How Remote Industries Are Closing the Connectivity Gap in 2026 - Programming Insider
Requirements Rigor Remains the Weakest Link
By Stephen L. Pendergast • Special Correspondent
Defense & Technology Correspondent | IEEE Senior Life Member
WASHINGTON — For most of the industrial era, the boundary of reliable communications was also the boundary of operational efficiency. A mine shaft in the Atacama, an offshore rig in the Norwegian Sea, a wildfire suppression base camp in the Cascades — each existed in a communications shadow that forced reliance on voice radio, delayed reports, and human couriers. That constraint is dissolving with a speed that few in the operations technology community anticipated even five years ago.
The driver is a structural shift in the satellite communications market. Low Earth Orbit satellite services are emerging across four distinct categories: fixed and mobile broadband for remote sites, connectivity for temporary locations such as construction sites, communications during emergency response, and resilience backup to traditional broadband. Gartner's July 2025 market analysis puts hard numbers on the trend: the LEO sector is forecast to be worth $14.8 billion globally in 2026, a 24.5% increase over 2025 figures, with LEO services for global IoT connectivity growing by 32% over the same period.
That growth rate is not a statistical artifact of a nascent market. It reflects genuine adoption pressure from asset-intensive industries that have exhausted the alternatives.
Performance Has Crossed the Threshold
The old knock on satellite connectivity — crippling latency from geostationary orbit — no longer applies to the new constellations. A Boston Consulting Group analysis shows that modern LEO satellites can deliver speeds of around 100 Mbps and latency of under 30 milliseconds, performance that closely approaches fiber and 5G but with ubiquitous global reach.
The rapid rise of LEO technology is driven by several reinforcing factors: lower launch costs from reusable rocket technology, software-defined satellites with dynamic bandwidth allocation, accelerating enterprise cloud adoption, and LEO solutions that integrate naturally within SD-WAN and hybrid network architectures.
For mining operations specifically, the performance numbers are operationally meaningful. Current LEO constellations now offer high bandwidth of 100 to 300 Mbps and above per site, and latency of 20 to 50 milliseconds — performance suitable for automation and real-time communication. That combination clears the threshold for autonomous haul truck control, which requires sub-100-millisecond round-trip command latency to remain safe.
Sites can now be brought online in days rather than months, enabling immediate access to cloud platforms, operational systems, and corporate networks. For project teams, this means faster mobilization; engineers can access centralized design systems and contractors can communicate seamlessly with head office while early-stage data is uploaded and analyzed in real time.
A case study from Argentina illustrates the operational reach of current systems. In the vastness of Argentina's Puna highlands — at over 4,000 meters elevation where cellular signal is absent — one of Latin America's most connected mining fleets now operates. TrailingSat, using Starlink as the backhaul, achieved real-time monitoring of more than 500 vehicles in areas where no mobile carrier reaches, covering lithium, copper, and gold deposits in the provinces of Salta, Catamarca, and Jujuy.
The Offshore Energy Sector Leads Private 5G Adoption
While LEO satellite handles the long-haul backhaul problem, the on-site communications challenge requires a different architecture. Private LTE and 5G networks have emerged as the preferred solution for large industrial footprints — mines, ports, refineries, and offshore platforms — where the operator controls spectrum and can engineer quality of service directly.
In an environment where network failures can cost $1 million per day in production losses, conventional communication technologies often fall short. The challenge extends beyond basic connectivity — successful smart operations require industrial-grade networks that deliver consistent performance across offshore rigs, remote drilling sites, and expansive processing facilities.
Tampnet, the Norwegian offshore connectivity specialist, is emblematic of the sector's maturation. The company has deployed private 4G/5G for oil and energy customers at more than 350 rigs and vessels in the North Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, and off the coasts of Trinidad & Tobago and Canada, holding spectrum for private offshore cellular deployments at 700 MHz, 800 MHz, 900 MHz, 1.8 GHz, and 2.6 GHz, and owning North Sea fiber cable as well. In July 2025, Tampnet signed a deal with Mavenir for wholesale migration to a cloud-native 5G core, with the company's managing director for North Sea operations describing the deployment as "an enabler for oil and gas companies to scale advanced use cases such as remote operations, AI-based optimization and dynamic reservoir monitoring."
The full capability stack that private 5G enables on a connected offshore rig is comprehensive. On a connected rig, wearable devices can monitor worker vitals while sensors track air quality and machines self-report maintenance needs — with the control room receiving all data in real time. Automation flows end-to-end: data moves directly from the drill head or gas detector into dashboards that trigger actions. Rigs can be brought online in minutes with plug-and-play access points, crucial when downtime means significant financial loss.
Hybrid Architecture Is the Operational Standard
Neither LEO satellite alone nor private 5G alone solves the full connectivity problem at complex industrial sites. The emerging operational standard pairs the two, often with fixed wireless and SD-WAN overlays, in a layered architecture that provides both coverage and resilience.
Oil and gas operations typically use a hybrid approach: onshore fields use private LTE/5G with localized base stations across large exploration or production sites; offshore platforms use private mobile networks connected via satellite, microwave, or subsea fiber for high availability and redundancy; pipeline corridors use linear coverage with repeaters and small cells along the infrastructure path.
For the utility and energy sector, the connectivity imperative extends beyond operations to safety and regulatory compliance. To detect possible leaks of explosive or toxic liquids or gases, private 5G can connect IoT sensors for monitoring valves, corrosion, and vibrations of rotating parts. Coupled with artificial intelligence, private 5G allows detection of fires by fixed cameras or drone flights, and supports establishment of real-time video conversations between operators on remote sites and inspectors on the ground.
Constellation Competition Intensifies
The market structure for LEO backhaul is consolidating around two primary players — SpaceX Starlink and Eutelsat OneWeb — with very different ownership structures and strategic orientations.
Eutelsat has moved aggressively to secure its position. On February 12, 2026, CEO Jean-François Fallacher delivered the Group's first-half 2025-26 results, confirming that the company has successfully transitioned into a connectivity-first operator, with non-video revenues now accounting for 54% of total turnover. The company contracted Airbus Defence and Space to build 340 additional OneWeb Gen-2 satellites at its Toulouse facility, with delivery beginning at end of 2026, incorporating advanced digital channelizers for enhanced onboard processing. The new satellites carry a strategically significant addition: they will embark 5G on-ground integration and will be technologically compatible with Europe's IRIS2 constellation, paving the way for IRIS2's entry into operational service in 2030, of which Eutelsat will be the main architect and operator of the LEO segment.
Starlink's industrial-grade offerings are developing in parallel. The Starlink Performance antenna, targeting maritime and extreme-environment industrial applications, is rated IP69K, wind-resistant to 270+ km/h, and qualified for ten years of saltwater exposure, with gigabit readiness targeted for 2026.
Who Builds These Systems — and How
The question of who actually designs and deploys remote industrial connectivity systems is central to understanding whether they will perform as expected. The market has sorted itself into three tiers, and very few large industrial operators are genuinely self-integrating from bare technology components.
The largest operators — major integrated oil companies, national mining conglomerates, large port authorities — engage systems integrators and managed service providers who deliver the network as a turnkey or near-turnkey deliverable. Ceragon's systems integration business, E2E by Ceragon, closed a $4.1 million agreement in April 2025 with a leading North American oil and gas producer to design, build, and commission a comprehensive OT network infrastructure across more than 100 mission-critical sites as a turnkey solution. Hughes, named Best Managed Services Provider in the 2025 Tech Ascension Awards, positions private wireless as a managed offering covering installation through ongoing network management. Tampnet in the offshore sector represents a vertical-specialist variant: a company that exists purely to own and operate offshore cellular networks as a service, so North Sea operators need not carry that expertise internally.
Mid-tier operators increasingly use vertical-specialist managed service providers or regional integrators with sector-specific credentials. Quality managed service providers in oil and gas typically provision additional resources within 24 to 48 hours for planned expansions, with cloud-based infrastructure allowing near-instant capacity increases and providers maintaining pre-configured equipment inventories for rapid physical deployment.
Smaller or more specialized operators — a single-site mining contractor, a regional utility — increasingly self-integrate using packaged components. A Starlink flat-panel antenna, a commercial SD-WAN appliance, and a pre-configured private LTE kit from a vendor such as Rajant or Digi International can be assembled by the operator's own IT staff. The components have matured enough that single-site DIY is feasible. What most operators in this tier cannot self-assemble is the cross-domain engineering knowledge to validate whether the resulting system will actually perform.
The structural reason most operators do not self-build the entire stack is the OT/IT convergence problem. Industrial operators have deep expertise in their process technology — drilling, extraction, ore processing — but relatively thin internal IT staff, and almost no internal staff who simultaneously understand SCADA protocols, 5G radio access networks, LEO satellite link budgets, and zero-trust cybersecurity architecture. Experienced managed service providers specialize in OT/IT convergence, safely connecting operational and information technology systems while understanding SCADA protocols, industrial control systems, and safety requirements — integration that happens gradually to maintain operational integrity throughout.
The Requirements Gap: Where the Process Fails
The most consequential and least-discussed problem in remote industrial connectivity is not the technology — it is the engineering discipline surrounding requirements definition, and the near-universal absence of formal performance modeling before systems are fielded.
The industry does have a standards stack intended to bridge the operator-integrator communication gap. The ISA-95 standards framework relies on the Purdue Reference Model for computer-integrated manufacturing to describe network segmentation in industrial control systems. It was updated in 2025 specifically because trends in digital transformation have driven the emergence of increasingly modular architectures across business and manufacturing operations. On top of ISA-95, the ISA/IEC 62443 series defines requirements and processes for implementing and maintaining electronically secure industrial automation and control systems, bridging the gap between operations and information technology as well as between process safety and cybersecurity. Together these two standards families give operators a structured vocabulary for expressing what they need and give integrators a structured framework for designing to meet those needs.
The problem is acknowledged even inside the standards community itself: all the vendors who come along are providing their pieces, but someone has to put them together — the individual projects are great, but it is the whole ecosystem that must be certified or validated to confirm that risk is being managed. A site-level assurance program under ISA/IEC 62443 Parts 2-1 and 3-3, comparable to ISO 27001 for information security, is reportedly near completion — but it does not yet exist as a deployed certification regime.
In practice, what passes for requirements definition in most remote industrial connectivity projects is a discovery process led by the integrator rather than a specification process authored by the operator. Most network problems in industrial environments do not start with bad intentions — they start with a reasonable decision made under pressure: a vendor needed access, a new line got added, a switch got installed to solve an immediate problem, and nobody had the time or the full picture to think through what it would mean six months later. That gap between network design and implementation is not a single failure point but the buildup of reasonable-seeming decisions that were never connected into a coherent system-level design.
A properly specified industrial connectivity requirement for a remote site would define, at minimum: latency budget by traffic class, distinguishing SCADA control-loop traffic from video surveillance from crew welfare data; availability requirement expressed as permitted annual downtime per application class; bandwidth envelope by traffic category including peak and sustained rates; geographic coverage with acceptable signal margin at the operational perimeter; environmental stress parameters covering temperature, humidity, vibration, and dust ingress class; recovery time objective after link failure by application priority; and cybersecurity zone boundaries with permitted data flows across each boundary expressed in terms of the IEC 62443 zone-conduit model. Almost no industrial operator produces a document at this level of specificity before engaging an integrator.
The wireless IIoT design literature is candid about the structural problem. The wireless system design for IIoT applications is inherently a joint effort between operational technology engineers, information technology system architects, and wireless network planners — three communities that historically do not share a common language, do not report to the same organizational hierarchy, and often have competing priorities. OT engineers care about determinism and availability; IT architects care about manageability and security; network planners care about coverage and throughput. A requirements process that does not force those three communities into a structured dialogue produces a design that optimizes for whichever community happened to be most present in the room during scoping.
The Simulation Gap
Rigorous requirements alone are necessary but not sufficient. Validating that a proposed network architecture will meet those requirements under realistic operational conditions — before hardware is procured and deployed to a remote site — requires network performance simulation, and this is where commercial industrial practice falls furthest short of the engineering standard that the investment scale warrants.
The tool suite for network simulation is mature. OPNET — now Riverbed Modeler following Riverbed Technology's 2013 acquisition — remains the most capable commercial platform for detailed network performance modeling: traffic load analysis, latency distribution under congestion, failover behavior, wireless link budget modeling under variable propagation conditions, and end-to-end QoS validation. NS-3, OMNeT++, and GNS3 offer academic and open-source alternatives with varying capabilities; NS-3 is the fastest among the open-source simulators and supports wireless and IoT network scenarios at granular levels, but requires significant programming expertise. For academic research, protocol development, or large-scale performance studies, these specialized simulators are widely used — but they typically require programming skills and dedicated engineering time that commercial integrators working on fixed-price industrial contracts rarely have budgeted.
The absence of simulation creates a specific and repeatable failure mode. Connectivity patterns for remote assets — well pads, compressor stations, pipeline terminals — need to be designed for resilience and remote diagnostics, not just basic connectivity. Redundancy has to be designed with realistic failover behavior, not just redundant links that have never been tested under load. The failure pattern that recurs in oil and gas often looks like this: a remote compressor station with intermittent link instability and vendor remote access that was set up quickly and never formalized. When an unplanned trip occurs, diagnosis takes far longer than it should because the network's actual behavior under stress was never modeled.
What substitutes for simulation in most commercial industrial deployments is vendor reference architecture, supplemented by the integrator's accumulated field experience. The reference architectures from Cisco/Rockwell (the Converged Plantwide Ethernet framework), Ericsson's private 5G design guides, and Hughes Managed LEO specifications encode genuine engineering knowledge. But reference architectures are generic, not site-specific. They cannot model the interaction between a specific traffic mix, a specific link quality distribution across a particular terrain, and a specific failover topology. A mine with a 6-kilometer open pit, three autonomous haul truck routes, and a control room connected via LEO satellite with a private LTE mesh on the pit floor presents a network modeling problem that no vendor reference architecture addresses directly.
The operators who come closest to proper requirements development and pre-deployment validation are the major integrated oil companies — Shell, BP, Chevron, and their peers — because they maintain internal telecommunications engineering groups with genuine RF and network expertise. For these companies, the systems integrator responds to a technical requirement, not the other way around. Everyone else is largely relying on the integrator to ask the right questions — which places the burden of requirements elicitation on the party with the commercial incentive to scope the project in a way that is deliverable within the contract price.
What Good Practice Looks Like
The defense and large utility sectors offer a template. A major C4ISR program or a transmission utility SCADA network expansion will typically require a formal System Requirements Document before an integrator is engaged, a network performance model validated against the SRD before hardware procurement, a factory acceptance test, and a site acceptance test with performance measurement against defined acceptance criteria. This is not theoretical — it is routine practice on programs where the consequences of connectivity failure are operationally or legally unacceptable.
The IEC 62443 standards framework provides the conceptual scaffolding to apply equivalent rigor to industrial connectivity: a risk assessment that drives security level targets for each zone, those targets translating into quantitative requirements for availability, latency, and access control, and those requirements driving both the architecture and the acceptance criteria. The framework is sound. The gap is adoption discipline.
A practical intermediate step for operators who lack the internal expertise to write a full system requirements document is to engage a third-party telecommunications engineer — independent of the integrator — to translate operational requirements into network performance specifications before the integrator is selected. This creates the competitive reference basis against which proposals can be evaluated and accepted, rather than accepting the integrator's self-defined scope. The cost of a qualified independent review is typically a small fraction of the total connectivity contract value and provides the assurance baseline that the investment otherwise lacks.
The Expanding Cyberattack Surface
The operational benefits of ubiquitous industrial connectivity carry a commensurate increase in cyber risk that the industry has not yet fully internalized. The expansion of remote connectivity to SCADA systems, industrial control systems, and autonomous vehicle platforms creates attack vectors that did not exist when those systems were air-gapped by geography alone.
Ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure jumped 47% in the first half of 2025, specifically targeting ICS and SCADA systems to disrupt operations. Nation-state groups are targeting energy, water, and transportation sectors for espionage and sabotage, often exploiting weak IoT device authentication. Operational technology and IoT-targeted campaigns have become a persistent trend, with attackers increasingly using simple, automated scans to find exposed devices and then exploiting decades-old vulnerabilities that remain unpatched. Device manufacturers too often optimize cost, time-to-market, and functionality over security, resulting in default passwords, unencrypted telemetry, hard-coded keys, and limited ability to update firmware remotely.
The regulatory environment is beginning to respond. The U.S. Coast Guard's maritime cybersecurity rule, effective July 2025, reflects growing regulatory attention to connected devices in transportation infrastructure. Zero-trust architecture has emerged as the recommended mitigation framework: every flow computer, every RTU, every control valve actuator must authenticate itself, regardless of network segment. For remote sites using satellite backhaul, this approach addresses the specific vulnerability of satellite signal interception or jamming of mission-critical control traffic.
Outlook
The trajectory of remote industrial connectivity technology is unambiguous. The remaining questions are whether requirements discipline and simulation practice will mature fast enough to match the technology's deployment pace, and whether the cybersecurity adaptation will keep pace with the connectivity expansion.
The hybrid LEO/private-5G architecture will become the default configuration for major industrial deployments through 2026 and beyond. Edge computing — processing data at the site rather than transmitting everything to the cloud — will reduce bandwidth demand while improving response latency for safety-critical applications. AI-driven network management will enable self-healing connectivity that reroutes around failures before human operators detect them.
But technology alone does not deliver assurance. An operator spending millions on remote connectivity infrastructure deserves the same level of pre-deployment engineering rigor that the defense sector applies as a matter of course. That means requirements documents, not discovery conversations. It means network performance models, not vendor reference architectures applied by analogy. It means independent verification of acceptance criteria, not integrator self-certification. Until that discipline becomes standard practice in commercial industrial deployments, the connectivity gap may close technically while a requirements and assurance gap quietly opens behind it.
Verified Sources and Formal Citations
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