Cellular Backhaul for SCADA, RTU & Industrial Telemetry Networks

SCADA systems, RTUs, and PLCs depend on continuous low-latency data exchange to maintain visibility over distributed process control infrastructure. Modbus, DNP3, and IEC 60870-5-104 polling cycles, alarm propagation, and historian backhaul require reliable transport with minimal jitter and guaranteed recovery after outages.

Cellular connectivity provides backhaul for telemetry networks spanning water treatment plants, remote pumping stations, pipeline monitoring, substation automation, tank farms, and industrial sites where leased-line deployment is cost-prohibitive or geographically impractical.

Common Challenges in Telemetry Deployments

Where Industrial Connectivity Enables Telemetry

Typical Telemetry & Monitoring Use Cases

Deployment Considerations

Security and Data Integrity

SCADA and process control networks operate under strict segmentation requirements (IEC 62443, NERC CIP). Cellular backhaul must provide:

Network Topology

Field instruments (4–20mA, digital I/O, Modbus RTU sensors) connect to a local RTU or protocol gateway. The gateway polls devices, timestamps readings, and forwards Modbus TCP or DNP3 over Ethernet to an industrial cellular router with external LTE/5G antennas. The router establishes an IPsec tunnel to a master station or SCADA front-end, isolating operational traffic from corporate VLANs. Separate out-of-band management tunnels allow remote router access without exposing the process control plane.

Data Buffering, Recovery and Consistency

SCADA systems require deterministic recovery. Gateways buffer timestamped polls in local non-volatile storage during cellular outages, then replay stored samples in chronological order once the tunnel re-establishes. Sequence numbering and change-of-value filtering prevent duplicate alarm annunciation. TCP keepalives and application-layer heartbeats (DNP3 integrity polls, Modbus watchdog registers) detect stale sessions before control commands are issued.

Why Cellular Connectivity Is Used Instead of Fixed Lines

Leased lines to remote pumping stations, pipeline valve sites, and rural substations incur £200–500/month per circuit plus installation lead times exceeding six months. Cellular provides sub-£20/month connectivity with same-day deployment. LTE latency (30–70ms) and 5G latency (10–30ms) meet SCADA polling requirements (typically 1–10 second cycles) when edge buffering absorbs temporary signal fades. Dual-SIM failover across operators provides resilience comparable to secondary fixed links.

Why Connected IoT

Discuss Your Remote Monitoring & Telemetry Requirements

For related deployment guidance, see our water & wastewater, wind & remote assets, DeviceHub management and VPN and antenna optimisation pages.

If you operate systems that require stable, secure connectivity, we can help specify the correct industrial router, antenna setup and connectivity approach for your deployment.