Your Energy Analyst answers in seconds what used to take three days and a consultant.
Your Energy Analyst knows every number in your building — load profiles, cost breakdowns, equipment benchmarks, tariff impacts. Ask it why last Tuesday was expensive. Ask it which 10 sites cost the most per square meter. Ask it what would happen if you added 4 EV chargers. It answers with data, context, and recommendations — not a chart you have to interpret yourself.
Today, analysis means spreadsheets and consultants.
Energy analysis means exporting CSVs from the BMS, building pivot tables, and sometimes hiring a consultant for $15,000 who delivers a report six weeks later. Nobody can answer “why was last Tuesday expensive?” without a week of investigation. Portfolio comparisons don't exist — every site is a separate spreadsheet with different column headers.
The VP asks: “Where's the 5% reduction we promised the board?” The facilities team says they need better data. The sustainability manager says she needs access to the BMS. The finance team says the electricity line item went up 8% but can't say why.
Everyone wants answers. Nobody has the tools to find them.
Ask any question. Get the answer, the context, and what to do about it.
“Why did energy spike last Thursday?”
36°C — highest this month. Cooling load 28% above average. Pre-cooling avoided $82 in demand charges. Without intervention, the day would have cost $120 more. Similar conditions forecast for next Tuesday — pre-cooling already scheduled.
“Which 10 stores cost the most per square meter?”
Store 47: compressor cycling 40% more than identical unit at Store 48. Maintenance flag raised.
Store 112: HVAC energy per sqm 40% above cohort — schedule hasn't been updated since the 2023 refit.
Store 203: lowest cost/sqm and 80kW of grid headroom — best candidate for EV chargers.
“What would adding 4 EV chargers do to this site?”
At 7kW each, peak concurrent draw of 28kW. Current peak: 172kW against 200kW limit. With load coordination: chargers run during off-peak without exceeding limit. During peak hours, charging pauses automatically.
The conversation that replaces the quarterly report.
How are we tracking against the energy reduction target?
Portfolio is down 12% year-over-year. 140 of 200 sites are on track. 30 sites are flat — mostly the strip-mall stores with shared HVAC. 30 sites are trending up — 18 of those have the compressor cycling issue flagged last month. If those 18 get maintenance, the portfolio hits 16% reduction by Q3.
Show me the worst 5.
1. Store 47, Parramatta — $14,200/mo, 38% above cohort. Compressor short-cycling 6x/hr vs 2x baseline. 2. Store 112, Chatswood — $11,800/mo, HVAC running 24/7 on 2019 schedule despite reduced hours. 3. Store 203, Penrith — $10,900/mo, lighting on 18hrs/day in a store open 10. 4. Store 88, Bondi — $10,400/mo, refrigeration defrost cycle overlapping peak tariff window. 5. Store 156, Blacktown — $9,800/mo, AHU economizer stuck closed — cooling mechanically when ambient is 19°C.
