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Power blind spots – gaining visibility into what lies beneath

     

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By: Anoop Hariparsad - Offer Marketing Manager, Microgrids, MEA at Schneider Electric

It might sound almost too simplistic, but for many organisations and their finance teams, monthly electricity bills are the only evidence of energy performance and resultant costs incurred. But, unfortunately, beneath this bird’s eye view also lies a significant blind spot; visibility into energy consumption and how inefficiencies are quietly draining profitability in the background.

The reality is that many buildings, factories, and commercial sites today still depend on fragmented or outdated metering systems which make them reliant on utility bills and a very broad snapshot of total consumption.

And granted, it might show much energy is used overall, however, it says very little about which systems are driving costs, when equipment is operating unnecessarily, or where inefficiencies are developing over time.

The hidden costs

As mentioned, a lot of facilities’ meter only incoming supply. This means they can see total consumption across the site, but not what is happening downstream.

Within any modern facility, energy demand is distributed across multiple systems, HVAC, lighting, office spaces, kitchens, production equipment, server rooms, refrigeration, and more. Each of these loads behaves differently throughout the day and presents its own opportunities for optimisation.

However, when organisations cannot isolate and monitor these individual loads, it leads to multiple blind spots.

As an example, who often does one not see office buildings fully illuminated late into the night, despite minimal occupancy? In industrial environments, machinery may continue to run during breaks, shift changes, or idle periods, simply because no one realises the energy impact. HVAC systems frequently operate at full capacity long after buildings have emptied.

These “background loads” can compound into substantial operational costs. And worst, organisations are often blissfully unaware of these loads draining energy and profitability.

Implement data-driven operations

This brings us back to metering. Whilst it might sound quite straightforward, implementing sub-metering across key operational areas, will start eliminating blind spots one by one. 

Indeed, instead of simply knowing how much electricity the site consumed, teams can identify exactly where energy is being used, at what times, and under what operating conditions. It creates common language between operations, maintenance, and finance.

Operations gain visibility into production-related consumption patterns, whereas finance teams gain credible data to support investment decisions and efficiency initiatives.

For maintenance, in many cases, rising energy consumption can serve as an early warning indicator for equipment deterioration. Motors, bearings, compressors, and HVAC systems often draw more power as performance degrades. 

Realising smarter energy management

A growing number of organisations are adopting compact digital meters that have evolved basic readings to provide real-time operational insight.

Solutions such as Schneider Electric PowerLogic PM2000 metering are helping facilities establish this visibility without requiring large-scale infrastructure overhauls. 

This enables facilities to move from static reporting toward live operational awareness.

Instead of waiting for a monthly utility statement, teams can monitor consumption trends in real time, analyse historical usage patterns, and configure alarms for unusual operating conditions or excessive demand spikes.

Connected metering also supports broader sustainability and decarbonisation objectives as it provides insight into where emissions originate, allowing for more accurate strategy execution.

Ultimately, smart metering forms a vital part of  the evolution of energy management. Gone are the days of analogue meters, replaced by an intelligent flow of operational data that enables facilities to measure performance, analyse behaviour, and control consumption dynamically.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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