Building Resilience with Energy Management in the Financial Services Industry

Industries Charles Adriaenssens , Ewald Munz

Environmental sustainability in the financial services industry (FSI) has matured from a “nice-to-have”, feel-good environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiative to a numbers- and data-driven imperative that directly ties to organizations’ greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction goals as well as strategic business objectives.

Examples of reasons why environmental sustainability - and in particular energy management - is now a business priority for the FSI include:

1. Environmental Sustainability Reporting

Many companies have been voluntarily reporting on their environmental sustainability performance and progress against their goals for years. In recent years, we have seen a shift from voluntary reporting to mandatory reporting.

Governments around the world remain increasingly focused on addressing environmental sustainability by setting public policy goals and implementing new rules and mandates applicable to corporations. A key focus area for regulators is on environmental sustainability reporting and transparency.

To cite some examples:

2. Smart Buildings Imperatives

Due to the characteristics of the FSI, organizations often own and operate a high number of physical buildings such as branches and offices. As EU buildings in 2023 accounted for 40% of all energy consumption, they are the single largest energy consumer in the EU and this is driving smart buildings imperatives.

Financial services organizations have ambitious energy and GHG emissions reduction targets. In addition, cross-industry initiatives, such as the Alliance of CEO Climate Leaders, to which many FSI companies are members, have their own environmental sustainability ambitions. Further, regulations, such as the revised EU Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD), continue to enhance the energy performance requirements for new buildings.

3. High GHG Cluster Risk with OnPremise Data Centers

Financial services companies typically operate in-house on-premise data centers instead of migrating to the cloud. These in-house data centers pose a carbon footprint risk since they contribute to the overall carbon footprint of FSI organizations.

As a result, the well-established management wisdom applies:

You can’t manage what you can’t measureOrganizations need to have unified, granular, vendor agnostic and real-time data insights on energy consumption, GHG emissions and costs so that they can optimize business operations and align with stakeholder requirements.

Building Resilience with a Unified Environmental Sustainability Solution

A unified environmental sustainability solution which focuses on energy management metrics for buildings and data centers is an effective way to provide data visibility and advance key business outcomes. Dashboards contain customizable visualizations, metrics, business and technical KPIs and built-in AI/Machine Learning for detecting outliers, forecasting, clustering and recommendations.

Unified Environmental Sustainability Solution

Disclaimer: Figures are for illustrative purposes only

Key Business Outcomes

Business Impact

There is an additional benefit to having this type of real-time data visibility: predictive security. Energy spikes and energy consumption anomalies in relation to servers may point to a cyber attack. This is another example of how data visibility enables organizations to respond quickly to issues that threaten their resilience.

In summary, a unified environmental sustainability solution for energy management leverages end-to-end visibility for energy efficiency, energy cost and GHG emissions for optimizations at scale and as such can be a critical building block for improving resilience in the FSI.

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