Smart Energy Initiative of Southeastern Pennsylvania  •  April 2026

Emergent Energy Solutions, LLC  |  West Chester, PA

From Energy Data to Energy Revenue: How a West Chester Company Is Helping Pennsylvania Businesses Monetize Efficiency

Emergent Energy Solutions has been a part of Chester County’s energy community since 2011. What started as a small metering company has grown into a multi-service energy practice—one that helps commercial and industrial facilities across Pennsylvania measure their energy use, reduce waste, and now, earn revenue from the efficiency investments they’ve already made.

The company is a certified Minority Business Enterprise headquartered West Chester, and a member of the Smart Energy Initiative of Southeastern Pennsylvania. Today, EES operates three distinct service lines, each built on the same principle: that good energy data creates real financial value.

What Emergent Energy Does

Emergent Metering, the company’s longest-running division, installs wireless circuit-level energy monitoring systems in commercial and industrial buildings. EES gives facility managers visibility into exactly where electricity, gas and water is being consumed—down to individual circuits, in ten-second intervals—without any interruption to operations. This kind of granularity reveals hidden inefficiencies that utility bills alone can’t show: an aging compressed air system drawing far more power than expected, a cooling loop running during unoccupied hours, or lighting circuits that never fully power down. Clients have included Wawa, Walmart, Kraft Heinz, and Constellation Brands.

PA S-RECs, the company’s energy credit division, aggregates and monetizes Pennsylvania Tier II Alternative Energy Credits on behalf of building owners. Under the state’s Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards, electricity suppliers are required to purchase credits from qualifying energy sources—and energy efficiency is one of them. EES helps facility owners register their completed efficiency projects, manage the documentation, and sell the resulting credits into the compliance market through its dedicated platform.

Packgine, the company’s newest division, is an AI-powered compliance platform that helps consumer brands navigate LCA and packaging regulations like Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) laws in the U.S. and the EU’s Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR). Learn more by visiting this blog: https://packgine.ai/blog/packaging-data-chaos-to-confident-epr-decisions

Why This Matters Now

Electricity costs across Pennsylvania and the broader Mid-Atlantic region have been climbing sharply. Wholesale power prices rose 56 percent in 2025, driven by surging demand from data centers, the retirement of aging power plants, and a regional grid where new supply hasn’t kept pace. Most businesses in the area saw rate increases of 10 to 20 percent, with more expected. For any facility watching its operating budget, energy efficiency has moved from a nice-to-have to a financial imperative.

At the same time, the value of Pennsylvania’s energy efficiency credits has been rising steadily. Credits traded at a weighted average of $26.92 each in the most recent compliance year. The state’s regulators project a supply shortfall by 2028 as older generation sources retire. Yet energy efficiency accounts for less than one percent of the current credit supply—meaning thousands of qualifying projects across the state have never been registered.

pasrecs.com: Turning Past Projects into Revenue

Emergent Energy Solutions launched pasrecs.com to make the credit opportunity accessible to any Pennsylvania facility owner with qualifying efficiency work. LED lighting upgrades, HVAC replacements, variable frequency drives, building automation improvements, compressed air upgrades, geothermal systems, and combined heat and power (CHP) installations can all qualify—many for a deemed useful life of up to fifteen years.

The process is designed to be straightforward. A building owner shares project details and any existing utility rebate documentation from PPL, PECO, or FirstEnergy. EES handles everything from there: eligibility review, state registration, credit issuance through the PJM tracking system, and sale to qualified buyers through competitive processes. There are no upfront fees—the company earns a share of the credit revenue it generates on the owner’s behalf.

The company’s metering background gives it a particular advantage here. Years of working with circuit-level energy data means EES can evaluate savings claims with a level of detail that makes verification faster and credit approval more reliable. For clients who also use Emergent Metering’s monitoring systems, the before-and-after energy data is already in hand.

An Invitation to Pennsylvania Businesses

Many building owners assume that if an efficiency project was completed years ago, the window to earn credits has closed. It hasn’t. Emergent’s process can support projects completed within the past ten years—meaning work done as far back as 2016 may still be eligible for meaningful, recurring annual revenue.

Emergent Energy Solutions recently published a detailed guide on this topic: “The 10-Year Lookback: How to Claim PA Tier II RECs on Energy Efficiency Projects You’ve Already Completed”, available at pasrecs.com/blog/10-year-lookback-claim-recs-past-projects.

If your business or facility has invested in energy efficiency in Pennsylvania, there may be credit revenue waiting to be claimed.

Emergentenergy.us | pasrecs.com  |  emergentmetering.com  |  packgine.ai

831 Lincoln Ave, Suite D-10, West Chester, PA 19380

215-645-7141  |  sales@emergentenergy.us