Fleet electrification specialist EO Charging has completed a £25 million shareholder-led recapitalisation that it says provides a strong foundation for continued growth and shows the continued commitment of investors.
That funding comprises an increased debt facility with HSBC and a new equity injection from existing investors Vortex Energy and Zouk Capital. The supplier adds that such a position reflects “continued confidence in EO’s strategy and its role in driving fleet electrification across Europe and the UK.”
The step follows a “strategic reorganisation” of EO Charging that includes a planned exit from the United States market and the sale of its domestic electric vehicle charger hardware and manufacturing business to Cogent Technologies.
As a result, the supplier will now focus on its core strengths in software, services and infrastructure-as-a-service for commercial fleets and the delivery of scalable fleet charging solutions.
The pivot will also enable introduction of efficiencies to streamline operations and support a more platform-led business model.
Investment will accelerate deployment of EO’s commercial grade charging infrastructure and its flagship software and service offering, ChargeAssurance. It provides fleet operators with end-to-end visibility, management, and energy optimisation tools.
EO Charging CEO Richard Staveley underlines how the investment furthers shareholder confidence in the supplier’s evolved strategy and long-term vision.
“We are doubling down on what we do best: delivering reliable, commercial grade charging infrastructure and intelligent software that helps fleets to electrify and perform at scale,” says Mr Staveley.
“By concentrating our efforts on the UK and European markets and exiting hardware manufacturing through the sale of our manufacturing business to Cogent Technologies, we are ensuring that EO remains agile, capital-efficient, and relentlessly committed to improving fleet performance and delivering customer value.”
Vortex Energy Chief Investment Officer Bakr Abdel-Wahab adds that the backer believes a transition to electric mobility and smart infrastructure “is no longer niche; it is becoming foundational to fleet and bus operators across the UK and Europe.”



















