§A · Dispatch · Landing
Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737 lands in Dammam the week of its $50B asset sale plan
If aboard, the timing aligns with Aramco's reported push to monetize infrastructure and expand oil storage abroad.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Saudi Aramco

Saudi Aramco
Saudi Aramco's Boeing 737-8AL, tail number N801XA, was tracked departing King Abdul Aziz Military Academy Airport (OE53) on June 25 at 11:00 UTC and arriving at King Fahd International Airport (OEDF) in Dammam at 15:10 UTC, a flight of just over four hours. The aircraft, operated by the company's Mukamalah aviation division, touched down at Aramco's exclusive general aviation terminal.
If Saudi Aramco was aboard, the arrival comes the same week the company is reportedly preparing to sell up to $50 billion in assets, including oil export terminals and a sulphur business stake, per a Reuters report cited by CruxBrief on June 23. Chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan, speaking in Rome on June 18, also outlined plans to expand oil storage in Asia, Korea, and Japan to insulate supply from chokepoint disruptions like the recent Strait of Hormuz closure. The flight lands as oil prices return to pre-war levels and Hormuz traffic rebounds, per the Straits Times and Saudi Gazette.
The Dammam home base remains the hub for Aramco's extensive corporate fleet, which shuttles executives to remote oil fields and strategic meetings across the Kingdom. Recent flights show the aircraft moving frequently between Dammam, Riyadh, and other domestic points, consistent with the company's operational tempo amid a major strategic pivot toward energy realism and fiscal diversification.
The aircraft
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