech IPO ever, with a potential $50 billion offering later in 2026.

This is more than a financial story. It represents the merger of rocket launch capability with frontier AI, creating a vertically integrated pipeline from compute to orbit that no other company on Earth can replicate. As CNBC noted, the combined entity now has the infrastructure to train AI models at a scale previously limited by terrestrial power grids and data center capacity.

๐Ÿง  Seven Frontier Models Launched in 28 Days

February 2026 saw an unprecedented wave of frontier model releases. No single month in AI history has produced this many competing launches:

  • Anthropic Claude Opus 4.6 (Feb 5): 1M-token context window, 14.5-hour task horizon, new "agent teams" feature. TechCrunch
  • OpenAI GPT-5.3-Codex (Feb 5): Set new SWE-Bench Pro records, 25% faster than GPT-5.2. Developer access was delayed due to cybersecurity concerns.
  • Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Feb 17): Near-Opus-level performance at lower cost, became the default model for most users. CNBC
  • Google Gemini 3.1 Pro (Feb 19): Led 13 of 16 benchmarks, scored 77.1% on ARC-AGI-2, and introduced "Deep Think" reasoning mode. Google Blog
  • Alibaba Qwen3.5-397B (Feb 15): Largest Alibaba model to date, open-weight, with native multimodal capabilities. CNBC
  • xAI Grok 4.20 Beta (Feb 17): Focused on medical document analysis with 4-agent parallel collaboration.
  • DeepSeek V4 (mid-February): Next-generation coding model with 1M+ context support.

The critical takeaway: no single model dominated all benchmarks. The leaderboard fractured across coding, reasoning, and multimodal tasks. The era of one clear "best AI" is over. For developers and businesses, this means the choice of which model to use now depends heavily on the specific use case.

๐Ÿ’ฐ $189 Billion in AI Funding in a Single Month

According to Crunchbase, global venture investment hit $189 billion in February, the largest single month on record. An astonishing 90%, roughly $171 billion, went to AI companies.

The three headline deals tell a story of extreme concentration:

  • OpenAI raised $110 billion on February 27, the largest private funding round in history. Amazon committed $50B, Nvidia and SoftBank $30B each.
  • Anthropic raised $30 billion, the third-largest venture round ever.
  • Waymo raised $16 billion for autonomous driving expansion.

As CNBC reported, 83% of that capital went to just three companies. This level of concentration raises serious questions about whether the AI industry is consolidating into a handful of hyperscale players, squeezing out smaller competitors and regional innovators.

๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ Anthropic Accuses Chinese Labs of Industrial-Scale Distillation

On February 23, Anthropic published a detailed blog post accusing three Chinese AI companies, DeepSeek, Moonshot AI, and MiniMax, of creating over 24,000 fraudulent accounts and generating 16 million+ exchanges with Claude to extract its capabilities and train their own models.

The scale was staggering: according to CNBC, MiniMax alone accounted for 13 million interactions, Moonshot AI for 3.4 million, and DeepSeek for about 150,000. As Fortune reported, Anthropic framed this as both a terms-of-service violation and a national security concern.

This is the first major public allegation of industrial-scale model distillation between rival AI labs. It could redefine how AI intellectual property is protected and will likely intensify the already escalating US-China technology competition. For companies in the Gulf region, it is a reminder that the geopolitics of AI are just as important as the technology itself.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Omantel Launches Otech: The Middle East's First Sovereign Cloud Platform

On February 11, Omantel unveiled Otech at the Royal Opera House Muscat, marking its transformation from a telecom operator into a comprehensive technology provider. According to Oman Observer, Otech became the first company in the Middle East accredited by AWS to deliver sovereign cloud services.

The launch included several major developments:

  • Strategic partnerships with Oracle, Google Cloud, AWS, Huawei, PwC, Palo Alto Networks, Fortinet, and Nagarro
  • Inauguration of the Firq Data Centre for mission-critical operations
  • Integration of Oman Data Park into the Otech ecosystem
  • Partnerships with three Omani AI startups: Orki (AI recruitment), Decoil (enterprise AI), and Remedy (AI-driven execution platform)

As The Arabian Stories reported, Otech consolidates cloud, AI, cybersecurity, IoT, and systems integration services into a single platform supporting public, hybrid, and hyperscaler cloud environments.

This positions Oman as a serious regional hub for data sovereignty at a time when GCC nations are competing aggressively to attract AI workloads. The timing is not accidental: with Analysys Mason predicting that AI data centre investment in the GCC will reach $5-7 billion in 2026, Oman now has the infrastructure to capture a meaningful share of that capital.

โš–๏ธ AI Regulation: A Global Tug-of-War

February also saw significant developments in AI regulation. According to Hunton Andrews Kurth, the Colorado AI Act, originally set to become enforceable on February 1, was delayed until June 30, 2026, after lawmakers could not reach consensus on amendments. This is the first comprehensive US state AI law, and even its authors could not agree on how to enforce it.

Meanwhile, the EU AI Act continues its phased rollout. According to the EU's official framework page, prohibited AI practices have been in effect since February 2025, with full applicability coming in August 2026. In the US, the Trump administration's AI policy executive order from late 2025 signals federal preemption of state AI laws, creating regulatory uncertainty.

For Oman and the GCC, the divergence matters. As the World Economic Forum argued, GCC nations may actually have a structural advantage in AI adoption thanks to sovereign cloud zones, unified national strategies, and faster regulatory cycles. Oman's AI & Digital Future Program (2024-2026) is a case in point: a single, coordinated national strategy rather than a patchwork of competing state and federal rules.

๐ŸŽฏ How Omani Businesses and Developers Should Respond

February 2026 was a lot to absorb. Here is what actually matters for people building in Oman:

  • Stop treating model choice as a one-time decision. With seven frontier models and no clear winner, the smart play is to build model-agnostic applications. Use abstraction layers so you can swap providers as benchmarks shift.
  • Explore Otech seriously. If you are an Omani business handling sensitive data (healthcare, finance, government), Otech's sovereign cloud offering eliminates one of the biggest barriers to AI adoption: data residency compliance. Start conversations now.
  • Watch the regulation gap. The EU AI Act is real and approaching fast (August 2026 full applicability). If your AI product or service could touch European markets, start compliance planning now. The GCC's lighter regulatory touch is an advantage, but only if you are prepared for both environments.
  • Do not ignore the funding concentration. When 83% of global AI funding goes to three companies, it means the tools, APIs, and platforms from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google will set the standard. Build on their ecosystems rather than competing with them.
  • Invest in AI literacy. With the Ministry of Transport, Communications and IT reporting that over 11,000 Omanis have been trained through the "Makin" initiative and Omanis now comprising 69% of technical IT positions, the talent pipeline exists. Developers should experiment with the new models released in February, particularly Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro, to understand their strengths firsthand.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

February 2026 confirmed that AI is not slowing down. It is accelerating on every front: investment, capability, geopolitics, and regulation. For Oman, the month brought one genuinely historic development: the launch of Otech positions the Sultanate as a credible player in regional data sovereignty, not just a consumer of someone else's cloud.

The $189 billion flooding into AI globally will create ripple effects. Some of that capital will flow toward GCC infrastructure. The World Economic Forum noted in February that new GCC partnerships are powering global innovation across data, AI, and energy. Oman, with its strategic location, new sovereign cloud infrastructure, and national AI program running through 2026, is positioned to benefit.

The question is no longer whether AI matters for Oman. It is whether Omani businesses and institutions will move fast enough to capture the opportunities that a $189 billion month creates. February's developments suggest the window is open, but it will not stay open forever.

AI RoundupSpaceXxAIOpenAIOmantel
Technology & AI
7 min read

Oman Bets Big on Chips: OIA Attracts 3 Global Semiconductor Firms in $38M Push

The Oman Investment Authority has attracted three US-based semiconductor companies to set up operations in the Sultanate, with a combined investment of $38 million that is creating high-skilled chip design jobs for Omani graduates.

Omar Al-RiyamiMarch 22, 2026

Oman is making a bold play to become a regional semiconductor hub. The Oman Investment Authority (OIA), through its ICT subsidiary ITHCA Group, has attracted three global chip companies to establish operations in the Sultanate, bringing in a combined investment of RO 14.63 million (approximately US$38 million). The move positions Oman at the center of a global industry that underpins everything from AI and 5G to electric vehicles and cloud computing.

๐Ÿ“Œ Key Takeaways

๐Ÿญ The Three Companies Setting Up in Oman

Each of the three firms brings a distinct specialization to Oman's nascent semiconductor ecosystem, covering chip design, optical AI technologies, and 5G wireless solutions.

GSME: Full-Stack Chip Design Center

US-based GSME has invested RO 5 million ($13 million) to establish a fully integrated semiconductor design center in Oman. The company focuses on RF (radio frequency) chips, power solutions, and semiconductor manufacturing processes. Critically, GSME has already trained 92 Omani graduates in chip design, with 67 of them securing full-time employment in the field. This is perhaps the most impactful element of the entire initiative: Oman is not just attracting investment, it is building a local talent pipeline in one of the world's most in-demand engineering disciplines.

Lumotive: AI-Powered Optical Sensing

Lumotive, also US-based, has committed RO 1.93 million ($5 million) to its Oman branch. The company specializes in programmable optics and Light Control Metasurface (LCM) technology for 3D sensing. This is the kind of deep-tech that powers autonomous vehicles, robotics, and industrial automation. Lumotive's presence in Oman introduces advanced optical and AI technologies that could eventually support the Sultanate's smart city and logistics ambitions.

Movandi: 5G Semiconductor Leader

The largest single investment comes from Movandi, which is putting in RO 7.7 million ($20 million) to establish a subsidiary in Oman. Movandi is a leader in 5G semiconductor technology, specializing in RF chipsets, beamforming solutions, and smart antenna development. With Oman's 5G rollout accelerating (Vodafone Oman recently surpassed 1 million 5G subscribers), having a 5G chip company operating locally creates a natural synergy between infrastructure deployment and the components that power it.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Investment Breakdown

$13M

GSME

Chip Design & RF Solutions

$5M

Lumotive

Optical & AI Sensing

$20M

Movandi

5G Semiconductors

๐Ÿ”ฌ Why Semiconductors Matter for Oman's Tech Future

Semiconductors are often called the "new oil" of the global economy, and for good reason. Every AI model running in a data center, every 5G tower transmitting data, and every smart device in a citizen's pocket depends on chips. The global semiconductor market is projected to exceed $1 trillion by 2030, and countries around the world are racing to secure their positions in the supply chain.

For Oman, the strategic logic is compelling. The Sultanate already has growing data center capacity, an expanding 5G network, and ambitious AI plans (including the UNESCO-recommended national AI supercomputer). Having semiconductor design capabilities locally means Oman is not just a consumer of these technologies but a contributor to the value chain that produces them.

The focus on chip design rather than fabrication is also smart. Building a semiconductor fabrication plant (fab) costs tens of billions of dollars and requires years of construction. Chip design, on the other hand, requires skilled engineers, software tools, and relatively modest capital, making it an ideal entry point for a country building its tech sector.

๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ’ป Building Oman's Chip Design Workforce

The talent development numbers deserve special attention. GSME's training of 92 Omani graduates in chip design, with 67 already working in the sector, represents exactly the kind of high-value job creation that Vision 2040 envisions. Semiconductor design engineers are among the highest-paid professionals in the global tech industry, and these roles cannot be easily outsourced or automated.

This also builds on the broader momentum in Oman's tech talent pipeline. The Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology (MTCIT) recently reported that over 11,000 Omanis have been trained through the Makin digital skills initiative since 2021, and the government invested RO 79 million in AI between 2021 and 2025. The semiconductor training adds a hardware dimension to what has primarily been a software-focused talent strategy.

๐Ÿ—๏ธ ITHCA Group: OIA's Tech Investment Arm

ITHCA Group, the ICT subsidiary of the Oman Investment Authority, has been the driving force behind attracting these companies. ITHCA's role as a specialized tech investment vehicle allows OIA to offer semiconductor firms not just capital but also connections to Oman's broader technology ecosystem, including telecom operators, data center providers, and government digital initiatives.

This targeted approach, using a dedicated tech subsidiary to attract specific types of companies, mirrors strategies used by other successful tech hubs in the region. The UAE's Abu Dhabi Investment Office (ADIO) and Saudi Arabia's NEOM have used similar models to attract deep-tech companies with strategic incentives and ecosystem support.

๐ŸŒ Oman in the Global Chip Race

Oman's semiconductor push comes at a time when the global chip industry is undergoing a massive geographic redistribution. The US CHIPS Act, Europe's Chips Act, and major investments by Japan, South Korea, and India are all reshaping where semiconductors are designed and manufactured. In the Gulf, the UAE has also been investing in chip design capabilities, particularly through its AI-focused companies like G42.

Oman's $38 million investment is modest compared to these multi-billion-dollar programs, but its focused approach on chip design (rather than fabrication) and its emphasis on local talent development could yield outsized returns. A small number of highly skilled chip designers can generate enormous value, and establishing Oman's reputation in this field early positions the country to attract larger investments as the sector matures.

๐ŸŽฏ Connection to Vision 2040

The semiconductor initiative directly supports several pillars of Oman Vision 2040:

  • Economic diversification: Moving beyond oil into high-value technology manufacturing and design
  • Human capital development: Creating skilled jobs for Omani graduates in a globally competitive field
  • Innovation ecosystem: Building the foundational technology capabilities that support AI, 5G, IoT, and smart city initiatives
  • Foreign investment attraction: Demonstrating Oman's ability to attract cutting-edge technology companies

Oman's digital economy contributed RO 800 million to GDP in 2024, and the government targets this to reach 10% of GDP by 2040. Having local semiconductor design capabilities strengthens the entire digital value chain, from the chips in devices to the AI models running in Omani data centers.

๐Ÿ‡ด๐Ÿ‡ฒ Why This Matters for Oman

This is more than a $38 million investment story. It signals that Oman is thinking strategically about where it fits in the global technology supply chain. While many countries in the region focus on being consumers and deployers of technology, Oman is positioning itself as a contributor to the foundational hardware layer.

The combination of three complementary companies (chip design, optical sensing, and 5G semiconductors) creates a mini-ecosystem that can grow over time. As these firms establish their Oman operations, they will likely attract suppliers, partners, and additional talent, creating a flywheel effect.

For Omani tech professionals and graduates, this opens up career paths that simply did not exist in the country before. Chip design, RF engineering, and optical systems are fields where Oman can build genuine expertise, not just import it.

The message is clear: Oman is not just building data centers and rolling out 5G. It wants a seat at the table where the underlying technology is designed.

๐Ÿ“š Sources

  • Muscat Daily, "OIA attracts 3 global chip firms to expand tech sector," 23 March 2026
  • Zawya, "OIA attracts 3 global chip firms to expand Oman's tech sector," 23 March 2026
  • The Arabian Stories, "OIA expands semiconductor investments in Oman, boosting jobs and innovation," 23 March 2026
  • Times of Oman, "Oman's semiconductor sector witnessing robust expansion," March 2026
  • Muscat Daily, "MTCIT unveils new drive to expand digital economy," 10 March 2026
SemiconductorsOIAInvestment5GAI

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