China's Mingyang joins Octopus for massive UK wind turbine push

Power group and Chinese OEM to work together in deployment bid, which will initially focus on onshore wind but could expand into solar power and battery energy storage

Mingyang chair Zhang Chuanwei met with Greg Jackson, CEO of Octopus Energy, in London last month to explore opportunities to collaborate.
Mingyang chair Zhang Chuanwei met with Greg Jackson, CEO of Octopus Energy, in London last month to explore opportunities to collaborate.Photo: Mingyang

Chinese wind giant Mingyang has struck a deal with major British power group Octopus over the deployment of wind turbines in the UK.

Mingyang said it signed a memorandum of understanding with Octopus that could see the latter “provide Octopus software to control Mingyang’s world-class hardware”.

The Chinese wind OEM said the agreement forms part of a plan with Octopus Energy Generation, the renewables arm of Octopus Energy, to “unleash close to 6GW of clean energy projects identified through Octopus’s ‘Winder’ platform”.

"Initially focused on onshore wind, the partnership will also explore expanding into other energy solutions, including solar power and battery storage systems."

Winder is a 'match making' initiative set up by Octopus to finance onshore wind developments at sites with local community support and the 6GW figure appears to be rooted firmly in potential rather than proceeding projects.

There is also no guarantee an MoU will translate into firm orders. A proposal to deploy Mingyang wind turbines at a German offshore wind project recently fell through after previously being the subject of a preferred supplier agreement.

But the explicit link between the UK's fastest-growing energy supplier, which acts as a self-styled 'disruptor' in the market, and a Chinese OEM is bound to be controversial.

Plans by Mingyang for a potential wind turbine plant in Scotland as part of an entry to the UK offshore market have proved divisive, with politicians objecting on energy security grounds even as some developers welcomed the prospect of competition in the market and access to Chinese technology that often undercuts prices of western rivals.

Mingyang added: "As part of the agreement, Octopus will explore the implementation of software to create the highest levels of data protection and cyber security in combination with Mingyang’s cutting-edge offshore and onshore wind turbines."

Zoisa North-Bond, CEO of Octopus Generation, said: “The UK is already a leader in wind, and this partnership with Mingyang is a core pathway to deliver some of the cheapest and most secure energy the UK has seen.

“By combining Octopus’s expertise in smart technology and software with outstanding wind turbines, we can optimise every kilowatt and cut energy costs for millions of bill payers.”

Updated with further comment
(Copyright)
Published 11 September 2025, 08:42Updated 11 September 2025, 15:20
MingYang Smart EnergyOctopus EnergyUKwindChina