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The Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology is the governmental body in the Sultanate of Oman responsible for all matters relating to infrastructure, including airports and ports, transport, logistics, communications, and information technology. [1]
Ras al Hadd Airport (ICAO: OORH) is an airport in Ash Sharqiyah Region of Oman, about 30 km south of the town of Ras al Hadd. [2] Construction began in 2011, [3] and was completed December, 2018 but the airport remains unused. [4] The airport is 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) inland from the Arabian Sea coast.
Salalah International Airport (IATA: SLL, ICAO: OOSA) is the Sultanate of Oman's secondary international airport after Muscat International Airport. It is located on the Salalah coastal plain in the Dhofar Governorate , 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi) northeast of Salalah 's city centre.
Marmul Airport (IATA: OMM, ICAO: OOMX) is an airport serving the Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) operations at the Marmul heavy oil field in the Dhofar Governorate of Oman. The airport is 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) southwest of the main PDO camp. The Marmul VOR-DME (Ident: MRL) is located on the field. [3]
Sohar International Airport (IATA: OHS, ICAO: OOSH) is an international airport situated in the wilayat of Sohar in Al Batinah Region of Oman. Sohar is a coastal city on the Gulf of Oman. The airport is 7 kilometres (4 mi) inland. The runway length does not include 120 metres (390 ft) displaced thresholds on both ends.
Muscat's original airport, Bayt al Falaj, began operations in 1929.It served as the capital's first airport and was known for sharp turns and steep descents. Airlines such as Gulf Aviation (later Gulf Air) and Oman International Services were its first users.