HomeCoursesEnergy Data Management, EnPI & SEU Awareness

📈 Energy Data Management, EnPI Monitoring & SEU Awareness

Free operator-level ISO 50001 energy-data training with a completion certificate.

Last updated: July 2026

You cannot improve energy performance you do not measure — and the people who make the measurements happen are equipment operators and technicians, not just energy managers. This operator-level course explains, in plain terms, the parts of ISO 50001:2018 that touch the shop floor: what Significant Energy Uses (SEUs) are and how they come out of the energy review (clause 6.3), what Energy Performance Indicators (EnPIs) and Energy Baselines (EnB) mean without the exam-prep depth, practical data-collection responsibilities (meter-reading discipline, logging operating hours and production alongside energy, spotting abnormal consumption), normalization factors in simple terms (production volume, weather/degree-days, occupancy), the operator's role in reaching energy objectives and targets, and how it all connects to the site's monitoring and measurement (clause 9.1). The course is organized into 6 modules, ending with a final exam (pass mark 80%). It is free awareness-level training designed for anyone who needs a practical, working understanding of the topic.

What you'll learn

  • What Significant Energy Uses (SEUs) are and how they are identified
  • Energy Performance Indicators (EnPIs) and Energy Baselines in plain terms
  • Meter-reading discipline and practical energy data collection
  • Normalization factors: production, weather/degree-days, occupancy
  • The operator's role in energy objectives and targets
  • How it connects to the EnMS monitoring and measurement (clause 9.1)

Learning objectives

  • Explain what an SEU is and how it comes from the energy review (clause 6.3)
  • Describe EnPIs and Energy Baselines at operator level, without the CEM-exam depth
  • Read meters accurately and log operating hours and output alongside energy use
  • Explain why normalization matters and name common normalization factors
  • Recognise abnormal energy consumption and know who to tell
  • Describe the operator's role in energy objectives, targets and clause 9.1 monitoring