Industry Directory
Transportation SCADA Integrators
This page highlights system integrators who work in transportation and logistics environments. Many of these firms support SCADA and controls projects for terminals, ports, intermodal yards, distribution centers, and related infrastructure.
How SCADA is Used in Transportation and Logistics
Transportation and logistics facilities use SCADA to monitor and control equipment that moves, stores, or protects goods. Integrators connect cranes, conveyors, automated storage, fueling systems, and building utilities so operators can see status, alarms, and throughput across the site.
In intermodal yards and ports, SCADA may also oversee gate systems, reefer monitoring, and yard equipment. At distribution centers, it can provide a consolidated view of material handling systems and supporting utilities that influence uptime.
Interfaces to Yard, WMS, and Operations Systems
SCADA in transportation and logistics often coexists with yard management, warehouse management (WMS), and terminal operating systems. Integrators may be asked to pass status, alarms, or basic counts into those systems so operations teams can see how equipment performance affects scheduling and dwell time.
Projects may require careful coordination between OT networks and IT infrastructure, especially when remote access and vendor support need to follow existing security policies.
When Transportation Operators Engage SCADA Integrators
Operators typically bring in integrators when they add new equipment, expand capacity, or modernize aging controls. Work can include tying new material handling systems into an existing SCADA layer, consolidating multiple vendor HMIs, or improving how alarms and KPIs are presented to dispatch and operations teams.
Directory Coverage for Transportation
This directory includes integrators who have identified transportation or logistics as one of their focus areas. Listings may change over time as firms update their capabilities, regions, and supported platforms.
When reviewing candidates, consider their experience with the type of facility you operate—such as ports, rail yards, airports, or distribution centers—and how closely their past projects align with your safety and operations practices.