How can you track your electricity and gas usage?

How can you track your electricity and gas usage?

Table of Contents

 

In an apartment building, residents use a variety of appliances and devices that rely on energy sources (electricity and gas). Several factors—such as excessive use, the quality or type of equipment, and so on—can cause your energy bill to exceed its usual amount. To address this, there are several tools available to help you track your energy consumption.

The Benefits of Tracking Your Energy Usage

There are several options available for tracking energy consumption in your home. Each one offers numerous benefits—including financial and environmental advantages—that should be considered to ensure more effective monitoring.

a plant that grows in the middle of rooms

An economic advantage

Regularly monitoring your energy consumption will allow you to track changes in your home’s energy use. If your energy consumption increases, steps can be taken to reduce it. Indeed, higher energy consumption will have a significant impact on yourfinancial expenses. By monitoring your consumption, you can save energy, which willlead to significant savings on your bill.

There are many gas and electricity meters on the market that provide users with access to data, allowing them to monitor their energy consumption in real time. Found in most French households, these meters are connected to an electricity and gas network operator. The data is displayed on an interface that showshourly,daily,monthly, andannualenergy consumption trendswithina home. This allows users to take quick action and reduce their energy consumption in the event of an increase.

An environmental benefit

The production of the energy needed by each household has a significant impact on the environment.Fossil fuels, such ascoal, are the primary sourceof electricity andnatural gas and are one of the main causes ofCO2 emissions.

To minimize the environmental impact of excessive gas and electricity consumption, energy providers offer tailored solutions that allow households to monitor and manage their energy usage.

 

Connected devices make it easier to track this

electrical connection of objects

When energy meters are not natively connected, you can make them connected by installing IoT sensors. For example, Enless Wireless offers a wide range of radio transmitters that can periodically read and transmit the meter readings of the meters to which they are connected.

The installation of this type of IoT equipmentmakes it easier to track and monitor energy consumption in near real time. Viewing consumption graphs also allows alerts to be generated when thresholds are exceeded, enabling the immediate detection of potential leaks.

Current IoT protocols (Sigfox, LoRa) enable the transmission of consumption data over very long radio distances while using very little energy. The investment in an IoT meter reading system is generally more than justified by the energy savings that will be achieved in the coming years.

 

Ready to go wireless?

Contact our sales team to learn more about Enless products

You may also like :

Subscribe to the newsletter

    ArubaAfghanistanAngolaAnguillaAland IslandsAlbaniaAndorraUnited Arab EmiratesArgentinaArmeniaAmerican SamoaAntarcticaFrench Southern TerritoriesAntigua and BarbudaAustraliaAustriaAzerbaijanBurundiBelgiumBeninBonaire, St. Eustatius, and SabaBurkina FasoBangladeshBulgariaBahrainBahamasBosnia and HerzegovinaSaint BarthélemyBelarusBelizeBermudaBolivia, Plurinational State ofBrazilBarbadosBrunei DarussalamBhutanBouvet IslandBotswanaCentral African RepublicCanadaCocos (Keeling) IslandsSwitzerlandChileChinaIvory CoastCameroonDemocratic Republic of the CongoCongothe Cook IslandsColombiaComorosCape VerdeCosta RicaCubaCuracaoChristmas IslandCayman IslandsCyprusCzech RepublicGermanyDjiboutiDominiqueDenmarkDominican RepublicAlgeriaEcuadorEgyptEritreaWestern SaharaSpainEstoniaEthiopiaFinlandFijiFalkland Islands (Malvinas)FranceFaroe IslandsMicronesia, Federated States ofGabonUnited KingdomGeorgiaGuernseyGhanaGibraltarGuineaGuadeloupeGambiaGuinea-BissauEquatorial GuineaGreeceGrenadaGreenlandGuatemalaFrench GuianaGuamFrench GuianaHong KongHeard and McDonald IslandsHondurasCroatiaHaitiHungaryIndonesiaIsle of ManIndiaBritish Indian Ocean TerritoryIrelandIranIraqIcelandIsraelItalyJamaicaJerseyJordanJapanKazakhstanKenyaKyrgyzstanCambodiaKiribatiSaint Kitts and NevisRepublic of KoreaKuwaitLao People's Democratic RepublicLebanonLiberiaLibyaSaint LuciaLiechtensteinSri LankaLesothoLithuaniaLuxembourgLatviaMacauSaint Martin (French side)MoroccoMonacoRepublic of MoldovaMadagascarMaldivesMexicoMarshall IslandsMacedoniaMaliMaltaMyanmarMontenegroMongoliaNorthern Mariana IslandsMozambiqueMauritaniaMontserratMartiniqueMauritiusMalawiMalaysiaMayotteNamibiaNew CaledoniaNigerNorfolk IslandNigeriaNicaraguaNiueNetherlandsNorwayNepalNauruNew ZealandOmanPakistanPanamaPitcairnPeruPhilippinesPalauPapua New GuineaPolandPuerto RicoDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaPortugalParaguayState of PalestineFrench PolynesiaQatarMeetingRomaniaRussian FederationRwandaSaudi ArabiaSudanSenegalSingaporeSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSaint Helena, Ascension, and Tristan da CunhaSvalbard and Jan MayenThe Solomon IslandsSierra LeoneEl SalvadorSan MarinoSomaliaSaint Pierre and MiquelonSerbiaSouth SudanSão Tomé and PríncipeSurinameSlovakiaSloveniaSwedenSwazilandSint Maarten (Dutch side)the SeychellesSyrian Arab RepublicTurks and Caicos IslandsChadTogoThailandTajikistanTokelauTurkmenistanEast TimorTongaTrinidad and TobagoTunisiaTurkeyTuvaluTaiwan, a province of ChinaTanzaniaUgandaUkraineU.S. Minor Outlying IslandsUruguayUnited StatesUzbekistanSaint Vincent and the GrenadinesVenezuelaBritish Virgin IslandsU.S. Virgin Islands, United StatesVietnamVanuatuWallis and FutunaSamoaYemenSouth AfricaZambiaZimbabwe

    Option 1Option 2Option 3Option 4