Energy procurement used to be simple: pick a supplier, lock in a rate, move on.
That world is gone.
For UK manufacturers, hospitality groups, and multi‑site operators spending large amounts on energy, procurement is now one of the most important financial risk decisions they make. Volatility, contract complexity, and timing risk have turned energy from a routine purchase into a margin‑critical exposure.
Most businesses don’t have a procurement problem. They have a risk alignment problem.
Why energy procurement is now a financial decision — not a commodity purchase
Over the last three years, energy has behaved more like a traded commodity than a utility. Prices move daily. Contract structures vary widely. Suppliers load risk premiums into deals that many businesses never see.
For organisations with significant consumption, this creates three major risks:
When your annual spend is measured in millions, these risks are not theoretical. They directly affect EBITDA, cash flow, and long‑term planning.
Manufacturers often assume fixed contracts provide stability. In reality, many fixed deals are misaligned to production cycles, leading to:
A plastics manufacturer in the Midlands or a metal fabricator in Yorkshire may have identical consumption volumes — but radically different exposure profiles.
Procurement must reflect that.
In hospitality: multi‑site complexity creates procurement blind spots
Hospitality operators — hotels, restaurants, leisure venues — face a different challenge: fragmented consumption.
Common issues include:
For a group spending £1m–£3m annually, aligning contract structures across sites can unlock significant savings and reduce volatility.
Accountants & Wealth Managers: why this matters to your clients
If you advise businesses with high energy spend, procurement strategy directly influences:
Energy is now a board‑level financial exposure, not an operational afterthought. Poor procurement decisions can quietly erode profitability for years.
Advisors who understand this add real value.
The biggest mistakes businesses make
Across manufacturing, hospitality, and multi‑site operations, the same errors appear repeatedly:
These mistakes are not small. For a business spending £500k–£5m annually, they can create avoidable six‑figure cost increases.
A better approach: treat energy like financial risk
The organisations that perform best treat energy procurement like any other financial exposure:
This is the approach I use with UK manufacturers and multi‑site operators across the national industrial belt.
A diagnostic approach is often enough to identify where a business is carrying unnecessary risk — and how to reduce it.
The takeaway
If your organisation — or your clients — spend a siginificant amount a year on energy, procurement is no longer about chasing the lowest rate.
It’s about building a strategy that:
Energy is now a financial decision. Treat it like one.
I founded Stratagem after having worked with energy suppliers and consultants for 20 years that I wanted to build something different.