

One name. Two gifts.
Onur is a Turkish name meaning honour, in a category starving for it. And hiding inside it: nur, the word for light. A solar company whose name literally contains light. We couldn't have invented a better reason to do this properly.
Behind the name: Onur is a senior electrical engineer with 15 years in solar, from design rooms in Miami to Melbourne's biggest installers. James spent a decade in energy sales, from Red Energy's retention desks to running a Victorian sales division, learning exactly where this industry breaks its promises. We met working at the same Melbourne solar company: the engineer and the salesman. Onur Energy is the company we kept wishing we worked for. One of us engineers it properly. The other explains it straight.
The promise, in writing
The Founder Line
Every warranty document carries a founder's mobile number. Not a call centre, not a ticket queue. A person whose name is on the building.
The Honour Check
At day 14 we compare your system's real generation against your quote, in writing, and call you with the result. If we wrote it, we stand behind it.
Show the Working
Every quote arrives with a short video of us walking through every figure. Exam rules apply: no answer without the working shown.
Why chain ourselves to all this? Because founder-named companies measurably behave better: research across 1.8 million firms found they outperform precisely because the founder's reputation is on the line. We didn't invent the mechanism. We just signed up to it, permanently.