The San Francisco enterprise carbon and energy platform is now using AI agents to audit utility bills at scale, helping identify billing errors, tax exemptions, and rate mismatches that may otherwise be difficult to detect. Early customers have reported recovering significant sums. Jigar Shah, co-founder of SunEdison, just signed on as senior advisor.Most enterprise finance teams treat utility bills like rent payments: assume the number is right and move on. That assumption is getting more expensive. U.S. commercial electricity prices rose 10.7% in the past year across 43 states, with hotspots like Virginia up 26.3%, Ohio up 21.9%, and Pennsylvania up 19.5%, driven largely by data center load growth. Companies may also be overpaying before the price increases hit because billing errors, rate mismatches, and unclaimed exemptions may go unnoticed across large volumes of invoices managed through spreadsheets and legacy software.Gravity, the San Francisco-based enterprise carbon and energy management platform, launched Utility Bill Management on June 4, 2026, a product that uses AI agents to automate how enterprises collect, analyze, and act on utility spend. The launch follows a pilot in which, according to the company, early customers identified significant refunds, avoided costs, and energy savings. Gravity is also positioning the product with a deliberately low barrier to entry: anyone can upload a single utility bill at utilitybillscan.com and receive findings in 30 seconds, without signing up for anything.The architecture: rules plus agentsThe design of Utility Bill Management reflects a deliberate split in how it handles different types of billing problems. Data flows in through two paths: direct API connections to a broad network of utility providers, or AI-powered extraction from electricity, natural gas, water, and waste bills. Deterministic rules handle unambiguous checks, tariff mismatches, inactive meters, duplicate charges, where the answer is binary, and the logic is fixed. AI agents handle the analysis that typically requires a specialist: identifying whether a site qualifies for a sales tax exemption, flagging power-factor penalties that could be corrected with equipment upgrades, or detecting anomalous consumption patterns that suggest a water leak or vampire load.At launch, the product surfaces seven categories of insight with quantified savings ranges that the company publishes on its product page. Inactive meters represent a smaller opportunity but a straightforward fix: companies paying monthly fees for meters that are no longer in use.“Companies are leaving $2 trillion in energy savings on the table every year, and much of it is hiding in utility bills that are rarely — if ever — audited. We help customers identify potential overcharges, anomalies, and refund opportunities. And we don’t stop there: Gravity does end-to-end value recapture so that insights don’t collect dust.” -- Saleh ElHattab, Co-Founder and CEO, GravityThe execution gap: from finding to fixingThe product’s most significant design decision is its refusal to stop at surfacing findings. Most energy monitoring tools generate reports that sit in dashboards. Gravity’s in-house energy management team qualifies identified projects, generates proposals, and matches customers with vetted vendors through its Energy Management Marketplace, which launched in August 2025. When an audit surfaces a correctable error, the platform doesn’t just flag it — it initiates the workflow to actually capture the value. For sales tax exemptions, that means filing the claim. For equipment-driven issues like power factor penalties, it means connecting the customer with the right vendor to implement a fix. According to the company, setup for new customers can often be completed within days.MiddleGround CapitalMiddleGround Capital offers one example of how Gravity’s Utility Bill Management platform can be applied across a complex portfolio. The private equity firm adopted the product to gain clearer visibility into utility spending across its portfolio companies and identify potential areas for cost recovery and operational savings.Rather than treating utility bills as isolated operating expenses, the collaboration shows how portfolio-level visibility can help firms better understand energy costs, surface potential refunds, and create a more structured process for managing utility spend over time.Jigar Shah and the market contextAlongside the launch, Gravity announced Jigar Shah, co-founder of SunEdison and former executive director of the U.S. Department of Energy's Loan Programs Office, who was an early adopter of the solar power purchase agreement model. Shah’s framing captures the market opportunity precisely: most companies pay their utility bills the same way they pay rent, assuming the number is right without ever checking. The combination of rising electricity prices, increasingly complex utility rate structures, and the volume of bills that most enterprises manage manually creates a gap that AI-powered auditing is well-positioned to close, a signal that the platform’s broader positioning as the only enterprise solution combining carbon accounting with energy cost management is gaining traction in the analyst community.The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, financial, medical, or professional advice. Readers should not rely solely on the content of this article and are encouraged to seek professional advice tailored to their specific circumstances. We disclaim any liability for any loss or damage arising directly or indirectly from the use of, or reliance on, the information presented. Gravity is headquartered in San Francisco, CA. Utility Bill Management launched June 4, 2026. 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