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With º£½ÇÊÓÆµ energy prices rising, green energy provider Octopus signs up to European wind power

Octopus Energy Group signs four deals to ramp up wind power generation across Europe to help deliver Net Zero

Octopus Energy CEO and founder Greg Jackson with Octopus Energy Generation chief executive Zoisa North-Bond (Image: Leicester Mercury)

With energy bills soaring and Western Europe forced into rethinking its reliance on Russian oil and gas, one º£½ÇÊÓÆµ energy business is stepping up its investment in wind power.

Octopus Renewables, a fund management specialist within the Octopus Energy Group, has signed four deals to ramp up wind power generation across Europe and to help deliver Net Zero.

It comes after Ofgem warned that average home energy bills will rise by £693 from April 1, after a spiralling wholesale prices led it to hike the energy price cap by 54 per cent to a record £1,971 for a typical home.

The Octopus Renewables deal will see it almost double its wind capacity over the next decade, with wind farms in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, Sweden, France and Finland providing a combined capacity to power almost half a million homes a year.

Octopus, which has operations around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ including a major base in Leicester, already sells 100 per cent renewable electricity, much of it coming from solar.

Its domestic energy arm supplies 3.1 million customers with greener power through Octopus Energy, M&S Energy, Affect Energy, Ebico, London Power and Co-op Energy.

Group chief executive recently warned that the group expects it to take a £100 million hit from the record rise in wholesale energy costs.

In the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, Octopus Renewables is investing in a joint venture to develop nine onshore wind farms with Wind 2 Limited, a specialist º£½ÇÊÓÆµ wind farm developer.