º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Sir Richard Branson-backed electric vehicle charging network cuts jobs as losses balloon

Gridserve has reported a pre-tax loss of £82.7m for its latest financial year, according to new accounts filed with Companies House

Gridserve recently announced an extra £100m in funding.

Gridserve, the electric vehicle (EV) charging network supported by figures including Sir Richard Branson, has reduced its workforce whilst reporting losses exceeding £80m in 2024, new filings have disclosed.

The Swindon-based company recorded a pre-tax loss of £82.7m for its most recent financial year, according to fresh accounts lodged with Companies House, as reported by .

This represents a deterioration from Gridserve's previous pre-tax loss of £54.8m in 2023.

The figures also demonstrate that the firm's workforce declined over the 12-month period from 320 employees to 239.

Nevertheless, the accounts have shown that Gridserve's turnover climbed in 2024 from £29.1m to £46.2m.

Gridserve raises extra £100m war chest

The financial results emerge just days following Gridserve's announcement that it had obtained £100m in fresh equity backing from several of its current investors.

TPG, Infracapital and Mitsubishi supplied the extra funding which will support the company's ambitions to broaden its EV charging network across º£½ÇÊÓÆµ motorways.

Additional supporters of Gridserve include Sir Richard Branson's Rise Fund – established by TPG in 2016 – alongside Hitachi.