The Scotsman

Simec Atlantis forecasts growth surge

● Energy group reports revenue of £1.3m, largely thanks to Meygen

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpress.co.uk

Simec Atlantis Energy, the Edinburgh-based energy pioneer behind the Meygen tidal project in the Pentland Firth, has reported a loss in its interim results ahead of anticipate­d “rapid growth” in the coming years.

The group posted a loss before tax of £9.1 million for the six months to the end of June, up from a loss of £3.2m for the same period in 2017, following a period of investment and transforma­tion.

The firm, formerly known as Atlantis Resources, unveiled total equity of £134.4m, an increase of more than £74m from 2017, as a result of the acquisitio­n of Simec Uskmouth Power (SUP) in June and several rounds of equity fundraisin­g, including a round in May worth £20m.

It posted revenue for the period of £1.3m, which it said was “mainly driven by Meygen operations”.

Atlantis listed completion of theconstru­ctionphase­atmeygen, which has now exported more than eight gigawatt hours of energy to the grid, and the SUP acquisitio­n among its key operationa­l highlights.

0 Atlantis chief executive Tim Cornelius predicts ‘meaningful cashflows’

TIM CORNELIUS, CEO

It expects the Meygen project to return to full capacity in the fourth quarter, following maintenanc­e works to two of the four turbines, with chief executive Tim Cornelius looking forward to “a very productive winter”.

Cornelius said the group’s clean energy projects, such as its flagship conversion of a coal-fired power plant at Uskmouth, Wales, to run on 100 per cent waste material, would act as a blueprint for future developmen­ts.

He said: “The conversion

process [at Uskmouth] is progressin­g well and we are on track to have first power generation from the converted plant in 2020, which will immediatel­y deliver meaningful operationa­l cashflows.”

He predicted Meygen’s new two-megawatt tidal power turbine, the world’s largest single rotor system, would “open up new project developmen­t opportunit­ies in the UK, France, Channel Islands, South Korea, Japan and China, as costs reduce and reliabilit­y continues to improve”.

Cornelius added: “The possibilit­y of future acquisitio­ns of Simec hydro, storage, onshore wind and bio-fuel projects puts us on a trajectory of rapid growth, with the ambition of transition­ing swiftly into a cash generative, growth company of scale.”

Adam Forsyth, alternativ­e energy and resource research efficiency analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald Europe, said: “The Atlantis interim numbers themselves do not reflect the very major changes in the company and, in particular, do not reflect the early work or the eventual potential of the 220 megawatt Uskmouth waste to energy project.

“However, there has been progress on this project and the company continues to move towards its transforma­tion into a major global renewable energy provider.”

The Atlantis results come as research published today by the National Subsea Research Initiative (NSRI) outlined steps to ensure the UK remains at the forefront of wave and tidal energy sectors.

It identified the need for a dedicated taskforce, supported by industry and government, to drive forward technology developmen­t and knowledge sharing, as well as stewardshi­p for strategic direction and industry-wide promotion.

“The possibilit­y of future acquisitio­ns of Simec hydro, storage, onshore wind and biofuel projects puts us on a trajectory of rapid growth”

 ?? PICTURE: JON SAVAGE ??
PICTURE: JON SAVAGE

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