
Our Programs
WEC develops innovative solutions for a responsible and sustainable future. Through the use of artificial intelligence, research, and targeted education, energy efficiency, environmental protection, and crisis resilience are promoted. The goal is to combine technological advancement with ecological awareness for a stable and livable society.

01
Responsible Constructions
Environmental Protection, Sustainability, and Research
As one of the largest sources of emissions in recent history, construction sites have come under scrutiny. The greenhouse gases mainly originate from the use of construction machinery and vehicles that burn fossil fuels. In this context, WEC has set a goal with its own algorithm to support renewable and clean energy through targeted actions. This enables low-emission construction projects and promotes environmental protection. In addition, AI is used to monitor and precisely track energy usage. Such an approach creates cross-trade transparency, providing the opportunity to identify and eliminate inefficient processes and excessive energy consumption. (adam-energysaver.com​)
02
Responsible Business Energy, Resource, and Environmental Protection

Using WEC’s proprietary algorithm called Adam, energy data is collected for buildings of all types, and the total energy consumption of the building is reduced by up to approximately 25% through AI-generated optimization. In this way, the primary resources required, such as oil, gas, coal, wind, or solar energy, can also be reduced by the same percentage. This represents a significant and genuinely sustainable step toward conserving our environment and natural resources. (adam-energysaver.com)

03
Blackout Preparedness and Crisis Resilience
Public Education, Civil Protection, and Self-Help
The likelihood of a large-scale power, infrastructure, or supply failure (“blackout”) cannot be predicted. Even though such an event is often considered unlikely, it should not be ruled out. This raises the question of whether we are prepared for such a scenario. In many areas, the answer is no. WEC demonstrates that anyone can be well-prepared with relatively little effort.
The real problem is not the power outage itself, but its consequences. Few may realize that the greater challenge occurs during the restart of the power grid. When the electricity network is brought back online, significant voltage, current, or frequency fluctuations can cause massive damage to critical infrastructure and IT systems.
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Affected systems include building management technology and other control infrastructures, which operate in the background but perform far-reaching functions. When safety systems fail, a race against time begins.
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WEC, together with its member and international blackout and crisis preparedness expert Herbert Saurugg, develops scenarios and solutions to minimize potential damage and support the restart process through controlled reactivation. In addition to municipalities and cities, it is also important for companies and organizations to understand how their infrastructure can be systematically restarted in a crisis and which interdependencies exist that often go unnoticed in everyday operations. In the modern age, we are used to everything working all the time - but in times of crisis, this can change abruptly. Be prepared - with us.
