Vattenfall Wind Power Ltd is a private limited company registered in England and Wales and forms part of the Swedish state‑owned Vattenfall Group. The company is legally domiciled at 1st Floor, 1 Tudor Street, London EC4Y 0AH, and is recorded as an active entity at Companies House. It has previously traded under the names AMEC Wind Energy Limited and Vattenfall Wind Power Hexham Ltd, reflecting its origins in UK wind development. According to Vattenfall’s legal entity data, the direct parent is Vattenfall Vindkraft Aktiebolag and the ultimate parent is Vattenfall AB, a European energy company headquartered in Solna, Sweden, which is one of Europe’s largest producers and retailers of electricity and heat and employs around 21,000 people.
Within the group, Vattenfall Wind Power Ltd sits in the Wind operating segment, which is responsible for developing, constructing and operating Vattenfall’s onshore and offshore wind farms as well as large‑scale solar power plants and batteries. The segment operates more than 1,400 wind turbines with approximately 6.6 GW of operated capacity across Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark and the UK, and has a strong pipeline including major offshore projects such as Nordlicht I and II in Germany and Zeevonk in the Netherlands. The UK subsidiary is the immediate parent of South Kyle Wind Farm Limited and provides a corporate platform for Vattenfall’s wind activities in the UK market, where the group has secured permissions for projects such as the Muir Mhòr floating offshore wind farm infrastructure in Scotland.
Strategically, Vattenfall Wind Power Ltd contributes to the wider group objective of “fossil freedom” by expanding renewable generation and enabling industrial decarbonisation. The group’s investment plan for 2026–2030 foresees SEK 165 billion of net investments, with wind power as the single largest technology focus and dedicated growth capex across its core markets, including the UK. As part of this programme, the Wind segment is prioritising large offshore projects, continued onshore build‑out, hybrid parks combining wind, solar and batteries, and long‑term corporate power purchase agreements with industrial customers.