11 November 2024
Gresham House Energy Storage
Fund PLC
("GRID" or the
"Company")
Trading and Regulatory
update.
Full year portfolio revenues
are expected to rise in 2024.
Gresham House Energy Storage Fund
plc (LSE: GRID), the UK's largest fund investing in utility-scale
battery energy storage systems (BESS), is pleased to
announce the following trading update.
Portfolio revenues and market
update
The Manager is confident that
operational portfolio revenues will rise in 2024 compared with
2023, having seen an improving trend since the low in Q1 2024, as
portfolio capacity grows and as revenue per MW rates recover.
Revenue per MW is rising due to improving market conditions as well
as the ongoing onboarding of projects contracted under the
previously announced tolling arrangements with Octopus
Energy.
As previously reported, as of 30
June 2024, portfolio revenues in H1 2024 were £17.9mn, down 12.8%
compared with H1 2023. So far in H2 2024, portfolio revenues for
the four months through to the end of October were £15.9mn.
Therefore, portfolio revenues for the first 10 months of 2024 were
£33.8mn. Given the 2024 performance to date and the demonstrable
improving revenue trends in recent months, GRID expects full year
portfolio revenues for 2024 to outperform full year 2023 portfolio
revenues (which were £38.7mn).
The ongoing drivers of revenue
growth include:
- Further
growth in capacity, which recently reached 845MW / 1,207MWh and is
set to rise to 1,072MW /1,701MWh with the completion of the current
pipeline in construction.
- Improving
market fundamentals:
o rising GB renewable generation capacity, creating greater
supply volatility.
o increasing power demand as the demand for electric vehicles
and stabilising retail electricity prices drive modest growth;
and
o reduced excess supply as coal plants have now been
retired.
- An
improving regulatory backdrop (see below)
Regulatory
update
There are several important recent
developments that the Manager believes improve the outlook for GB
BESS:
-
The National Energy System Operator's (NESO)
commitment to accelerate the improvement in dispatch rates in the
Balancing Mechanism. This was mentioned in NESO's
announcement[1] of 16 October, available
here, and in its plan for delivering Clean Power by 2030 (CP30)
published[2] on 5 November (available
here). The latter highlights the
need for significant growth in renewable generation and low carbon
flexibility. It also emphasises NESO's commitment to a level
playing field between technologies, which the Manager has been
campaigning for since the summer of 2023. Lithium-ion BESS are the
best commercial and environmental solution for delivering this
flexibility, with NESO forecasting a requirement for 22GW of BESS
by 2030.
-
More specifically and independent of the above,
the Balancing Programme, which is aimed at creating the level
playing field for BESS, is approaching two significant milestones.
These comprise the launch of the Quick Reserve service, offering GB
BESS an additional revenue opportunity, by year end and the
implementation of technology, to allow energy data to be
automatically and continuously communicated by BESS to the control
room, in the new year. Both are expected to make BESS more
dependable and visible to the control room.
-
The focus by Government, since Labour came to
power, on 'Clean Power 2030', i.e. a decarbonised grid by 2030, has
focused the efforts of the Department for Energy Security and Net
Zero (DESNZ) and NESO on what is deliverable by that date, being
primarily renewables plus battery storage.
-
On 1 November, the UK Government published its
response to the Long Duration Energy Storage (LDES) consultation,
to which the Manager responded, recommending that a Cap and Floor
structure be implemented. The Government has now confirmed that
Lithium-ion batteries will be included and eligible to compete in
the Cap and Floor arrangement. The Manager is pleased to see that
the Government's previous inexplicable recommendation to exclude
BESS has now been reversed. The Manager believes this change could
see projects of 8 hours duration or more become commercially
attractive in due course. Further details about the scheme are
expected to be published by Ofgem and Government in
2025.
Ben
Guest, Fund Manager of Gresham House Energy Storage Fund plc &
Managing Director of Gresham House New Energy,
said:
"We are pleased to see revenues in
GB improving as the natural volatility of renewable generation
rises, creating more opportunities for our assets in wholesale
markets. On top of this, we are seeing the benefit of our ongoing
capacity rollout and duration increases come through as we begin to
capitalise on the market's recovery.
"We also welcome the positive
regulatory steps being taken as part of the Government's focus on
decarbonising the electricity system by 2030. This is moving the
focus to immediately deployable technologies and hence onto the
benefits BESS can offer the whole system today.
"As Great Britain's reliance on
renewable generation increases the requirements for storage
increase significantly, both for short duration and longer
duration. Lithium-ion is now the most competitive technology, in
terms of cost and round-trip efficiency, at any duration up to at
least 10 hours and will become increasingly competitive at longer
durations as battery prices fall further."
Capital Markets Day
Update
Fund Manager, Ben Guest will set out
the framework for the Company's three-year plan through 2027,
including indicative targets for MW and MWh capacity, revenues, and
EBITDA at the Capital Markets Day on Wednesday 27 November,
2.00-4.00pm (GMT). Please register to
attend here.
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.
http://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.