The ESOS regulation is mandatory for large UK businesses that satisfy the personnel requirement of having 250 or more employees.
Those whose annual turnover is more than £44 million and annual balance sheet totals more than £38 million.
Accurate calculation of your total energy consumption across buildings, transport and industrial activities to identify ESOS-in-scope energy use and ensure compliance with ESOS requirements.
Comprehensive energy audits carried out in line with ESOS guidance, providing detailed insight into current energy performance and improvement opportunities.
Preparation and formal sign-off of compliant ESOS reports by our accredited ESOS Lead Assessors, ensuring accuracy, credibility, and regulatory assurance.
Practical recommendations tailored to your operations, highlighting opportunities to reduce energy consumption, improve efficiency, and lower carbon emissions.
Clear, structured action plans outlining recommended measures, timescales and responsibilities to support implementation and ongoing energy performance improvement.
Ongoing progress updates to track energy efficiency improvements, demonstrate continued commitment and support internal reporting between ESOS compliance phases.
ESOS is required to be completed by large UK businesses:
If your business qualifies as a large undertaking on the Phase 4 qualification date, 31st of December 2026, you are required to comply with ESOS regulations for Phase 4.
The ESOS Phase 4 reporting period began on December 6, 2023, and the final compliance deadline is December 5, 2027. To stay ahead of deadlines, we recommend starting ESOS Phase 4 now, as work can take over 6 months to plan and carry out.
Yes. We have experience in dealing with multiple late notice ESOS reporting requirements. We can work with you to ensure you are on the right side of the Environmental Agency (EA).
Your ESOS assessment and audits must be conducted or reviewed by an ESOS Lead Assessor. The Lead Assessor must be a member of an approved professional body register.
Organisations that fail to comply with ESOS requirements risk substantial penalties, ongoing daily fines, and regulatory scrutiny.