§A · Dispatch · Landing
Saudi Aramco's aircraft lands at Ras Tanajib the week oil exports resume at Ras Tanura
If aboard, the 8-minute hop from Jubail aligns with the restart of crude loading at the kingdom's key Gulf terminal.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Saudi Aramco

Saudi Aramco
Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737-8AL, tail N801XA, was tracked on a brief 8-minute flight from Jubail Airport (OEJB) to Ras Tanajib Airport (OETN) on June 28, 2026. The aircraft climbed to 12,375 feet at a maximum ground speed of 331 knots before touching down at the coastal airstrip that serves the company's eastern operations.
If Saudi Aramco's executive team was aboard, the timing would place them at Ras Tanajib the same week the company resumed crude loading at the nearby Ras Tanura terminal after a four-month halt, per Reuters and Al-Monitor reports. Two Very Large Crude Carriers were seen taking on cargo at the world's largest oil port on June 26, signaling the end of an Iranian blockade that had forced exports through the Red Sea. The restart follows an interim U.S.-Iran deal and marks a significant recovery in Gulf output.
Ras Tanajib Airport (OETN) sits adjacent to the company's oil-field infrastructure on the Gulf coast, making it a natural destination for operational oversight. The aircraft's recent pattern shows frequent movements between Aramco's eastern hubs and Riyadh (OERK) — a routing consistent with coordinating the terminal restart and the broader ramp-up in regional production.
The aircraft
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