A community resource

A free, public learning resource for the energy industry.

An open, anonymised register of safety incidents, near-misses, and operational failures across utility-scale renewable energy and grid infrastructure. Built so the industry can learn from itself.

Published entries
Battery storage
Solar PV
Wind
Grid & other
Awaiting review

Why this exists

Utility-scale renewable energy assets — solar, wind, battery storage, grid infrastructure — are deployed at unprecedented pace. Incidents happen: thermal events, control failures, structural and electrical faults, near-misses. Most learning currently stays inside operator walls. Smaller operators, contractors, and new entrants therefore repeat mistakes the industry has already paid to learn.

The Energy Incident Register addresses that gap. It is a free, public, anonymised record of incidents and the lessons they produced. Operated as a community resource. No paywall, no commercial agenda, no commercial relationships with submitters or readers.

How it works

1. Submit

Operators, engineers, and contractors submit incidents through a structured form. Identifying details about sites, vendors, and personnel are kept private.

2. Review and anonymise

Each submission is reviewed manually. Anonymisation is mandatory and irreversible. The published entry preserves the technical lesson without identifying the source.

3. Publish and learn

Approved entries are published with a unique reference, structured fields, and clear lessons learned. The register is searchable and free for anyone to use.

Editorial principles

The register is not a regulator and not an investigator. Critical incidents requiring formal investigation should be reported to the relevant national authority. The register exists to share lessons learned, not to replace regulatory reporting.

Who runs it

The register is operated by ClearDeskPro CIC, a UK community interest company (an asset-locked legal structure designed for activities that benefit the community rather than private shareholders). The CIC holds no commercial interests in the energy industry and does not sell products or services. Funding comes from a small annual donation from a separate commercial entity, with grant funding pursued for the longer term.

More about the register and its governance →