Final results for the year ended 31 December 2023

Ceres Power Holdings plc
15 April 2024
 

CWR.L

15 April 2024

Ceres Power Holdings plc

 

Final results for the year ended 31 December 2023

Focus on accelerating the pace of development and commercialisation

 

Horsham, UK: Ceres Power Holdings plc ("Ceres", the "Company") (CWR.L), a leading developer of clean energy technology, announces its results for the year ended 31 December 2023.

 

Financial highlights

·      Revenue of £22.3 million (2022: £19.8 million1)

·      Gross profit of £13.6 million (2022: £10.7 million1), maintaining sector-leading gross margin at 61% (2022: 54%1)

·      Research and development investment increased by 11% to £54.0 million (2022: £48.5 million1), consistent with strategy to drive innovation and commercial acceleration in electrolysers

·      Strong cash and short-term investments position of £140.0 million (2022: £182.3 million) with reduced cash outflow of £42.4 million (2022: £67.3 million) through disciplined working capital and cash management

 

Strategic highlights

·      Bosch's 'power units' based on Ceres' technology received European funding of ~€160 million to support series ramp up and mass production

·      Doosan's 50MW stack factory in South Korea has completed factory acceptance testing and machine installation with commissioning on schedule for 2024

·      Second generation stack design has passed critical design review, offering improvements in performance and cost to licence partners

·      The electrolysis programme is progressing well. The megawatt-scale electrolyser demonstrator successfully completed testing in Germany and has arrived at partner Shell's R&D centre in Bangalore, India

·      Graduation to the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange in June 2023

 

Current trading and outlook

·      Signed significant new fuel cell and electrolysis license with Delta Electronics in January 2024, which includes staged revenues of £43 million to Ceres through technology transfer and licensing, of which approximately half is expected to be recognised as revenue in 2024. Initial production by Delta is expected to start by the end of 2026

·      We have confidence at this early stage of the year to approximately double revenues in 2024 from existing partnerships, compared to 2023

 

Phil Caldwell, Chief Executive Officer of Ceres, said:

"After a challenging 2023, Ceres is already on track for a strong year in 2024, underpinned by a significant new licence deal with Delta, our first to include SOEC. This is further validation of our strategy to accelerate investment into SOEC our green hydrogen technology and adds to our series of world class partnerships as we continue to scale our business globally."

 

Ends

 

As indicated on 14 March 2024, the Company was informed by its auditors BDO that they required more time to complete this year's audit. The process is now complete and a number of prior period corrections were identified, the main ones relating to the historical timing and treatment of revenue recognition and foreign exchange impact for long term contracts, the dilapidation provision and capitalisation of relevant costs.

The total impact of all items is a decrease in net assets of £3.6 million in 2022, with the majority being explained by a reduction of revenue of £1.7 million in 2021 and £2.3 million in 2022. These decreases in revenue are offset by increases in revenue of £0.3 million in 2023 and £3.3 million increase in the opening order backlog for 2024. Please see note 1 of the Financial Statements for further detail.

Financial Summary

 

2023

2022

Restated1


£'000

£'000

Total revenue1, comprising:

22,324

19,788

Licence fees

6,378

5,369

Engineering services revenue

10,220

9,039

Provision of technology hardware

5,726

5,380


 

 

Gross profit

13,554

10,709

Gross margin %

61%

54%

 

 

 

Adjusted EBITDA loss2

(50,297)

(45,686)

Operating loss1

(59,401)

(54,013)


 

 

Net cash used in operating activities

(33,899)

(50,832)

Net cash and investments

139,956

182,320

 

 

 


1. The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1

2. Adjusted EBITDA loss is an Alternative Performance Measure, as defined and reconciled to operating loss in the non-GAAP section at the end of this report.

 

Analyst presentation

 

Ceres Power Holdings plc will be hosting a live webcast for analysts and investors on 15 April 2024 at 09.30 GMT. To register your interest in participating, please go to: https://www.investormeetcompany.com/ceres-power-holdings-plc/register-investor.

 

For further information visit www.ceres.tech or contact:

 

Ceres Power Holdings plc

Elizabeth Skerritt/ Merryl Black

 

 

Tel: +44 (0)7932 023 283/ +44 (0)7770 853 463

FTI Consulting (PR Adviser)

Ben Brewerton/ Dwight Burden

Tel: +44 (0)203 727 1000

Email: ceres_power@fticonsulting.com

 

About Ceres

Ceres is a leading developer of clean energy technology: electrolysis for the creation of green hydrogen and fuel cells for power generation. Its asset-light, licensing model has seen it establish partnerships with some of the world's largest companies, such as Bosch, Doosan, Delta and Weichai. Ceres' solid oxide technology supports greater electrification of our energy systems and produces green hydrogen at high-efficiencies as a route to decarbonise emissions-intensive industries such as steelmaking, ammonia and future fuels. Ceres is listed on the London Stock Exchange ("LSE") (LSE: CWR) and is classified by the LSE Green Economy Mark, which recognises listed companies that derive more than 50% of their activity from the green economy. Read more on our website www.ceres.tech or follow us on LinkedIn.

 

Chief Executive's Statement

This past year was tough economically, and particularly for the clean energy and hydrogen industries. The Hydrogen Council's December update pointed to "headwinds that have caused a slower development of the global hydrogen industry than had previously been expected". Against the backdrop of increased energy prices and high inflation, many companies delayed investment decisions and share prices were significantly impacted. Ceres was not immune from this wider trend.

We have positioned ourselves to emerge stronger from the recent downturn in the industry. Amidst project delays, regulatory uncertainty and higher financing costs, Ceres has made careful decisions about where to deploy capital and resources, and where to invest for growth based upon where the biggest opportunities present themselves for the future of our business in an evolving global market. In 2021 we made the strategic decision to invest in solid oxide electrolyser cell ("SOEC") technology to access the market for green hydrogen and significantly increase the addressable market for our technology in addition to fuel cells. This has been the right decision for Ceres' long-term strategy, as evidenced by the recent signing of our first SOEC licence partner, and the challenge now is to accelerate our SOEC development while also delivering on our existing solid oxide fuel cell ("SOFC") business.

Progress with fuel cells and existing licensee partners

We have built our business with a focus on our fuel cell technology and on our existing licence partners. In 2023 together with our partner Doosan we completed the factory acceptance testing of all equipment for the highly automated factory at Saemangeum in South Korea. Commissioning is on track to complete in the second half of 2024, and we expect first production of SOFC systems and royalties to Ceres to follow in 2025.

Our partnership with Bosch remains strong and we have developed the next generation stack technology to support scale up of their facility in Bamberg, Germany. Major equipment is being installed in 2024 with support from significant European grant funding of approximately €160 million. However, timelines for products to market have not been supported by the geopolitical backdrop in Europe with sentiment moving away from reliance on gas and high energy prices impacting the economic case. We expect production will be slower to coincide with Bosch's product launch which is still undergoing development and validation of our second generation stack technology in the field in 2024.

Our relationship with Weichai remains strong and they are developing 75kW stationary power units based on the Ceres technology targeting the distributed power market. The planned three-way China joint venture ("JV") has not been concluded in 2023 despite the relationship between Bosch, Weichai and Ceres remaining positive. It is now our belief that the proposed JV is unlikely to be completed in its current form. However, we are evaluating other options with Weichai to address the Chinese market and we will provide an update on our progress at the appropriate time.

Green hydrogen strategy

Over our 20 years of operation, we have made several key strategic transitions as the market has evolved, going from a domestic heat and power product company to a licensing business for power systems and now with the addition of SOEC providing electrolyser technology for green hydrogen production.

License opportunities for SOFC have given us a great foundation, and the market for green hydrogen produced by electrolysis is a high growth market that is predicted to be significantly larger over time. New licensee partners are now likely to come from the markets for green hydrogen where we are seeing robust future demand for our technology. Therefore, we are accelerating the pace of development and commercialisation of SOEC, whilst ensuring we maintain our leading position in SOFC markets.

Reflecting strong interest in our technology for green hydrogen production, we were pleased to start the new year by signing our first licence partner for both green hydrogen and power generation with Delta Electronics in Taiwan, a global leader in power electronics supplying the information and communication technology industry and operating manufacturing sites globally. The agreement includes revenue of £43 million to Ceres through technology transfer, development licence fees and engineering services, of which approximately half is expected to be recognised as revenue in 2024. There is potential for additional revenue from the sale of Ceres development stacks to Delta and the agreement also includes future royalty payments to Ceres on future commercial production and sale to end customers by Delta. Technology introduction and factory construction will start from 2024 and the initial production by Delta is expected to start by the end of 2026.

We anticipate that licensing revenues from new partners will offset near-term delays in fuel cell royalties and we have confidence at this early stage of the year to approximately double revenues in 2024, compared to 2023, based on existing contracts. In addition to top line growth through near-term licence revenues, we are also managing our cash, directing more of our investment to growing our SOEC business alongside SOFC. Through the licensing model, these in turn translate into longer-term recurring revenues with royalties from electrolyser manufacturing representing additional upside to royalties from our SOFC business.

Market opportunity

We see China, Europe, South Korea and the wider Asian markets being among the largest markets for power generation - areas for which we have good coverage with our existing SOFC licensees and further complemented by the addition of Delta.  

Across the global market, we believe that green hydrogen production from SOEC will play an essential role in industrial decarbonisation in order to meet net zero. Hard-to-abate industries such as green steel and ammonia will be the first to develop followed by synthetic fuels. Ceres' SOEC technology offers distinct advantages of efficiency when coupled with industrial processes where it can utilise waste heat, and so naturally couples with the exothermic Haber-Bosch process used globally to produce ammonia as well as the heat-intensive requirements for steel production.

Many of the top ammonia and steel regions - India, Australia, Europe, the Middle East and North America amongst them - have announced green hydrogen strategies, and several have gone further to publish derivative strategies for ammonia and steel. In fact, green steel is a product that in the coming years will go a significant way to delivering a low carbon Ceres stack. In a world where traceability is becoming ever more important, soon all products will be measured on their "carbon footprint" and we believe Ceres' technology, which is made from common steel and material sets, will have a significant competitive advantage over technologies which utilise hard to source rare earths and more expensive materials.

What is clear is that the future demand for electrolysis for green hydrogen exceeds supply, stimulating new entrants into the market who need access to the best technology and can scale manufacturing through global supply chains. This ideally positions Ceres for growth as the only company offering access to world-leading solid oxide technology under licence. Ceres has moved to place commercial representatives in the US, Asia, Europe and India over the past 18 months, and we will continue to build commercial strength and credibility and consider presence in other markets with the aim to sign new licence partners that will convert longer term into a significant share of the SOEC market for green hydrogen.

Foundation of research and innovation

Ceres has a culture that is founded on science, engineering and individuals who are highly talented and passionate about the Company's purpose - to deliver clean energy for a clean world. We would not be the business we are today without the foundation of research and innovation generated over many years by our industry-leading team.

Technology alone is not enough and our success depends on our ability to be responsive to the changing market and to mature from being a technology-led organisation to one laser focused on commercialisation through global partnerships with some of the world's leading manufacturing companies. Hence, we are building on the foundations of our SOFC business and the experience gained in maturing and scaling our technology, targeting new partners and moving at pace to capture the market.

Deep expertise in solid oxide technology has allowed us to prosecute an ambitious programme for hydrogen over the past 24 months, strengthening our conviction that SOEC offers distinct advantages of efficiency and cost, with potential to reduce capital and operational project costs to produce green hydrogen by 25%. Our first megawatt-scale electrolyser demonstrator has arrived at our partner Shell's R&D centre in Bangalore, India, where in collaboration with Shell, we will validate the performance, cost and operational functionality of the technology. Our technology team is now focused on developing the next SOEC product concept for a 4-5MW modularised system, which is supporting further commercial discussions and will facilitate the deployment of larger installations essential to meet the scale challenge for the decarbonisation of industry.

The year ahead

Green hydrogen will not be a silver bullet, but it does have an important role to play in the decarbonisation of industry, where it can deliver obvious and economic advantages. Advancements in electrolyser technology, manufacturing economies of scale, design improvements and further reduction in renewable power costs will all make electrolytic hydrogen more viable.

Despite current disruptions in Europe, we believe that natural gas will have a sustained role to play in the decarbonisation of the global energy system, as China and Asia more broadly transition away from dependence on coal. We have strong power partners through Doosan, Weichai and now Delta in the region and when it comes to manufacturing at scale, the Asian economies excel.

We've made a strong start to 2024 with revenues for the year expected to be approximately double that of 2023. We are well positioned for growth with new partnerships as a result of our investment into SOEC for electrolysis. Our SOFC partners are continuing to scale manufacturing and build global supply chains which can service both our SOFC and SOEC markets.

At Ceres we continue to focus on the levers within our control: careful capital allocation, investment in valuable skills and building strong and sustainable partnerships that have ambition to play a meaningful role in our future energy system. I look forward to providing further updates on our progress over the course of the year and as ever, we thank you for your support.

 

Phil Caldwell

Chief Executive Officer

 

Financial Review

Revenue

The Group reported revenue of £22.3 million in 2023, compared with £19.8 million1 in the prior year. Most of the revenue was from existing partners Bosch and Doosan through ongoing development activities as we support them with factory build and prepare for commercial launch. Revenue is a combination of development licence revenue, engineering services and the provision of technology hardware. £21.5 million of the revenue in 2023 relates to SOFC (2022: £19.6 million1). Our SOEC business segment recognised revenue in the year of £0.8 million (2022: £0.2 million), the majority of which is licence revenue from signing a collaboration with Bosch and Linde announced in March 2023 to validate our electrolysis technology. Revenue from the Shell test evaluation partnership will commence once the demonstrator is commissioned at Shell's facility in Bangalore, India in 2024.

 

Gross margin

Gross profit of £13.6 million in the year (2022: £10.7 million1) increased when compared to the prior year due to the impact of high margin licence reallocations from the restatements impacting 2022. There was a similar level of revenue and revenue mix in terms of the proportion of engineering services and hardware. Consequently, gross margins of 61% also improved compared to prior year (2022: 54%1). These margins remain much higher than industry norms due to the licensing nature of Ceres' business model.

 

Other operating income

Other operating income increased significantly in the year to £3.7 million (2022: £1.3 million), which reflects the level of R&D Expenditure Credits ("RDEC") claimed in the year compared to the prior year. As of 2023 all Ceres' R&D tax relief is in the form of RDEC as Ceres no longer qualifies for SME R&D tax credit schemes. In 2022, SME R&D tax credit was recognised within the taxation credit.

 

Operating costs

Operating costs increased to £76.6 million (2022: £66.1 million1) as Ceres increased investment in core technology to drive future growth, including the second generation of stack and a significant investment in the megawatt-scale electrolyser. The largest category of spend is R&D, which increased to £54.0 million (2022: £48.5 million1). The average number of persons employed by the Group in the year increased to 590 (2022: 536). Now that we have critical mass of engineers, scientists, electrochemists and other technical employees, we don't anticipate headcount increases in 2024.

 

Finance income and expense

Finance income increased significantly to £7.1 million (2022: £2.8 million), which reflects improved interest rates on our bank deposits and short-term investments in money market funds in a higher interest rate environment. We maintain a stringent treasury policy to balance appropriate market returns with the security of funds including only high investment grade, and diversification of, financial institutions. Finance expense increased to £1.3 million (2022: £0.3 million) mostly due to a foreign exchange losses of £0.8 million on currencies held in non-sterling denominations (2022: gain of £0.2 million).

 

Taxation (charge)/credit

Taxation charge in 2023 of £0.4 million reflects payment of withholding taxes from overseas earnings. This compares to a taxation credit of £3.9 million in 2022, which represents SME R&D tax credits, as described in the other operating income section above.

 

Loss for the financial year

The Group posted a loss of £54.0 million (2022: £47.6 million1) for the year, which reflects the increase in operating costs and no taxation credit in 2023, partly offset by higher other operating income and interest income compared to 2022.

 

Adjusted EBITDA

Adjusted EBITDA loss for 2023 increased to £50.3 million (2022: £45.7 million1). Adjusted EBITDA is a non-statutory measure and is detailed in the Alternative Performance Measures section in this review. The increased loss is primarily due to the increased operating costs explained above.

 

Reconciliation between operating loss and adjusted EBITDA

Management believes that presenting Adjusted EBITDA loss allows for a more direct comparison of the Group's performance against its peers and provides a better understanding of the underlying trading performance of the Group by excluding non-recurring, irregular and one-off costs. The Group currently defines Adjusted EBITDA loss as the operating loss for the year excluding depreciation and amortisation charges, share-based payment charges, unrealised losses on forward contracts and exchange gains/losses.

 

Total capital investments

Total capital investments comprises capital expenditure (property, plant and equipment) and capitalised development (intangible assets). In 2023, total capital investments declined to £14.7 million (2022: £18.2 million) due to a combination of reducing investment requirements for our Manufacturing Innovation Centre in Redhill, a deferral of some test capacity expansion from 2023 to 2024, and a prioritisation of spend as we emphasised cash discipline during the year.

 

Working capital movements

During 2023 working capital decreased by £10.0 million (2022: increase of £3.0m1,2), which had a favourable impact to reduce the cash outflow in 2023. The two largest components of this was the reduction of Trade and other receivables by £7.3 million, including significant invoice payments from partners in January 2023, and a £2.9 million reduction in inventories during the year that partly reflects the consumption of first generation stacks, and an increased focus matching our pilot plant production levels to partner demand. The net movement of contract assets and contract liabilities was a decrease in net liabilities of £1.1 million.

 

Cash outflow

Cash outflow (change in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments) was £42.4 million (2022: £67.3 million). This improvement, despite the increase in the Adjusted EBITDA loss, has driven by the reduction in working capital, reduced capital investments and, to a lesser extent, increased finance income.

 

Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments

The Group ends the financial year in a strong position with £140.0 million in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments (2022: £182.3 million) to support future investment as we drive revenue growth, manage costs and expenditure in a disciplined way, and track towards profit and cashflow breakeven.

 

Outlook

We end 2023 with a strong financial position and continue to invest across the business to build a sustainable competitive advantage in highly differentiated solid oxide technology. As we move into 2024, we expect revenues to approximately double compared to 2023, based on current contracts with existing partners and licensees including Bosch, Doosan, Weichai, Delta, Shell, Linde and others. Signing additional licence contracts in the year represents potential upside to this outlook, and although the timing of these incremental opportunities is uncertain, we are well-placed for future growth from both existing and new partnership prospects.

 

 

 



31 December 2023

31 December 2022

Restated1


Note

£'000

£'000



 

 

Revenue1

2

22,324

19,788

Cost of sales


(8,770)

(9,079)

Gross profit

 

13,554

10,709

Other operating income2


3,665

1,332

Operating costs1

4

(76,620)

(66,054)

Operating loss

 

(59,401)

(54,013)

Finance income

5

7,079

2,830

Finance expense

5

(1,287)

(304)

Loss before taxation


(53,609)

(51,487)

Taxation (charge)/credit

6

(399)

3,872

Loss for the financial period and total comprehensive loss


(54,008)

(47,615)



 

 

Loss per £0.10 ordinary share expressed in pence per share:


 


Basic and diluted loss per share

7

(28.03)p

(24.88)p



 

 

 

 

 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. 

1 The restatements to 2022 and 2021 are described in Note 1.

 

CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENT

For the year ended 31 December 2023

 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

2 2022 taxation paid has been restated to increase the taxation paid from £380,000 by £1,529,000 to correct the amount disclosed as tax paid, the corresponding adjustment is to reduce the increase in trade and other receivables and other current assets. The exchange gains on cash and cash equivalents in 2022 has been corrected by reducing the previously reported amounts by £690,000 with the corresponding adjustment being made to increase the movement in trade and other payables, and hence net cash used in operating activities has increased by the same amount.

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

For the year ended 31 December 2023

 

 


Share

capital

Share

premium

Capital redemption reserve

Merger

reserve

Accumulated losses

Total

 


£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At 1 January 2022 - Previously stated


19,073

404,726

3,449

7,463

(154,056)

280,655

Restatement1


(1,143)

(1,143)

At 1 January 2022 - Restated


19,073

404,726

3,449

7,463

(155,199)

279,512

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Comprehensive income








Loss for the financial year - Restated1


(47,615)

(47,615)

Total comprehensive loss - Restated1


(47,615)

(47,615)



 

 

 

 

 

 

Transactions with owners








Issue of shares, net of costs


136

737

873

Share-based payments charge


997

997

Total transactions with owners


136

737

997

1,870

At 31 December 2022 - Restated1

 

19,209

405,463

3,449

7,463

(201,817)

233,767



 

 

 

 

 

 

Comprehensive income







 

Loss for the financial period


(54,008)

(54,008)

Total comprehensive loss


(54,008)

(54,008)



 

 

 

 

 

 

Transactions with owners


 

 

 

 

 

 

Issue of shares


88

721

809

Share-based payments charge


67

67

Total transactions with owners

 

88

721

67

876

At 31 December 2023


19,297

406,184

3,449

7,463

(255,758)

180,635

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

 1 The restatement to 2021 and 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

 

 


 

 31 December 2023


 

 31 December 2022

Restated1

 

£'000

 

£'000

Europe2

12,394


7,980

Asia2

9,589


11,391

North America

341

 

394

Rest of World

 

23

 

22,324

 

19,788

 

For the year ended 31 December 2023, the Group has identified two major customers (defined as customers that individually contributed more than 10% of the Group's total revenue) that accounted for approximately 51% (SOFC and SOEC) and 39% (all SOFC) of the Group's total revenue recognised in the period (31 December 2022: two major customers that accounted for approximately 48% and 38% of the Group's total revenue recognised for that year).

Major product/service lines

 


 31 December 2023


 31 December 2022

Restated1

 

£'000

 

£'000

Engineering services

10,220


9,039

Provision of technology hardware

5,726


5,380

Licence fees2

6,378

 

5,369

 

22,324

 

19,788

 

Timing of transfer of goods and services

 


 31 December 2023


 31 December 2022

Restated1


£'000


£'000

Products and services transferred at a point in time

6,544


4,760

Products and services transferred over time

15,780


15,028


22,324


19,788

 

The contract-related assets and liabilities are as follows:

 

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

2 The adjustments as described in Note 1 have impacted 2022 licences revenue in both Europe and Asia.

 

3. Segmental analysis

In accordance with IFRS 8 the method applied to identify reporting segments is based on internal management reporting information that is regularly reviewed by the chief operating decision maker, which the Group considers to be the Executive team. The Group's internal segmental reporting has changed and now only separately presents results down to gross profit level from its Power (SOFC) and Hydrogen (SOEC) divisions where previously presented to adjusted EBITDA.

 


Power - SOFC

 

Hydrogen - SOEC

 

Consolidated

31 December 2023

£'000

 

£'000

 

£'000


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

Revenue (external)

21,567

 

757

 

22,324

Cost of sales

(8,346)

 

(424)

 

(8,770)

Gross profit

13,221

 

333

 

13,554

 


 

 

 

 

 


Power - SOFC


Hydrogen - SOEC


Consolidated

31 December 2022 - Restated1

£'000


£'000


£'000













Revenue (external)

19,608


180


19,788

Cost of sales

(9,070)


(9)


(9,079)

Gross profit

10,538


171


10,709

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

4. Operating costs

 

Operating costs can be analysed as follows:

 


 


31 December 2023


 31 December 2022

Restated1


£'000


£'000

Research and development costs

54,034


48,546

Administrative expenses

17,681


15,116

Commercial

4,905


2,392


76,620


66,054

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

5. Finance income and expenses

 


 31 December 2023


 31 December 2022


£'000


£'000

Interest income on cash, cash equivalents and investments

7,079


2,657

Foreign exchange gain on cash, cash equivalents and short-term deposits


173

Finance income

7,079


2,830


 



Interest paid

(99)


Interest on lease liability

(248)


(212)

Unwinding of discount on provisions

(89)


(87)

Other finance costs

(46)


(5)

Foreign exchange loss on cash, cash equivalents and short-term deposits

(805)


Interest expense

(1,287)


(304)

 

6. Taxation

No corporation tax liability has arisen during the period (31 December 2022: £nil) due to the losses incurred. A tax charge has arisen as a result of foreign withholding taxes suffered and an overprovisions of R&D tax credit for 2022 under the SME R&D regime. The SME R&D tax credit regime is no longer accessible to the Group. The RDEC regime continues to be accessible and has been recognised within other operating income.

 


 31 December 2023


 31 December 2022


£'000


£'000

UK corporation tax


(4,470)

Foreign tax suffered

334


828

Adjustment in respect of prior periods

65


  (230)


399


(3,872)

 

7. Loss per share

 


31 December 2023

 31 December 2022

Restated1


£'000

£'000

Loss for the financial period attributable to shareholders

(54,008)

(47,615)


 

 

Weighted average number of shares in issue

192,651,782

191,385,618


 

 

Loss per £0.10 ordinary share (basic and diluted)

(28.03)p

(24.88)p

 

 

 

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

8. Property, plant and equipment

 


Leasehold improvements

 £'000

 

Plant and machinery
£'000

 

Computer equipment
£'000

 

Fixtures and fittings

£'000

Assets under construction

 £'000

 

 

Total

£'000

Cost







At 1 January 2022 - Previously stated

7,412

25,514

2,563

348

1,975

37,812

Brought forward restatement1

151

518

669

At 1 January 2022 - Restated

7,563

26,020

2,563

348

1,975

38,481

Additions

1,121

5,194

203

6,848

13,366

Transfers

71

1,672

(1,743)

Disposal

(1,621)

(6,669)

(831)

(72)

(9,193)

At 31 December 2022

7,134

26,229

1,935

276

7,080

42,654








Additions

1,318

3,647

164

115

1,937

7,181

Transfers

511

2,009

(2,520)

Disposals

(150)

(568)

(57)

(68)

(843)

At 31 December 2023

8,813

31,317

2,042

391

6,429

48,992

 







Accumulated depreciation







At 1 January 2022 - Previously stated 

3,358

14,291

1,790

232

19,671

Brought forward restatement1

37

160

197

At 1 January 2022 - Restated 

3,395

14,451

1,790

232

19,868

Charge for the year

956

4,119

444

73

5,592

Depreciation on disposals

(1,621)

(6,669)

(831)

(72)

(9,193)

At 31 December 2022

2,730

11,901

1,403

233

16,267








Charge for the year

1,264

5,783

379

35

7,461

Depreciation on disposals

(150)

(411)

(57)

(618)

At 31 December 2023

3,844

17,273

1,725

268

23,110

 







Net book value







At 31 December 2023

4,969

14,044

317

123

6,429

25,882

At 31 December 2022 - Restated

4,404

14,328

532

43

7,080

26,387

At 31 December 2021 - Restated

4,168

11,581

773

116

1,975

18,613

 

1 The adjustment in respect of 2022 and 2021 is described in Note 1.

2 The transfer from assets under construction to plant and machinery in the 2022 property, plant and equipment note was understated by £779,000. The note has been re-presented to reflect this correction.

 

'Assets under construction' represents the cost of purchasing, constructing and installing property, plant and equipment ahead of their productive use. The category is temporary, pending completion of the assets and their transfer to the appropriate and permanent category of property, plant and equipment. As such, no depreciation is charged on assets under construction.

Assets under construction consist entirely of plant and machinery that will be used in the manufacturing, development and testing of fuel cells.

 

9. Right of use assets

 

Land and Buildings

 

Computer equipment

 

Total

£'000


£'000

 

£'000

 





3,694


43


3,737

829



829

4,523


43


4,566

 


 


 

168



168

(33)



(33)

4,658


43


4,701

 


 



 


 



1,289


10


1,299

606


14


620

1,895


24


1,919

 

 

 

 

 

627

 

14

 

641

2,522


38


2,560

 





 





2,136


5


2,141

2,628


19


2,647

 

The lease liabilities are detailed in Note 18.

 

10. Intangible assets

 


Internal developments in relation to manufacturing site

 £'000

Customer and internal development programmes

£'000

 

 

 

Perpetual

software licences

£'000

Patent costs
£'000

 

Total

£'000

Cost






At 1 January 2022

411

8,407

252

633

9,703

Additions

5,340

273

219

5,832

At 31 December 2022

411

13,747

525

852

15,535







Additions

6,443

357

6,800

At 31 December 2023

411

20,190

525

1,209

22,335







Accumulated amortisation






At 1 January 2022

164

1,038

23

1,225

Charge for the year

82

748

125

77

1,032

At 31 December 2022

246

1,786

148

77

2,257







Charge for the year

82

728

137

77

1,024

At 31 December 2023

328

2,514

285

154

3,281







Net book value






At 31 December 2023

83

17,676

240

1,055

19,054

At 31 December 2022

165

11,961

377

775

13,278

 

The customer and internal development intangible primarily relates to the design, development and configuration of the Company's core fuel cell and system technology. Amortisation of capitalised development commences once the development is complete and is available for use.

 

 

11. Inventories

 


31 December 2023


31 December 2022


£'000


£'000

Raw materials

1,648


1,566

Work in progress

787


1,477

Finished goods

390


2,671

Total inventory

2,825


5,714

 

Inventories have reduced which reflects the stacks shipped to customers and the use of stacks for internal R&D projects, particularly the SOEC demonstrator.

 

12. Trade and other receivables

 


31 December 2023


31 December 2022

Current:

£'000


£'000

Trade receivables

3,422


11,825

VAT receivable

2,273


1,853

RDEC receivable

4,008


3,032

Other receivables

172


443


9,876


17,153

Non-current:

 



Other receivables

741


741

 

13. Other current assets

 


31 December 2023


31 December 2022

 

£'000


£'000

Prepayments

1,193


869

Accrued grant income


88


1,193


957


 


 

 

14. Net cash and cash equivalents, short-term and long-term investments

 


31 December 2023


31 December 2022

Restated1


£'000


£'000

Cash at bank and in hand

7,063


16,312

Money market funds

42,644


55,472

Cash and cash equivalents

49,707


71,784


 



Short-term investments

90,249


110,536

Cash and cash equivalents and investments

139,956


182,320

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

The Group typically places surplus funds into pooled money market funds with same day access and bank deposits with durations of up to 24 months. The Group's treasury policy restricts investments in short-term sterling money market funds to those which carry short-term credit ratings of at least two of AAAm (Standard & Poor's), Aaa-mf (Moody's) and AAAmmf (Fitch) and deposits with banks with minimum long-term rating of A-/A3/A and short-term rating of A-2/P-2/F-1 for banks which the UK Government holds less than 10% ordinary equity.

 

15. Trade and other payables

 


31 December 2023


31 December 2022

Current:

£'000


£'000

Trade payables

3,624


4,795

Other payables

1,359


138


4,983


4,933

 

16. Other current liabilities

 

 

1 The restatement to 2022 and 2021 is described in Note 1.

 

17. Derivative financial instruments

 


Fair value

hierarchy

Carrying amount

31 December 2023

£'000

Fair value

31 December 2023

£'000

Carrying amount

31 December 2022

£'000

Fair value

31 December 2022

£'000

Financial assets measured at fair value through profit or loss


 

 



Forward exchange contracts

Level 2

1

1

26

26

Currency swap contract

Level 2

7

7

Non-deliverable forward contracts

Level 2

28

28

Total derivative assets


8

8

54

54



 

 

 

 

Financial liabilities measured at fair value through profit or loss


 

 



Forward exchange contracts


(99)

(99)

Total derivative liabilities


(99)

(99)



 

 

 

 

 

18.  Lease liabilities

 



31 December 2023

31 December 2022



£'000

£'000



 

 

At the start of the period


3,124

3,039

New finance leases recognised


66

Lease payments


(906)

(956)

Interest expense


248

212

Adjustment to lease term


64

829

At the end of the period

 

2,596

3,124



 


Current


694

610

Non-current


1,902

2,514

Total at the end of the period


2,596

3,124

 


 

 

 

19.  Provisions

 


 

Property Dilapidations

 

 

Warranties

 

 

Contract Losses

 

Total


 

£'000


£'000

 

£'000

 

£'000

At 1 January 2022

 

1,828


1,253


326


3,407

Movements in the Consolidated Statement of Profit and Loss:

 








Amounts used

 



(137)


(137)

Unused amounts reversed

 


(707)


(135)


(842)

Unwinding of discount

 

87




87

Increase in provision1

 

190


329



519

At 31 December 2022

 

2,105


875


54


3,034

Movements in the Consolidated Statement of Profit and Loss:

 








Unused amounts reversed

 

 

(553)

 

(10)

 

(563)

Unwinding of discount

 

89

 

 

 

89

Change in provision

 

88

 

281

 

 

369

At 31 December 2023

 

2,282

 

603

 

44

 

2,929


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Current

 

 

603

 

44

 

647

Non-current

 

2,282

 

 

 

2,282

At 31 December 2023

 

2,282

 

603

 

44

 

2,929

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Current

 


875


54


929

Non-current

 

2,105




2,105

At 31 December 2022

 

2,105


875


54


3,034

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

Following further progress on contracts and no new warranty issues identified in the period, £0.6m of the warranty provision was released to the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss. As at 31 December 2023 the Group has recorded a contingent liability of approximately £0.1m (31 December 2022: £0.3m) to reflect the lower possibility of the Group paying out on any potential failures for certain additional stacks that may still be running where the contracts have concluded.

 

 

20. Share capital

 


 

31 December 2023

 

31 December 2022


 

Number of £0.10
Ordinary
shares

£'000

 

Number of £0.10
Ordinary
shares

 

£'000

Allotted and fully paid







At 1 January


192,086,775

19,209


190,729,638

19,073

Allotted £0.10 Ordinary shares on exercise of employee share options


881,321

88


1,357,137

136

At 31 December 2023 / 31 December 2022

 

192,968,096

19,297

 

192,086,775

19,209

 

During the year ended 31 December 2023, 881,321 ordinary £0.10 shares were allotted for cash consideration of £799,684 on the exercise of employee share options (31 December 2022: 1,357,137 ordinary £0.10 shares were allotted for cash consideration of £866,717).

 

Reserves

The Consolidated Statement of Financial Position includes a merger reserve and a capital redemption reserve. The merger reserve represents a reserve arising on consolidation using book value accounting for the acquisition of Ceres Power Limited at 1 July 2004. The reserve represents the difference between the book value and the nominal value of the shares issued by the Company to acquire Ceres Power Limited. The capital redemption reserve was created in the year ended 30 June 2014 when 86,215,662 deferred ordinary shares of £0.04 each were cancelled.

 

21. Events after the balance sheet date

Since the end of the year, Ceres announced its first joint SOEC and SOFC licence agreement with Delta Electronics. The agreement includes revenue of £43m to Ceres through technology transfer, development licence fees, and engineering services.

Whilst we continue to maintain strong relationships with both Bosch and Weichai, it is now our belief that the proposed JV is unlikely to be completed in its current form.

In February 2024, we made a strategic decision to discontinue our option to acquire the remaining shares of RFC Power ("RFC"), the pioneering flow battery company, in which Ceres retains a 24.2% stake. We continue to support RFC's development through technology and engineering services, leveraging the complementary nature of our expertise in electrochemistry and systems. This decision is aligned with our strategy to concentrate on our core business areas of fuel cell and electrolysis innovation. We will also continue to support RFC to engage with potential financial and strategic partners to best position it to achieve future growth and success in the energy storage market.

22. Capital commitments

Capital expenditure that has been contracted for but has not been provided for in the financial statements amounts to £5,671,000 as at 31 December 2023 (31 December 2022: £8,679,000), in respect of the acquisition of property, plant and equipment.

 

23. Related party transactions

As at 31 December 2023 and as at 31 December 2022, the Group's related parties were its Directors and RFC Power Limited.

During the year the following Directors exercised share options:

 

Date of exercise

Director

Type of options

Total number of options exercised

Weighted average

exercise price

Total gain on exercise

Number of shares retained

30 March 2023

Phil Caldwell

LTIP

200,000

£3.463

£672,600

200,000

04 May 2023

Phil Caldwell

Sharesave

4,610

£1.952

£6,602

4,610

07 July 2023

Mark Selby

2004 ESS

2,063

£2.825

£4,066

2,063

12 July 2023

Michelle Traynor

Sharesave

1,844

£1.952

£2,003

1,844

10 August 2023

Clarissa de Jager

Sharesave

7,377

£1.952

£10,284

7,377

03 October 2023

Phil Caldwell

2004 ESS

11,859

£3.204

£27,869

11,859

 

During the year ended 31 December 2023 two Directors sold 141,313 2004 Employee Shareholder Status (ESS) shares in Ceres Power Intermediate Holdings Ltd and received 92,864 Ceres Power Holdings plc shares in consideration in addition to the linked ESS options as set out in the table above.

During the year ended 31 December 2022, one Director exercised and retained 7,109 share options under the Company's employee share save scheme and one Director exercised and sold 14,218 share options under the Company's employee share save scheme. There were no other transactions between the Company and the Directors during the year ended 31 December 2022.

Transactions between the Group and RFC Power Limited, being an associated entity of the Group, comprised engineering consultancy services provided by the Group to RFC Power Limited for the value of £0.6m (31 December 2022: £0.4m).

Reconciliation between operating loss and Adjusted EBITDA

Management believes that presenting Adjusted EBITDA loss allows for a more direct comparison of the Group's performance against its peers and provides a better understanding of the underlying performance of the Group by excluding non-recurring, irregular and one-off costs. The Group currently defines Adjusted EBITDA loss as the operating loss for the period excluding depreciation and amortisation charges, share-based payment charges, unrealised losses on forward contracts and exchange gains/losses.

 

 

1 The restatement to 2022 is described in Note 1.

 

 

 

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