Buyer’s Guide: Energy Management Software (2024)
22 Mar, 2024
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Executive Summary
This report provides real estate executives responsible for energy within their buildings with an up-to-date analysis of 76 vendors offering energy management software (EMS), and a detailed analysis of 11 software offerings available on the market today. This report supplements our recently published Green Quadrant benchmark of the leading 15 vendors of EMS, with different solution focuses, alongside vendor heritage and case study analysis (see Verdantix Green Quadrant: Energy Management Software 2023). The study collected data directly from vendors through questionnaires, briefings and other information submitted to Verdantix. Where vendors did not actively participate in this research, we used publicly available information. Our analysis finds that the EMS market is vast, with hundreds of solutions available for buyers to choose from. Providers are embracing AI and including it in their solutions’ feature sets, as well as incorporating carbon accounting functionality to ease reporting processes for buyers subject to new regulations. Buyers of EMS should leverage this report to gain an understanding of the vast array of solutions in the market today, and to appreciate the various heritages and specialisms of solutions, in order to narrow down their search for software that meets their bespoke requirements.
The Verdantix Buyer’s Guide to energy management software (EMS)
Firms leverage EMS to realize cost and carbon savings simultaneously
The wide umbrella of EMS covers more solutions than ever before
Buyers must prioritize integration- and connection-rich solutions, and ensure that these meet their bespoke needs
Review of key product enhancements
AI is being adopted en masse
Vendors are rushing to incorporate carbon management capabilities
Findings from the 2023 Verdantix Green Quadrant for EMS
Inclusion criteria for the 2025 Buyer’s Guide to EMS
75F’s Facilisight delivers ASHRAE Guideline 36 energy savings directly to buyers’ facilities
Acuity Brands’ Atrius streamlines emissions reporting with templated dashboards for reporting against the CDP, CSRD, GRESB and GRI
CIM’s PEAK Platform focuses on maximizing customer speed to value and boosting existing system connectivity
E.On Optimum caters to individual customer needs with a fully managed services offering, alongside varying SaaS subscription levels
Infogrid’s offering autonomously identifies energy conservation measures and provides comprehensive M&V to validate savings
JLL’s Hank enacts autonomous control on buyers’ HVAC equipment to improve energy efficiency without compromising occupant comfort
KODE Labs’s strong data aggregation capabilities provide buyers with a single solution for complete building system monitoring and control
Metrikus’s platform provides contextualized energy data to empower smarter workspace decisions
METRON’s EMOS offering allows buyers to benchmark and compare energy performance against its historical database of more than 20,000 buildings
Uplight offers extensive DER management for buyers equipped with energy-producing assets
Verdigris’ scalable solution offers autonomous building control supplemented with equipment-level dependency identification for enhanced energy savings
Firms leverage EMS to realize cost and carbon savings simultaneously
The wide umbrella of EMS covers more solutions than ever before
Buyers must prioritize integration- and connection-rich solutions, and ensure that these meet their bespoke needs
Review of key product enhancements
AI is being adopted en masse
Vendors are rushing to incorporate carbon management capabilities
Findings from the 2023 Verdantix Green Quadrant for EMS
Inclusion criteria for the 2025 Buyer’s Guide to EMS
75F’s Facilisight delivers ASHRAE Guideline 36 energy savings directly to buyers’ facilities
Acuity Brands’ Atrius streamlines emissions reporting with templated dashboards for reporting against the CDP, CSRD, GRESB and GRI
CIM’s PEAK Platform focuses on maximizing customer speed to value and boosting existing system connectivity
E.On Optimum caters to individual customer needs with a fully managed services offering, alongside varying SaaS subscription levels
Infogrid’s offering autonomously identifies energy conservation measures and provides comprehensive M&V to validate savings
JLL’s Hank enacts autonomous control on buyers’ HVAC equipment to improve energy efficiency without compromising occupant comfort
KODE Labs’s strong data aggregation capabilities provide buyers with a single solution for complete building system monitoring and control
Metrikus’s platform provides contextualized energy data to empower smarter workspace decisions
METRON’s EMOS offering allows buyers to benchmark and compare energy performance against its historical database of more than 20,000 buildings
Uplight offers extensive DER management for buyers equipped with energy-producing assets
Verdigris’ scalable solution offers autonomous building control supplemented with equipment-level dependency identification for enhanced energy savings
Figure 1. The six-part functionality of energy management software
Figure 2. EMS deployment case studies
Figure 3. Vendor heritages of EMS solution providers
Figure 4. Green Quadrant vendor solution updates and upcoming releases
Figure 5. List of EMS solution providers
Figure 6. 75F solution overview
Figure 7. Acuity Brands (Atrius) solution overview
Figure 8. CIM solution overview
Figure 9. E.ON solution overview
Figure 10. Infogrid solution overview
Figure 11. JLL (Hank) solution overview
Figure 12. KODE Labs solution overview
Figure 13. Metrikus solution overview
Figure 14. METRON solution overview
Figure 15. Uplight (AutoGrid) solution overview
Figure 16. Verdigris solution overview
Figure 2. EMS deployment case studies
Figure 3. Vendor heritages of EMS solution providers
Figure 4. Green Quadrant vendor solution updates and upcoming releases
Figure 5. List of EMS solution providers
Figure 6. 75F solution overview
Figure 7. Acuity Brands (Atrius) solution overview
Figure 8. CIM solution overview
Figure 9. E.ON solution overview
Figure 10. Infogrid solution overview
Figure 11. JLL (Hank) solution overview
Figure 12. KODE Labs solution overview
Figure 13. Metrikus solution overview
Figure 14. METRON solution overview
Figure 15. Uplight (AutoGrid) solution overview
Figure 16. Verdigris solution overview
Mindsett, Net Zero Tracker, R8 Technologies, REsustain, ArcelorMittal, Eptura, Switch Automation, Myrspoven, CIM, Bueno Systems, Metrikus, Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), Johnson Controls (JCI), Dell, Ento, EY, PointGrab, ABB, Ecogen Energy, inavitas, AutoGrid, SAIL Outdoors, CDP, Microsoft, ASHRAE, Willow, Clockwork Analytics, Panoramic Power, EcoEnergy Insights, Acuity Brands, Washington & Lee University, Spica Technologies, International Organization for Standardization (ISO), Optimum Energy, BrainBox AI, Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), BuildingMinds, LaSalle Investment Management, JLL Technologies (JLLT), Fabriq, Eaton, Dapesco, Energy Elephant, Planon, Smarkia, Nordomatic, GridDuck, Phoenix Energy Technologies, Encycle, Fifth Third Bank, Ameresco, Sabey Data Centers, Royal London Asset Management, Bridge Commercial Real Estate, EnergyCAP, David Lloyd Leisure, Schneider Electric, Iconics, Hark Systems, Daikin, METRON, Grand Hyatt, Powerhouse Dynamics, QuadReal Property Group, Aquicore, Stark, Eagle Street Partners, Slack, Zenatix, Spectral Energy, Optergy, E.ON, Cortex Sustainability Intelligence, Cloudfm Group, Distech Controls, Prescriptive Data, PTT, FM:Systems, Oxford Properties, Weber State University, ServiceNow, mCloud Technologies, Datakwip, Appspace, US Energy Information Administration (EIA), Bedrock Detroit, Accruent, Infogrid, BNP Paribas, Shell Energy, Groupe Pochet, Faradai Energy, Vitality, Marriott, KODE Labs, Optima Energy, Nome Capital Partners, JLL, Facilio, 75F, Beeldi, T-Mobile, Verizon, GRESB, IBM, Danone, Uplight, SkyFoundry, Avison Young, Shell, C3 AI, GridPoint, Enel X, Spacewell, Carrier, Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI), MRI Software, Entronix, Energy Star, Rudin Management, Hilton, Airthings, Siemens, Tesco, PassiveLogic, aedifion, WatchWire, Arbejdernes Landsbank, Innovatus Capital Partners, Ofgem, FogHorn, GSK, Hines, TotalEnergies, GPT Group, Measurabl, Wattics, Manchester Metropolitan University, US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Lehotsky Capital, dataArrows, Amazon Web Services (AWS), Park Hotels & Resorts, CopperTree Analytics, Tridium, Atrius, Honeywell, Tango, Fujitsu, GPR Ventures, Thing-it, Energy Advantage, ENOWA (NEOM), Northzone
About the Authors

Harry Wilson
Senior Analyst
Harry is a Senior Analyst in the Verdantix Real Estate & Built Environment practice. Harry's research and advisory expertise centres on energy management; he leads Verdant…
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Claire Stephens
Research Director
Claire Stephens is a Research Director at Verdantix, leading research into technologies and services shaping the real estate and the built environment, encompassing …
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