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Emporia Energy

Your smart home monitor collects data you never see. Energy waste compounds silently without alerts. Query real-time electricity usage from Emporia devices inside OpenClaw.

What breaks without openclaw emporia energy skill

Invisible energy waste. Manual monitor checks. No automated threshold alerts.

Live household energy data × direct Emporia Vue integration ÷ 10–20 minutes ÷ no third-party dashboard = consumption insights inside your agent.

openclaw emporia energy skill — what it actually does

01
Query live electricity usage from Emporia Vue devices on demand.
02
See today's full household consumption in a single command.
03
Set usage threshold alerts that trigger when limits are exceeded.
04
Feed energy data into automated efficiency workflows.
05
Combine energy monitoring with notification skills for instant alerts.

Security check — openclaw emporia energy skill

Privacy score: 7/10 — accesses connected platform APIs only. Lock it: review OAuth scopes before install, confirm macOS, Linux; OpenClaw ≥1.0 compatibility.

Quick start — openclaw emporia energy skill in 10–20 minutes

Setup time: 10–20 minutes

!
You need:
  • OpenClaw core
  • Emporia Energy account
  • Emporia Vue device

Install the package:

# Install via ClawhHub
clawhub install urosorozel/emporia-energy
1
Set EMPORIA_USER, EMPORIA_PASS in .env
2
Install the skill
3
Run /emporia usage --today to see today's consumption
4
Set alerts with /emporia alert --threshold 5kWh

Troubleshooting openclaw emporia energy skill

1
1. Unofficial API — may break if Emporia updates their backend
2
2. Real-time data has a 1-minute resolution — not suitable for sub-minute analysis

Compatibility & status

Works with: macOS, Linux; OpenClaw ≥1.0 beginner Last updated: Oct 2025 ★ 75 on GitHub MIT

Official docs →

View on GitHub →

Related — more like openclaw emporia energy skill

Every day without monitoring is a day of invisible waste on your bill. Install before your next high-usage period and know exactly where the power goes.

Get it on GitHub →