Your Energy Data Has More Potential Than You Think

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Your Energy Data Has More Potential Than You Think

These changing market conditions reinforce an important reality: while energy prices, policies, and regulations will continue to evolve, understanding how your facility consumes energy is one factor that remains within your control.
July 8, 2026
Your Energy Data Has More Potential Than You Think

Your Energy Data Has More Potential Than You Think

If the past two years have taught energy managers anything, it's to expect the unexpected.

Ontario has recently experienced electricity commodity prices reaching historic highs and Global Adjustment rates falling well below long-term expectations during periods of market volatility. At the same time, electrification, growing grid demand, and major investments in generation and transmission are reshaping Ontario's electricity landscape and creating a very different outlook for businesses over the next two decades.

These changing market conditions reinforce an important reality: while energy prices, policies, and regulations will continue to evolve, understanding how your facility consumes energy is one factor that remains within your control.

That's where your energy data becomes one of your most valuable assets.

Your Utility Bill Only Tells Part of the Story

For many organizations, the monthly utility bill serves as the primary measure of energy performance. It answers an important question: how much did we spend? But it rarely explains why costs changed from one month to the next.

Demand may increase even when production remains relatively stable, or overnight consumption may gradually creep higher over time. These changes often go unnoticed because they aren't obvious on a monthly invoice.

The answers are typically found in interval meter data, which records electricity consumption throughout the day in much greater detail. Most businesses already have access to this information, yet many only scratch the surface of what it can reveal.

Better Data Leads to Better Decisions

Historically, many organizations have focused their energy strategy on procurement, budgeting, or reacting to market prices. While those activities remain important, today's energy environment requires a broader approach.

Understanding when and how electricity is consumed has become just as valuable as understanding what electricity costs. Analyzing interval data allows businesses to identify trends that would otherwise remain hidden.

Interval data can help identify:

  • When does the facility reach its highest electrical demand?
  • How much electricity is being consumed outside of normal operating hours?
  • Has the overnight or weekend baseload increased over time?
  • Are equipment start-ups creating avoidable demand spikes?
  • Does energy consumption align with production activity?
  • Is power factor trending lower than expected?

The Biggest Opportunity May Be When Nothing Is Happening

One of the first areas worth examining is a facility's baseload, the electricity consumed when little or no production is taking place.

Every facility requires a certain amount of electricity to remain operational, but an unexpectedly high baseload can indicate opportunities that are easy to overlook. HVAC systems running longer than necessary, compressed air leaks, equipment left energized, lighting schedules, or automation controls that haven't been updated can all contribute to unnecessary energy use.

Because this consumption occurs every hour of every day, even relatively small improvements can translate into meaningful savings over the course of a year.

Energy Data Can Reveal More Than Energy Savings

Energy analysis is often associated with reducing utility costs, but its value extends well beyond the electricity bill.

Changes in a facility's load profile can sometimes provide early warning signs of operational issues before they become larger problems. Equipment operating outside of normal parameters, mechanical wear, control system failures, or process changes may all appear as subtle shifts in energy consumption long before they result in downtime or maintenance calls.

Viewed it this way, interval data becomes more than an energy management tool. It has become another source of operational intelligence that can support maintenance planning, reliability, and overall facility performance.

Turning Insights into Action

Identifying opportunities is only the beginning. The greatest value comes from turning those insights into projects that reduce costs, improve reliability, or increase operational efficiency.

For some facilities, that may mean optimizing equipment schedules or correcting a poor power factor. For others, it could involve upgrading controls, improving compressed air systems, installing variable frequency drives, or implementing an Energy Management and Information System (EMIS) to continuously monitor performance.

Many of these initiatives may also qualify for utility or government incentive programs, helping offset implementation costs and improving the project's return on investment.

As Ontario's electricity system continues to evolve, organizations that routinely analyze their energy data are better positioned to identify opportunities, prioritize investments, and respond more effectively to changing market conditions.

Final Thoughts

Energy markets will continue to change. Commodity prices will fluctuate, policies will evolve, and electricity demand across Ontario will continue to grow.

What businesses can control is how efficiently they operate, how well they understand their own energy use, and how effectively they turn data into informed decisions.

Your utility bill tells you what you spent. Your energy data tells you why, and more importantly, where your next opportunity may be.

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