Why UK Businesses Are Looking Again at Solar, Batteries and Energy Efficiency
UK businesses are once again paying close attention to commercial solar, battery storage and energy-efficiency upgrades.
A recent UK business report highlighted growing demand from small and medium-sized companies looking at solar installations and power-purchase agreement models. These arrangements can allow a business to use solar energy without paying the full installation cost upfront, although the commercial terms still need careful review.
This matters because energy decisions are no longer just about saving money on bills. They now connect to carbon reporting, customer expectations, compliance, asset value, resilience and long-term business planning.
Energy pressure is becoming a boardroom issue
For many organisations, energy cost uncertainty creates a simple question: what can we control?
A business cannot control wholesale energy markets. But it may be able to control how much energy it wastes, when it uses power, whether its building is suitable for solar, whether battery storage makes sense and whether EV charging should be planned alongside wider electrical upgrades.
That is why solar, batteries, EV charging and energy efficiency should not be treated as separate conversations. The best route often starts with a practical review of the site, the building, the business model and the future plan.
This also links to ESOS and carbon reporting
For larger organisations, the timing is important.
GOV.UK confirms that ESOS Phase 3 includes action plans and progress updates, with the first progress update deadline listed as 5 December 2025.
That means many businesses cannot afford to leave energy-saving recommendations sitting in a report. They need to show what has been done, what is planned and what impact those actions are expected to have.
Even where a company is not directly in scope for ESOS, the same thinking is useful. A clear energy plan can support procurement, tenders, landlord discussions, investor questions, customer confidence and internal cost control.
Who should be paying attention?
Small businesses should look at practical, affordable improvements first. This may include lighting, controls, heating efficiency, solar suitability or EV charging for staff and customers.
Medium-sized businesses should consider whether energy-efficiency upgrades, solar, batteries and EV charging can be planned together rather than as separate projects.
Large businesses and multinationals should connect energy projects to ESG, SECR, ESOS, procurement standards and multi-site asset planning.
Public sector organisations should review how energy upgrades can support carbon targets while protecting budgets and service delivery.
Contractors and subcontractors should prepare for more demand around retrofit, renewables, electrical infrastructure, data collection, compliance evidence and project coordination.
What should organisations do next?
The first step is not always installation. The first step is understanding.
Before committing to a solar, battery or EV charging project, a business should ask:
- Is the site suitable?
- What is the current energy use?
- Where is energy being wasted?
- What is the condition of the roof, electrical supply and building fabric?
- Will demand increase because of EV charging, heat pumps, new equipment or expansion?
- Is the project being bought outright, leased or delivered through a power-purchase agreement?
- Who is responsible for design, installation, maintenance, monitoring and performance?
- How does the project support ESOS, carbon reporting or wider sustainability goals?
These questions reduce risk. They also help the business avoid buying a product before it has a plan.
How Biodiverse Enterprise Ltd can help
Biodiverse Enterprise Ltd supports organisations that want clearer, more practical routes into sustainability and energy improvement.
This can include sustainable construction, EV charging planning, commercial solar and battery coordination, ESOS action-plan implementation, energy-efficiency upgrades, carbon and environmental improvement, retrofit coordination and green-sector education.
The role of Biodiverse is to help clients move from pressure to clarity.
That means understanding the site, the objective, the budget, the risks and the delivery route. Where accredited specialists, designers, installers or technical partners are needed, that should be made clear from the start.
A practical opportunity, not a quick fix
The rise in commercial solar interest is a positive sign, but businesses should avoid rushing into poorly planned projects.
Solar panels, batteries, EV chargers and efficiency upgrades can all play a useful role. But they work best when they are part of a joined-up plan.
For organisations reviewing energy costs, carbon targets or ESOS actions, now is a good time to take stock, assess the options and move forward carefully.
Biodiverse Enterprise Ltd helps clients understand the next sensible step.