OMR 20.0m
Committed governorate development projects
Ash Sharqiyah North ranks 1 of 11 on this official table.
Governorate brief
Ash Sharqiyah North has the largest programme commitment of any governorate, but the official challenge is not capital scarcity. It is whether Ibra and the wider governorate can turn that money into a genuine applied-technology and food-industry cluster.
OMR 20.0m
Ash Sharqiyah North ranks 1 of 11 on this official table.
321,045
Ash Sharqiyah North ranks 7 of 11 on this official table.
3.4%
Lower is better. Ash Sharqiyah North ranks 4 of 11 on this official table.
Start here
Each card pairs one of the big questions with the live number, the trend chart, and a way into the full topic page where the data is broken down properly.
Topic page
How much money is actually being committed, and whether the property market is picking up the signal.
Committed governorate development projects
OMR 20m
Property traded value
OMR 72m
Preview chart: Property traded value
Public spending is the easy part. What matters is whether it pulls private money in behind it and starts to shift how the local economy actually works. Ibra is showing OMR 71.8m on property traded value.
Open the full topic file for 2 current charts and 1 verified time-series chart.
Read the full briefTopic page
Population, permits and whether the place is actually being built fast enough for the role it has been handed.
Registered population
321,045
Building permits
3,039
Preview chart: Building permits
A spatial plan only becomes real when permits and settlements start lining up with the role the governorate has been given. Until then, it is still just a map. Ibra is showing 3,039 on building permits.
Open the full topic file for 2 current charts and 2 verified time-series charts.
Read the full briefTopic page
The jobs and businesses that show whether the governorate has a working economy, or just a project list.
Unemployment rate
3%
Establishments
25,103
Workers in establishments
71,772
Preview chart: Unemployment rate
If the strategy does not eventually show up in jobs, firms and a thicker base of local businesses, it is not really a strategy yet — it is still a slide. Ibra is showing 3.4% on unemployment rate.
Open the full topic file for 3 current charts and 2 verified time-series charts.
Read the full briefTopic page
Hotels, occupancy, and whether the place is becoming a real destination or just adding rooms.
Hotels
104
Hotel occupancy rate
14%
Preview chart: Hotel occupancy rate
A lot of governorates are sold on heritage, climate, scenery or access. The numbers have to back up the story — empty rooms are not a visitor economy. Ibra is showing 14.0% on hotel occupancy rate.
Open the full topic file for 2 current charts and 2 verified time-series charts.
Read the full briefTopic page
Whether schools and hospitals are keeping up — the simplest read on whether people can build a life here.
Students in schools
71,876
Hospital beds
366
Preview chart: Students in schools
The story is not only about investment. It is also about whether families can build their lives — schooling, healthcare, daily services — without having to default back to Muscat. Ibra is showing 71,876 on students in schools.
Open the full topic file for 2 current charts and 2 verified time-series charts.
Read the full briefTopic page
Roads, water and the quiet base layer that usually decides whether any of the rest of it actually works.
Roads executed
263 km
Water connections
29,708
Preview chart: Water connections
Infrastructure is the silent constraint. Roads, water and utility access are usually what separates a strategy on the page from an economy that runs. Ibra is showing 29,708 on water connections.
Open the full topic file for 2 current charts and 1 verified time-series chart.
Read the full briefOfficial role
MOHUP's strategy for Ash Sharqiyah North revolves around Ibra as an applied-technology city, supported by advanced manufacturing, education, food-industry activity in Sinaw and specialized camel-related industries in Bidiyah.
Why we went deeper here
The public record is strong enough to track six priorities per governorate — but not every Vision 2040 theme, and not everywhere equally.
Official sources cover most of what actually matters at the governorate level: strategy, money, jobs, businesses, property, housing, tourism, schools, hospitals, roads and water. They are not deep enough to honestly track every one of the twelve national priorities across all eleven governorates, so we focus on the six where the evidence holds up.
Where the numbers come from
This page stays deliberately short. We only go deeper on a topic where the government's own data is strong enough to back the claim.
Oman Vision 2040 Implementation Follow-up Unit
Official annual report used for the governorate development programme envelope, committed values by governorate, private-investment plots, Sorouh projects, governorate employment targets, and digital follow-up arrangements.
Governorate development programme table on the Development of Governorates and Sustainable Cities pages (pp. 279-280 in the PDF print numbering).
National Centre for Statistics and Information
Latest official NCSI yearbook used for governorate population, unemployment, property trading, building permits, establishments, workers, hotel stock, hotel occupancy, school students, hospital beds, roads, and water connections.
Key cited tables include the governorate population table, Table 2-17, Table 2-21, Table 5-3, Table 7-3, Table 9-21, Table 11-10, Table 12-9, Table 25-4, the Schools, Classrooms, Students and Teachers by Governorate grand-total table, and the Production and Distribution of Water and No.of Connections by Governorate table.
Ministry of Housing and Urban Planning
Official MOHUP strategy document used for each governorate's intended spatial role, anchor cities, and sector priorities inside the national urban framework.
Governorate strategy spreads include Muscat (p. 59), Dhofar (p. 61), Al Batinah North (p. 64), Ad Dakhiliyah (p. 66), Al Wusta (p. 67), Musandam (p. 80), Al Batinah South (p. 81), Adh Dhahirah (p. 84), Ash Sharqiyah North (p. 86), Ash Sharqiyah South (p. 88), and Al Buraymi (p. 90).