Buy a company: Energy & environment

Buy a company: Energy & environment: compare listings on company.ch by location, guide price, revenue and handover. The category helps identify relevant offers and open the right detail pages faster.
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Buying an energy or environmental business in Switzerland

A useful first comparison of an energy or environmental business should connect the asking price with operating evidence, contractual rights and a workable transfer. Changing subsidies, grid constraints, component warranties and claims from historic projects can create liabilities not visible in current sales figures.

Test contracted revenue against project and regulatory assumptions

Review installed base, service contracts, signed projects, subsidy assumptions, energy prices, gross margin and warranty provisions by technology and project cohort.

Confirm permits, certifications and technical liabilities

Check planning and grid approvals, professional certifications, product warranties, environmental obligations, supplier terms, commissioning records and responsibility for past installations.

Retain technical knowledge and allocate outstanding warranties

Transfer project files, calculations, monitoring access, supplier contacts, permits, warranty cases and qualified personnel, with contractual allocation of historic obligations.

Related acquisition routes for an energy or environmental business

Keep the search broad enough to find adjacent opportunities, then compare the same evidence across each listing. Continue with Environmental technology company or Production & industry, or return to all companies for sale.

Buyer questions about an energy or environmental business

Which revenues remain viable without temporary subsidies or price effects?

Review installed base, service contracts, signed projects, subsidy assumptions, energy prices, gross margin and warranty provisions by technology and project cohort.

Are permits, certifications and supplier warranties valid after the acquisition?

Check planning and grid approvals, professional certifications, product warranties, environmental obligations, supplier terms, commissioning records and responsibility for past installations.

Who carries liability for defects in completed installations?

Changing subsidies, grid constraints, component warranties and claims from historic projects can create liabilities not visible in current sales figures.

How will project files, monitoring access and technical staff be handed over?

Transfer project files, calculations, monitoring access, supplier contacts, permits, warranty cases and qualified personnel, with contractual allocation of historic obligations.