EMS – Energy Management System
Intelligent energy management for manufacturing enterprises
What is EMS (Energy Management System)?
Portfolio
- SCADA/MES – Production Process Management
- Industrial IoT – Data Collection and Analysis
- Building and Data Center Monitoring
- Predictive Maintenance and OEE Monitoring
- Digitalization/Optimization of Manufacturing Processes
- Reporting and Business Intelligence
- High Performance HMI Interface design
- Energy Consumption Monitoring
- Connecting Enterprise Systems, Databases and SAP ERP
- Consulting / Advisory
An EMS system therefore collects data from meters, switchboards, PLC units and other devices, stores historical records and visualizes them within a unified interface. The result is a clear energy management system that allows not only recording energy consumption, but also identifying areas with the highest consumption, uncovering hidden energy losses, optimizing demand peaks, or allocating costs among individual departments or operations.
EMS thus creates the foundation for systematic and data-driven energy management, where energy is no longer managed retrospectively based on invoices and begins to be managed proactively based on accurate and up-to-date information.
Why does a manufacturing company gradually lose control without EMS?
Many manufacturing companies still operate today without a centralized EMS. At first glance, everything appears to function – production runs, energy invoices are paid, and shutdowns are scheduled. However, the problem does not appear dramatically, but rather systematically.
❌ Manual meter readings are time-consuming and prone to errors
Readings from meters are often written down manually, then transcribed into spreadsheets or stored in various applications. This process is time-consuming and prone to errors. Data may exist, but it does not arrive at the right time nor within the correct context.
❌ Equipment continues running during weekends and shutdowns
Equipment, lighting, or ventilation systems often continue operating during weekends, holidays, or shutdowns. Without automated control, the system cannot effectively respond to changes in the operating mode. Energy is consumed even when it creates no value.
In one manufacturing company, for example, we discovered that even during a complete production shutdown, energy consumption dropped by only 50%. This meant that half of the energy load remained active even though production had stopped. Only a detailed analysis revealed which systems remained switched on and where unnecessary losses were occurring.
❌ Demand peaks unnecessarily increase costs
Without continuous monitoring and optimization, unnecessary demand peaks occur. These increase monthly fees for reserved capacity, the risk of network overload, and overall costs. A single short peak may result in thousands of euros in additional annual charges.
❌ Energy consumption is known only from the monthly invoice
Management may see the total energy cost at the end of the month, but lacks a detailed overview of where the most energy was consumed, when demand peaks occurred, or what caused sudden cost increases. The ability to respond immediately is therefore absent, and decision-making happens only retrospectively.
❌ Accurate allocation of costs between lines or tenants is missing
Without detailed measurement, it is not possible to accurately allocate energy costs between individual production lines, departments, tenants or external operations. This often leads to inaccurate financial planning and internal uncertainties.
❌ ESG and ISO become an administrative burden
Without a centralized system, manual ESG reporting becomes unnecessarily time-consuming. The company also lacks reliable documentation for an energy management system ISO 50001 audit. Energy management thus becomes an administrative burden instead of a controlled process of improvement.
How does EMS work in practice?
A modern Energy Management System functions as the central brain of energy management. It is not just about monitoring. It is about actively managing energy consumption as a strategic resource.
1️⃣ Real-time data collection
The first step in implementing EMS is the identification of all relevant consumption meters within the enterprise. The EMS system then integrates electricity meters, gas meters and other devices into a higher-level system using protocols such as Modbus, OPC UA, BACnet or MQTT.
2️⃣ Data analysis and visualization
Collected data is displayed in clear dashboards. Management can therefore analyze consumption trends, compare different periods and identify areas with the highest costs, even down to the level of departments, production lines or tenants.
3️⃣ Notifications, alarms and automation
The EMS system can not only alert users to exceeded limits, unusual fluctuations in energy consumption, failures or excessive loads, but it can also automatically control equipment operation based on predefined rules and real-time data.
4️⃣ Optimization process
However, the real value of EMS lies in optimization. Based on accurate data, it becomes possible to identify equipment with disproportionately high consumption, optimize demand peaks and reduce reserved capacity or set more efficient operating modes.
Optimization therefore does not represent a one-time intervention but a continuous improvement process. EMS enables enterprises to regularly evaluate the results of implemented measures and gradually reduce the energy intensity of production without disrupting its continuity.
What benefits does an EMS system bring?
EMS creates a stable environment where energy becomes a controllable resource, not an uncontrolled cost. Companies that systematically implement EMS therefore achieve:
✅ Reduction of energy costs (often by 10 to 20%)
✅ Better financial planning and transparent cost allocation
✅ Documentation for meeting environmental and legislative standards
✅ Higher operational safety
✅ Better market competitiveness
Why implement EMS with IoT Industries?
Gain control over your energy
If you want to find out where the largest energy losses occur in your enterprise, how to optimize energy demand without interfering with production, or how to prepare your company for ISO 50001 and ESG requirements, contact us and discover how an Energy Management System can work in your company.