Combining energy management efforts with efficient operations is the key to drive long-term financial growth |
A variety of industry forces are driving the need among industrial companies for a comprehensive energy management system, but it’s profitability that’s ultimately motivating much of this activity. Organisations are realising that sustainability initiatives alone can’t drive profitability and they are finding that energy management efforts must be combined with efficient operations to effectively drive long-term financial growth. However, two key challenges — lack of visibility into Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and a legacy manufacturing IT environment — are preventing many companies from achieving their financial and operational goals. Investing in energy intelligence software, which includes data collection, visualisation software and analytical tools, is one way in which organisations are beginning to address their challenges.
In many cases, this software supplements existing and planned Manufacturing Operations Management (MOM) software and automation investments. These technologies, nonetheless, traditionally neglect to collect and manage energy data in context of operations, so many companies are beginning to deploy energy intelligence strategies to gain insight into the role of energy within their operations — from procurement through production. In addition to operational insights, the data generated by this technology is being used to provide improved clarity for buy/produce decisions and to help justify energy efficiency projects. However, energy data alone cannot drive success. The information generated by this technology must be paired with the right energy-management processes and organisational leadership capabilities. By uniting all these elements, firms can begin to develop a more holistic and effective strategy that turns energy data into actionable operational insights.
Macroeconomic trends such as global population growth and GDP expansion certainly are driving the need for cleaner, more cost-effective energy sources. These trends are prompting individual companies to target energy projects aimed at reducing consumption and improving sustainability. In addition, although financial growth is a top business objective for executives in the coming year, according to a survey from LNS research, companies are not necessarily tying sustainability and energy management programs to this goal directly. Instead, these programs are more often tied to profitability improvements and energy usage reductions.
Top sustainability objectives for 2013 include reducing the total cost of operations and reducing energy consumption. The top goal for energy management also is reducing the total cost of operations. Executives also want to align their energy programs and operations with corporate sustainability objectives. Companies face a variety of challenges in reaching these objectives, but the top issues (stated below) cited by executives were related to technology:
- Disparate systems and data sources: Purpose-built applications often are implemented piecemeal by individual divisions or business units, so systems lack cohesion and strategic purpose.
- Energy metrics not measured effectively: The proliferation of disparate systems makes it difficult to share data across the enterprise and make measurable improvements.
Energy intelligence software is making it easier for companies to achieve their sustainability and energy-management objectives by delivering data across the enterprise. What’s more, this information is being delivered to role-based decision-makers in real time with analytics. Energy intelligence software brings together energy and production data so it’s possible to view energy consumption by process or product, and even allocate energy costs to the bill of materials. However, investing in technology alone isn’t enough. Companies must align and optimise key resources — people, processes and technology. Instituting a few best practices in these areas can help ensure the technology investment reaches its full potential.
These practices could be as follows:
- Seek support from senior leadership: This backing is imperative for success because it often acts as a catalyst for creating an energy-focused culture and an effective energy intelligence software implementation.
- Take advantage of existing energy-management programs: These programs, such as ‘Energy Star’, ISO 50001 and superior energy performance, can serve as a helpful resource for understanding industry best practices and developing methodologies.
- Take a next-generation approach to manufacturing software: Using a common information management system for energy data can help alleviate past problems related to measuring energy data and transforming it into operational insights.
- Use role-based KPIs: Energy intelligence software standardizes data sources in a way that allows everyone from executives and decision-makers on the shop floor to identify specific areas for improvement and measure progress toward goals.
While more environment-conscious decisions will be expected by stakeholders over time, the operational and financial benefits of the software warrant enough evidence to take action now.