Managing water without networks: continuous monitoring thanks to satellite IoT
IoT is a key tool for water management: monitoring flows, detecting leaks, and tracking water quality. But one limitation remains: without connectivity, there is no data.
A large share of water infrastructure is located in remote areas: mountain reservoirs, rural networks, dams, and groundwater resources.
As a result, decisions are made without visibility, directly impacting costs, risks, and operational performance.
This is precisely where satellite connectivity makes a difference. It enables sites to be connected without ground infrastructure, continuously and without service interruption.
In this article, we explore three main use cases of satellite connectivity for the water sector:
- monitoring isolated infrastructures
- continuous water quality monitoring
- real-time level monitoring, even without terrestrial networks
Global challenge: massive losses and lack of data
Water management today faces a paradox:
- 126 billion m³ of water lost every year worldwide
- representing $39 billion in annual losses
- Up to 30% of water lost undetected in isolated areas
These losses are directly linked to the lack of continuous monitoring.
Yet:
- more than 30 million km of pipelines must be monitored worldwide (ESSEC study, 2026)
- the smart water monitoring market is growing rapidly, +12.5% annually (ESSEC study, 2026)
The issue is no longer technological. It is about accessing data in non-covered areas.
Use Cases:
- Groundwater and borehole monitoring
- Underground water level management
- Detection of anomalies or critical drops
Measurements:
- Water level
- Pump status
- Pressure
- Energy consumption
Benefits:
- Real-time visibility
- Early warning of water stress
- Dramatic reduction in on-site interventions
Use Cases:
- Reservoir level monitoring
- Buried valve and air valve management
- Leak detection on the network
Measurements:
- Level
- Pressure
- Flow rate
- Quality
Benefits:
- Water loss reduction
- Predictive maintenance
- 24/7 remote supervision
Use Cases:
- Pumping station monitoring
- Storm overflow control
- Sewer network surveillance
Measurements:
- Level
- Flow rate
- Overflow
- Pump alerts
- Pumping cycles
Benefits:
- Reduced flood risk
- Automatic incident alerts
- Remote operation
Use Cases:
- Soil moisture monitoring
- Automatic pump control
- Crop-specific irrigation optimization
Measurements:
- Moisture
- Rainfall
- Irrigation flow
- Pump status
Benefits:
- Water savings
- Improved agricultural yield
- Remote monitoring of isolated areas
Use Cases:
- Aquaculture pond monitoring
- Water quality control
- Automated aeration and feeding
Measurements:
- Temperature
- pH
- Dissolved oxygen
- Turbidity
- Salinity
Benefits:
- Reduced losses
- Optimal conditions for species
- 24/7 remote monitoring
Use Cases:
- Retention and settling pond monitoring
- Mining water quality surveillance
- Level and overflow control
- Accidental pollution alerts
Measurements:
- Level
- Turbidity
- pH
- Conductivity
- Heavy metals
Benefits:
- Leak and overflow prevention
- Environmental and groundwater protection
- Continuous remote monitoring of isolated sites via satellite
Isolated infrastructures: still monitored blindly
Underground pipelines, mountain reservoirs, pumping stations in forests… These critical assets are often outside GSM, LoRa, or fiber coverage.
Consequences:
- no real-time alerts
- reactive rather than preventive maintenance
- high operational costs, up to €1,000 per intervention
- invisible but continuous losses
Meanwhile:
- leaks go unnoticed
- incidents are detected too late
- repairs are delayed
This lack of visibility has both operational and environmental costs.
Key takeaway
30% of water is lost
in remote areas, undetected.
Invisible leaks = lasting losses.
of water is lost globally every year.
From field to screen: making the invisible visible
Critical incidents rarely occur where monitoring exists. Without continuous data, weak signals go unnoticed and decisions are delayed.
With satellite IoT:
- every site becomes visible in real time
- data is transmitted automatically
- alerts are immediate
Result:
- targeted interventions
- optimized maintenance
- reduced field costs
Water quality: invisible pollutants, a major public health issue
Between invisible pollution and increasingly strict environmental regulations, continuous water quality monitoring has become a major public health challenge. But in areas not covered by terrestrial networks, traditional tools are no longer enough.
A strategic blind spot
Pesticides, nitrates, heavy metals, PFAS, pharmaceutical residues… In groundwater, rivers and even drinking water, pollutants are accumulating and spreading in increasingly diffuse ways.
The problem: these contaminations are often detected too late. And in some rural or remote areas, no data is transmitted between two analysis campaigns.
The situation is already critical:
- 59% of European rivers and35% of lakesexceed thresholds for “forever chemicals”
- 80% of global diseases are linked to contaminated water
During droughts, pollutant concentrations rise, directly impacting irrigation, public health and treatment costs.
Toward continuous water quality monitoring
Satellite IoT is changing the paradigm: shifting from retrospective analysis to continuous monitoring.
Autonomous sensors, installed on wells, pipelines or irrigation networks, transmit data in real time—without relying on GSM coverage or terrestrial gateways.
Temperature, turbidity, pH, dissolved oxygen, nitrates or PFAS: multi-parameter connected sensors integrate with operational systems and trigger alerts as soon as thresholds are exceeded.
Some solutions go even further. For example, SUEZ has equipped several remote regions in Senegal with a system combining water quality sensors and satellite transmission for early pollution detection.
These solutions are plug-and-play, interoperable, and designed for remote environments. The data collected is transmitted, analyzed, and ready to use to:
- Limit plant shutdowns or downstream pollution
- Reduce field inspection rounds
- Anticipate pollution peaks
- Ensure regulatory compliance
Moreover, the new European Drinking Water Directive requires enhanced monitoring of emerging pollutants, with stricter thresholds and alert obligations. Satellite IoT is one of the solutions to meet these requirements.
Water levels: anticipating climate crises
Floods, droughts, overexploitation: water resources are becoming increasingly unstable.
x5
flood-related damages in Europe could increase fivefold by 2050 without adaptation (EU, +3°C scenario).
people affected by floods over the past 20 years (UN/FAO, 2022).
in economic losses linked to floods worldwide between 2000 and 2019 (UNDRR, 2020).
And yet, many areas remain unmonitored. Data collection is still sometimes manual. Some systems, such as SWOT, can take up to 11 days to deliver usable measurements—far too slow for operational decision-making.
Better prevention, without waiting for a crisis
Continuous monitoring of water levels has become critical. But without sensors, network coverage, or local power—how can it be done?
Satellite IoT now makes it possible to equip remote areas with autonomous sensors.
In rural or mountainous regions, many waterways are still not instrumented. Without GSM coverage, reservoirs, canals, and retention basins remain difficult to monitor, even though they play a key role during floods or droughts.
Thanks to satellite connectivity, each micro-station installed can directly transmit data such as:
- Flow rate
- Water level
- Turbidity
- Pressure
These measurements continuously feed operational monitoring systems.
Alerts are triggered as soon as critical thresholds are exceeded. Decisions can then be made quickly, remotely—without waiting for on-site intervention.
Staying in control, even off-network
Water-related challenges—aging infrastructure, pollution, resource management—require reliable, continuous, real-time data.
But in the field, terrestrial networks are not enough.
With satellite connectivity:
- Coverage gaps become visible
- Alerts are automatically transmitted
- Management processes become automated
How can we help you better monitor your water resources?
About us
Created in 2018, Kinéis is a satellite IoT operator.
© kineis - IoT everywhere - 2023
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