Energy is no longer a predictable overhead—it’s becoming a core strategic lever for businesses navigating an increasingly volatile market, Harvard Business Review writes.
Driven by geopolitics, extreme weather, grid constraints and surging demand from AI and electrification, energy costs are rising and behaving less like a fixed expense and more like a dynamic risk. That shift is forcing companies to rethink how they manage everything from procurement to operations.
Leaders who build deeper visibility into energy usage, break down complex tariff structures and understand what truly drives their bills can uncover meaningful savings. At the same time, companies that design operations for flexibility—shifting usage away from peak periods or investing in on-site generation and storage—can reduce exposure and even create new revenue opportunities through demand response programs.
The implications are reaching the boardroom, where energy strategy now intersects with margins, uptime, capital planning and decarbonization goals. Traditional hedging alone is no longer enough; firms must pair financial tools with operational agility and smarter contracting.
As volatility becomes the norm, businesses that treat energy as an actively managed capability—not a passive cost—will be best positioned to control risk, improve resilience and gain a competitive edge.
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