Sustainability & Risk / Energy

Energy: Application Overview

The Archibus Energy application is a cost management program that provides alerts and reports that help you analyze your energy costs. The application includes tasks for developing the background data, entering and approving bills, importing meter data, and generating analytic reports that help you review cost and consumption metrics, generate forecasts, and what-if scenarios.

Key features include:

Typical workflow for tracking and analyzing your energy use

The following describes a typical workflow for tracking and analyzing your energy use.

Step 1: A business process owner establishes validating data.

This data includes:

Step 2: A business process owner configures bill processing.

Use application parameters to determine whether or not bills must be entered for monthly periods and in strict sequence in order to be approved and archived. You can set this application parameter for all bill types or for just certain ones. See Configuring Bill Processing.

Step 3. A system administrator sets up the On-Ramp for the Energy Application.

The Administrator defines Connectors to automatically load bill data into Archibus, and associates these Connectors with vendors and bill types.

A sample Connector for loading energy bills is provided. System Administrators can use this as a model to define Connectors using their vendor's specifications. Once Connectors are defined, you can associate them with vendors and bill types. See Energy Application On-Ramp.

Step 4: A cost administrator loads bill data, or enters it manually.

A cost administrator can automatically load the bill data, or manually enter it.

Note: When entering bills using the Connector, for legacy data, you can bypass the approval process, and directly archive bills.

Step 5: An accounting supervisor reviews and approves the bills.

The supervisor can review bills and their line items, and review variance reports that show current usage in relation to previous time periods. Approving a bill archives the bill so that the bill's data is used in the reports that analyze energy use. See:

Step 6: An energy manager reviews cost and consumption metrics, and generates forecasts and scenarios.

For example, the Measurement & Verification report uses the weather model calculations to show the amount of energy you would have used this year compared to a baseline period to help you evaluate the impact of changes you have made. What-if scenarios enable you to examine the financial impact of changes in % cost and % occupancy. See Energy Manager Overview.

Report on energy consumption data, such as consumption by building, floor, or equipment, in order to spot outliers and trends. See:

Step 7: A contract or operations manager reviews utility bill metrics.

Utility bill metrics can be reviewed for a selected portion of the portfolio by various groupings (building, bill type, or billing period.) See Utility Bill Metrics Report.

Optionally, an energy manager can update calculations.

There are several calculations that provide the modeling data used in the utility analytics reports. All calculations are scheduled to run every 24 hours based on a time set during the implementation of the Energy application. If you want to manually run the calculations sooner than the scheduled time, you can use the Update Calculations task to manually update your weather model data. See Update Calculations.