29 April 2024
Gresham
House Energy Storage Fund plc
("GRID", the
"Company" or the
"Fund")
Full-Year
Results to 31 December 2023
Focus on capital discipline
and deployment into projects offering a significant near-term
cashflow contribution; revenue outlook gradually
improving.
Gresham House Energy Storage Fund
plc (LSE: GRID), the UK's largest utility-scale battery energy
storage fund, announces its audited annual results for the year
ended 31 December 2023.
2023 performance highlights
· EBITDA
of the underlying portfolio of £25.8mn (31 December 2022: £48.8mn),
down 47% year over year, reflecting a decreasing revenue
environment for battery operators in 2023
· 129.07p NAV per share as of 31 December 2023, down 17% year
over year (31 December 2022: 155.51p), reflecting the application
of significant reductions to 2024 to 2026 revenue forecasts from
third parties as the revenue environment is expected to improve
gradually
· 5.51p
per share dividend paid in respect of
2023
· NAV
total return since IPO of 71.4%
· Weighted average discount rate maintained at 10.9%, which is
higher than listed peers
o Discount rate applied to contracted cashflows increased by
100bps (to 6.0%) at the interim results stage. No other changes
made during 2023, with greater shorter-term revenue risks addressed
through reductions to revenue forecasts.
Amended and restated debt
facility
· Amended and restated debt facility to provide additional
headroom in the recent lower revenue environment, as announced on
18 April, including:
o Consent to draw remaining funds (up to £65mn) required to
complete current construction programme, set to take operational
capacity to1,072MW/1,696MWh in 2024
o Amended Interest Cover and Net Debt to EBITDA covenant levels
for 2024 and 2025
o Decision by the Company to cancel £110mn of undrawn debt,
reducing total facility to £225mn, of which £110mn has been drawn
to date
o Drawn debt is fully hedged at 3.70% resulting in a blended
cost of debt of 6.70%
o Margin on the debt facility remains unchanged at 300bp over
SONIA.
Deployment and
fundraising
· As of
31 December 2023:
o Operational capacity increased 25.5% to 690MW / 788MWh (31
December 2022: 550MW / 598MWh)
o Total gross equity funds raised of £50mn (31 December 2022:
£150mn)
o £50mn drawn from existing debt facilities in 1H23; total of
£110mn debt drawn out of total £335mn available as of 31 December
2023.
· As of the date of this
announcement:
o 50MW
York project is fully operational having commissioned in January
2024
o 35MW
Arbroath project extension to 48MWh (previously 35MWh) completed in
April 2024
o Operational portfolio stands at 740MW / 876MWh
o Energisation of both Penwortham (50MW/ 50MWh) is imminent and
energisation of Shilton Lane (40MW / 80MWh) is also expected in the
coming days
o Energisations of Melksham, Bradford West and Elland
anticipated in coming months
o No
debt drawn so far in 2024.
· In
2024, focus is on deployment of capital into projects which contribute to earnings in 2024:
o 377MW of projects (including York at 50MW), which are over
three-quarters paid for, expecting construction
completion
o Duration extensions on 340MW of operational projects also
expected to be completed (83% of cost already paid)
o Targeting operational portfolio of 1,072MW / 1,696MWh by end
of 2024
o Deferment of US Project; international expansion remains a
strategic objective when conditions improve.
· 4.4mn
shares repurchased at an average discount to NAV per share of 65%
delivering immediate NAV per share improvement of 0.6p per
share.
Dividends
· As
previously announced, no dividend is expected to be paid in
2024
· From
2025 onwards, the Company aims to deliver an attractive dividend
from distributable cash-flow after debt covenant testing.
Dividends will be commensurate with a blended merchant and
contractual income model.
2024 Outlook
· The
challenging trading environment in January and February 2024 has
improved with revenue rates increasing 33% and 97% for the
operational portfolio since February for March and the first half
of April respectively[1]. This reflects improving utilisation of BESS by the GB
Electricity System Operator (ESO) and improving wholesale market
spreads as renewable penetration increases
· Merchant revenues are inherently volatile, and the portfolio
is likely to experience periods of higher and lower
revenues
· Whilst
the recent revenue improvement is promising, revenues remain below
long-term third-party forecasts. The Company anticipates further
recovery as ESO progresses through its Balancing Programme in 2024
and 2025
· Completion of remaining projects (new projects and extensions)
will take the operational portfolio to 1,072MW /
1,696MWh
· Active
disposal process for a subset of the portfolio is ongoing to
demonstrate value and contribute towards deleveraging
· GRID
remains the GB market leader with a market share of around
20%[2].
Commenting on GRID's results, John
Leggate CBE, Chair of Gresham House Energy Storage Fund plc,
said:
"2023 and early 2024 revenues for
the GB BESS sector declined steadily, reaching a low in February.
The Board and the Manager are acutely aware that this period has
been disappointing and has required patience from our investors. We
appreciate our intention not to pay dividends for 2024 is very
unwelcome news. However, given the competing priorities for
the Company, the Board and the Manager believe this is the right
decision: using cash generation from the portfolio, along with
available financing, towards completing the current project
pipeline and duration extensions is key in order to maximise
shareholder value.
"Encouragingly, we have since seen a
marked recovery on the back of improving market fundamentals in
recent weeks and the continued rapid deployment of new renewable
generation, particularly offshore wind, drives a commensurate
increase in demand for battery energy storage. In brief, the
long-term commercial attractions of BESS remain as true as
ever.
"We look forward to reaching 1GW of
operational capacity in 2024. The expanded grid capacity and
duration of the portfolio will allow the Company to roughly double
its EBITDA generation potential which means that as long as
revenues remain at recently improved levels, or indeed improve
further, the Company will seek to return to dividend payments in
2025."
Ben Guest, Fund Manager of Gresham
House Energy Storage Fund plc and Managing Director of Gresham
House New Energy, said:
"We are focusing deployment of
capital where it has the largest cash generation impact. The
completion of our construction programme will give the Company the
scale to significantly increase its earnings base even in a reduced
revenue environment enabling the Company to return to dividend
coverage as soon as possible.
"The fundamental business case
remains strong. Underpinning this is rising renewable penetration
which we expect to increase from c.45% today to 70% within the next
four years leading to an even more volatile and intermittent
electricity supply, in turn resulting in greater power price
volatility. By way of example, in the year to April 2024 we
have seen the most negative price points ever for the time of year,
tripling over previous years. The trend of negative prices is
likely to increase as renewable generation grows.
"BESS are the most efficient
technology for reserve and half-hourly market balancing as they
simply enable the greatest percentage of renewable energy to be
used, by far. We are pleased to see ESO's gradual progress is
leading to batteries being utilised a little more each month. There
is a long way to go, and we look forward to continued improvements
through 2024 and 2025."
Annual Report and webinar
An online webinar and Q&A
session, to discuss the results, will be held at 11am BST on 29
April 2024. Ben Guest will provide an update on GRID's
operational and financial performance and answer questions.
Registration is available
here and a recording will be
available following the presentation.
A copy of the 2023 Annual Report and
Financial Statements (the "Annual
Report") is also available on the Company's website
at
https://greshamhouse.com/real-assets/new-energy/gresham-house-energy-storage-fund-plc/
where further information on the
Company can also be found. The Annual Report has also been
submitted to the National Storage Mechanism and will shortly be
available at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
Further, the Annual Report can also
be found here: http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/3024M_1-2024-4-26.pdf
For further information, please
contact:
Gresham House New Energy
Ben Guest
James Bustin
|
+44 (0) 20 3837 6270
|
Jefferies International Limited
Stuart
Klein
Gaudi Le Roux
Harry Randall
|
+44 (0) 20 7029 8000
|
KL
Communications
Charles Gorman
Charlotte Francis
Effie Aye-Maung-Hider
|
gh@kl-communications.com
+44 (0) 20 3882 6644
|
JTC
(UK) Limited as Company Secretary Christopher Gibbons
|
GHEnergyStorageCoSec@jtcgroup.com
+44 (0)20 7409 0181
|
About the Company and the Manager:
Gresham House Energy Storage Fund
plc seeks to provide investors with an attractive and sustainable
dividend over the long term by investing in a diversified portfolio
of utility-scale battery energy storage systems (known as BESS)
located in Great Britain and internationally. In addition, the
Company seeks to provide investors with the prospect of capital
growth through the re-investment of net cash generated in excess of
the target dividend in accordance with the Company's investment
policy.
The Company targets an unlevered Net
Asset Value total return of 8% per annum and a levered Net Asset
Value total return of 15% per annum, in each case calculated net of
the Company's costs and expenses.
Gresham House Asset Management is
the FCA authorised operating business of Gresham House Ltd, a
specialist alternative asset manager. Gresham House is committed to
operating responsibly and sustainably, taking the long view in
delivering sustainable investment solutions.
www.greshamhouse.com
Definition of utility-scale battery energy storage systems
(BESS)
Utility-scale battery energy storage
systems (BESS) are the enabling infrastructure that will support
the continued growth of renewable energy sources such as wind and
solar, essential to the UK's stated target to reduce carbon
emissions. They store excess energy generated by renewable energy
sources and then release that stored energy back into the grid
during peak hours when there is increased demand.