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Issue 5 — From Reactive to Condition-Based Maintenance

After data begins to work for operations, maintenance teams often reach an uncomfortable realisation:

They are still working hard —but reacting too often.

 

When Maintenance Is Always Urgent

In many water utilities, maintenance activity is driven by:

  • Fixed schedules
  • Alarms that demand immediate attention
  • Failures that cannot be ignored

This approach keeps assets running, but at a cost.

Teams are busy.
Resources are stretched.
Failures feel familiar — and frustratingly repetitive.

The problem is not effort.
It is timing.

 

Why Reactive Maintenance Persists

Reactive maintenance persists because it feels safe.

A pump fails → it is repaired.
An alarm triggers → it is addressed.
A schedule arrives → work is done.

These actions are visible, measurable, and defensible. But they are also blind to gradual change.

Slow degradation, abnormal stress, and early warning signs often go unnoticed — not because data is missing, but because it is not being used in context.

 

The Shift Toward Condition-Based Thinking

When utilities begin using operational history meaningfully, maintenance conversations start to change.

Instead of asking:When is the next scheduled service?

Teams begin asking:

  • Is this asset behaving differently from before?
  • Is its condition changing faster than expected?
  • Should maintenance happen now — or can it wait?

This marks the move from time-based maintenance to condition-based maintenance.

 

 

What Condition-Based Maintenance Really Means

Condition-based maintenance is not about predicting the future.

It is about understanding the present more clearly.

Using historical operational data, teams can:

  • Identify abnormal operating patterns
  • Detect gradual performance degradation
  • Correlate process conditions with asset stress
  • Prioritise maintenance based on actual condition

Maintenance becomes:

  • More deliberate
  • Better justified
  • Less reactive

Decisions are no longer driven by urgency alone — they are supported by evidence.

 

Why This Stage Delivers Immediate Value

For many utilities, condition-based maintenance delivers benefits quickly:

  • Fewer unnecessary interventions
  • Reduced emergency repairs
  • Better planning of resources and spares
  • Clearer justification for maintenance decisions

Perhaps most importantly, it reduces uncertainty.

Maintenance teams no longer feel they are constantly catching up. They begin to feel in control.

 

Not Predictive — Yet (And That’s Okay)

It is important to be clear:

Condition-based maintenance does not require advanced prediction or complex analytics.

At this stage, value comes from:

  • Consistent data
  • Historical visibility
  • Engineering judgement supported by evidence

For many utilities, this represents a major operational leap — and a sustainable one.

 

Preparing for What Comes Next

As condition-based practices mature, utilities begin to see a new possibility:

What if these insights could be applied consistently across the entire organisation?

That question opens the door to scaling maintenance intelligence.

 

Coming Next: Issue 6 — Preparing for Predictive Maintenance at Scale

In the next issue, we explore when and why utilities consider scaling from condition-based decisions to enterprise-level predictive maintenance — and what readiness truly looks like.