Industrial Wireless


Revealing unseen leaks

I&C February 2026 Industrial Wireless

As water tariffs rise and infrastructure continues to age, utilities across the Nordic region are under growing pressure to do more with less. While much of the stress is visible in budgets and regulatory reports, the core challenge lies beneath the surface: in long-distance networks, buried pipelines and elusive leaks. Mano Koolen, channel sales manager at Ovarro, the leak detection specialist, outlines how municipalities are responding to hidden water loss using acoustic monitoring and analysis tools that provide early indications of developing leaks.

Global Water Intelligence’s 2025 Tariff Survey shows that in Europe around 30% of water is lost before it reaches households, and traditional methods to detect these leaks often fall short. Leaks occur underground, in remote terrain, under extreme temperatures and high pressures, and traditional detection methods often miss issues that go unresolved for months.

The invisible challenge of Nordic geography

Norway alone spans over 2400 kilometres, with networks winding through mountains, valleys and sparsely populated areas. Manholes are up to 4,5 metres deep. Seasonal temperature swing from 40°C in summer to -30°C in winter, and the physical stress on older pipes is substantial. Materials like cast iron expand and contract over time, developing cracks that go undetected by conventional tools.

Operational fragmentation adds another layer of complexity. Water, wastewater and maintenance teams often use separate systems. Cybersecurity considerations and connectivity limitations also impact the adoption of new monitoring technologies.

From routine inspection to real-time insight

Many Nordic utilities are rethinking their approach. By integrating departments, strengthening data quality and using acoustic logging to track anomalies, they are moving away from reactive maintenance towards earlier, data-driven intervention. Organisations that adopt proactive methods typically reduce unplanned outages by intervening earlier, with greater accuracy. A McKinsey finding is that AI-powered predictive maintenance can cut service disruptions by up to 50%.

Acoustic logging in particular has been transformative. Rather than waiting for surface signs of failure, utilities now deploy fixed or portable devices to ‘listen’ for pressurised leaks. By identifying leaks at an early stage, the systems provide a predictive indication of where losses are likely to intensify if left untreated.

Hamar: a real-world return on investment

A recent project in Hamar, Norway, demonstrates the value of this shift. The municipality installed Enigma5 fixed acoustic loggers from Ovarro to monitor a challenging section of pipeline. Within days, the system flagged an anomaly. Engineers correlated the data between two loggers and confirmed a leak releasing 600 cubic metres of water daily. Financially, the loss translated to €2718 per day, or more than €990 000 per year.

Without the system in place, the leak could have gone undetected for months. The area was hard to access and the manhole particularly deep, yet the acoustic signature was clear, enabling rapid confirmation and repair. In this case, the return on investment was measured not in years, but in weeks.

A similar success was seen in Oslo, where 75 Enigma5 hydrophones helped reduce night-time water consumption from 80 litres per second to just 22. Around half of this saving was directly linked to the leak detection technology, delivering an estimated annual cost reduction of €120 000. Once again, the return on investment was not measured in years, but in immediate, measurable gains.

Towards continuous oversight

Portable loggers, such as EnigmaREACH, complement fixed systems by allowing utilities to survey wider areas using the lift-and-shift method. Deployed across a stretch of pipeline, they record overnight and are retrieved for analysis the next day. By combining sweep-based and fixed monitoring, municipalities gain both flexibility and consistency, converting periodic inspection into continuous oversight.

The result is greater control over networks that were once monitored intermittently. Utilities can detect new leaks early and ensure repaired sections remain stable. With growing public expectations and rising costs, this ability to act quickly and accurately is critical.

Empowering sustainable progress

As Nordic utilities respond to financial pressures and sustainability goals, the focus is shifting from repair to detection. The case in Hamar is one example, but similar stories are emerging across the region, from remote farmland to dense urban networks. The technology is proven, the need is pressing and the benefits are immediate.

Ovarro’s portfolio of acoustic monitoring and telemetry solutions, including Enigma5, EnigmaREACH and advanced RTUs, is helping utilities close the gap between visibility and action. By revealing the unseen, Nordic municipalities are laying the foundation for long-term sustainability, one leak at a time.

For more information contact Ovarro, +44 124 643 7580, [email protected], www.ovarro.com




Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Remote water monitoring
Omniflex Remote Monitoring Specialists Industrial Wireless
Remote monitoring specialist, Omniflex has helped New South Wales Ports improve its ability to track water usage by installing remote monitoring to 38 water meters at its Port Kembla site, sending the data to the NSWPorts web portal.

Read more...
Control and information overlay for nuclear plants
Omniflex Remote Monitoring Specialists Industrial Wireless
Radiation monitoring specialist Omniflex has supported a major UK nuclear plant operator through a critical phase of its decommissioning programme, ensuring continuous safety and security monitoring as buildings were progressively de-manned.

Read more...
Upgrading an outdated alarm monitoring system
Omniflex Remote Monitoring Specialists Industrial Wireless
Legacy alarm replacement specialist, Omniflex has successfully upgraded Guernsey Electricity’s MPAS90 alarm annunciator systems, which were first installed decades ago and are obsolete.

Read more...
Upgrading obsolete rack-based alarms
Omniflex Remote Monitoring Specialists Industrial Wireless
Legacy alarm replacement specialist, Omniflex has supported a major oil and gas company in Qatar by upgrading the obsolete MPAS 90 alarm systems at one of its major plants in the country.

Read more...
Würth Elektronik presents new radio modules
Industrial Wireless
Würth Elektronik has introduced two new highly compact radio modules. They give developers maximum freedom in designing proprietary wireless solutions that go beyond standard protocols.

Read more...
Senseca introduces data loggers to meet long range transmission needs
Senseca Industrial Wireless
Senseca has introduced the driven LR35 data logger series based on LoRaWAN technology. They are specifically designed for situations where long-range transmission is required.

Read more...
Omniflex upgrades alarms for Uganda hydro plants
Omniflex Remote Monitoring Specialists Industrial Wireless
Omniflex has worked with Uganda Electricity Generation Company to provide an upgrade solution for the plant alarm equipment across the Nalubaale and Kiira hydroelectric power stations on Lake Victoria.

Read more...
New RFID communication module
Siemens South Africa Industrial Wireless
The new Siemens RFID communication module, Simatic RF128C enhances efficiency and flexibility, making it ideal for applications in the battery, electronics and semiconductor industries.

Read more...
Advanced missing person locator system to boost mine safety
Industrial Wireless
Becker Mining South Africa has enhanced its state-of-the-art Missing Person Locator system, a powerful module integrated into the company’s comprehensive SmartFlow digital mine visualisation and management platform, designed to enhance emergency preparedness and personnel safety in mining operations worldwide.

Read more...
New RFID communication module
Siemens South Africa Industrial Wireless
The new Siemens RFID communication module, Simatic RF128C enhances efficiency and flexibility, making it ideal for applications in the battery, electronics and semiconductor industries.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved