Deployment depends on site-specific hazardous-zone requirements. Patrol routes are planned around classified areas and operational restrictions.
Oil and gas operations span well sites, pipelines, terminals, and processing facilities that require visibility across large, distributed assets.
The most common security threats to the oil and gas industry are shaped by the physical realities of distributed infrastructure and remote operations.
Wellheads, pump stations, tank farms, and refinery campuses can span large areas. Maintaining continuous visibility across every asset is a structural challenge, not a staffing issue.
Process units, storage tanks, and chemical handling areas create environments where access is tightly controlled and operational consequences can be significant.
Oil and gas infrastructure is a frequent target for theft, vandalism, protests, and other disruptions. Incident stakes are often higher than a typical perimeter breach.
Shutdowns and turnarounds can bring large temporary workforces onto site. Increased traffic across multiple access points adds complexity to site oversight and accountability.
Risks can include:
Oil and gas security requirements often extend beyond what guards, cameras, and alarms can document across large footprints.
Fixed cameras monitor specific locations, but refinery campuses, pipeline corridors, pump stations, and wellhead sites create gaps between monitored areas.
Covering a refinery is one challenge. Covering remote well sites, compressor stations, and storage terminals on a consistent schedule is another.
Fences and access controls secure entry points, but many remote assets operate outside the primary facility’s access control architecture.
An alarm at a pump station or pipeline access point may occur miles from personnel, creating delays between notification and verification.
Security standards require documented evidence of active perimeter monitoring. Fixed-point records don’t always establish when remote assets were observed or patrolled during the review period.
Refinery units, tank farms, and chemical handling areas are classified environments where investigating an alarm may involve additional safety considerations.
Oil and gas security requirements affect stakeholders across operations, safety, and security. Vice Presidents of Operations, Terminal Managers, and Pipeline Operations leaders are responsible for production, remote assets, staffing, and operational risk. Environmental Health & Safety teams focus on employee safety, hazardous-area access, leak response, and regulatory compliance. Security Directors oversee security personnel and systems. Physical guards handle patrols, access control, incident response, and recordkeeping.
A fence sensor, motion detector, access control system, or site alarm identifies activity at a wellhead, pump station, pipeline access point, storage terminal, or process area.
Available information is reviewed to determine whether the event involves a perimeter intrusion, activity near a pipeline right-of-way, a contractor outside an authorized turnaround zone, or access near a classified hazardous area.
The security operator evaluates the situation and decides whether to notify refinery operations, pipeline operations, HSE personnel, site security, or law enforcement, or close the event as a false alarm.
Based on the operator's decision, site security, operations personnel, HSE teams, or law enforcement respond. Actions taken, response times, and involved personnel are documented.
Video, patrol records, operator decisions, response timelines, and chain-of-events documentation are compiled to support TSA reviews, NERC CIP evidence requests, insurance inquiries, audits, or investigations.
Asylon’s solutions address specific oil and gas security challenges.
We regularly hear these questions from security leaders responsible for pipeline corridors, terminals, refinery campuses, and other oil and gas sites:
Deployment depends on site-specific hazardous-zone requirements. Patrol routes are planned around classified areas and operational restrictions.
Scheduled patrols create timestamped records that can support NERC CIP evidence requests and TSA Pipeline Security reviews.
Auto-generated incident records include footage, patrol history, operator decisions, and a documented chain of events.
Guardian can respond to alarms at remote assets, while DroneDog supports scheduled patrols at unmanned facilities with available infrastructure.
DroneIQ can ingest events from existing access control systems, site alarms, and other security infrastructure through open integrations.
Guardian can patrol pipeline corridors and verify activity near access points, vehicle approaches, excavation work, or unauthorized entry.
Deployment timelines vary based on site complexity, hazardous-area planning, infrastructure requirements, and operational approvals.
No. Security personnel continue handling response activities while the system extends visibility across remote sites, hazardous areas, and large perimeters.
Oil and gas organizations operate under operational, regulatory, and insurance scrutiny. Asylon strengthens oil and gas security across wellheads, pipelines, terminals, and refineries, while creating documentation for audits, investigations, and reviews.
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