Decision-Making Hygiene: Why Expanded Gathering and Understanding Facts Matters in Energy Decision-Making

In our last blog, we introduced the concept of decision-making hygiene—a disciplined approach to making better choices. One of the most critical aspects of this approach is gathering and fully understanding a broader range of facts before making decisions that impact end-users and the economics of energy choices. 

Municipal leaders, utility executives, and energy entrepreneurs are faced with a complex reality: energy policies, infrastructure investments, and regulatory changes all have direct and indirect impacts on businesses, homeowners, and entire communities.

Poor fact-gathering can lead to misallocation of resources, higher costs for consumers, and missed opportunities for economic growth.

Fact-Based Decision-Making: A Must for Energy Leaders

A strong and sustainable energy future relies on facts that bring new perspectives to counterbalance assumptions, political pressure, or outdated models.

A sampling of thoughts for expanding decision hygiene:

  1. Data on Energy Usage and Consumer Needs
  • The Reality: Many energy policies are shaped by historical trends rather than real-time insights and overestimated expectations of economics.
  • The Risk: Outdated assumptions about demand can lead to overbuilding infrastructure, underinvesting in efficiency, conservation, and innovation [including local generation].
  • A Solution: Municipalities and utilities must leverage and share smart grid data, advanced analytics, and direct engagement with customers to understand actual consumption patterns.

  1. Affordability and Economic Impact on End-Users
  • The Reality: Energy is a technical and economical community issue, influenced by environmental decisions.
  • The Risk: Decisions that ignore energy affordability can drive up rates and polarize community stakeholders, making life harder for residents and business.
  • A Solution: Leaders must understand the full range of stakeholder considerations before establishing policies and approving new projects.

  1. Cost vs. Benefit Analysis of New Technologies
  • The Reality: New energy technologies—like battery storage, electrification, and microgrids are topical/exciting but require careful near-term and life-cycle evaluation.
  • The Risk: Jumping on trends without a full cost-benefit analysis can lead to underutilized infrastructure or stranded assets.
  • A Solution: Decision-makers should evaluate ROI, lifespan, operational risks, and policy implications before adopting new technologies.

  1. Regulatory and Policy Considerations
  • The Reality: Government policies and energy regulations are complex, ever-evolving, and highly influential on business models.
  • The Risk: Misinterpreting or overlooking policy and regulatory requirements/realities can lead to non-compliance, project delays, and inability to adapt/pivot when changes occur.
  • A Solution: Energy businesses and municipalities should actively monitor regulatory changes, engage with policymakers, and share information so their strategies accommodate evolving frameworks.

  1. Consumer Behaviour and Market Trends
  • The Reality: Many energy consumers, the full spectrum from residential to large industrial, are changing how they use and think about energy.
  • The Risk: Ignoring shifts in demand can lead to investments that don’t match actual user needs. [Another set of risks must be considered for supplier organizations that serve energy consumers.]
  • A Solution: Fact-based decision-making means continuously gathering insights from surveys, market research, and stakeholder engagement programs.

The Economic Consequences of Poor Fact-Gathering

When decisions are made without fully understanding the facts, the economic consequences can be severe. Some examples include:

  • Overbuilding infrastructure that ratepayers must fund… distribution, transmission and generation.
  • Delaying investments in modern solutions(e.g., ignoring efficiency measures that could reduce demand and lower costs).
  • Creating affordability crises for residents and businesses (e.g., approving policies that disproportionately increase energy costs for vulnerable customers).

By contrast, decision-making hygiene leads to:

  • More resilient energy systems that align with real-world needs.
  • Stronger economic outcomes that balance affordability and investment.
  • Greater trust from end-users who see decisions that benefit them, not just large utilities or governments.

A Call to Action: Elevating Energy Decision-Making in Ontario

Ontario’s energy leaders have an opportunity to improve how they gather and use facts to shape decisions.

This means:

  • Using real-time energy data rather than outdated projections.
  • Conducting comprehensive economic analyses before approving new projects.
  • Engaging directly with all stakeholder sectors to understand their needs.
  • Aligning policy decisions with affordability and competitiveness goals.

Fact-based decision-making hygiene will create achievement of balanced energy and environment goals and sustainability.

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