Gravity, an enterprise carbon and energy management platform, launched Utility Bill Management on June 4. The product automates utility bill analysis and cost recovery for large enterprises using a combination of deterministic rules and AI agents.
The service ingests utility bills through direct API connections to utility providers or through AI-powered extraction. It surfaces findings across seven categories of insight and couples them with end-to-end remediation workflows that convert identified savings into actual recoveries.
Problem it solves
Enterprises receive utility bills from multiple providers across multiple locations. Errors in those bills are common. Tariff mismatches, duplicate charges, inactive meters and billing mistakes create a tax on enterprise energy spend that most companies never recover.
The claim is that companies collectively leave $2 trillion in energy savings on the table annually. That figure is the headline. Whether it is accurate matters less than the fact that it is plausible. Energy audits cost money. Bill review is tedious. Most enterprises lack the in-house expertise to challenge utility companies on tariff classification or power-factor penalties. The friction of recovery exceeds the perceived benefit.
How it works
Gravity splits the work between deterministic rules and AI agents. Rules handle routine errors: duplicate charges, inactive meters, binary compliance checks. These are high-confidence catches that require no judgment.
AI agents handle specialist tasks: sales-tax exemption eligibility, power-factor penalties, anomalous consumption patterns. These require contextual understanding and interpretation of energy market mechanics.
The architecture reflects a pragmatic approach. Automation handles what can be automated reliably. AI handles what requires judgment. Humans handle disputes and final approval.
Execution layer
The product is technically sound but incomplete without the execution layer. Gravity has built an in-house remediation team and an Energy Management Marketplace that partners with vendors to convert findings into recoveries. That is the differentiator.
Finding a $50,000 annual savings opportunity is worthless if claiming it requires six months of argument with the utility company. Gravity says it handles the entire remediation workflow, from filing claims to matching vendors. Early pilot customers completed setups within days and identified savings immediately.
Market signal
MiddleGround Capital is a customer. Jigar Shah, the former head of the Department of Energy's loan programs and now an investor in climate tech, is senior advisor. Both signal that Gravity is targeting enterprises with real energy spend, not SMBs optimizing lighting costs.
The product is available now through utilitybillscan.com. The question is not whether the opportunity exists. The question is whether enterprises will adopt it. Early results suggest they will.