Energy efficiency and performance optimization across power generation and energy infrastructure
Enhancing efficiency and performance with reliable measurement, monitoring and actionable insights
In brief
- Growing electricity demand, increasing system complexity and higher reliability risks are making energy efficiency and performance optimization essential across power generation and critical energy infrastructure.
- Reliable measurement and continuous monitoring provide the transparency needed to identify inefficiencies, stabilize processes and support data-driven operational decisions.
- Integrated optimization improves uptime, asset performance and energy use, while enabling operators to adapt to dynamic demand and emerging high-consumption use cases such as data center cooling.
Why energy efficiency and performance optimization matter now?
Accelerating electricity demand, data center growth and renewable variability make energy efficiency and performance optimization essential for resilient power infrastructure.
Energy efficiency and operational performance have become strategic priorities across the energy value chain. The drivers are clear, measurable and accelerating:
- Electricity demand is rising significantly, growing by more than 3–4% annually and over 2.5× faster than total energy demand
- Infrastructure reliability is under increasing stress due to electrification and weather-dependent generation
- Asset operators must balance cost, uptime and sustainability under tighter margins and regulatory pressure
- Digitalization is raising expectations for real-time, data-driven decision-making
At the same time, reliability challenges are intensifying. Electrification, weather-dependent renewable generation and extreme weather events are increasing variability across power systems. In parallel, data center growth is adding substantial new demand, expected to account for around 10% of global electricity demand growth by 2030 and to more than double its consumption .
For plant operators and infrastructure owners, optimization is no longer limited to isolated efficiency initiatives. It requires continuous visibility into system behavior, equipment performance and process conditions.
The operational priorities shaping critical energy infrastructure
- Reliability and uptime: Critical energy infrastructure must operate with high availability. Outages can affect broader industrial activity, essential services and grid stability. Strengthening power system resilience is becoming essential as extreme weather and shifting load patterns introduce new reliability risks.
- Energy efficiency: Efficiency improvements help reduce operating cost, energy waste and system stress by minimizing energy losses, reducing heat and mechanical strain on equipment, and lowering maintenance and failure rates . These benefits support sustainability goals while improving competitiveness and resource planning. At the same time, stronger progress is needed, reinforcing the importance of continuous operational optimization .
- Process transparency: Optimization requires actionable data. Operators need reliable visibility into how systems perform under real conditions, especially across distributed or energy-intensive operations.
- Resilience under changing demand: Critical energy systems increasingly need to adapt to dynamic loads, infrastructure constraints and more decentralized operating environments. Accurate measurement supports faster understanding and better control under these changing conditions.
How measurement supports energy efficiency in power generation and infrastructure
Measurement enables energy efficiency through accurate data, early detection of losses and optimized use of energy and utilities.
Measurement is a foundational enabler of energy optimization. It helps operators understand where energy is used, where losses occur and where process performance can be improved.
Key measurement priorities for energy optimization
- Flow measurement for consumables, such as fuel and heating and cooling processes
- Temperature measurement for efficient heat transfer and process stability
- Pressure measurement for equipment performance and control
- Level measurement for storage, process continuity and balance
- Liquid analysis for fluid quality, heat transfer efficiency and stable process conditions
Typical business outcomes
- Full transparency into energy use, losses and process performance
- Early identification of inefficiencies and optimization potential
- Stable and consistent performance across assets and processes
- Optimized use of energy and utilities with reduced waste
- Data-driven operational decisions with higher confidence and speed
Performance optimization across critical energy systems
Performance optimization across critical energy systems with Endress+Hauser expertise, combining instrumentation, predictive maintenance and lifecycle management to maximize uptime and efficiency.
Optimization is not only about consuming less energy. It is also about improving how infrastructure performs over time, ensuring stable operation, reliability and long-term efficiency.
What performance optimization includes:
- Maintaining stable operating conditions
- Reducing unnecessary process variability
- Supporting predictive and condition-based maintenance
- Improving asset utilization and lifecycle performance
- Increasing uptime
This becomes increasingly important as infrastructure operators manage aging assets, changing demand profiles and tighter expectations for uptime.
To address these challenges, operators can partner with Endress+Hauser process experts to manage and optimize maintenance activities across the installed base, improving Operational Equipment Efficiency (OEE). Through close collaboration, the focus is on achieving the optimal balance between increasing performance, mitigating risks and reducing operational costs to support consistent system output and reliability.
Endress+Hauser supports this approach with qualified personnel and proven process knowledge to plan, execute and continuously improve maintenance strategies across critical instruments. This includes managing maintenance workflows, ensuring measurement accuracy and supporting compliance and safety requirements throughout the lifecycle of cooling and energy infrastructure.
By combining instrumentation expertise with data-driven insights, operators can improve process efficiency, reduce manual effort and make informed decisions about long-term asset management. This enables a shift from reactive interventions to structured, performance-oriented maintenance strategies that enhance system availability and reduce operational risk.
Data centers as a growing critical-energy use case
Exploding demand for digital services is turning data centers into one of the fastest-growing drivers of electricity consumption.
One of the clearest examples of why energy efficiency and performance optimization matter today is the rapid rise of data centers as major electricity consumers. Data centers are becoming central to power and energy discussions not only because they require large amounts of electricity to run compute-intensive workloads, but also because additional energy is needed to ensure effective cooling and stable operation.
As digitalization accelerates and AI-driven applications expand, electricity demand from data centers continues to grow at pace. The IEA reported in April 2026 that electricity consumption from data centers surged by 17% in 2025 and is expected to increase significantly, with overall electricity use projected to roughly triple by 2035, with AI-focused facilities acting as a key driver of this trend .
Electricity use from AI-optimised data centers is set to more than quadruple by 2035.
At the facility level, cooling is a critical contributor to overall energy demand. Higher rack densities and increased computing performance generate substantial heat loads, making efficient thermal management essential to ensure uptime and protect equipment. In fact, up to 40% of total electricity consumption is not used for computing, but for removing heat from the system.
As a result, cooling strategies are evolving. Uptime Institute’s 2024 cooling survey indicates that while traditional air-based cooling remains widely used, operators are increasingly adopting advanced approaches such as direct liquid cooling to manage rising thermal loads more efficiently. This shift highlights the growing need for integrated optimization of both power consumption and cooling performance in modern data centers.
Why this matters for energy infrastructure
- Data centers are becoming a significant electricity demand driver
- Higher rack densities increase cooling complexity and energy intensity
- Operators need better visibility into thermal and hydraulic performance
- Optimization depends on accurate measurement, control and infrastructure integration
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Measurement and instrumentation for reliable, efficient energy operations
Advanced measurement and instrumentation enable reliable energy operations through accurate data, improved process control and enhanced efficiency in critical infrastructure.
In critical energy infrastructure, instrumentation needs to do more than provide a single reading. It must support operational confidence over time, often in demanding conditions. Industry-grade measurement enables:
- Accurate data for operational decision-making
- Stable performance in challenging environments
- Better control over energy-intensive processes
- Stronger foundations for automation and digital workflows
- Improved confidence in efficiency and reliability initiatives
This kind of data becomes more valuable as systems become more connected and optimization becomes more continuous.
Key questions about energy efficiency and performance optimization
These FAQs address the key questions behind energy efficiency and performance optimization in critical energy infrastructure. They clarify what energy efficiency means in operational terms, why optimization has become a strategic priority for power and energy systems and how measurement and instrumentation provide the data foundation needed to improve performance, reliability and control.