Why manual monitoring fails
Most environmental monitoring relies on periodic manual sampling — grab samples taken monthly or quarterly and sent to a lab. Results arrive weeks later. If parameters were exceeded, the exceedance happened weeks ago. There is no way to correlate environmental data with operational conditions. And there is no way to catch short-duration spikes that happen between samples.
Continuous IoT monitoring
- Air quality — PM2.5, PM10, SO2, NOx, CO, and VOC sensors with 1-minute readings
- Water quality — pH, turbidity, dissolved oxygen, COD/BOD, and heavy metals at discharge points
- Noise levels — decibel meters at facility boundaries with time-weighted averages
- Stack emissions — continuous emission monitoring systems (CEMS) for regulated sources
- Weather station — wind direction, speed, and atmospheric conditions for dispersion context
Regulatory integration
Many jurisdictions now require continuous monitoring data to be transmitted directly to regulatory portals. The platform can push data to government systems automatically, generate compliance reports in the required format, and maintain the audit trail that regulators expect. All from the same system that manages your operations.
Environmental compliance is not a monthly report. It is a continuous responsibility. Your monitoring should match.