Due Diligence on Energy & Utilities Companies — UK Guide

Data updated 2026-04-25

The UK Energy & Utilities sector comprises 17,452 active companies, with a remarkably low 0.8% dissolution rate indicating sector stability. However, 8,358 companies formed since 2020 represent significant market entry and potential volatility. Due diligence is critical: director count and Person of Significant Control (PSC) concentration emerge as top risk signals, with PSC ownership concentration averaging a risk score of 12.8 across 18,016 records.

17,452
Active Companies
0.8%
Dissolution Rate
14 yr
Average Age
111,331
Signals Tracked

Why This Matters

Due diligence in the Energy & Utilities sector is not merely a compliance checkbox—it is a fundamental risk management imperative shaped by the sector's unique regulatory environment and financial stakes. The UK energy market operates under strict oversight from Ofgem, the Financial Conduct Authority, and the Prudential Regulation Authority, meaning that counterparties, investors, and partners face significant regulatory exposure if they engage with non-compliant or high-risk entities. A breach of due diligence obligations can result in substantial fines, loss of operating licenses, reputational damage, and in extreme cases, criminal liability for individuals and organizations. The Energy & Utilities sector has historically been a target for sophisticated corporate fraud, shell company schemes, and beneficial ownership obfuscation. Companies in this space handle critical national infrastructure, manage consumer data, and control assets of enormous strategic importance. The average company age of 14.0 years suggests a mature market, yet the influx of 8,358 newly formed companies since 2020—driven by the renewable energy transition, decentralization, and net-zero mandates—has dramatically increased the proportion of untested market entrants with unknown governance structures. Our data reveals three critical risk dimensions: director count (21,046 records with average risk score 3.1), PSC count (18,047 records with average risk score 14.4), and PSC ownership concentration (18,016 records with average risk score 12.8). High PSC risk scores indicate complex, opaque ownership structures that may mask beneficial owners, create conflicting interests, or facilitate money laundering. In the energy sector, where foreign investment is substantial and geopolitical tensions are rising, understanding true beneficial ownership is essential for national security compliance and sanctions screening. Financial implications are severe. Failed due diligence on a counterparty that subsequently defaults can expose an energy company to multi-million-pound losses. For utilities managing critical infrastructure contracts, engaging with entities with undisclosed conflicts of interest or hidden liabilities can lead to service disruptions affecting millions of consumers. Regulatory penalties for inadequate due diligence under the Money Laundering Regulations 2017 and subsequent amendments can reach 10% of annual turnover. Additionally, energy companies face specific ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) scrutiny from investors; poor governance due diligence can damage ESG ratings and increase cost of capital. Our data sources—Companies House officers records, PSC registers, and dissolution data—provide transparent, authoritative evidence of governance structure and ownership. By systematically analyzing these records, organizations can identify hidden risks: shell companies with minimal operational presence, directors with histories of disqualification or insolvency, complex ownership chains designed to obscure accountability, and concentration of control that creates single-point-of-failure risks. In a sector where trust is paramount and regulatory compliance is non-negotiable, comprehensive due diligence transforms raw corporate data into actionable risk intelligence.

What to Check

1
Verify Director Identity and Competency

Cross-reference all company directors against Companies House records (ch_officers). Confirm their professional qualifications, industry experience, and any disqualifications. Red flags include newly appointed directors with no energy sector background, multiple directorships in unrelated sectors, or gaps in employment history. For energy companies, technical competency is non-negotiable.

ch_officers
2
Analyze Director Count and Governance Structure

Examine the number of directors relative to company size and complexity. Our data shows director_count averaging risk score 3.1 across 21,046 records. Too few directors may indicate understaffing and governance weakness; too many may suggest diluted accountability. Energy utilities typically require specialized committees (audit, risk, health & safety) that correlate with appropriate director count.

ch_officers
3
Identify All Persons of Significant Control

Obtain the complete PSC register and verify each individual or entity holding 25%+ ownership. PSC_count data (18,047 records, average risk score 14.4) reveals that complex PSC structures are common. Ensure PSC information is current, matches beneficial ownership declarations, and that no PSC entries are marked as 'unknown' without justification.

ch_psc
4
Assess PSC Ownership Concentration Risk

Calculate the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index or similar concentration metric for PSC ownership. Our dataset shows psc_ownership_concentration averaging risk score 12.8 across 18,016 records—a significant concern. High concentration (e.g., single PSC holding 75%+) indicates governance risk, potential conflicts of interest, and vulnerability to key person dependency.

ch_psc
5
Screen for Dissolved or Delinquent Entities

Check if the target company, its subsidiaries, parent entities, or related entities have dissolution history. The 0.8% dissolution rate in this sector is low, but 166 dissolved companies warrant investigation. Determine dissolution reasons: voluntary strike-off (lower risk) versus compulsory strike-off or administrative dissolution (higher risk indicating regulatory breach or financial failure).

Dissolutions register
6
Verify Regulatory Compliance and Licenses

Energy & Utilities companies must hold appropriate licenses and comply with industry-specific regulations (Ofgem for gas/electricity, Environment Agency for water). Verify current license status, any compliance history, enforcement actions, or license suspensions. Cross-reference regulatory databases with Companies House data to identify misrepresentations.

Regulatory authority records
7
Investigate Ultimate Beneficial Ownership

Trace ownership chains through all layers: immediate PSCs, their PSCs, parent entities, and ultimate beneficial owners. Foreign ownership requires additional sanctions screening via OFAC and UK consolidated list. In energy, trace back to identify sovereign wealth funds, state-owned enterprises, or politically exposed persons that may trigger compliance obligations.

ch_psc, companies registry
8
Review Financial History and Solvency

Obtain at least three years of filed accounts from Companies House. Assess profitability, liquidity, debt levels, and going concern statements. Red flags include rapid deterioration, negative equity, qualified audit reports, or audit firm resignations. For energy companies with capital-intensive operations, scrutinize capital expenditure and funding sources.

Companies House filings

Common Red Flags

high

high

medium

high

medium

Top Signals

Signal TypeSourceCountAvg Score
Director Countch_officers21,0463.1
Psc Countch_psc18,04714.4
Psc Ownership Concentrationch_psc18,01612.8
Ch Employeesch_accounts9,5221.6
Ch Net Assetsch_accounts9,4438.6
Psc Corporate Ownerch_psc8,870-10.0
Mortgage Satisfaction Ratech_mortgages7,181-6.1
Mortgage Active Chargesch_mortgages7,181-3.2
Has Secretarych_officers6,5795.0
Mortgage Lender Concentrationch_mortgages5,446-3.5

Signal Distribution

Ch Psc44.9KCh Officers27.6KCh Mortgages19.8KCh Accounts19.0K

Energy & Utilities at a Glance

UK SECTOR OVERVIEWEnergy & UtilitiesActive Companies17KDissolved166Dissolution Rate0.8%Average Age14 yrsFormed Since 20208KSignals Tracked111KSource: uvagatron.com · 2026

Energy & Utilities Sector Overview

The UK energy & utilities sector comprises 21,241 registered companies, of which 17,452 are currently active and 166 have been dissolved. The sector's dissolution rate stands at 0.8%. The average company in this sector is 14 years old. 8,358 companies (48% of active) were incorporated since 2020, indicating rapid growth and a high proportion of young businesses. Geographically, the highest concentrations are in LONDON (4,467 companies), BRISTOL (429), and EDINBURGH (330). UVAGATRON tracks 111,331 signals across 4 data sources for this sector, enabling comprehensive risk assessment from multiple angles.

Data Sources Used

1
Companies House

Core company data, filings, and officer records for 16.6M companies

2
All 50+ Sources

Cross-referenced signals from government, regulatory, and international databases

3
Risk Score v3

Multi-dimensional risk assessment across 5 dimensions and 32 sub-scores

Top Locations

Related Checks for Energy & Utilities

Frequently Asked Questions

A 0.8% dissolution rate is exceptionally low and indicates sector maturity, regulatory stability, and strong barriers to entry that support ongoing operations. However, this masks the influx of 8,358 newly formed companies since 2020, many with unproven track records. The low dissolution rate does not eliminate due diligence requirements; rather, it means investigations should focus on the growing cohort of new entrants whose viability is untested. Additionally, the 166 dissolved companies require investigation to understand failure modes—whether regulatory, financial, or operational—which inform risk assessment of current counterparties operating in similar niches.

A PSC concentration risk score of 12.8 out of a typical scale of 0-20 indicates substantial concentration risk is endemic in this sector. This reflects the reality that many energy companies—particularly those in renewable energy or new utility models—are privately held with concentrated ownership by founders, investment firms, or strategic partners. For due diligence purposes, this high baseline score means concentration alone is not necessarily disqualifying; instead, focus on whether the concentrated owner is a legitimate operating company, investment fund, or individual with clean compliance history. Cross-reference the PSC concentration risk against the company's board independence, audit committee structure, and governance policies. Concentration held by foreign or sanctioned entities, or by individuals with negative history, elevates the severity significantly.

Trace all PSCs, ultimate beneficial owners, and parent entities through Companies House records and identify any foreign or state-affiliated ownership. Cross-reference all names, addresses, and corporate identifiers against: UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) consolidated list, OFAC (US), UN Security Council lists, and EU consolidated sanctions lists. For energy companies, flag any ownership by Russian, Iranian, North Korean, or Syrian entities given sectoral sanctions. Additionally, screen against politically exposed persons (PEPs) databases via international compliance providers. The energy sector's critical national infrastructure status means foreign ownership alone may not be disqualifying, but must be disclosed to relevant regulators (often Ofgem or BEIS/DESNZ). Document all screening results; regulatory expectations are that financial institutions and energy companies maintain comprehensive records of beneficial ownership and sanctions screening.

Yes, apply enhanced due diligence to companies formed since 2020. While the sector's mature average age of 14 years suggests stability, newly formed companies lack operational history, proven compliance records, and established governance. For 2020+ entrants, require: audited financial statements (not just statutory filings) for at least two years of operation; detailed business plans and capital structure; evidence of technical team competency for energy/utilities specific functions; regulatory licenses and approvals; and background checks on all directors and PSCs. Newly formed companies may exhibit higher director/PSC churn as ownership or management evolves, which is normal but requires explanation. Be especially cautious if a new company claims to operate critical infrastructure or has immediate, large-scale capital requirements—these are characteristics of potential fraud schemes.

A director_count average risk score of 3.1 (on a 0-20 scale) indicates that director count is generally not a primary risk driver across the 21,046 records analyzed—it's a relatively low-risk factor at the sector level. However, this is contextual; the appropriate director count depends on company size, complexity, and regulatory requirements. A £5 million revenue SME with three directors is healthy governance; a £200 million utility with three directors suggests understaffing. Red flags include: (1) single director controlling everything—indicates no independent oversight; (2) more than 12 directors without clear committee structure—suggests governance by committee rather than delegation; (3) all directors from same professional background without diversity—indicates groupthink risk. Energy companies typically require: executive directors (CEO, CFO, CTO), independent non-executive directors (audit, risk, H&S committees), and ideally sector-experienced advisors. Use director_count as one variable, not in isolation—assess director count relative to board independence, qualifications, and functional coverage.

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Source: Companies House register and 50+ UK government databases via UVAGATRON, updated 2026-04-25. Data is refreshed daily. Information is provided for reference only.