In a bid to electrify its growth amid intensifying competition in cloud data platforms, Snowflake Inc. unveiled Energy Solutions on January 27, 2026, a tailored suite designed to knit together fragmented data streams across the energy sector. The offering targets power utilities, oil and gas giants, and renewables players grappling with silos separating information technology systems from operational technology and Internet of Things devices. By packaging governance tools, pre-built datasets spanning over a century of energy history, and more than 30 partner-developed applications, Snowflake aims to fast-track AI deployment for predictive maintenance, grid optimization, and emissions cuts.
The announcement, detailed in Snowflake’s official press release, underscores a strategic pivot toward vertical-specific solutions, now numbering nine since the 2021 debut of its Financial Services Data Cloud. ‘Data is the control plane for the future of energy,’ said Fred Cohagan, Snowflake’s global head of energy, in the company press release. He emphasized how the platform enables non-technical users to query data via natural language through Snowflake Intelligence, turning complex analytics into real-time operational decisions.
Energy firms have long wrestled with disparate data sources—legacy engineering records, real-time sensor feeds, and enterprise finance systems—hindering AI adoption in a sector vital to global economies. Snowflake’s suite leverages its AI Data Cloud to create a governed foundation, integrating with tools like Snowpark for machine learning and Cortex for AI development. Early adopters include ExxonMobil, PG&E, Siemens, Sunrun, Expand Energy, IGS Energy, and Powerex, who cite gains in reliability and cost savings.
Breaking Data Barriers for Operational Edge
At the core of Energy Solutions lies the unification of IT, OT, and IoT data, a challenge Cohagan described as essential for an industry where ‘decades of operational, engineering, and business data [are] spread across systems,’ per a TechTarget report. This integration supports use cases from asset health monitoring to trading risk management, with Snowflake Intelligence delivering insights in seconds via natural language prompts.
A new partnership with SAP allows blending finance and supply chain data with field operations, directly informing grid management and commercial strategies. As Cohagan noted in TechTarget, ‘Energy is one of the most data-intensive and mission-critical industries in the world—it underpins nearly every economy and sector.’ The suite’s pre-modeled datasets accelerate this, reducing the need for custom builds that have slowed AI pilots in energy.
Customer testimonials highlight tangible impacts. David Leach, SVP and chief data and analytics officer at PG&E, told Snowflake that the platform ‘helps us consolidate siloed legacy environments, govern sensitive regulatory and operational data, and deliver timely analytics’ to boost reliability and affordability (company press release). Similarly, Ian Mathieson, director of data systems at Powerex, praised the migration from legacy systems for ‘AI-driven forecasting and LLM-powered market insights.’
Partner Ecosystem Powers Specialized AI Tools
Snowflake’s rollout coincides with over 30 native applications from partners, amplifying sector-specific capabilities. Itron’s Grid Planning solution, for instance, performs 8,760-hour power flow analyses to model grid performance years ahead, yielding results in hours rather than months, as outlined in a Yahoo Finance article. This aids utilities in precise infrastructure planning and cost avoidance.
CARTO contributes cloud-native spatial analytics for geospatial mapping without data movement, enhancing visibility into assets and risks. Siemens integrates its Industrial Edge platform to stream decentralized asset data securely for AI analytics, with natural language interfaces for maintenance insights. ‘The energy transition requires unprecedented visibility into our operations, from renewable asset performance to grid optimisation,’ said Horst J. Kayser, CEO of factory automation at Siemens, in the press release.
Other collaborators include Bidgely for consumption pattern analysis, EnergyHub for virtual power plant telemetry, Dataiku as a launch partner for scalable AI, Sigma for process effectiveness apps, Exiger for supply chain risk, Tredence for predictive insights, and Argus for pricing analytics. Mike Palmer, CEO of Sigma, stated in a BusinessWire release, ‘By leveraging Snowflake on this solution, we’re combining Sigma’s ability to turn live cloud data into intuitive, AI-powered applications… to improve overall process effectiveness.’
Real-World Wins in Grid Reliability and Decarbonization
Expand Energy’s CIO John Christ reported that Snowflake provides ‘a single, trusted view… reducing complexity and saving thousands of hours annually’ via Snowpark machine learning. Sunrun’s Rohit Ayyagari, VP of enterprise technology, noted it powers analytics for 7,500 users, ‘reducing latency, improving accuracy, and enabling faster insights’ (press release).
IGS Energy’s Dan Shah highlighted simplified AI model building that cuts costs without sacrificing accuracy. EDF built an Intelligent Customer Engine on Snowflake to unify data for energy efficiency insights, per Alex Read, senior enterprise product manager. These cases illustrate how Energy Solutions moves beyond pilots to operational workflows, as Cohagan affirmed: ‘Customers tell us they need a secure, governed data foundation that supports real operational workflows—not just analytics or AI pilots’ (TechTarget).
The suite taps Snowflake’s Cortex AI environment and governance for trustworthy AI at scale, positioning energy firms for volatile supply-demand dynamics. Future enhancements may include SCADA system ties, per TechTarget analyst Stephen Catanzano, to deepen operational tech integration.
Strategic Fit in Snowflake’s Vertical Push
This launch fits Snowflake’s expansion into tailored platforms for manufacturing, technology, and others, easing customization burdens. In a Snowflake blog post, Cohagan reiterated commitments to platform innovation and partner collaborations for use cases like emissions reduction. Amid a stock trading around $216 with mixed returns, per Yahoo Finance, Energy Solutions signals focus on data-heavy sectors.
X posts from Snowflake and CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy amplified the news, spotlighting ExxonMobil and PG&E. Partners like Dataiku eye predictive maintenance demand, noting reduced integration friction boosts revenue. As energy digitizes amid decarbonization pressures, Snowflake’s governed, scalable cloud positions it to capture workloads where AI meets mission-critical operations.
With consumption-based pricing suiting compute-intensive AI, observers will track metrics like partner app adoption and sector growth. Cohagan’s vision: ‘Snowflake is helping the world’s energy leaders modernize how they manage data and harness AI to democratize insights so that anyone… can act on intelligence in real time’ (press release).


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