Simply Said

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Simply said, energy efficiency refers to utilizing less energy to complete the same work.

That is,
decreasing energy waste, which has a number of advantages including a decrease in greenhouse gas
emissions, a decrease in the need for energy inputs, and a decrease in costs for households and the
economy as a whole.

Energy efficiency is important because it saves time and money, improves the resilience and
dependability of the electric grid, and has positive effects on the environment, community, and human
health.

Overview on the ECL

Using the Energy Control and Losses (ECL) module, which involves configuring the application and
importing the necessary data, it is possible to obtain various sorts of reports from a variety of metrics
(substations, circuits, meters, consumption, dates, etc). The three modules that make up the ECL system
are as follows: Energy balances, measurement management, and strategic planning

This module enables the organization to set up various strategic planning action lines, track their
progress and deviations, and take remedial measures. In this context, ECL questions the management of
measurements' other features, such as daily energy use. This procedure includes information from the
report, load profile, notable energy deviations, overloaded transformer, and point-by-point energy
measurements.

The energy balances module also has two components horizontal and vertical balances. The query of the
balance losses that focuses on the network type was made possible by the horizontal balances. The
energy flow (voltage level), bars closing (delivery criteria), substations (technical losses), and feeders
(domain losses) are included in this. The vertical horizontal balances allowed the energy balances to be
questioned with an organizational viewpoint and by adding commercial indicators. Energy flow (voltage
level, delivery criteria), Substation bar closing (voltage level, physical losses), Substations (technical
losses), and feeders (domain losses) are included.

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