§A · Dispatch · Landing
Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737 lands at Ras Tanajib the week of Ras Tanura oil loading restart
If aboard, the short hop from Dammam would bring executives to the terminal as crude loadings resume after a four-month halt.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Saudi Aramco

Saudi Aramco
Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737-8AL, tail number N801XA, was tracked departing King Fahd International Airport (OEDF) in Dammam on July 1 at 12:35 UTC and arriving at Ras Tanajib Airport (OETN) just 25 minutes later, a brief hop consistent with a visit to the company's eastern oil infrastructure.
If Saudi Aramco executives were aboard, the timing would align with a major operational milestone: the resumption of crude loadings at the nearby Ras Tanura terminal, the world's largest oil export port, after a nearly four-month halt. Shipping data cited by Reuters and Arab World News on June 25–26 showed two Very Large Crude Carriers loading at Ras Tanura, with a third waiting, as Saudi Aramco joined a regional rush to move cargoes following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz under a U.S.–Iran interim agreement.
The flight continues a pattern of domestic movements by Saudi Aramco's fleet, which regularly shuttles personnel between Dammam, Riyadh, and remote field airports. Ras Tanajib serves the Ras Tanura complex, where the company also operates a 550,000 bpd refinery that was shut during the conflict. The visit, if it occurred, would underscore the company's focus on restoring full export capacity from Gulf terminals.
The aircraft
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