Oman and Thailand widen economic ties

Oman and Thailand moved to deepen economic and diplomatic engagement during a high-level meeting in Muscat, with both sides focusing on trade, investment, tourism and institutional cooperation as they seek to turn cordial political ties into broader commercial gains. Sayyid Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi, Foreign Minister of the Sultanate of Oman, received Sihasak Phuangketkeow, Thailand’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, during an official visit that also included a meeting with His Majesty Sultan Haitham bin Tarik.

The talks reflected a clear attempt by both governments to give sharper economic content to a relationship that has long been friendly but comparatively understated when measured against each country’s larger Asian and Gulf partnerships. Official statements from Muscat said the two sides reviewed bilateral relations and discussed the growing pace of cooperation in trade and investment, while also exploring tourism and opportunities in diplomatic training. That mix of subjects points to a partnership being built not only around commerce, but also around government-to-government capacity building and softer channels of engagement.

A parallel audience with Sultan Haitham added political weight to the visit. During that meeting, the Thai side expressed appreciation for Oman’s humanitarian cooperation in evacuating the crew of a Thai vessel in the Strait of Hormuz, a detail that underscored how bilateral ties have also been shaped by practical crisis support in a strategically sensitive waterway. Beyond symbolism, such exchanges matter because they build trust at a time when Gulf-Asia relations are being redrawn by energy security concerns, shifting supply chains and the search for new tourism and logistics corridors.

For Oman, the push fits neatly with Vision 2040, the state’s long-term strategy to diversify beyond hydrocarbons by expanding tourism, logistics, manufacturing and foreign investment. For Thailand, the outreach aligns with a wider diplomatic and commercial effort to strengthen links with Gulf economies that can offer energy cooperation, investment capital and access to markets stretching across the Arabian Peninsula and East Africa. The Muscat discussions suggest both sides see room to connect these ambitions in practical sectors rather than leaving the relationship at the level of protocol.

Business engagement has already been gaining momentum. In August 2025, Omani and Thai business leaders held bilateral meetings focused on food security, healthcare, perfumes and cosmetics, showing that commercial interest has been widening beyond headline sectors. Another official report from Oman highlighted agriculture, health and beauty, textiles, food processing and jewellery as promising areas for deeper cooperation. That matters because it shows the latest ministerial meeting did not emerge in isolation; it builds on groundwork already laid by chambers, officials and private-sector representatives looking for sector-specific deals.

Tourism stands out as one of the most immediate areas for expansion. Oman’s diplomatic mission in Thailand lists tourism, education and culture among its key priorities, while the latest ministerial readout in Muscat specifically identified tourism as an area of joint interest. Thailand remains one of Asia’s strongest leisure brands, while Oman has been working to market itself as a premium destination blending heritage, coastline and mountain landscapes with higher-end hospitality. Better institutional coordination, easier travel processes and stronger airline and tour partnerships could all flow from this kind of diplomatic push, particularly as both countries try to capture more affluent long-haul travellers.

The inclusion of diplomatic training in the talks may appear secondary, yet it offers an important clue about how the relationship could evolve. Training cooperation typically creates durable bureaucratic links, shared expertise and more frequent official contact, all of which help sustain commercial and political initiatives over time. In a period marked by regional volatility and growing competition for investment, countries are placing greater value on institutional familiarity and faster communication between ministries, embassies and trade-promotion bodies.



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