Managing EHS compliance across one oilfield site is demanding.
Managing it across multiple sites is a different challenge entirely.
Oilfield operators may have drilling sites, service yards, storage areas, maintenance locations, production facilities, and remote field operations spread across different regions. Each location may involve different hazards, different crews, different supervisors, different state requirements, and different levels of documentation maturity.
At the same time, OSHA expectations for worker safety and EPA requirements for environmental compliance do not slow down because operations are spread out. Workers still need proper training, hazard controls, PPE, emergency procedures, and safe work practices. Hazardous materials and waste still need to be identified, stored, documented, transported, and managed correctly.
That is where EHS managed services can make a major difference.
For oilfield operators, managed services provide structured support, specialized expertise, consistent documentation, site-level visibility, and practical safety guidance that internal teams may not have the time or capacity to maintain across every location.
Why Multi-Site Oilfield Compliance Is So Difficult
Oilfield operations are complex because every site has its own conditions.
One site may handle hazardous waste. Another may have confined space risks. Another may involve heavy equipment, elevated work, chemical storage, respiratory exposure, or emergency response needs. Some locations may be remote. Some may have high turnover. Others may rely on rotating crews or contractors.
The uploaded draft highlights this challenge clearly: each site demands consistent safety standards, current documentation, and trained personnel, but maintaining that level of oversight with internal resources alone often falls short.
The problem is not always lack of effort. It is often lack of visibility.
Corporate EHS leaders may create strong policies, but they cannot always see whether those policies are being applied correctly at every site. A report may show training completion, while field behavior tells a different story. A hazardous waste log may look current, while containers at one site are mislabeled or stored incorrectly. A site may have written procedures, but workers may be improvising because conditions changed.
Multi-site compliance requires more than policy distribution. It requires active management.
OSHA and EPA Requirements Must Work Together
Oilfield compliance often involves both worker safety and environmental responsibility.
OSHA focuses on protecting workers. That includes hazard communication, PPE, respiratory protection, emergency response, training, exposure control, confined space safety, fall protection, electrical safety, and safe work practices.
EPA and RCRA requirements focus heavily on how hazardous waste is identified, stored, handled, transported, documented, and disposed of. EPA states that RCRA generator regulations are designed to ensure hazardous waste is properly identified and handled safely to protect human health and the environment.
A common mistake is treating OSHA and EPA compliance as separate programs.
In reality, they overlap every day in oilfield operations. A hazardous waste storage area is not only an environmental concern. It is also a worker exposure concern. A spill is not only a reporting issue. It may also require emergency response, PPE, training, and exposure controls. A waste container is not only a disposal item. It may also create labeling, handling, compatibility, and employee safety questions.
EHS managed services help connect these programs so worker protection and environmental compliance support each other.
What EHS Managed Services Include
EHS managed services provide outside safety and compliance expertise that supports internal teams.
For oilfield operators, this can include safety assessments, compliance monitoring, documentation support, training coordination, program reviews, site visits, hazardous materials oversight, incident support, and practical recommendations that apply across multiple locations.
The uploaded draft describes managed services as a structured way to handle environmental, health, and safety responsibilities through external specialists who support safety assessments, compliance monitoring, training programs, and documentation across sites.
A managed services program may include:
- Site-specific safety assessments
- OSHA compliance reviews
- EPA and hazardous waste program support
- PPE program evaluation
- Hazard communication review
- Training documentation support
- Emergency response planning
- Incident and near-miss review
- Corrective action tracking
- Contractor safety support
- Hazardous materials and waste documentation
- Standardized procedures across locations
- Support for audits and inspections
Arbill’s EHS managed services can help organizations strengthen safety programs with expert support that extends beyond basic compliance checklists.





