Equity and Debt Facility offers Sunsave resources to increase the deployment and to develop, according to co-founder Ben Graves Home Energy Management System (EMS). The start -Up offers solar energy on subscription based on customers who have the installation on their property from the offset.
UK Start Up Sunsav PV -Magazine With the funds, the company can make solar energy on the roof accessible to more consumers.
The financing round comprises GBP 13 million in equity plus a GBP 100 million debt facility of Crédit Agricole CIB. Equity Fundraising was also led by Norrsken VC and IPGL, with the participation of Angel Investors. Sunsave has now raised a cumulative total of GBP 22 million by three publicly announced fundraising rounds.
Sunsave was also part of the Green Home Finance Accelerator project of the British government, which has awarded the start -up with a GBP 2.2 million subsidy.
“That was really about innovating new Green Home Finance products and the management and roles of them.” Said Graves. “It was well timed for us.”
Image: Sunsave
Sunsave offers British consumers a solar subscription service that bundles the financing of the installation with a monthly operating and maintenance costs. Under the Sunsave model, consumers have the solar system on their property from the moment of installation as if they had received a loan from a bank. The PV system is paid off via a financing agreement offered by Sunsave, which is authorized as a lender by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
“Financing in the UK may be more regulated than anywhere in Europe,” said Graves “one of the first things we had to do to launch this type of product, was to become a lender immediately as a lender by the FCA. It is extremely unusual in the VK for an installer to also be a regulated leaser.
British installers who offer finance at the point of sale usually work together with FCA -registered institutions such as retail benches, but according to Graves this can have serious implications for the lender. Under this type of scheme, the lecturer takes liability for the delivery and quality of products, which means that a financing provider is exposed to risks if there is misleading sale or problems with the installation.
Graves argued that the Sunsave model means that the start -up can reduce the risk of the lender by taking control of the installation. The company reports that since January 2024 it has seen 32% growth of the month to month.
“The core of what we are trying to do is bringing finance and installation together under one roof where we can in principle arrange the risks that the quality of the installation presents for financing point-of-sale. If we install and manage the customer journey, we can ensure that these risks are really offered carefully and offer the risks because a bank that runs the entire price, they have.
Sunsave also has ambitions beyond Solar on the roof. Graves told PV -Magazine In the future, the start -up is planning to offer British consumers a complete solution for energy management from home, because the electrification of home heating and transport pace collects and is open to working with others.
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