Oman’s Budget Records Surplus of $1.7 Billion in 6 Months

A general view of the capital of Oman, Muscat. (Getty Images)
A general view of the capital of Oman, Muscat. (Getty Images)
TT

Oman’s Budget Records Surplus of $1.7 Billion in 6 Months

A general view of the capital of Oman, Muscat. (Getty Images)
A general view of the capital of Oman, Muscat. (Getty Images)

The Sultanate of Oman registered a budget surplus of 656 million Omani rials ($1.7 billion) in the first six months of 2023, as a result of higher oil revenues, the Ministry of Finance said in a statement. Last year, the budget achieved a surplus of 784 million rials.

The Sultanate approved the 2023 budget with a deficit of 1.3 billion rials, equivalent to 3 percent of the GDP, after recording a surplus of about $3 billion last year.

In 2022, the Gulf oil-producing countries benefited from a significant rise in crude prices, which exceeded $100 per barrel, after the Russian-Ukrainian war deepened fears of disruption to global energy supplies.

The budget for this year is based on an average oil price of $55 a barrel. The 2022 budget was based on an oil price assumption of $50 a barrel, but the government later estimated prices averaged $94 a barrel last year.

The official Omani News Agency said on Sunday that the Ministry of Finance had settled more than 1.5 billion rials of government loans by the end of the first half of 2023, reducing the public debt to about 16.3 billion rials.

“By the end of H1 2023, the Ministry of Finance did not withdraw from reserves as planned, as a result of generating additional revenue,” it stated.

The agency added that the Ministry of Finance also paid, by the end of the first half of 2023, more than 507 million rials of private sector dues received through bonds.



Turkmenistan, Iran Sign Deal to Supply Gas to Iraq

The deal was announced by Turkmenistan's foreign ministry - AFP File Photo
The deal was announced by Turkmenistan's foreign ministry - AFP File Photo
TT

Turkmenistan, Iran Sign Deal to Supply Gas to Iraq

The deal was announced by Turkmenistan's foreign ministry - AFP File Photo
The deal was announced by Turkmenistan's foreign ministry - AFP File Photo

Turkmenistan and Iran on Wednesday signed a contract for the delivery of 10 billion cubic meters a year of Turkmen gas that Iran will then ship on to Iraq.

The deal was announced by Turkmenistan's foreign ministry, which did not state the monetary worth of the contract, according to The AP.

The ministry's statement said Iranian companies will construct a new 125-kilometer (77-mile) pipeline to Iran to expand Turkmenistan's delivery capacity. The ministry said Turkmenistan plans to increase its gas supplies to Iran to 40 billion cubic meters a year.

Iraq last year faced disruptions in the supply of Iranian gas, which accounted for about 40% of its imports.

Turkmenistan is heavily reliant on revenue from sales of the gas in its vast reserves. And the government was instructed to find alternative options to ensure the operation of power plants in the central and southern provinces of the country.

The former Soviet republic of Turkmenistan relies heavily on the export of its vast natural gas reserves. China is the country's main customer for gas and Turkmenistan also is working on a pipeline to supply gas to Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.