Resolve Marine’s 2025 Sustainability Report Highlights Progress

Marine salvage firm links debris recovery to offshore wind expansion

Resolve Marine has released its 2025 sustainability report, setting out a year’s progress across environmental remediation, workforce policy, and governance. The firm recovered 96,186 tons of marine debris through work in 17 countries during 2025. Significantly, the report includes a case study on offshore wind, marking the company’s expansion into renewable energy infrastructure.

The Florida-based salvage specialist published the report on May 28, 2026. It frames the company’s traditional emergency response and wreck removal work within the UN Sustainable Development Goals framework. Three goals feature prominently: SDG 14 on ocean health, SDG 11 on urban sustainability, and SDG 5 on gender equality.

For UK businesses watching supply chain shifts in marine services, the report offers a window into how salvage firms are repositioning for energy transition work. Offshore wind projects require specialized marine contractors. Consequently, companies like Resolve Marine are adapting existing capabilities to serve this growing sector.

Report covers remediation work across five continents

The document details seven major projects from 2025. These range from emergency response operations to planned environmental remediation jobs. The selection demonstrates the geographic spread of the company’s work, spanning operations in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Oceania.

Resolve Marine’s debris recovery figure provides measurable environmental impact. Nearly 100,000 tons of material removed from marine environments represents substantial physical intervention. However, the report does not break down the nature of this debris or specify which projects contributed most to the total.

The offshore wind case study stands out as the most commercially significant element. Offshore wind farms require ongoing marine support throughout construction, operation, and eventual decommissioning. This includes vessel positioning, subsea cable work, foundation installation support, and emergency response capacity. Salvage companies possess many relevant capabilities: heavy lift equipment, diving teams, offshore logistics, and regulatory experience in complex marine environments.

The UK offshore wind sector continues to expand, with projects in development across Scottish waters, the North Sea, and the Irish Sea. Supply chains for these installations remain under development. Therefore, businesses involved in marine contracting, port services, or offshore logistics should monitor which international firms are positioning for this work.

ESG reporting extends beyond environmental metrics

The report addresses workforce policies alongside environmental data. It covers health and safety programs, ISO certifications, and quality management systems. Gender diversity receives specific attention through SDG 5, though the report does not appear to publish detailed workforce demographic breakdowns.

Resolve Marine maintains the Mission Resolve Foundation, its charitable arm focused on community engagement. The foundation’s activities are included in the social reporting section. Additionally, the company has published its whistleblowing and code of conduct policies as part of governance disclosure.

This represents the firm’s second annual sustainability publication. The 2024 report, released the previous year, established the reporting format. Themes from that earlier document included stakeholder engagement, environmental impact tracking, pay equity, and board structure. The 2025 report follows this template while adding the offshore wind focus.

For businesses evaluating marine contractors, these reports provide useful due diligence material. Many public sector tenders now require environmental and social governance evidence. Furthermore, private sector supply chain audits increasingly examine subcontractor ESG performance. Published sustainability reports, when substantive, can streamline procurement processes by providing standardized disclosure.

Maritime salvage sector adapts to energy transition

The inclusion of renewable energy work signals a broader industry shift. Traditional marine salvage has centered on shipping casualties, wreck removal, and emergency response. These remain core activities. Nevertheless, the energy transition is creating new demand for marine services in different contexts.

Offshore wind installations require marine contractors with heavy lift capacity, precise positioning, and regulatory compliance experience. Salvage companies possess these capabilities. Moreover, they maintain emergency response readiness, which offshore wind operators value for incident management.

The UK market presents particular opportunities. The government has set ambitious offshore wind targets as part of its net zero strategy. Meeting these targets requires a substantial increase in installed capacity over the next decade. Each new wind farm needs marine support services throughout its lifecycle.

However, competition for this work is intensifying. Specialist offshore wind contractors, traditional marine engineering firms, and salvage companies are all positioning for market share. Businesses considering partnerships or subcontracting arrangements should assess technical capability, track record, and financial stability carefully.

What the 2025 report confirms about marine services

  • Resolve Marine recovered 96,186 tons of marine debris during 2025 across operations in 17 countries on five continents.
  • The company has published its second consecutive annual sustainability report, establishing a pattern of public ESG disclosure.
  • Offshore wind features as a case study, demonstrating the firm’s expansion into renewable energy infrastructure support.
  • The report links company activities to UN Sustainable Development Goals, particularly ocean health, urban sustainability, and gender equality.
  • Environmental, workforce, and governance policies are disclosed, including ISO certifications, whistleblowing procedures, and code of conduct.
  • The Mission Resolve Foundation represents the company’s charitable and community engagement program.
  • Published data provides due diligence material for businesses evaluating marine contractors for tenders or supply chain partnerships.

Commercial considerations for UK businesses

Companies involved in offshore wind development should note the entry of salvage specialists into this sector. This changes the contractor landscape. It may create new partnership opportunities or increase competition for existing marine service providers.

For procurement teams, published sustainability reports offer valuable preliminary information. They cannot replace thorough due diligence. Nevertheless, they provide a starting point for assessing environmental management systems, workforce policies, and governance structures. Many businesses now face supply chain ESG reporting requirements under regulatory frameworks that demand upstream transparency.

The debris recovery figure demonstrates operational scale. However, businesses evaluating contractors should request project-specific information. Geographic experience, technical capability, insurance coverage, and safety records matter more than aggregate tonnage figures when selecting partners for specific jobs.

Marine salvage involves significant environmental risk. Incidents can result in pollution, habitat damage, or regulatory penalties. Consequently, contractor selection processes should examine not just capability but also risk management systems. Sustainability reports can indicate whether a company has formal environmental management processes in place.

For businesses working on offshore wind projects, marine contractor capabilities will directly affect project timelines and costs. Delays in marine operations can cascade through entire construction schedules. Therefore, assessing contractor reliability and technical capacity becomes a commercial priority.

Energy transition reshapes marine services demand

The offshore wind case study reflects a wider pattern across marine industries. Companies built on fossil fuel support, shipping services, or traditional maritime work are adapting to energy transition opportunities. This creates both competition and collaboration possibilities.

UK businesses should understand how their own supply chains are evolving. Marine contractors with energy transition experience may offer advantages for projects with sustainability requirements. Conversely, firms slow to adapt may face reduced market access as clients prioritize contractors aligned with net zero goals.

The UN Sustainable Development Goals framework appears increasingly in corporate reporting. For some businesses, this represents genuine strategic alignment. For others, it serves primarily as a communication tool. Procurement teams should assess whether SDG references are backed by specific actions, measurable targets, and transparent reporting.

Resolve Marine’s report positioning suggests the company views sustainability disclosure as a competitive advantage. This approach is becoming more common across industries. As carbon reporting requirements expand and supply chain transparency demands increase, businesses without formal ESG programs may face procurement barriers.

Where to find additional information

Resolve Marine’s sustainability report and related corporate information are available through the company’s official website. The site includes previous sustainability publications, which allow comparison of year-on-year progress.

For businesses seeking guidance on offshore wind supply chain opportunities, the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero publishes sector development updates and policy frameworks. These documents outline government targets and timelines for renewable energy deployment.

Companies requiring support with sustainability reporting or supply chain ESG compliance can access resources through the SBS Academy, which provides practical guidance on environmental management systems and reporting frameworks relevant to UK businesses.

The Offshore Wind Sector Deal sets out government commitments and industry obligations for UK offshore wind development. It includes supply chain provisions and local content expectations that affect marine contractor selection.

For information on environmental management standards applicable to marine operations, ISO 14001 guidance from the International Organization for Standardization provides the framework many contractors use for certification.

Contact Us

We are here to support your net-zero journey, whatever your stage

Our team offers practical guidance and tailored solutions to help your business thrive sustainably.

SBS sustainability team
🌿

Sustainable Business Services

AI-powered sustainability assistant

Online — typically replies instantly
Verified by MonsterInsights