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- 21 May 2026
Connectivity in the Field: How Next-Generation Wi-Fi is Transforming Oil & Gas Operations Across the Gulf
Author: Aurang Zaib, Technology Head, Northstar Telecom
In an industry where the margin between safe and unsafe can be measured in milliseconds, “good enough” connectivity is no longer enough.
The Gulf oil and gas sector is entering a new era — one driven by intelligent infrastructure, real-time operations, and connected industrial environments. From offshore rigs to sprawling refinery complexes, the need for resilient, low-latency, high-capacity wireless networking has never been greater.
Legacy systems that once supported basic communications are now struggling under the demands of modern energy operations. Thousands of IoT sensors, AI-driven monitoring platforms, autonomous inspections, HD surveillance feeds, and augmented reality maintenance tools all require a level of network performance that older wireless infrastructure simply was not designed to deliver.
Across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), operators are recognising connectivity not as a utility, but as strategic infrastructure.
A Sector Built on Precision, Running on Legacy Networks
Oil and gas operations are among the most technologically demanding environments in the world.
Operators across Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and Oman manage:
- Offshore platforms exposed to harsh marine conditions
- Massive refinery and processing facilities
- Remote desert oilfields and worker camps
- Long-distance pipeline corridors
- Logistics hubs handling continuous industrial operations
These environments demand uninterrupted communication and data exchange. Yet many facilities still rely on ageing wireless systems originally designed for voice traffic and basic operational data.
The result is a widening gap between the requirements of the modern intelligent oilfield and the capabilities of legacy networking infrastructure.
In industrial environments, network congestion and latency are not minor inconveniences. They can directly affect:
- Worker safety
- Emergency response times
- Predictive maintenance systems
- Operational efficiency
- Asset visibility and control
This is precisely where Wi-Fi 7 enters the conversation.
What Makes Wi-Fi 7 Different?
Wi-Fi 7 (IEEE 802.11be) represents a major leap in enterprise wireless networking capability, particularly for high-density industrial environments such as refineries, operational facilities, control centres, and oilfield camps.
Rather than being an incremental upgrade, Wi-Fi 7 introduces architectural improvements designed specifically for modern, data-intensive operations.
Ultra-High Throughput
Wi-Fi 7 supports theoretical speeds of up to 46 Gbps, allowing a single network to simultaneously handle:
- Real-time sensor data
- HD video surveillance
- Voice communications
- AR/VR applications
- Industrial automation systems
without degrading network performance.
For refinery operations and centralised monitoring centres, this level of capacity fundamentally changes what can be achieved operationally.
Multi-Link Operation (MLO)
One of Wi-Fi 7’s most important capabilities is Multi-Link Operation (MLO).
This allows devices to transmit and receive data across multiple frequency bands simultaneously. If interference affects one channel, traffic can automatically shift to another without interrupting connectivity.
In industrial facilities filled with heavy equipment and radio interference, this creates a far more resilient network environment — especially for safety-critical systems where every alert must be delivered reliably.
Massive Device Density
Modern oil and gas operations increasingly depend on large-scale IoT deployments.
Wi-Fi 7’s support for 4096-QAM modulation and wider 320 MHz channels allows networks to support thousands of simultaneous connected devices without performance degradation.
That scalability is critical as intelligent facilities continue to evolve.
Five Ways Wi-Fi 7 is Reshaping Gulf Energy Operations
1. Smarter Control Rooms and Monitoring Centres
Control rooms sit at the heart of refinery and processing operations. Operators, systems, communications platforms, and monitoring tools all converge here in real time.
Wi-Fi 7 provides the low-latency, high-capacity connectivity required to ensure operational continuity, even in extremely demanding environments.
2. Reliable Connectivity Across Oilfield Camps
Remote oilfield camps often function as communications hubs for wider operations.
Workers depend on reliable access to:
- Safety systems
- Operational communications
- Training platforms
- Remote collaboration tools
- Personal connectivity services
Wi-Fi 7 enables enterprise-grade wireless coverage across these facilities, replacing inconsistent legacy systems with stable, scalable infrastructure.
3. AR-Based Maintenance and Remote Support
Augmented reality is rapidly becoming a practical maintenance tool across industrial sectors.
With AR-enabled workflows, remote specialists can guide field technicians through complex repairs using real-time video and immersive overlays. However, these systems require uninterrupted low-latency connectivity to function effectively.
Wi-Fi 7 provides the bandwidth and reliability necessary to support these next-generation maintenance environments.
4. Connected Refinery and Logistics Operations
Refineries and logistics facilities operate thousands of simultaneous systems across vast industrial footprints.
High-density Wi-Fi 7 deployments enable all these applications to coexist on a unified network infrastructure, improving:
- Situational awareness
- Workflow coordination
- Asset monitoring
- Inspection efficiency
- Operational responsiveness
5. Faster Emergency and Safety Response
In hazardous industrial environments, connectivity itself becomes part of the safety system.
Critical applications such as:
- Gas detection systems
- Worker location tracking
- Emergency shutdown signals
- Environmental monitoring
all rely on continuous, resilient communication.
Wi-Fi 7’s resilience and failover capabilities make it particularly suited to these safety-critical use cases.
Why the Wired Infrastructure Matters Too
Wireless performance is only as strong as the infrastructure behind it.
In oil and gas facilities, industrial-grade managed switches form the backbone of the network, connecting:
- Access points
- Cameras
- Sensors
- Operational technology (OT) systems
- Monitoring platforms
These systems provide:
- VLAN segmentation for OT and IT isolation
- Power over Ethernet (PoE) for connected devices
- Intelligent Layer 2 and Layer 3 traffic management
Without a robust switching architecture, even the most advanced Wi-Fi deployment cannot deliver the performance industrial operations require.
The GCC’s Digital Transformation Momentum
The timing of this shift is significant.
Across the Gulf region, national transformation programmes are accelerating investment into intelligent infrastructure:
- Saudi Vision 2030
- UAE AI Strategy
- Bahrain Economic Vision
- Qatar National Vision 2030
All place digital transformation at the centre of economic growth.
The GCC telecom market, valued at approximately $83.99 billion in 2024, is projected to reach $151 billion by 2033. Much of that investment is flowing into industrial and enterprise networking infrastructure designed to support AI, IoT, and connected operations.
For the oil and gas industry, this creates the foundation for the intelligent oilfield — where every asset, worker, and system is connected in real time.
What Energy Operators Should Look for in a Networking Partner
Choosing a Wi-Fi 7 solution for industrial environments involves far more than selecting access points.
Ruggedised Industrial Hardware
Networking equipment deployed in Gulf oil and gas facilities must withstand:
- Extreme temperatures
- Dust and sand exposure
- Humidity
- Continuous vibration
Consumer-grade or office-focused equipment is not sufficient for these conditions.
Predictable Long-Term Costs
Many enterprise networking vendors rely heavily on recurring licensing models.
A license-free architecture can significantly reduce long-term operational costs and provide greater financial predictability for operators.
Flexible Deployment Options
For many operators, data sovereignty and operational security remain non-negotiable.
Cloud-managed and on-premise deployment options both play an important role depending on operational requirements.
Full Infrastructure Integration
Effective industrial networking requires more than standalone wireless access points.
Operators should look for integrated ecosystems that combine:
- Wi-Fi infrastructure
- Industrial switching
- Wireless backhaul
- Unified management platforms
- Indoor and outdoor networking solutions
Regional Expertise and Support
Local operational knowledge matters.
Deploying enterprise networking across GCC energy infrastructure requires partners who understand regional regulations, environmental conditions, and operational realities.
IO by HFCL: Built for Industrial Gulf Environments
IO by HFCL positions itself as a purpose-built enterprise networking portfolio designed for demanding industrial applications.
Its offering combines:
- Wi-Fi 7 access points
- Multi-gigabit PoE switching infrastructure
- AI-driven network management through IO Canvas
- Cloud and on-premise deployment flexibility
- License-free operational models
Within the GCC, IO by HFCL works alongside Northstar Technology to support deployments across oilfield facilities, refineries, government projects, and smart infrastructure initiatives.
The focus is clear: delivering enterprise-grade connectivity infrastructure tailored for the operational realities of Gulf industrial environments.
The Future of Oil & Gas Connectivity Has Already Started
The oil and gas industry has consistently evolved through technological transformation — from offshore drilling innovations to digital process control systems.
Next-generation wireless infrastructure is now becoming the next major operational advantage.
For Gulf operators, the question is no longer whether modern connectivity infrastructure is necessary. The question is how quickly organisations can deploy the networks required to support intelligent operations at scale.
The technology is ready.
The region is investing.
The operators that move first may gain the greatest long-term advantage.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Wi-Fi 7?
Wi-Fi 7, also known as IEEE 802.11be, is the latest generation of wireless networking technology designed to deliver ultra-high throughput, lower latency, and improved reliability for high-density environments.
Why is Wi-Fi 7 important for oil and gas operations?
Oil and gas facilities increasingly rely on connected systems such as IoT sensors, AI platforms, HD surveillance, and remote monitoring tools. Wi-Fi 7 provides the speed, reliability, and device capacity needed to support these mission-critical applications.
Can Wi-Fi 7 improve worker safety?
Yes. Wi-Fi 7 supports real-time communication for gas detection systems, worker tracking, emergency shutdown systems, and safety monitoring platforms where low latency and uninterrupted connectivity are essential.
What is Multi-Link Operation (MLO)?
Multi-Link Operation allows devices to use multiple wireless frequency bands simultaneously. This improves reliability and reduces interruptions caused by interference in industrial environments.
Is Wi-Fi 7 replacing wired infrastructure?
No. Wi-Fi 7 depends on strong wired infrastructure, including industrial-grade managed switches that provide power, traffic management, and secure network segmentation across operational environments.
What should oil and gas operators look for in a Wi-Fi 7 solution?
Operators should prioritise rugged industrial hardware, scalable infrastructure, flexible deployment models, integrated networking ecosystems, and local regional support capabilities.
Ready to Modernise Connectivity Across Your GCC Operations?
Explore how IO by HFCL and Northstar Technology are helping Gulf energy operators deploy resilient, enterprise-grade Wi-Fi 7 infrastructure across refineries, oilfield camps, and industrial facilities.
