Show Menu
Learn more about Oman
Info about Oman
The inhabitants of the area of Oman have long prospered on Indian Ocean trade. In the late 18th century, a newly established sultanate in Muscat signed the first in a series of friendship treaties with Britain. Over time, Oman's dependence on British political and military advisors increased, but it never became a British colony. In 1970, QABOOS bin Said al-Said overthrew the restrictive rule of his father; he has ruled as sultan ever since. His extensive modernization program has opened the country to the outside world while preserving the longstanding close ties with the UK. Oman's moderate, independent foreign policy has sought to maintain good relations with all Middle Eastern countries.
Diseases
N/A
Languages
Arabic (official), English, Baluchi, Urdu, Indian dialects
Drug usage
N/A
Ethnic division
Arab, Baluchi, South Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi), African
HIV/AIDS prevalence rate
0.1% (2001 est.)
Climate info
dry desert; hot, humid along coast; hot, dry interior; strong southwest summer monsoon (May to September) in far south
Natural Resources
petroleum, copper, asbestos, some marble, limestone, chromium, gypsum, natural gas
Economic data
Oman is a middle-income economy that is heavily dependent on dwindling oil resources, but sustained high oil prices in recent years have helped build Oman's budget and trade surpluses and foreign reserves. As a result of its dwindling oil resources, Oman is actively pursuing a development plan that focuses on diversification, industrialization, and privatization, with the objective of reducing the oil sector's contribution to GDP to 9% by 2020, but many of these projects are in jeopardy because Muscat overestimated its ability to produce the natural gas on which much of its development projects are based. Oman actively seeks private foreign investors, especially in the industrial, information technology, tourism, and higher education fields. Industrial development plans focus on gas resources, metal manufacturing, petrochemicals, and international transshipment ports. High inflation levels have also been a threat to continued high levels of economic growth, but the drop in oil prices and the global financial crisis in 2008 also will affect Oman's fiscal position and it may post a deficit in 2009 if oil prices stay low. In addition, the global credit crisis is slowing the pace of investment and development projects-a trend that probably will continue into 2009.
Environmental issues
rising soil salinity; beach pollution from oil spills; limited natural fresh water resources
Travel destinations in Oman




Airlines based in Oman



find your perfect holiday location

Current temperature
25 C

Similar weather

25.53 C
25.22 C
  Tumaco
26.07 C
  Kerteh
25.17 C
26.72 C
23.86 C
27.18 C
29.79 C
  Gamba
21.01 C
  Macaé
23.82 C
27.8 C
  Bunyu
24.56 C
  Coen
20.97 C
  Tuluá
20.49 C
28.76 C
20.61 C
24.62 C
  Foya
20.03 C
22.46 C
20.12 C
21.71 C
  Oita
26.12 C
  Sittwe
29.53 C
23.02 C
  Luanda
24.28 C
26.19 C
23.74 C
21.82 C
  Assiut
23.68 C
23.86 C
23.85 C
  Belaga
24.92 C
27.7 C
21.13 C
28.61 C
22.91 C
29.53 C
27.76 C
  Padang
29.29 C
  Opuwa
22.16 C
  Boridi
28.94 C
  Sawu
29.5 C
29.02 C
23.56 C
26.23 C
  Biak
26.41 C
24.59 C
26.26 C
20.96 C
29.5 C
28.14 C
21.52 C
  Caia
29.7 C
  Sanana
29.03 C
20.97 C
23.02 C
21.62 C
20.5 C
  Sinop
WeatherDream!

Do you like to travel? But you normally don't care where you are going as long as the weather is perfect for you? Have you noticed that to find the perfect weather has been made so difficult for us, even though it's really easy to provide you a simple search option to find travel destinations with the weather you would really go for? We have and this is the exact reason why I created this site.

good ideas?

Feel free to share them.

Get in touch
I have too much free space

But at least it's warm.

connect with me

Want to get in touch for one reason or another? Check the contact page or follow us in twitter or check out our Facebook page.

flights to Oman image