The upstream sector covering exploration, drilling, and early-stage production remains the beating heart of Oman’s energy economy. Even as the world accelerates toward renewables, the upstream industry continues to anchor national revenues, employment, and foreign investment.
According to the Ministry of Energy and Minerals, oil and gas revenues accounted for roughly 68% of Oman’s total government income in 2024, generating OMR 7.45 billion from oil and OMR 1.82 billion from gas. Combined, hydrocarbons contributed around OMR 9.3 billion, out of OMR 12.78 billion in total revenue underscoring their centrality to the fiscal framework. The country’s average crude production stood at about 1.06 million barrels per day (bpd), with exports averaging 850,000 bpd.
Globally, the International Energy Agency (IEA) projects oil demand to grow by another 720,000 bpd in 2025, defying expectations of a rapid decline. Oman, as part of OPEC+, continues to calibrate production levels strategically to balance market stability and domestic fiscal health. Sustained upstream investment remains critical, OPEC estimates nearly $14.9 trillion in global upstream capital requirements through 2050, signalling that hydrocarbons will remain indispensable to global energy security for decades.
Investment Depth and Economic Weight
Oman’s upstream industry has been a magnet for foreign capital. By Q1 2025, the sector attracted OMR 24.7 billion in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI); nearly 81% of total national FDI inflows, highlighting investor confidence in the country’s geological potential and policy stability. The Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) alone contributed an estimated US$ 22.5 billion in 2024 revenues, serving as both a commercial and technological backbone for the nation’s energy ambitions.
Oil and gas activities contributed OMR 12.2 billion to GDP in 2023, with natural gas adding another OMR 1.8 billion. The combined petroleum sector continues to underpin diversification efforts not as a relic of the past, but as a foundation upon which Oman builds a sustainable, innovation-driven economy.
EOR and Technological Frontiers
Oman has long been a regional leader in Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR): a suite of advanced extraction methods that extend the productive life of mature fields. EOR now contributes nearly 19% of PDO’s crude output, a figure projected to reach 28% by 2031. Fields such as Marmul, Amal, and Harweel have become laboratories for innovation, deploying polymer flooding, miscible gas injection, and solar steam technologies to unlock complex reservoirs.
New operators, including CC Energy Development, Occidental Oman, and Tethys Oil, are driving exploration in new blocks, targeting both tight oil and conventional reservoirs. These efforts signal a deliberate push to modernize Oman’s upstream portfolio, one grounded in data, digital transformation, and environmental efficiency.
Balancing Growth with Sustainability
Despite its strengths, the sector faces undeniable headwinds: rising operational costs, supply chain disruptions, and tightening emission standards. Yet Oman’s upstream resilience lies in its adaptability. The government’s Vision 2040 blueprint calls for cleaner production processes, carbon management, and greater collaboration between public and private stakeholders.
PDO’s own decarbonization roadmap includes large-scale solar integration and flaring reduction initiatives reflects this shift. With average oil prices around USD 82–83 per barrel in 2024, Oman has maintained fiscal stability while investing in future-ready technologies.
In a rapidly evolving global energy landscape, Oman’s upstream sector is not merely surviving, it is evolving. By aligning economic strategy with technological innovation, Oman is positioning itself as a resilient energy player that bridges the hydrocarbon and low-carbon eras.
With its vast geological resources, investor-friendly environment, and commitment to efficiency, the upstream sector will continue to serve as both a revenue generator and a testbed for sustainable growth, ensuring Oman’s energy leadership well into the next generation.
Here are some updated statistics and figures for Oman's upstream / oil & gas sector, backed by recent sources. These will help add quantitative detail to your overview. If you like, I can also pull together historical trends or forecasts.
| Metric | Value | Source / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Number of productive fields (2023) | ~405 fields (350 oil, 55 gas) | Oman had roughly 405 producing fields in 2023: 350 oil, 55 gas. |
| Reserves | • Oil & condensate: just under 5 billion barrels • Natural gas: ~23 trillion cubic feet | These are the total proved reserves as reported in 2023. |
| Daily production (crude oil & condensate, 2023) | ~1.1 million barrels per day | Oman’s crude+condensate production averaged about 1.1 m bbl/d in 2023. |
| Average gas production (2023) | ~142.5 million cubic metres per day | That is total gas output in 2023. |
| Exports (2023) | ~850,000 bpd of crude + condensate | Oman exported ~850,000 barrels per day in 2023. |
| Contribution of oil & gas sector to GDP | ~OR12.2 billion in 2023 (petroleum sector) | In 2023 petroleum-related activity contributed OR12.2 bn to GDP. Natural gas contributed ~OR1.8 bn of that. |
| Public Revenue from Oil & Hydrocarbons (2024) | Net oil revenue: OMR 7,452 million; Net gas revenue: OMR 1,822 million | These are the figures for 2024; oil revenue increased ~16% over budgeted amounts, driven by higher prices. |
| Total Public Revenue (2024) | ~OMR 12,781 million | Public revenues in 2024 reached ~OMR 12.781 bn. |
| Hydrocarbon share of public revenue | Majority (oil + gas) – e.g. oil alone netting OMR 7,452 million vs total public revenue ~OMR 12,781 million → ~58-60% from oil; gas adds more | Using above numbers, oil revenue alone is ~58-60%; adding gas raises share. |
| FDI in Oil & Gas Sector Q1 2025 | ~RO 24,701.9 million (~81% of total FDI) | By end Q1 2025, the O&G extraction sector got RO24.7019 bn of RO30.6115 bn total FDI; cash inflows of about RO4.812 bn. |
| PDO revenue contribution (2024) | ~$22.5 billion | PDO’s oil and gas & related operations contributed about US$22.5 bn in 2024. |
| EOR contribution to PDO crude output | • ~19% in 2025 • Expected ~28% by 2031 | EOR currently contributes ~19% of PDO’s crude production (2025), expected to rise to ~28% by 2031. |
| Average realised oil price in 2024 | ~$82-83 per barrel | Several reports note an average realised oil price of USD 82-83/bbl for 2024. |
Sources:
Ministry of Energy and Minerals (Oman), 2024–2025
National Centre for Statistics and Information (NCSI), 2025
International Energy Agency (IEA) Oil Market Report, 2025
OPEC World Oil Outlook, 2025
PDO Annual Report, 2024
Muscat Daily & Times of Oman, Q1 2025 FDI data




