
Oil and gas companies in Iraq operate in physically distributed environments. Field sites, drilling locations, and headquarters offices must share operational data in real time.
However, many organizations hesitate to move fully to the cloud due to:
• Regulatory considerations
• Connectivity instability
• Latency concerns
• Data sovereignty requirements
That is where the hybrid cloud in Iraq becomes the practical solution.
At Osous Al Taqnia, we recently designed a Microsoft Azure hybrid cloud architecture for an oil and gas operator managing field operations in Basra and executive management in Baghdad.
This case study explains the challenge, the architecture approach, and the measurable results.
If your organization needs secure field-to-HQ connectivity without abandoning on-premise infrastructure, this example will help.
The client operated:
• On-premise ERP servers in Baghdad
• SCADA-connected monitoring systems in field sites
• VPN access for engineers
• Manual data synchronization
Their main risks included:
• Field connectivity interruptions
• Data replication delays
• Backup systems located in the same physical location
• Limited centralized monitoring
In simple terms, they needed resilience without losing operational control.
After evaluating options, they engaged Osous Al Taqnia to design a structured Azure hybrid cloud strategy in Iraq.
Full cloud migration can be effective, but for oil and gas in Iraq, a hybrid architecture often provides a better balance.
Hybrid cloud allows:
• Core systems to remain on-premise
• Disaster recovery hosted in Azure
• Secure data replication
• Centralized monitoring
• Gradual cloud transition
As a certified Microsoft Partner in Iraq, we designed an architecture that respected regulatory and operational constraints.
We began with:
• Server capacity evaluation
• Network bandwidth testing
• Data classification review
• Regulatory requirement mapping
We identified that SCADA systems required local processing due to latency sensitivity.
However, backup replication and analytics workloads could be safely moved to Azure. This selective migration reduced risk.
We implemented:
• Azure Virtual Machines for analytics
• Azure Site Recovery for failover
• Encrypted VPN tunnels between sites
• Azure Monitor for centralized dashboards
The architecture included:
• Local data processing at field level
• Automatic replication to Azure storage
• Cloud-based disaster recovery
When integrated with Azure cloud infrastructure in Iraq, the organization achieved resilience without full dependency on cloud connectivity.
Security is critical in oil and gas operations.
We configured:
• Role-based access policies
• Conditional access rules
• Microsoft Defender for Cloud integration
• Multi-factor authentication
This ensured that remote engineers accessed only necessary systems.
If your organization operates across multiple locations, combining a hybrid cloud in Iraq with endpoint security provides layered protection.
Before going live, we conducted:
• Disaster recovery simulations
• Failover testing
• Load balancing validation
• Backup restoration drills
Recovery time was reduced from 36 hours to under 45 minutes.
That level of resilience significantly reduced operational risk.
Within five months, the oil and gas operator achieved:
• 80 percent improvement in backup reliability
• 60 percent faster data synchronization
• Reduced hardware upgrade expenses
• Improved executive visibility into field performance
• Regulatory compliance documentation readiness
Most importantly, management gained confidence that operations could continue even during infrastructure disruptions.
Industrial sectors in Iraq often face:
• Connectivity variability
• Physical security risks
• Remote workforce challenges
• High infrastructure maintenance costs
Hybrid cloud architecture provides:
• Scalability
• Secure redundancy
• Gradual modernization
• Predictable operational costs
When combined with Microsoft Defender in Iraq and structured Azure monitoring, organizations build a resilient digital foundation.
Hybrid cloud reduces capital expenditure by avoiding unnecessary full cloud migration. Costs are optimized through selective workload placement.
Yes, when configured properly. Cloud replication adds an additional protection layer against physical disasters.
Yes, hybrid models allow sensitive systems to remain locally hosted while leveraging Azure for resilience.
Hybrid architecture requires careful planning. We provide:
• Infrastructure assessment
• Regulatory compliance alignment
• Azure configuration
• Security integration
• Ongoing monitoring
With teams in Baghdad, Basra, and Erbil, we understand Iraq’s industrial environment and connectivity challenges.
If your organization operates in oil and gas, manufacturing, or heavy industry, talk to our experts about designing a hybrid cloud roadmap.
If your organization:
• Relies only on local servers
• Has limited disaster recovery
• Faces field connectivity issues
• Needs scalable analytics
It may be time to explore a hybrid cloud in Iraq.
Request a quote and let our team design a secure Azure hybrid architecture tailored to your operations.
6th Floor, The Meydan Hotel, Nad Al Sheba, Dubai
Villa S 11/5, Atconz, Erbil
62nd St, Baghdad