One portfolio. One team. One report.
Multi-site energy goes wrong by a thousand cuts: scattered end dates, a different supplier at every location, renewal letters signed locally because nobody had time to compete them. We consolidate the estate, centralize the procurement and keep per-site visibility — so the whole portfolio is bought, audited and reported as one.
- One
- Renewal calendar across the estate
- 30+
- Suppliers competing for your full volume
- Per-site
- Visibility under the consolidated view
Centralize the buying. Don't lose the detail.
Portfolio consolidation
Dozens of meters, multiple suppliers, scattered end dates — pulled into one portfolio with aligned renewals and one negotiation that carries your full volume.
Centralized procurement
One competitive process across 30+ suppliers, one written recommendation, one signature event — instead of thirty mini-renewals a year handled site by site.
The right structure per site
Large sites may justify block & index; smaller sites belong on a clean competitive fix. Same portfolio, same renewal calendar, the right product underneath each meter.
Per-site bill validation
Every site’s invoices checked against contract rates and TDSP delivery charges. Errors and overcharges get caught at the meter level, not buried in a consolidated total.
One report for the whole estate
A single consolidated view of usage, cost and contract status across the portfolio — with the per-site detail behind it when a local manager or your finance team needs it.
One named team
One account manager who knows your whole estate, your renewal calendar and your growth plans — not a different rep for every location.
Aggregated volume is your negotiating position
Thirty sites renewed separately are thirty small customers. The same sites renewed together are one account worth fighting for — and suppliers price accordingly. We've procured 565,500+ MWh in contracts using exactly that leverage.
Multi-site energy — frequently asked questions
Send us your site list.
We'll map every meter, supplier and end date, model the consolidation plan, and put a portfolio strategy and renewal calendar in front of you — written for the people who have to approve it.
