Monte Carlo Storage Cost Analysis Skill

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This skill analyzes a data warehouse for stale tables that can be removed to reduce storage costs. It delegates classification, safety scoring, and formatting to the `analyze_storage_costs` MCP tool, then presents the pre-formatted result verbatim and handles follow-up questions (category drill-downs, lineage checks).

Category: AI & Intelligent Agents
Repo: antigravity-awesome-skills
Path: skills/monte-carlo-storage-cost-analysis/SKILL.md
Updated: 7/5/2026, 4:58:46 PM

AI Summary

This skill analyzes a data warehouse for stale tables that can be removed to reduce storage costs. It delegates classification, safety scoring, and formatting to the `analyze_storage_costs` MCP tool, then presents the pre-formatted result verbatim and handles follow-up questions (category drill-downs, lineage checks). It is useful for LLM applications, agent orchestration, RAG pipelines, AI evaluation, and multi-agent workflows. Source: antigravity-awesome-skills (skills/monte-carlo-storage-cost-analysis/SKILL.md).

Monte Carlo Storage Cost Analysis Skill

This skill analyzes a data warehouse for stale tables that can be removed to reduce storage costs. It delegates classification, safety scoring, and formatting to the analyze_storage_costs MCP tool, then presents the pre-formatted result verbatim and handles follow-up questions (category drill-downs, lineage checks).

Monte Carlo tool routing (required): Always call Monte Carlo MCP tools through this plugin's bundled server, whose fully-qualified tool names are mcp__plugin_mc-agent-toolkit_monte-carlo-mcp__<tool> (e.g. mcp__plugin_mc-agent-toolkit_monte-carlo-mcp__get_alerts). Bare tool names used in this skill (get_alerts, search, get_table, …) refer to that bundled server. If the session also has a separately-configured monte-carlo-mcp server, do not route to it — it may point at a different endpoint or credentials.

Reference file (use the Read tool to access it):

  • Output contract and category keywords: references/output-structure.md

When to activate this skill

Activate when the user:

  • Asks about storage costs, waste, or cleanup opportunities
  • Wants to find unused, unread, or stale tables
  • Asks "which tables can I drop?" or "what's costing us money?"
  • Mentions storage optimization, cost reduction, or warehouse cleanup
  • Wants to identify zombie tables, dead-end pipelines, or temporary/archive tables

When NOT to activate this skill

Do not activate when the user is:

  • Just querying data or exploring table contents
  • Creating or modifying monitors (use the monitoring-advisor skill)
  • Investigating data quality incidents (use the prevent skill)
  • Looking at pipeline performance or query cost (use the performance-diagnosis skill)

Prerequisites

The following MCP tools must be available (connect to Monte Carlo's MCP server):

  • analyze_storage_costs -- runs the full analysis pipeline and returns pre-formatted output
  • get_asset_lineage -- used only for follow-up lineage checks

The analyze_storage_costs tool supports Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift, and Databricks warehouses only. Other warehouse types are out of scope.

Workflow

Important: These steps are internal instructions for you. Do NOT expose step numbers, step names, or the procedural structure to the user. Just act naturally.

Step 1: Identify the warehouse

You need a warehouse to proceed.

  • If the user specified a warehouse (by name or UUID), use it.
  • If not: call analyze_storage_costs with no warehouse_id. The tool will either auto-pick when only one supported warehouse exists, or return a list of supported warehouses — let the user choose one, then call the tool again with the chosen warehouse_id.

Step 2: Run the analysis

Call analyze_storage_costs with:

  • warehouse_id: the warehouse UUID

The tool fetches candidates, classifies them into waste patterns (Unread, Write-only, Dead-end, Static waste, Zombie, Other stale) and table categories (Temporary, Archive/Snapshot, Production, Other), computes safety tiers, and returns a formatted analysis.

  • If the tool returns an error, report it to the user and stop.
  • If no candidates are found, tell the user and stop.

Step 3: Present the initial summary

The tool output contains two regions:

  1. A <!-- PRESENT_AS_IS --> block with a condensed summary, a Top-N table, and a drill-down prompt.
  2. A <!-- CATEGORY_DETAILS --> block with per-category tables wrapped in <!-- CATEGORY:<key> --> markers. Do NOT present these yet.

Present ONLY the <!-- PRESENT_AS_IS --> block — copy it verbatim, preserving every column, row, and value. Add a brief intro sentence if needed, then paste the block unchanged. The user will see the summary and top tables, then choose a category to drill into.

CRITICAL — do NOT call any other tool after analyze_storage_costs succeeds. No search, no get_table, no troubleshooting agents, no cross-checks. The analysis result IS the final answer; your only remaining job is to present the <!-- PRESENT_AS_IS --> block verbatim.

CRITICAL — preserve markdown-linked MCONs verbatim. The pre-formatted tables already contain properly linked MCONs (e.g., [`db:schema.table`](https://getmontecarlo.com/assets/MCON++...)). Never output bare MCON strings as plain text.

Step 4: Handle follow-up requests

Category drill-downs. When the user asks about a specific category ("show me temporary tables", "what about production?", "tell me more about archive"):

  1. Find the matching <!-- CATEGORY:<key> --> section in the analyze_storage_costs result already in the conversation. Do NOT re-invoke analyze_storage_costs — the data is already there.
  2. Present that section's content verbatim — every column, row, and value.
  3. After presenting, remind the user of remaining categories they haven't explored yet.

Category keywords (see references/output-structure.md for the full list):

  • "temporary", "staging", "tmp", "stg" → CATEGORY:temporary
  • "archive", "snapshot", "backup", "old" → CATEGORY:archive_snapshot
  • "uncategorized", "other", "unknown" → CATEGORY:other
  • "production", "prod", "critical", "important" → CATEGORY:production

If the user says "show me everything" or "all categories", present all category sections in order: temporary → archive → uncategorized → production.

Lineage checks. When the user asks what consumes a specific table ("check lineage for X", "is it safe to remove Y?", "what depends on this table?"):

  1. Call get_asset_lineage with mcons: [<table mcon>] and direction: "DOWNSTREAM".
  2. If has_relationships: false → the table's consumers are likely BI dashboards or tools (not other tables). Mention this — it may still be safe to remove, but the user should verify with dashboard owners.
  3. If downstream tables exist AND are also stale → recommend removing both.
  4. If downstream tables are active → flag as risky, do NOT recommend removal.

Note: The N consumers flag in the Usage & Risk column counts ALL consumers, including BI dashboards (Looker, Tableau, Power BI) and other non-table assets. The lineage tool only returns table-to-table edges, so lineage results may show fewer consumers than the count. When that happens, explain the gap to the user.

Reading the Usage & Risk column

Each row's final Usage & Risk cell combines read-side activity with risk flags. Format:

{activity}                          # no flags fire
{activity}; {flag1, flag2, ...}     # one or more flags fire

Activity values (always present):

  • No reads -- no recorded reads
  • 180d · 0 reads -- last read N days ago, zero total reads
  • 2d · 580 reads / 14 users -- recent reads, total reads and distinct reading users

A low days since read is only meaningful when paired with the read count — a single backup job or security scanner can make a cold table look "1d". Always weigh staleness against reads + users.

Risk flags (appended after ; in this fixed order when any fire):

  • high criticality / medium criticality -- pre-computed criticality
  • N consumers -- has active consumers (tables, views, or BI dashboards); verify before removing
  • high importance score -- is_important is a thresholded importance_score ≥ 0.6 computed upstream in Databricks, not a user-applied tag
  • has monitors -- actively monitored by Monte Carlo

Table categories

Tables are automatically classified for prioritized review:

  • Temporary/Staging -- Short-lived ETL/test tables (safest to drop)
  • Archive/Snapshot -- Historical copies, date-suffixed tables (verify retention policies)
  • Production -- Monitored, critical, or lineage-important tables (highest risk)
  • Other -- No strong signal either way (needs manual review)

Scope limitations

  • Storage costs only -- not compute, query optimization, or billing
  • One warehouse per analysis
  • Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift, and Databricks only
  • Recommendations only -- never execute DROP TABLE or destructive actions

Limitations

  • Use this skill only when the task clearly matches its upstream source and local project context.
  • Verify commands, generated code, dependencies, credentials, and external service behavior before applying changes.
  • Do not treat examples as a substitute for environment-specific tests, security review, or user approval for destructive or costly actions.

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