Both, depending on what the facility needs. Some sites require full-time on-site coverage; others are well-suited to a combination of periodic site visits and remote monitoring. We assess your facility, your staffing situation, and your uptime requirements and recommend the right coverage model.
Yes. This is one of the most common ways we get engaged. Construction teams are not operations teams, and the handoff between them is one of the highest-risk moments in a project's life. We can step in at commissioning, take over at mechanical completion, or stabilize a facility that's already running but underperforming.
It depends on the equipment mix, but a typical program covers scheduled inspections and service intervals for compressors, dryers, blowers, and treatment media, along with instrumentation calibration, safety system checks, and documentation. We build programs that are CMMS-ready so maintenance history is tracked and auditable.
We build alarm-response workflows and upset-response playbooks into the operations program from the start. When a deviation occurs, the operator knows exactly what to do, who to notify, and how to recover. The goal is to catch deviations before they become rejections and to document everything for the pipeline operator if needed.