What volatile power prices are really costing Mining, and how carbon reporting raises the stakes
Blog Post | 28.04.2026 | 5 min read | Hugo Stappers
Blog Post | 28.04.2026 | 5 min read | Hugo Stappers
Mining companies sit at a unique intersection of the energy transition. As large, asset‑intensive industrials, they depend on reliable, affordable energy to keep operations running 24/7 - often in remote or off‑grid locations. At the same time, rising energy price volatility, decarbonization pressure, and heightened stakeholder scrutiny are forcing mining organizations to rethink how energy is procured, managed, and reported.
Whether sourcing power from on‑site generation, long‑term contracts, or external suppliers, mining companies are increasingly discovering that a passive approach to energy is no longer sustainable.
Energy typically represents one of the largest operating costs in mining. Electricity, fuels for heavy equipment, and diesel for remote operations all expose companies to price risk and carbon intensity. In recent years, that exposure has only increased due to volatile commodity markets, growing renewable penetration, and geopolitical uncertainty impacting fuel prices.
Many mining organizations still rely on energy suppliers to absorb market risk. However, even when procurement is outsourced, price volatility, contract structures, and pass‑through mechanisms mean that risk often ends up back on the miner’s balance sheet.
This has turned energy from a back‑office procurement issue into a strategic management topic - one that directly impacts profitability, capital planning, and long‑term competitiveness.
Unlike utilities or pure energy traders, mining companies operate across a broad spectrum of energy maturity.
Some large miners participate directly in wholesale electricity markets, operate captive generation assets, or manage long‑term power purchase agreements (PPAs). Others procure through suppliers and have limited or no direct market access. Both models are valid - but they require different levels of tooling and discipline.
What they share is a common need to understand:
This is where energy forecasting, position keeping, and valuation become highly relevant - even without executing a single trade.
Here is where an Energy Trading and Risk Management (ETRM) system comes in.
An ETRM system, such as from Hitachi Energy, is a software platform used by energy‑intensive companies to centrally manage energy procurement, contracts, consumption, and cost exposure in a structured and compliant way. By acting as a single source of truth and automating key processes, an ETRM improves transparency, supports risk and emissions management, and provides market insights—without requiring companies to actively trade in energy markets.
For mining companies that are not direct market participants, the objective is not trading - it is control and transparency.
ETRM Lite capabilities allow mining energy managers to:
In practice, this means moving beyond spreadsheets toward a structured, auditable “single source of truth” for energy. Even without market execution rights, mining companies benefit from having a proactive eye on how supplier pricing and market dynamics impact their cost base.
In volatile markets, this visibility alone can materially reduce surprises and budget overruns.
For mining companies that do access wholesale markets, operate generation assets, or manage financial hedges, the scope expands significantly.
A full Energy Trading and Risk Management (ETRM) solution supports:
This enables a centralized energy procurement or trading desk to operate with industrial discipline - reducing reliance on manual processes and institutional knowledge, while scaling across geographies and jurisdictions.
Importantly for miners, this capability is not about “becoming traders” but about protecting core operations from excessive volatility while selectively optimizing energy spend.
Whether using ETRM Lite or a full ETRM, forecasting underpins almost every energy decision.
Mining operations tend to have relatively stable baseload demand, but expansions, asset closures, electrification of equipment, and fuel switching all introduce uncertainty. Forecasting tools, such as Nostradamus AI, help answer critical questions such as:
Accurate demand, price, and renewable generation forecasts allow mining companies to connect operational plans with financial and carbon outcomes—before committing capital or contracts.
Alongside energy costs, carbon accountability has become a core challenge for mining leadership. Regulatory requirements, investor expectations, and social license to operate now demand robust, auditable emissions reporting.
Mining organizations must manage:
Excel‑based approaches struggle under this complexity - particularly for global mining portfolios spanning multiple jurisdictions and regulatory regimes.
Integrating carbon tracking with energy procurement and forecasting enables:
In this context, carbon management becomes a strategic planning tool, not just a reporting obligation.
There is no single “right” energy model for mining companies. Some will remain contract‑based buyers, others will evolve into asset‑backed market participants. What matters is having technology that supports the journey - from basic visibility to advanced portfolio optimization.
Energy Portfolio Management, supported by forecasting, ETRM (or ETRM Lite), and carbon accounting, provides mining companies with a coherent framework to:
In an increasingly uncertain energy landscape, the winners will not be those who avoid complexity - but those who manage it deliberately.