Available Energy Management Features
Missing Energy Management Features
Pricing
Starting Price
Options
Available Since
Deployment Options
Good Option For
- Large Business (250+ people)
Deep dive
Core Features
Verdigris starts with high-frequency electrical data collected at the distribution panel, then applies cloud analytics and machine learning so facilities teams can move from speculation to a traceable, time-stamped explanation. Key features include:
Circuit-level metering hardware: installs EV2/EV2 Pro meters and smart CTs to capture detailed electrical measurements and keep data available through web access, CSV exports, and APIs.
AI disaggregation: creates device-level “virtual meters” from a single circuit by clustering electrical signatures using machine learning.
Analytics dashboard and exports: navigates a portfolio down to panel/breaker level, analyzes minutely trends and power-quality data, and exports charts or CSV files for reporting workflows.
Alerts and anomaly detection: sets up circuit-level notifications and sends alerts when usage deviates from expected patterns.
Forecasting for operations planning: models expected energy behavior using historical use, weather, and time patterns to help detect deviations and anticipate high-demand events.
Adaptive Automation and M&V: automates baseline-efficiency optimization and demand management, and generates weather-normalized M&V reports aligned with IPMVP/ASHRAE-grade standards.
Closing Insights
Verdigris grew as a full-stack, hardware-plus-software energy platform: capture high-frequency electrical data at the panel, run analytics in the cloud, then automate parts of building operation where the data supports repeatable savings. The company operates from Silicon Valley and has offices in the US and Taiwan, which matches its emphasis on large commercial portfolios and data-center scale rollouts.
Verdigris is best suited to energy- and reliability-intensive sites, especially U.S. data centers and large building portfolios, where operators need defensible circuit-level evidence for expansion planning, uptime risk reduction, and utility-cost exposure (peak demand). It also maps to compliance situations where electricity and carbon data must be explainable.
Named users and references include T-Mobile (data center portfolio), and Verdigris press also cites use by firms such as Verizon and Nvidia. Pricing isn’t public; deployments typically bundle metering hardware, analytics subscriptions, and integration via API/exports.