Significant Energy Uses (SEU): Identification, Monitoring, and Optimization

How to identify your significant energy uses, prioritize them using objective criteria, and manage them daily with the ISO 50001 methodology.
🔎 The key concept: An SEU is not just about consumption. It's an energy use that, due to its energy weight or improvement potential, deserves specific attention. ISO 50001 makes it the cornerstone of continuous improvement.
Energy Use vs. Consumption: A Fundamental Distinction
The ISO 50001 standard establishes a clear distinction between energy use and energy consumption:
- Energy use: "manner or type of application of energy." Examples: space heating, compressed air production, lighting, refrigeration.
- Energy consumption: the amount of energy actually used (in kWh, MWh, etc.).
- Significant Energy Use (SEU): an energy use that represents a substantial portion of total consumption and/or offers considerable potential for performance improvement.
📌 Key takeaway: Not all uses are equal. The goal is to identify those on which to focus efforts to maximize the impact of energy efficiency actions.
Matrix for Selecting Significant Energy Uses
ISO 50001 does not define a single threshold. Here is a decision-making matrix combining energy weight and improvement potential, two key criteria:
| Use / Criterion | Energy Weight | Improvement Potential | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Use A (e.g., central heating) | High (>15% of consumption) | High (obsolete technology) | Priority SEU |
| Use B (e.g., LED lighting) | High (>10% of consumption) | Low (already optimized) | SEU to monitor |
| Use C (e.g., compressed air) | Moderate (5-10% of consumption) | High (leaks, regulation) | Priority SEU |
| Use D (e.g., office equipment) | Low (<5% of consumption) | Low | Non-SEU |
💡 Decision rule: any use combining high weight AND high potential is a priority SEU. A low-weight but high-potential use may also be retained (e.g., heat recovery system).
Typology of Energy Uses in Buildings and Industry
Thermal Use
Heat production (boilers, processes), steam, cooling (refrigeration, air conditioning). Often the largest category.
Electrical Use (Power)
Motors (pumps, fans, compressors), lighting, transformation (furnace, induction).
Fluid Use
Compressed air (often highly energy-intensive), domestic hot water, heat transfer fluids.
Comfort Use
Heating, ventilation, air conditioning (HVAC), building lighting.
Process Use
Energy directly linked to product transformation: drying, baking, heat treatment, polymerization, etc.
Relevant Variables and Correlations: The Heart of SEU Management
Once SEUs are identified, it is essential to determine the relevant variables that influence their consumption, to then define relevant performance indicators (EnPIs) and detect deviations.
| Variable Category | Examples | Affected Use |
|---|---|---|
| Production / Activity | Tons produced, volume, number of units, operating time | All process uses |
| Climatic | Outside temperature, degree-days (DD), humidity | Heating, air conditioning, cooling |
| Occupancy / Usage | Building occupancy rate, opening hours | Lighting, HVAC, hot water |
| Technical | Equipment efficiency, service pressure, setpoint temperature | Compressed air, steam, thermal processes |
📊 Correlation example: the electricity consumption of a compressed air system is generally proportional to the air flow used, which itself is linked to production. A relevant EnPI could be kWh of compressed air / unit produced. If this EnPI suddenly increases, a leak or malfunction is likely.
Operational Implementation: Controls, Maintenance, Procurement, and Competence
ISO 50001 requires implementing specific actions for each SEU:
Operational Controls
Define standardized operating procedures (instructions, procedures, setpoint ranges). Example: shifting operations to off-peak hours to reduce peak consumption.
Maintenance
Plan maintenance based on actual SEU needs. Example: monitoring steam traps, cleaning condensers, detecting compressed air leaks.
Procurement
Integrate energy performance criteria into purchases related to SEUs (e.g., choosing a high-efficiency compressor, variable speed drives).
Competence & Training
Train personnel whose activities impact SEUs (operators, maintenance, procurement) and raise awareness of best practices.
Simulator: Prioritize Your Energy Uses
Evaluate Your Uses Based on Two Criteria
For each use, estimate its energy weight (share of total consumption) and its improvement potential (possible reduction). The simulator calculates a priority score and helps you decide if it is an SEU.
Priority Score: 0 / 100
Recommendation: Adjust the sliders
Wattnow: Managing Significant Energy Uses
What Wattnow Brings for SEU Mastery
Consumption analysis by use via sub-metering or statistical allocation. Classification by order of importance.
Automatic calculation of performance indicators (EnPIs) with relevant variables (production, climate, occupancy). Deviation detection.
Performance threshold monitoring. Alert in case of significant deviation (e.g., +10% on an EnPI).
Dedicated dashboards for SEUs, corrective action tracking, improvement evidence for audits.
Frequently Asked Questions About Significant Energy Uses
It is recommended to start with a limited number (1 to 3) for the first ISO 50001 cycles, as each SEU requires resources (controls, training, monitoring). The standard does not set a number but favors quality of management.
Yes, ISO 50001 explicitly allows this. This is relevant for companies that have already optimized their largest uses, or for modest-sized uses with high yield (e.g., heat recovery system, replacing an inefficient compressor).
Assessment is based on technical analysis: comparison with best available technologies (BAT), feedback, audits, data analysis (internal/external benchmarking). Tools like Sankey diagrams or regression analyses can help.
The cross-functional energy team (management, maintenance, production, procurement) is responsible for initial identification, objective setting, indicator monitoring, and implementing improvement actions. It also drives awareness among personnel impacting SEUs.
ISO 50001 requires considering energy performance when purchasing items related to SEUs (spare parts, equipment, services). Suppliers must be informed of expected energy criteria, and offers should be evaluated based on life-cycle cost, not just purchase price.
Official Resources and References
To Go Further (Wattnow Articles)
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