A new integration streams Blackline Safety’s connected gas data from the Spot quadruped to Blackline Live, layering robotic atmospheric awareness on top of MFE’s existing drone-based gas detection products.
MFE Inspection Solutions has launched a robotic gas detection solution that connects Blackline Safety’s cloud-connected portable detector to the Boston Dynamics Spot quadruped. The Houston company says the integration extends connected gas monitoring into robotic workflows, streaming readings, alerts, and location data to remote teams as conditions change. MFE recently expanded its uncrewed-systems portfolio with the launch of MFE Offshore, a subsea and offshore drone division Dronelife covered in January.
“Gas detection is critical for safety. And teams are no longer limited to collecting that data only when a person enters the area,” said Jason Acerbi, CTO and VP of USA at MFE Inspection Solutions. “Robots like Spot are already being used to collect inspection data remotely in hazardous environments. Our new solution adds real-time gas detection to those workflows, giving operators insight into gas hazards before deciding how and when to send people in.”

Robotic Gas Detection in Connected Safety Workflows
Traditional gas detection has centered on personal monitors worn by individual workers. Connected safety pulls live data from personal monitors, area monitors, drones, and ground robots like Spot into one shared view inside Blackline Safety’s Blackline Live software. That model lets safety leaders read atmospheric conditions across a site before, during, and after work is performed.
Live readings appear directly on the Spot tablet and stream to Blackline Live. Hot-swappable, cartridge-based sensors support standard, single-gas, multi-gas diffusion, and multi-gas pump configurations, monitoring up to five gases simultaneously from a portfolio of more than 20 — including ammonia, carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide, oxygen, sulfur dioxide, combustible gases/LEL, and VOCs via PID.
“This is about connecting technologies customers are already using and making them more useful together,” said Christine Gillies, Chief Product and Marketing Officer, Blackline Safety. “MFE has built the digital plumbing to connect Spot with Blackline’s connected gas detection platform. This adds another layer to worker protection while giving organizations critical exposure data as it happens, not after the fact like with traditional monitors, so they can make informed decisions in the moment.”
Field-Proven Robotic Gas Detection and Spot Protection
MFE has supported Spot-based gas detection for years. In an earlier midstream oil and gas mission, Spot detected combustible gas during an autonomous inspection, leading the safety team to a pinhole leak that might have taken longer to find.
That history shapes the new product. Because Spot is not intrinsically safe, the solution triggers automated return-to-home actions when defined thresholds — such as rising LEL — are crossed, protecting both site personnel and the Spot platform itself. The Blackline detector can continue collecting and streaming data independently even if Spot is powered down as part of the response.
Target use cases include oil and gas leak monitoring, semiconductor process gases like ammonia, chemical-plant toxics like hydrogen sulfide, confined-space pre-entry assessment, emergency response and re-entry planning, and routine robotic patrols that build trend data over time.
“Spot’s thermal, acoustic, and visual inspection abilities provide AI-powered predictive insights into facility health,” said Merry Frayne, Senior Director of Product at Boston Dynamics. “Integrating the Blackline Safety portable device gives process manufacturers an even more complete picture of their site while keeping people out of harm’s way.”
Layering Robotic Gas Detection With Drone-Based Sensing
The Spot integration sits alongside MFE’s drone-side gas detection work. The company’s MFE Detect LW brings optical gas imaging to drone workflows so teams can collect methane detection data from the air, and the MFE PulsePro targets corrosion-under-insulation screening.
More information is available at MFE Inspection Solutions, Boston Dynamics, and Blackline Safety.
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Ian McNabb is a journalist focusing on drone technology and lifestyle content at Dronelife. He is based between Boston and NH and, when not writing, enjoys hiking and Boston area sports.

