European Green Transition (EGT ) has experienced a notable increase in customer engagement, contract wins and project delivery in its Wind Energy Services business. 

The company said in a quarterly update that as at 31 March 2026, the repowering orderbook and pipeline included 55 signed Heads of Terms, and 25 granted planning approvals. Project commencements and deposits have been received for 13 projects, and three repowers have been completed to date.

The Wind Energy Services business operates under the brands Earthmill Maintenance, Silverford Engineering and Wind Energy Partnership (WEP).

Repowering involves replacing and upgrading ageing wind turbines with more powerful and efficient models while utilising existing infrastructure, and represents a major growth opportunity for the company, following UK government policy changes in summer 2025. 

European Green Transition expects to build on its current number of signed repowering heads of terms during the second quarter. It’s currently engaged with approximately 280 qualified prospects across its existing client base of around 900 turbines. With a typical repowering contract value of approximately £450,000, this represents a potential repowering revenue opportunity of £126 million. 

These qualified prospects and existing customers are typically small, industrial high-energy users requiring energy security, particularly in light of the ongoing energy crisis caused by geopolitical volatility and uncertainty.

With this in mind, the company has strong visibility over near and medium-term revenue, in line with management expectations for significant growth in 2026 and beyond. UK government policy continues to prioritise the acceleration of domestically generated, low-cost renewable energy, with onshore wind recognised as one of the fastest and most cost-effective technologies to deploy.

The UK is seeking to double onshore wind capacity to 2030.

Recent proposals to remove planning barriers for small-scale onshore wind turbines are expected to support increased adoption of distributed energy solutions, improving cost certainty for small businesses while reducing reliance on volatile fossil fuel markets.

Furthermore, it is expected that by 2035, over 50% of the UK's current onshore wind capacity will face decisions around repowering.

"We have started 2026 with strong momentum, supported by an expanding repowering pipeline and increasing customer activity. In an environment where energy security is a growing priority for us all, demand for onshore wind and repowering solutions continues to build,” said Dave Broadbank, managing director of the Wind Energy Services business.

“With supportive policy tailwinds and clear visibility over future projects, we are confident in our ability to deliver significant growth in 2026 and beyond and of reaching our medium-term target of £50 million Group revenue and double-digit EBITDA margin."

 

View from Vox

 

A potential orderbook of more than £120 million is not to be sniffed at, and shows the scale of the new Wind Energy Services business and its significance to European Green Transition. So far, progress looks good, and the company’s chief financial officer Jack Kelly has said in a recent interview with Vox that the company is on target to meet revenue and EBITDA projections.