The oil rigs in Argentina’s Neuquén Basin are spread out across miles of desert. Operators must check the supply levels in water tanks—as well as the settings on fracking pipes—before using any equipment for fracking. But some of these facilities are so far apart that it takes two or three hours to drive from one to another.
Two companies sought to address this challenge: Tesacom, an Iridium partner in the region, and Exemys, a technology company that helps customers monitor dispersed and remote assets. The Exemys® GRD, a small and lightweight piece of electronic hardware for remote monitoring, can be attached to industrial equipment and connected to the Internet to provide status updates and enable workers to remotely adjust settings.
However, these devices need a reliable connection to a robust network with coverage across the entire region. Some oil companies have used cellular networks to connect this type of equipment, but doing so is extremely resource-intensive: each location would require an antenna 3 or 4 meters in height, as well as transportation for both the materials and the construction team.