ROMPETROL

DĂEȘTI

Where fuel flows, data must flow too.

WHY?

The story:

Compressor stations never sleep.

At the Rompetrol platform in Ploiești, where compressor stations never sleep, more robust equipment was required.
There was a need for visibility, control, and reliable data. Because when you’re pumping fuel, you also need the confidence that everything runs smoothly.

WHAT?

The challenge:

What you can’t measure, you can’t control.

The client came with a clear need:

✅ Monitoring of the compressor station
✅ Integration into a SCADA platform providing real-time information on equipment status, operation, alarms, and key parameters relevant for operation and maintenance

HOW?

The solution:

One platform. Real-time visibility.

We implemented an automation solution designed to speak the same language as the operators.

🔩 What we used:

  • Intuitive, centralized, and accessible SCADA interface
  • Real-time monitoring of parameters within the compressor station
  • Integration with the existing infrastructure
  • Automated reporting for maintenance and operations teams

WHAT WAS ACHIEVED?

The result:

Clarity and control

📈 Data by the second. Faster decisions. Full control.

💡 Increased visibility: it is now clear what is happening in every corner of the plant.

⚙️ Less stress: the system flags anomalies in real time, allowing teams to intervene before major issues arise.

😊 More joy: when things work as they should, the positive energy is felt among people too.

CLIENT THOUGHTS?

When it’s quiet, it’s good

“Our collaboration with bitYes provided not only a technical solution, but also a genuinely positive human experience. A team with solid expertise, with whom we felt we spoke the same language. The implemented SCADA system now gives us control, efficiency, and above all, peace of mind.”


– Representative, Rompetrol Dăești

BACKSTAGE

When technology meets nature

During testing, the vibration sensor on the main compressor proved to be so sensitive that it detected… a metal door rattling because of an air draft. We nicknamed it “the weather sensor.”
Now we even know when the wind is blowing through the station. 😄