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SUS-B data dashboard

Endress Hauser Sustainability Through Measured Process Data

Sustainability reporting becomes weaker when the underlying utility, flow, temperature and analytical readings are treated as background data. Endress Hauser frames sustainability as a measurement governance problem: the plant needs calibrated readings, stable intervals and explainable data paths before reduction claims can be trusted by operations, finance or external auditors.

This page uses a dashboard structure because sustainability teams often ask for summarized results while engineering teams need the evidence behind those summaries. The goal is not to decorate environmental claims. It is to show where process instrumentation can support water balance, steam efficiency, leak reduction, chemical dosing control and energy reporting.

Data dashboard

Measurement points that make reduction claims defensible.

Flow balanceUtility and process flow readings are checked against range, meter location and calibration evidence before water or steam reduction is reported.Loop evidence
Energy intensityTemperature and pressure loops support boiler, heat exchanger and feedwater reviews when interval drift and operating profile are visible.Thermal context
Chemical dosingAnalytical sensors and conductivity readings help teams connect dosing control with cleaning cycles, wastewater quality and batch documentation.Analytical record
Loss preventionLevel, pressure and flow alarms can be reviewed as part of spill, leak or transfer-loss investigations when service history is maintained.Incident trace

Research papers

Downloadable evidence paths for operations and reporting teams.

The documents are positioned as working references. They help a team decide which readings should be trusted for sustainability reporting, which records need recalibration and which claims should wait until the measurement chain is stronger. A cautious sustainability claim is more valuable than an attractive claim with weak instrument evidence.

Regulatory timeline

From field reading to reportable number.

  1. Define the claim boundary.Clarify whether the metric covers a unit, a utility system, a batch line or a full facility.
  2. Identify measurement loops.List flow, pressure, level, temperature and analytical signals that feed the claim.
  3. Review service history.Check certificates, interval changes, repair notes and whether any reading was outside expected tolerance.
  4. Separate estimate from measured value.Mark assumptions clearly so reductions are not overstated when the instrument evidence is incomplete.
  5. Keep a repeatable audit trail.Store the loop list, data extraction date, certificate references and reviewer notes with the report.

Use calibrated process data before making reduction claims.

Endress Hauser can review which readings support your water, steam, chemical or transfer-loss metrics and where the evidence chain needs service attention.

Review sustainability measurement points