Managing Energy, a Collective Organization?

For Jean-Pascal Tricoire, CEO of Scheider Electric, energy management is a "collective organization".

Share:

Comprehensive energy news coverage, updated nonstop

Annual subscription

8.25$/month*

*billed annually at 99$/year for the first year then 149,00$/year ​

Unlimited access • Archives included • Professional invoice

OTHER ACCESS OPTIONS

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2$/month*
then 14.90$ per month thereafter

FREE ACCOUNT

3 articles offered per month

FREE

*Prices are excluding VAT, which may vary depending on your location or professional status

Since 2021: 35,000 articles • 150+ analyses per week

Turn down the heat? Turn off the electricity? The management of energy, whether forced by rationing, or voluntary to fight against global warming, “makes money”, provided that there is a “collective organization”, says the CEO of the Schneider Electric group, Jean-Pascal Tricoire, in an interview with AFP.

As France fears cold weather this winter and Emmanuel Macron presides over a Defense Council on Friday dedicated to the country’s energy supply, the electrical equipment group’s chairman believes the situation can lead to “savings” and, above all, to “better sharing of electricity.”

On his Twitter profile, Mr. Tricoire displays the word “efficiency” in green letters. At the end of June, he had welcomed the call for sobriety launched jointly by the three major energy bosses in France, the CEO of TotalEnergies, the CEO of EDF and the CEO of Engie.

To solve the problem of peak consumption hours, which are causing fears of blackouts this winter, we “must be able to organize ourselves collectively,” he says.

For example, voluntary reductions in consumption by some should allow others to continue using electricity. Schneider, a group with sales of 16 billion euros in the first half of the year, tested an “erasure” in one of its factories in April: the factory stopped heating and charging its cars for two hours.

We had been warned three days before by the “energy weather forecast”, the Ecowatt system (managed by RTE, the French electricity transmission network, editor’s note). That day, we started the heating at 08:00 instead of 06:00: we saved 850 kWh”, says Mr. Tricoire.

“You have to be organized, and it was easy to do because we are equipped with building management systems.” These systems, a kind of computer brain that manages a building’s energy consumption, are a specialty of the French group, which is counting on the current energy debate to accelerate its sales.

“It’s going to move very fast”

“France is a very tertiary country and has a lot of offices,” said Tricoire, regretting that “only 6% of buildings” are equipped with such systems. According to him, on average, “an office building consumes about 300 kWh per square meter per year, whereas it consumes only 180″ with such equipment.

For the habitat, taking the example of Australia or California, he estimates that in the long term, “a normal house” will be “very largely self-supplied” with electricity, “enough to erase many +creeps” and enough to participate in the resolution” of the problems of supply as well as climate, he judges.

“Every roof of a house should have a production component, if we look ahead five or ten years”: “and we should all know what is happening at home in terms of energy directly on our laptop: for example, if the freezer is unplugged I should know it, I should know how much my car consumes, and how much it costs me”, he says.

According to him, consumers who are connected and informed of their consumption in real time are lowering it de facto.

Mr. Tricoire describes an all-electric landscape in France where “a large part of the production will be local”, whether “at the individual or collective level”.

“I think it’s going to move very fast,” he says, citing as a driver of change “the convergence of renewable energy” in full development, “technological advances on the storage” of electricity and “the explosion of electric mobility.” “All this is catalyzed by the climate emergency and unfortunately accelerated by the emergency of the energy transition due to the war in Europe” he notes.

However, it does not aim to fragment the electricity landscape, which is dominated by EDF in France. Enedis, subsidiary of EDF and manager of the current distribution network, “will remain” according to him “the great administrator of the complexity of the electric network”.

“On the other hand, for everyone who can, we all want to be part of solving both the climate problem and the energy problem.”

The Ministry of the Economy forecasts stable regulated tariffs in 2026 and 2027 for 19.75 million households, despite the removal of the Arenh mechanism and the implementation of a new tariff framework.
The federation of the electricity sector proposes a comprehensive plan to reduce dependence on fossil fuels by replacing their use in transport, industry and housing with locally produced electricity.
The new Czech Minister of Industry wants to block the upcoming European emissions trading system, arguing that it harms competitiveness and threatens national industry against global powers.
Several scenarios are under review to regain control of CEZ, a key electricity provider in Czechia, through a transaction estimated at over CZK200bn ($9.6bn), according to the Minister of Industry.
The government has postponed the release of the new Multiannual Energy Programme to early 2026, delayed by political tensions over the balance between nuclear and renewables.
Indonesia plans $31bn in investments by 2030 to decarbonise captive power, but remains constrained by coal dependence and uncertainty over international financing.
The Bolivian government eliminates subsidies on petrol and diesel, ending a system in place for twenty years amid budgetary pressure and dwindling foreign currency reserves.
Poland’s financial watchdog has launched legal proceedings over suspicious transactions involving Energa shares, carried out just before Orlen revealed plans to acquire full ownership.
The Paris Council awards a €15bn, 25-year contract to Dalkia, a subsidiary of EDF, to operate the capital’s heating network, replacing long-time operator Engie amid political tensions ahead of municipal elections.
Norway’s energy regulator plans a rule change mandating grid operators to prepare for simultaneous sabotage scenarios, with an annual cost increase estimated between NOK100 and NOK300 per household.
The State of São Paulo has requested the termination of Enel Distribuição São Paulo’s concession, escalating tensions between local authorities and the federal regulator amid major political and energy concerns three years before the contractual expiry.
Mauritania secures Saudi financing to build a key section of the “Hope Line” as part of its national plan to expand electricity transmission infrastructure inland.
RESourceEU introduces direct European Union intervention on critical raw materials via stockpiling, joint purchasing and export restrictions to reduce external dependency and secure strategic industrial chains.
The third National Low-Carbon Strategy enters its final consultation phase before its 2026 adoption, defining France’s emissions reduction trajectory through 2050 with sector-specific and industrial targets.
Germany will allow a minimum 1.4% increase in grid operator revenues from 2029, while tightening efficiency requirements in a compromise designed to unlock investment without significantly increasing consumer tariffs.
Facing a structural electricity surplus, the government commits to releasing a new Multiannual Energy Programme by Christmas, as aligning supply, demand and investments becomes a key industrial and budgetary issue.
A key scientific report by the United Nations Environment Programme failed to gain state approval due to deep divisions over fossil fuels and other sensitive issues.
RTE warns of France’s delay in electrifying energy uses, a key step to limiting fossil fuel imports and supporting its reindustrialisation strategy.
India’s central authority has cancelled 6.3 GW of grid connections for renewable projects since 2022, marking a tightening of regulations and a shift in responsibility back to developers.
The Brazilian government has been instructed to define within two months a plan for the gradual reduction of fossil fuels, supported by a national energy transition fund financed by oil revenues.

All the latest energy news, all the time

Annual subscription

8.25$/month*

*billed annually at 99$/year for the first year then 149,00$/year ​

Unlimited access - Archives included - Pro invoice

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2$/month*
then 14.90$ per month thereafter

*Prices shown are exclusive of VAT, which may vary according to your location or professional status.

Since 2021: 30,000 articles - +150 analyses/week.