News Archive

IP Terminal

by msecadm4921

IP video has been installed for security at Royal Vopak’s petrochemical storage terminal in West Thurrock. There health and safety is paramount.

The terminal provides storage and handling of liquid and gaseous chemical and oil products for Vopak’s customers. Products are transported from the terminal to the customer by road, pipeline and river via the three-berth jetty.

Vopak Terminal London recently chose to upgrade their ageing analogue CCTV with end-to-end networked IP video from IndigoVision. The 40-camera system was specified by consultants, M J Partnership and installed by ADT, with Waterstons, Vopak’s IT consultants. At the heart of the system is ‘Control Center’, IndigoVision’s IP video and alarm management software, which allows operators to view live and recorded footage, from any camera, from any point on the network. Vopak has utilised this flexibility with the installation of a number of ‘Control Center’ workstations both in the central control room and at other locations around the site, allowing other authorised staff to access the system. ‘Control Center’ software is licence-free, which means Vopak can install a workstation for no more cost than a PC.

The IP Video system has provided Vopak with benefits including fast image retrieval and greatly improved live and recorded video quality, which can be used for evidential purposes; something that was not achievable with the old analogue system.Video footage can also be used as a training aid for Vopak.

“We are delighted with the new CCTV system,” said Peter Lloyd, Engineering Manager at Vopak Terminal London. “The video quality is exceptional and the flexibility of the ‘Control Center’ software is allowing us to use it as a site-wide management tool.”

Video recording is achieved using IndigoVision’s Network Video Recorder (NVR) software which provides up to 3 months of continuous storage from all of the cameras. ‘Control Center’ provides a number of tools that allows fast retrieval and analysis of the recorded footage by the operator. The 40 CCTV cameras, which are a mix of fixed and PTZ from the original installation, are each connected to an IndigoVision 8000 transmitter/receiver module which converts the analogue camera feed into DVD-quality MPEG-4 digital video for transmission over the network.

The combination of ‘Control Center’ software and the network creates a ‘virtual matrix’, which is a more flexible and scalable video switching platform than the original analogue matrix that it replaced. Any camera on the network can be viewed from any workstation on the network, no matter where. Similarly, any workstation can access recorded video from the NVR server. This scalability also means that it is the firm claims cost effective to expand the system in the future as cameras can be added to any point on the network without the need to run new cabling.

Related News

  • News Archive

    NHS Breaches

    by msecadm4921

    A report published by Big Brother Watch, a privacy campaign group, suggested that confidentiality of NHS records is breached, with patient records…

  • News Archive

    Analogue Outdated

    by msecadm4921

    In Oregon, US, OMSI faced a typical security issue of outdated analogue technology. The 219,000-square-foot Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI)…

  • News Archive

    Retail CCTV View

    by msecadm4921

    Burglary, shoplifting, internal theft, collusion, credit card fraud, ram raiding and violence against staff are among the challenges of retail security managers,…

Newsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to stay on top of security news and events.

© 2024 Professional Security Magazine. All rights reserved.

Website by MSEC Marketing