Oilfield and natural gas operations in northeastern BC and Alberta run in conditions that break standard office equipment fast: extreme cold, vibration, dust, humidity, and remote locations with limited internet access. IT deployments for these environments require different hardware, different connectivity strategies, and service approaches that do not assume same-day on-site support.
Why Standard Office IT Fails in the Field
Consumer and light commercial laptops, access points, and switches are rated for 0 to 35 degrees Celsius. Field sites in northeastern BC regularly see -30 or colder in winter. Hardware that has not been specified for these environments will fail prematurely - often at the worst time.
Vibration from heavy equipment, diesel generators, and vehicle transport shortens the lifespan of spinning-disk hard drives to months rather than years. All field equipment should use solid-state storage. Fanless designs eliminate another failure point in dusty environments.
Rugged Hardware Considerations
For field laptops and tablets, look for MIL-STD-810H certified devices rated for temperature extremes, shock, vibration, and humidity. Panasonic Toughbook, Dell Latitude Rugged, and Getac are the three primary enterprise-grade rugged lines with Canadian reseller support.
Rugged networking equipment for temporary site installations - access points, switches, and cellular routers - should be rated for extended temperature ranges (typically -40 to +70 degrees Celsius) and designed for DIN rail or enclosure mounting. Peplink and Cradlepoint are commonly deployed in oilfield environments for their cellular failover and remote management features.
Connectivity at Remote Sites
LTE is the baseline connectivity option for most BC and Alberta oilfield sites. Multi-carrier cellular routers with automatic failover between Bell, Telus, and Rogers improve reliability significantly. Cellular coverage gaps in remote northeastern BC make Starlink a compelling option for sites that need reliable connectivity regardless of carrier coverage.
Starlink Business is designed for higher-priority data and provides better performance consistency than Starlink residential in high-usage environments. The hardware is more durable and the service agreement includes a business-grade SLA.
Remote Support Models
Same-day on-site support is not realistic for remote oilfield sites. IT support for field operations should be built around remote access and redundancy rather than rapid physical dispatch. Remote monitoring and management (RMM) tools, configured for low-bandwidth environments, allow proactive maintenance and remote troubleshooting.
For hardware failures, a spare-in-the-field approach works better than waiting for a technician to drive or fly out. Maintain a documented spare kit at each major site: a spare router, a spare switch, and a spare laptop pre-configured for rapid deployment. North Star can manage these kits remotely.
Security Considerations for Field IT
Field devices have a high physical theft and loss risk. Every field laptop and tablet should have full disk encryption enabled and a documented remote wipe procedure. BitLocker on Windows, configured through Intune, provides encryption with centralised management.
Cellular routers at field sites should use private APN configurations where available, or VPN tunnelling for all traffic, to prevent local network attacks. Access to operational technology (OT) networks from IT networks should be strictly segmented.