Energy baseload: definition, calculation and how to reduce this phantom consumption
COMPLETE GUIDE

Energy baseload: the power you pay for even when you're not producing

Energy baseload diagram - continuous non-production energy
Visualization of energy baseload: continuous energy consumed outside active production periods

Energy baseload, also called base load or residual consumption, represents the electricity continuously consumed by your facility even during low activity periods (night, weekends, shutdown). It's the power you pay for without seeing it, the energy that keeps flowing while your plant sleeps.

🔎 In brief: An excessively high baseload can represent 15 to 30% of your annual bill. Reducing it means saving thousands without major investment, simply by tracking invisible waste.

DEFINITION

What is energy baseload?

Energy baseload is the residual consumption of a building or facility when the main activity is at a standstill.

Nighttime consumption

It's the minimum power your site continuously consumes, measurable between 2am and 4am, when production equipment is theoretically turned off.

Phantom load

Also called standby consumption, it often goes unnoticed because it's not linked to main activity. Yet it runs 24/7, 365 days a year.

A savings opportunity

Unlike production peaks, baseload is stable and predictable. It's the first lever to activate in any energy efficiency approach.

DIAGNOSIS

What's in your baseload?

The baseload is made up of multiple equipment that remain permanently active. Identifying them is the first step to reducing it.

📋 WHAT'S IN THE BASELOAD?
⚙️ HOW TO OPTIMIZE IT?
Standby equipment (computers, printers, screens)
Energy audit to identify sources
Security and permanent lighting
Automation and time scheduling
Servers and IT systems (racks, storage, UPS)
Schedule and setpoint optimization
Auxiliary systems (pumps, ventilation, AHU)
Consumption monitoring with Wattnow
CALCULATION

How to calculate your energy baseload?

The calculation is simple, just analyze your load curve:

Baseload (kW) = Minimum power during off-peak periods

Example: If your baseload is 50 kW and you have 5,000 off-peak hours per year (nights + weekends), your annual phantom consumption is:

50 kW × 5,000 h = 250,000 kWh

That's significant energy waste, with no associated production.

CAUSES

Why is baseload often too high?

Invisibility

Phantom consumption can't be seen. Without real-time monitoring, it's impossible to know it exists and how much it costs.

Lack of scheduling

Many equipment (AHU, lighting, ventilation) run continuously due to lack of time programming adapted to activity periods.

Equipment aging

Old motors, transformers and UPS units have high fixed losses that contribute to the baseload.

SOLUTIONS

How to reduce your energy baseload?

1. Energy audit

Precisely identify equipment responsible for the baseload through detailed analysis of your load curves and on-site measurements.

2. Time scheduling

Install timers or controllers to automatically turn off non-essential equipment during inactivity periods.

3. Automation

Deploy building management systems (BMS) or control solutions to optimize equipment operation.

4. Equipment replacement

Replace aging equipment with more efficient models (high-efficiency motors, LED lighting, virtualized servers).

SUMMARY

5 key points about energy baseload

1
Definition: Baseload is the minimum and permanent electricity consumption, even during low activity periods.
2
Impact: It can represent 15 to 30% of your annual bill.
3
Composition: Standby equipment, security lighting, servers, auxiliary systems.
4
Calculation: Minimum night power × number of off-peak hours per year.
5
Solution: Energy audit, time scheduling, automation and real-time monitoring with Wattnow.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions about energy baseload

What's the difference between baseload and peak consumption?
Baseload is the permanent base consumption (night, weekends), while peaks are consumption spikes during activity. Baseload impacts your total consumption, peaks impact your contracted power and overrun penalties.
How to measure baseload without specific equipment?
You can read your meter at 2am and 4am several nights in a row to estimate your baseload. But for accurate measurement and ongoing monitoring, a system like Wattnow is essential.
What's a good baseload level?
There's no universal value, it depends on your activity. The important thing is that your baseload is as low as possible given equipment that must remain on (security, servers). A 20-30% reduction is often achievable without major investment.
How much does a 50 kW baseload cost?
A 50 kW baseload running 24/7, 365 days a year, consumes 50 × 8760 = 438,000 kWh annually. That's equivalent to the annual consumption of dozens of households, with no associated production.
How does Wattnow help reduce baseload?
Wattnow continuously analyzes your load curves, automatically identifies your baseload and its variations. Our platform alerts you to deviations and helps prioritize reduction actions. You can visualize the impact of your actions in real time.

What if your baseload was costing you more than you think?

Discover with Wattnow your company's phantom consumption and concrete actions to reduce it. A personalized analysis of your energy baseload, with no obligation.

Request a free analysis