UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16
UNDER THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Date: 07 November 2024
Commission File Number: 001-14958
NATIONAL GRID plc
(Translation
of registrant’s name into English)
England and Wales
(Jurisdiction
of Incorporation)
1-3 Strand, London, WC2N 5EH, United Kingdom
(Address
of principal executive office)
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual
reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
☒ Form 20-F ☐ Form 40-F
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by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper
as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule
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to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3- 2(b) under the Securities
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assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b):
n/a
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit No.
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Description
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99.1
|
Exhibit
99.1 Announcement sent to the London Stock Exchange on 07 November
2024 —
National Grid plc Half-Year Results 2024/25
|
Exhibit
99.1
London | 7 November 2024:
National
Grid, a leading energy
transmission
and distribution company,
today
announces its Half-Year results for the period
ended 30 September
2024.
|
|
Delivering investment at pace, in an exciting new era of
growth
John Pettigrew, Chief Executive, said:
"Over
the last six months, the exciting momentum within National Grid has
continued as we deliver an unprecedented step up in capital
investment. We successfully completed the £7 billion Rights
Issue, underpinning our ability to deliver our five-year, £60
billion investment plan at pace. Delivery is well underway with
investment increasing to a record £4.6 billion in the first
half of this year. In the UK, work on our 17 major onshore and
offshore transmission projects is moving forward, in consultation
with our communities and stakeholders, and we are well progressed
in securing the supply chain for all these projects. In the US,
we've made good progress on our $4 billion Upstate Upgrade in New
York, and delivered further gas mains replacement and network
reinforcement across our communities.
We've
been encouraged by policy and regulatory progress on both sides of
the Atlantic. In the UK, we sold the Electricity System Operator to
government, and Ofgem's publication of the sector specific
methodology decision marked the next step in the RIIO-T3 regulatory
process. In the US, we have new rates for our downstate New York
gas business, and for our Massachusetts Electric business, giving
us greater visibility on investment plans.
National
Grid is delivering a new and exciting phase of growth with an
attractive investor proposition underpinned by high quality asset
growth, strong earnings growth and an inflation protected dividend.
We remain focused on playing our role in the energy transition and
the responsible delivery of the new infrastructure required to
enable the digital, electrified economies of the
future."
Financial Summary
Six months ended 30 September: continuing operations only (not
including UK Gas Transmission)
|
|
|
Statutory results
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|
Underlying1,2
|
Unaudited
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
% change
|
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
% change
|
Operating profit (£m)
|
|
1,309
|
1,985
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(34%)
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|
2,046
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|
1,796
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14%
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Profit before tax (£m)
|
|
684
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1,371
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(50%)
|
|
1,436
|
|
1,144
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26%
|
Earnings per share3 (p)
|
|
12.6
|
26.7
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(53%)
|
|
28.1
|
|
25.9
|
8%
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Dividend per share (p)
|
|
15.84
|
19.40
|
(18%)
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|
|
|
|
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Dividend per share (rebased) (p)
|
|
|
|
|
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15.84
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14.98
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6%
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Capital investment4 (£m)
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|
4,603
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3,946
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17%
|
|
|
|
|
|
1.
'Underlying'
represents statutory results from continuing operations, but
excluding exceptional items, remeasurements, major storm costs
(when greater than $100 million), timing and the impact on
underlying results of deferred tax in our UK regulated businesses
(NGET and NGED). Further detail and definitions for all alternative
performance measures (including constant currency) are provided
from page 59.
2.
Comparatives
restated for the change in our underlying earnings definition to
remove the deferred tax in our UK regulated businesses (NGET and
NGED).
3.
Comparatives
restated for the impact of the bonus element of the Rights Issue
(see note 9).
4.
Our
definition of capital investment was amended in 2023/24 to align
with our statutory measure (see note 2(c) to the financial
statements). Comparative amounts have been restated.
Highlights
Good financial performance across the half year
■
Underlying
operating profit on a continuing basis of £2.0 billion,
an increase of 14% at actual exchange rates (15% at constant
currency) versus the prior period. This was principally driven by:
increased rates in our New York businesses; higher revenues in UK
Electricity Transmission; a lower charge to the environmental
provision in New York; and a higher contribution from the UK
Electricity System Operator (ESO); partially offset by lower
profits in National Grid Ventures (NGV).
■
Underlying
EPS from continuing operations of 28.1p, up from 25.9p in the prior
period, driven primarily by the above factors and lower net finance
costs, partially offset by the increased share count following the
Rights Issue in June 2024.
■
Statutory
operating profit down 34% to £1.3 billion, driven
principally by adverse timing movements primarily in ESO. Statutory
EPS of 12.6p, down from 26.7p in the prior period.
■
Interim dividend
of 15.84p/ordinary share. This
represents 35% of the total rebased dividend per share of
45.26p in respect of the last financial
year to 31 March 2024, in line with the Group's dividend
policy (see page 63 for calculation).
Highlights continued
Record capital investment driving the energy
transition
■
Capital investment of
£4.6 billion for continuing operations,
£657 million higher than the prior period
(£726 million higher at constant currency). This
was principally driven by higher connection spend in UK Electricity
Transmission, and increased spend on early Accelerated Strategic
Transmission Investment (ASTI) projects; higher spend in New York
through our Smart Path Connect and Climate Leadership and Community Protection
Act (CLCPA) electric transmission projects,
as well as additional gas network spend in our Leak Prone Pipe
(LPP) replacement programme; partially offset by lower spend at
Viking Link following commissioning in the prior year; and the ESO
being classified as held for sale.
Evolving our strategy to focus on our pureplay energy
networks
■
Successfully
completed the £7 billion equity raise with proceeds received
in June.
■
Moved forward with the initial phase of our
significantly higher capital investment plan which, over the next
five years, will be almost double the investment compared to the
last five years.
■
National Grid
Renewables and Grain LNG classified as held for sale following
announced intention to sell both businesses.
■
Sold the ESO to the UK government for an enterprise value of £630
million[1] (transaction
completed 1 October).
■
Completed the sale
of the final 20% equity interest in National Gas Transmission to a
consortium of long-term infrastructure investors led by Macquarie
Asset Management.
■
£58 million of
cumulative synergy benefits now delivered across the Group as a
result of the UK Electricity
Distribution acquisition - on track to reach our
£100 million target by the end of 2025/26.
Progressing the new phase of capital delivery
■
Good progress on
our early ASTI investments, commencing construction on five of our
17 projects: Yorkshire
Green; North London reinforcement; Eastern Green Links 1
(EGL1) and 2 (EGL2) joint ventures; and Bramford to
Twinstead.
■
Held public
consultations over the summer covering eight other ASTI projects,
including 58 in-person consultations with over 7,600 people
attending, and with 750 people through online
webinars.
■
Working with seven
strategic partners to agree the initial allocation of work under
the Great Grid Partnership, our £9 billion supply chain
framework to deliver nine ASTI projects.
■
On track to award
all High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) and converter station
contracts for the remaining offshore ASTI projects in the first
part of 2025.
■
Further progress on
our 'Upstate Upgrade' in New York, with our Smart Path Connect
project - the rebuild and upgrade of 110 circuit miles of
transmission lines in upstate New York - reaching the halfway point
of construction, slightly ahead of schedule.
■
Good progress on
construction of our CLCPA Phase 1 projects. Issued a procurement
and construction Request for Proposal (RFP) for our CLCPA Phase 2
projects.
Delivering customer connections across our networks
■
On course to
connect a further 4.5 GW of new projects to our UK Electricity
Transmission network in 2024/25, versus 3.4 GW in
2023/24.
■
Connected 269 MW of new projects across our UK
Electricity Distribution network
(including 196
MW solar, 67 MW energy storage).
Highlights continued
Good regulatory and policy progress
■
Ofgem published
the RIIO-T3 Sector
Specific Methodology Decision (SSMD) which continues to recognise
'investability' as a priority when considering new price control
regulation for RIIO-T3.
■
Responded to the UK
government's consultation on the National Planning Policy Framework
(NPPF) calling for the explicit recognition of electricity network
infrastructure and its role in delivering the government's
energy objectives.
■
Welcomed Ofgem's
open letter on connections reform, directing the ESO and industry
to consider stronger alignment between future connection
arrangements and government strategic energy plans.
■
New three-year rate agreement approved by the New
York Public Service Commission (PSC) for our
downstate gas distribution business,
KEDNY-KEDLI.
■
New five-year rate
order issued by the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities
(DPU) for our Massachusetts Electric (MECO) business.
■
Filed for new rates
for Niagara Mohawk (NIMO), our upstate New York electric and gas
distribution business.
■
Our Electric Sector
Modernization Plan (ESMP) was approved by the DPU as a strategic
roadmap, outlining the incremental investment required in our
electric network over the next five years to help deliver
Massachusetts' clean energy goals.
■
Ofgem consultation
launched on Offshore Hybrid Asset (OHA) regulatory framework to
support first-of-a-kind OHAs.
Delivering on our responsible business commitments
■
Published our
second Climate Transition Plan (CTP), outlining our greenhouse gas
emissions reduction targets and our roadmap to achieve net zero by
2050.
■
Employees
volunteered over 40,000 hours across communities during the half
year. Now achieved 44% of our 10-year Group commitment of
volunteering 500,000 hours.
■
Board diversity remained at 45.5%; Group
Executive diversity at 53.9%. Since year end, gender and ethnically
diverse colleagues have risen from circa 7,100 to 7,400 and 5,300
to 5,600 respectively
[2].
Financial Outlook and Guidance
■
Guidance is based
on our continuing businesses, as defined by IFRS and includes the
contribution of the ESO up until disposal. It excludes the minority
stake in National Gas Transmission, which was classified as a
discontinued operation until disposal.
■
Financial outlook
over the five-year period from 2024/25 to 2028/29:
■
total cumulative
capital investment of around £60 billion;
■
Group asset growth
CAGRi of around 10%
backed by strong balance sheet;
■
driving underlying
EPS CAGRii of 6-8% from a
2024/25 EPS baseline;
■
credit metrics
consistent with current Group rating; and
■
regulatory gearing
to fall to the low-60% range by March 2025, then expected to trend
towards the high-60% range by the end of RIIO-T3.
■
For 2024/25
underlying EPS we continue to expect strong operational performance
reflecting year-on-year operating profit growth of around 10%, as
well as reduced financing costs due to lower average net debt.
We anticipate the additional share count from the Rights Issue
to largely offset this improved performance. We then expect an
underlying EPS CAGR of 6-8% from a 2024/25 baseline, through to
2028/29. Please refer to the detail in the Five-Year Financial
Framework and 2024/25 Forward Guidance on pages 15 to
17.
I.
Group
asset compound annual growth rate from a FY24 baseline. Forward
years based on assumed USD FX rate of 1.25; and long run UK CPIH
and US CPI. Assumes sale of ESO, Grain LNG, and National Grid
Renewables before 2029. Assumes 20% stake in National Gas
Transmission treated as a discontinued operation and therefore does
not contribute to Group asset growth.
II.
Underlying
EPS compound annual growth rate from FY25 baseline. Forward years
based on assumed USD FX rate of 1.25; long run UK CPIH, US CPI and
interest rate assumptions and scrip uptake of 25%. Assumed sale of
ESO in 2024/25; and sale of Grain LNG and National Grid Renewables
before 2029. Assumed 20% stake in National Gas Transmission treated
as a discontinued operation and therefore did not contribute to
underlying EPS.
Financial Key Performance Indicators
As at and for the six months ended 30 September
(£
million)
|
2024
|
2023
|
change %
|
Statutory operating profit (continuing) at actual
currency:
|
|
|
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
642
|
838
|
(23%)
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
759
|
472
|
61%
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UK Electricity System Operator
|
(213)
|
443
|
(148%)
|
New England
|
87
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(47)
|
285%
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New York
|
(50)
|
8
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(725%)
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National Grid Ventures
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145
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310
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(53%)
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Other
|
(61)
|
(39)
|
(56%)
|
Total statutory operating profit (continuing)
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
(34%)
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying operating profit
(continuing) at constant currency1:
|
|
|
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
724
|
656
|
10%
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
573
|
563
|
2%
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
115
|
34
|
238%
|
New England
|
237
|
211
|
12%
|
New York
|
288
|
115
|
150%
|
National Grid Ventures
|
147
|
219
|
(33%)
|
Other
|
(38)
|
(13)
|
(192%)
|
Total underlying operating profit (continuing)
|
2,046
|
1,785
|
15%
|
|
|
|
|
Capital investment (continuing) at
constant currency:2
|
|
|
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
1,290
|
899
|
43%
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
647
|
608
|
6%
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
-
|
75
|
(100%)
|
New England
|
814
|
764
|
7%
|
New York
|
1,569
|
1,217
|
29%
|
National Grid Ventures
|
279
|
312
|
(11%)
|
Other
|
4
|
2
|
100%
|
Total capital investment (continuing)
|
4,603
|
3,877
|
19%
|
1.
'Underlying'
represents statutory results from continuing operations, but
excluding exceptional items, remeasurements, major storm costs
(when greater than $100 million), timing and the impact on
underlying results of deferred tax in our UK regulated businesses
(NGET and NGED). Further detail and definitions for all alternative
performance measures (including constant currency) are provided
from page 59.
2.
Prior
year comparatives have been restated to reflect the change in our
'capital investment' definition (previously an alternative
performance measure, or APM), which now aligns with our statutory
segmental disclosure of capital investment in note 2(c) to the
financial statements and as such, is no longer considered to be
an APM. Capital investments exclude additions for assets or
businesses from the point they are classified as held for
sale.
Contacts
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|
Investor Relations
|
Angela Broad
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+44 (0) 7825 351 918
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Tom Edwards
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+44 (0) 7976 962 791
|
James Flanagan
|
+44 (0) 7970 778 952
|
Media
|
Danielle Dominey-Kent
|
+44 (0) 7977 054 575
|
Brunswick
|
Dan Roberts
|
+44 (0) 7980 959 590
|
Peter Hesse
|
+44 (0) 7834 502 412
|
Results presentation webcast
|
An audio webcast and live Q&A with management will be held at
09:15 (BST) today. Please use this link to join via a laptop,
smartphone or tablet: https://www.nationalgrid.com/investors/events/results-centre
A replay
of the webcast will be available soon after the event at the same
link.
|
UK (and International)
|
+44 (0) 330 551 0200
|
UK (Toll Free)
|
0808 109 0700
|
US (Local)
|
+1 786 697 3501
|
Password
|
Quote "National Grid Half Year" when prompted by the
operator
|
|
|
|
|
Use of Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)
Throughout
this release we use a number of alternative (or non-IFRS) and
regulatory performance measures to provide users with a clearer
picture of the regulated performance of the business. This is in
line with how management monitor and manage the business
day-to-day. Further detail and definitions for all alternative
performance measures are provided on pages 59 to 64.
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STRATEGIC OVERVIEW
Strong reliability performance during a period of high
growth
National
Grid has reported strong reliability across our UK and US networks
for the half year.
Despite
severe weather events across a number of our jurisdictions, our
teams were thoroughly prepared and restored outages rapidly and
well within regulatory requirements. This includes our New York
region where the average time to restore 95% of customers was
12 hours, and in Massachusetts where the average time was 16
hours.
In the
UK, the National Energy System Operator (NESO) recently published
its Winter Outlook report for the UK. The NESO is forecasting an
electricity capacity margin of 8.8%, slightly higher than last
year's, and broadly in line with recent winters. In New York, the
PSC published its Electric and Gas Utility Winter readiness report
in October that sees adequate supplies of gas and electricity to
meet the demands of residential and commercial customers across the
state this winter.
Overall,
we remain confident in delivering our usual high standard of
reliability across our networks in the months ahead and remain
vigilant as we move through winter in both the UK and the
US.
Safety performance
During
the half year, we recorded a Group Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate
(LTIFR) of 0.10*, compared
to 0.08 at year end and against our Group target of 0.10. We
continue to make strong progress under our Stand Up for Safety
campaign, launched in August 2022, and our three-year Group Safety
Strategy. The campaign is underpinned by our company-wide
principles of Safe to Say, Safe Choices, Safe to Stop and Safe to
Learn. As we expand our investment programme with additional
contractors, we have introduced Group-wide contractor management
guidelines to improve oversight and drive consistency, and created
supply chain task forces to integrate safety into our
planning.
●
Employee
and contractor lost time injury frequency rate per 100,000 hours
worked.
Half-year operating financial performance
Our statutory operating profit is presented on page 18 which
includes the impact of exceptional items, remeasurements, timing
and the impact of deferred tax in our UK regulated businesses (NGET
and NGED) and a reconciliation to our APMs is presented on page
61.
We achieved underlying operating profit on a continuing basis of
£2.0 billion, an increase of 14% at actual exchange rates
(15% at constant currency) versus the prior period. This was
principally driven by: increased rates in our New York businesses;
higher revenues in UK Electricity Transmission; a lower charge to
the environmental provision in New York; and a higher contribution
from the ESO; partially offset by lower profits in
NGV.
Underlying operating profit - continuing operations1
Six
months ended 30 September
|
|
At actual
exchange rates
|
|
At constant currency
|
(£ million)
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
% change
|
|
2023
|
% change
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
|
724
|
656
|
10%
|
|
656
|
10%
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
|
573
|
563
|
2%
|
|
563
|
2%
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
|
115
|
34
|
238%
|
|
34
|
238%
|
New England
|
|
237
|
218
|
9%
|
|
211
|
12%
|
New York
|
|
288
|
119
|
142%
|
|
115
|
150%
|
National Grid Ventures
|
|
147
|
219
|
(33%)
|
|
219
|
(33%)
|
Other
|
|
(38)
|
(13)
|
(192%)
|
|
(13)
|
(192%)
|
Total underlying operating profit
|
|
2,046
|
1,796
|
14%
|
|
1,785
|
15%
|
1.
'Underlying
results' and a number of other terms and performance measures are
not defined within accounting standards and may be applied
differently by other organisations. For clarity, we have provided
definitions of these terms and, where relevant, reconciliations on
pages 59 to 64.
For the half year, Group capital investment for continuing
operations reached £4,603 million, £657 million
higher than the prior period at constant currency (£726
million higher at actual exchange rates). This was principally
driven by higher connection spend in UK Electricity Transmission,
and increased spend on early ASTI projects; higher spend in New
York through our Smart Path Connect and CLCPA electric projects, as
well as additional gas network spend in our LPP replacement
programme; partially offset by lower spend at Viking Link following
commissioning in the prior year; and the ESO being classified as
held for sale.
Delivering a step change in infrastructure investment
As the
energy transition accelerates at pace, National Grid is well
positioned to deliver the significant increase in investment that
we announced in May 2024.
At our
Full Year results, we made several important announcements,
launching a new phase of growth for the Company. These
included:
■
a new five-year
financial framework with around £60 billion of capital
investment across the Group between now and 2029;
■
a £7 billion
Rights Issue, forming a key part of our comprehensive funding plan
to deliver this investment and growth;
■
a refreshed
strategy, to become the pre-eminent pureplay networks business
across our jurisdictions; and
■
our intention to
sell our National Grid Renewables and Grain LNG businesses as we
deliver this refreshed strategy.
During
the last six months we have made good progress in delivering each
of these. In June, we successfully completed the £7 billion
equity raise, one of the largest ever rights issues by a UK listed company.
National Grid Renewables and Grain LNG are now held for sale
following our announced intention to sell both
businesses; and we
continue to move forward with the significant uplift in our capital
investment plan which, over the next five years, will be almost
double the investment delivered over the last five years. This is
being driven primarily by the large increase in UK investment
through our ASTI projects, as well as continued investment in our
US energy networks, including our Upstate Upgrade in New York.
Through these actions, we are positioning the Company to help
deliver the energy transition in our jurisdictions, and to deliver
for both our customers and shareholders.
Group portfolio changes in the Half Year
In September, we were pleased to reach agreement with the UK
government on the terms of the sale of the ESO for an enterprise value of £630
million[3].
The transaction, which completed on 1 October, was an important
milestone for the creation of an independent National Energy System
Operator (NESO). The NESO will take on responsibility for
strategic planning for Great Britain's energy infrastructure as
well as advising the government and Ofgem on the most efficient way
to achieve Great Britain's net zero goals. It represents the
conclusion of several years' collaboration between National
Grid, the
government and
Ofgem, with the decision to establish a
'future system operator' as an independent public corporation
brought into law through the Energy Act 2023. Moving forward, we will partner with NESO
colleagues in a new way as they formally take on responsibility for
ensuring Great Britain's energy system is secure and
affordable. There will be some services that we will continue to
deliver to the NESO under transitional
service agreements.
In the
same month, we were pleased to complete the sale of the final 20%
equity interest in National Gas Transmission to a consortium of
long-term infrastructure investors led by Macquarie Asset
Management. This followed the consortium exercising its option for
the remaining 20% in July. The consideration for this equity stake
was on equivalent financial terms to the original 60% transaction
(acquired by the same consortium) that was completed in January
2023, and the 20% sale completed in March 2024. We now expect
National Grid's asset base to move to around 80% electric by
2028/29, up from 60% in 2021.
Delivering the next phase of capital investment
During
the half year, we delivered another record level of capital
investment for a six-month period at £4,603 million, on track to
deliver around £10 billion for the full year in line with
guidance and our five-year financial framework. This has been
driven principally by the significant increase in network
investment we are seeing across both our UK and US
jurisdictions.
UK - progress on ASTI project delivery
During
the half year, we continued to make good progress on our early ASTI
investments with construction commencing on five of our 17
projects. The five projects are:
■
Yorkshire
Green - the upgrade and reinforcement of 40 kilometres
of transmission lines in Yorkshire, including the installation of
33 new pylons and two new substations. Site access and
establishment works began in June and continue to progress
well.
■
North London
reinforcement - replacing an existing 275 kV overhead line with
a 400 kV line from Pelham substation, Hertfordshire, to Waltham
Cross substation in Epping Forest, and then to Tottenham substation
in Haringey. Site establishment works began in the summer and
continue to progress well, including ground investigation works for
the overhead lines.
■
Eastern Green Link 1
(EGL1) - our joint construction
project with
ScottishPower Energy Networks to deliver a 2 GW HVDC cable between
Torness, Scotland, and County Durham, England, to help unlock
Scotland's renewable energy reserves. Site establishment works
began in September 2024.
■
Eastern Green Link 2
(EGL2) - our joint construction
project with Scottish and
Southern Energy Networks (SSEN) to construct a 2 GW HVDC cable
between Peterhead, Scotland, and Drax, England. In September, we
held simultaneous 'groundbreaking' ceremonies with SSEN at either
end of the £4.3 billion project. This included the start of
construction at the new Wren Hall converter station at Drax, North
Yorkshire.
■
Bramford to
Twinstead - our project to reinforce part of the East Coast
transmission network through 18 kilometres of new overhead
line and around 11 kilometres of underground cable. We began
construction of the Twinstead Green Grid Supply Point in
September 2023. In September this year, the project received
a Development Consent Order from the Secretary of State for
Energy Security and Net Zero. We are now mobilising this work
across the wider project, having awarded Main Works Contracts to
Balfour Beatty in the summer.
We are
also in the final stages of procuring the supply chain for
our Tilbury to
Grain infrastructure upgrade. This project involves
replacing the existing 1960s Thames Cable Tunnel beneath the Thames
from Tilbury to Gravesend. The existing tunnel, which houses 400 kV
transmission cables, is nearing the end of its useful life and our
proposals include the construction of a new tunnel and cabling.
Mains Works Contracts are due to be awarded later this year with
construction to start in early 2025.
UK - ASTI project consultations
During
the half year, we continued to make good progress on our other ASTI
projects with public consultations held over the summer period
covering eight other ASTI projects. In total, we held 58 in-person
consultations across these projects with over 7,600 people
attending those events, and we reached a further 750 people
through online webinars. As part of our wider engagement to support
these events, we sent over 250,000 targeted newsletters to the
communities potentially impacted by our proposals.
This
included the statutory consultation for the two Norwich to Tilbury projects where
we are proposing to build 180 kilometres of new transmission
line to reinforce the high voltage power network in East Anglia and
enable the connection of new offshore wind generation. From 23
April through 15 July, we ran our first stage consultation
for Eastern Green Link 3
(EGL3) and Eastern Green Link 4 (EGL4). Both projects are new offshore high
voltage links between Scotland and England which, when
commissioned, will together transmit enough electricity to supply
up to four million homes. We
anticipate submitting an application for development consent to the
Planning Inspectorate in 2026.
Other
consultations currently underway include:
■
Brinsworth to High Marnham
overhead line upgrade - to build three new substations to support the
upgrade of the existing Brinsworth to Chesterfield, and
Chesterfield to High Marnham overhead lines from Yorkshire to
Nottinghamshire.
■
Chesterfield to Willington new
400 kV line - to build a new 60-kilometre, 400 kV line
between a new substation in Chesterfield and an existing substation
at Willington, South Derbyshire. The new substation at Chesterfield
to be consented as part of the Brinsworth to High Marnham upgrade
project.
■
Sea Link offshore cable
link - to reinforce the transmission network between
Suffolk and Kent via a new, primarily offshore, cable link.
Following our statutory consultation at the end of 2023, we
undertook targeted local consultation over the summer. We
anticipate submitting an application for a development consent
order in early 2025.
■
North Humber to High Marnham
new 400 kV line - to build a new 400 kV transmission line between
a new substation in Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, and a new
substation at High Marnham in Nottinghamshire. The upgrade is
required to increase the capability of the transmission network
between the north of England and the Midlands, as well as to
facilitate the connection of proposed new offshore wind planned in
the area. Following our Stage 1 consultation in 2023, we ran a
'localised' consultation between 9 July and 6 August 2024 to seek
views about a potential alternative corridor between South Wheatley
and High Marnham.
UK - ASTI supply chain
Across
our ASTI projects, mobilisation under the Great Grid Partnership is
progressing well. This is part of a £9 billion supply
chain framework to secure the network design and construction work
to deliver nine ASTI projects and support projects beyond 2030. As
part of this, we are working with seven strategic partners to agree
on the initial allocation of work by the end of December 2024.
Our
procurement programme for HVDC and converter stations is also
entering its final stages, with contracts for the remaining
offshore ASTI projects due to be awarded in the first part of 2025.
Altogether, we are confident that by the first part of next year we
will have secured the 'tier 1' supply contractors for all 17
confirmed ASTI projects that were awarded to us in our operational
licences in 2023.
United States (New York) - Upstate Upgrade
In
March 2024, we announced plans to invest more than $4 billion in
transmission network infrastructure in New York. The 'Upstate
Upgrade', the largest investment in New York's electricity
transmission network for over a century, is a collection of more
than 70 transmission enhancement projects through to 2030. In
addition to delivering a modernised, stronger, and cleaner energy
network in upstate New York, these projects will also generate over
1,700 new jobs.
Progress
on these projects has continued during the half year, with a
further $218 million capital investment. Our Smart Path Connect
project - the rebuild and upgrade of 110 circuit miles of 230 kV to
345 kV transmission lines in northern New York - reached the
halfway point of construction, slightly ahead of schedule. The
project remains on track for energisation in December
2025.
On our
$800 million CLCPA Phase 1 investment programme, construction has
progressed well on the first stage of our substation upgrade. This
also includes projects such as Inghams to Rotterdam circuit
rebuilds (111 miles) to support 330 MW of incremental headroom
capacity for renewable generation.
Our
Upstate Upgrade also includes CLCPA Phase 2 investments, part of
the $2.1 billion Phase 2 funding which covers 400 circuit miles of
115 kV line rebuilds, five new substations and nine line rating
upgrade projects which support increasing our system capacity to
connect additional renewable generation. This includes our Black
River to Porter circuit rebuild projects which will upgrade
approximately 172 circuit miles of our 115 kV system in Jefferson,
Lewis, and Oneida counties, and our Colton to Nicholville circuit
rebuild, which will upgrade approximately 18 miles of our 115 kV
system in St. Lawrence County.
Through
this investment, total network capacity in upstate New York will be
increased supporting the interconnection of new renewable
generation. During the half-year, the Procurement and Construction
RFP covering Phase 2 investments was issued to the market. This
follows the awarding of engineering contracts for transmission
projects in October 2023. We continue to grow strategic
relationships with major contractors as part of our Supply Chain
Transformation programme launched in 2023, which seeks to deliver
two major outcomes with suppliers to aid becoming a 'Client of
Choice'. Firstly, to partner more closely with the supply chain to
ensure our strategies and goals are aligned; and secondly, to use
our scale as a group to secure wider, longer-term contracts with
our suppliers.
UK regulatory and policy progress
We
welcomed a number of developments in UK policy and regulation during the
half year. Our engagement with the new UK government has been
positive, reflecting the strength of our existing relationships as
the administration begins to make progress against the energy
priorities they set out, including the establishment of the NESO.
In addition, we have also seen and welcomed Ofgem's SSMD document
that continues to recognise 'investability' as a priority when
considering the formation of new price control regulation
for RIIO-T3.
Planning and permitting reform
In
July, we were pleased to see the King's Speech (which sets out the
government's legislative agenda) include expected legislation to
reform the planning system. This will help accelerate the delivery
of critical infrastructure, which National Grid has been advocating
for in recent years. In the same month, the Ministry of Housing,
Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) issued a consultation
to seek views on proposed reforms to the National Planning Policy
Framework (NPPF). As part of the consultation, proposed amendments
were made to give significant weight to benefits associated with
renewable and low carbon energy generation when assessing planning
proposals.
We
responded to the consultation with a number of key points,
including the need to:
■
recognise
electricity network infrastructure and its role in delivering the
government's energy objectives;
■
ensure existing
network assets are protected in any new grey belt developments;
and
■
recognise the
importance of network upgrades and connections to facilitate the
modern, digital economy, including data centres.
The
consultation closed on 24 September and we now await the
government's response.
RIIO-T3 and Sector Specific Methodology Decision
In
July, Ofgem published its SSMD for our UK Electricity Transmission
business relating to the RIIO-T3 regulatory period (effective from
April 2026 through to March 2031). This follows the regulator's
Sector Specific Methodology Consultation (SSMC) in December 2023
which recognised the need to deliver clear signals as well as
certainty for investors that projects are viable, investable and
deliverable. As part of this consultation, we highlighted the need
for regulation to allow projects to move at pace, and that the
financial framework must reflect the scale of the investment we
need to deliver over the RIIO-T3 period.
Overall,
we welcomed Ofgem's recognition in the SSMD that an appropriate
financial framework is required to retain and attract capital that
the sector requires as we embark on a significant step up in
investment. The regulator set out an initial cost of equity range
of 4.57-6.35% which it will use as it considers cross checks,
forward-looking risks, and the need to ensure the price control is
'investable'. Within the SSMD, Ofgem also concluded its inflation
consultation, with the introduction of a nominal return on fixed
rate debt, which will allow better matching of allowances to actual
debt costs and faster recovery of cash.
Submission
of Company business plans in December 2024 is the next step of a
regulatory process that will run through to the final determination
at the end of 2025. We will include the outcomes of SSMD in our UK
Electricity Transmission business plan for RIIO-T3, and we will
continue to engage constructively with Ofgem, as well as wider
stakeholders, to agree the right policy and regulatory frameworks
to deliver a net zero energy system.
Connections reform - progress across our networks
At the
end of September, the transmission connection pipeline for Great
Britain stood at 552 GW, with 417 GW of this capacity contracted to
connect to our transmission network in England & Wales. We are
pleased that we now have consensus with Government, Ofgem and the
NESO on the need to reduce and reorder the connections pipeline to
ensure that priority is placed on connecting the right technologies
in the right places at the right time, to help reach the UK's net
zero goals. To this end, the NESO and Ofgem continue to work
through the reform process to put in place a long-term
solution.
In June
2023, the ESO recommended the implementation of the Target Model
Option Four (TMO4) designed to reform the connections process. TMO4
is based upon a 'first ready, first connected' approach to
connections, rather than the current 'first to contract, first to
connect' system. Under TMO4, new projects would enter the
connections process at a 'first gate' and would be required to
satisfy criteria to arrive at a 'second gate'. The second gate
would allow the project to obtain a queue position and a connection
date.
In
September, we welcomed Ofgem's open letter on connections reform
which directed the ESO and industry to consider stronger alignment
between future connection arrangements and government strategic
energy plans. This is consistent with a recommendation made by our
UK Electricity Transmission business in our response to the ESO's
TMO4 consultation, and we support the recommendation that
'strategic need' should be incorporated into the reformed
connection arrangements criteria. The NESO will use Clean Power
2030 (see below) as a basis and plan to implement code changes to
manage the connections queue based on technology needs. During the half year, the
ESO continued to progress TMO4 with the process set to
'go live' in the second quarter of calendar year 2025 (we
anticipate an Ofgem decision on the proposals in the first
quarter).
Across
our UK Electricity Distribution network, we have led the way
through the industry's Technical Limits initiative where we signed
13 offers for over 283 MW of distribution network connections, with
an average acceleration in connection date of around nine years (we
were the first Distribution Network Operator (DNO) to connect a
project under this initiative). We also removed 190 projects during
the half year, amounting to 3.7 GW of capacity from the contracted
connections queue. We are now focused on reallocating this capacity
through better queue management to more ready
projects.
During
the half year, UK Electricity Distribution chaired the TMO4 impacts
group for the Electricity Networks Association (ENA), taking a lead
role in representing DNOs. In collaboration with other group
members we are developing some further improvements to the revised
connections queue management process. In addition, UK Electricity
Distribution also created an internal team dedicated to the
acceleration of connections and are updating internal policies to
enable adoption of a 'first ready, first needed, first connected'
approach.
Clean Power by 2030
In
August, the government commissioned the ESO to provide "practical
advice on achieving clean power by 2030 for Great Britain". This
places a requirement on the NESO to provide a range of pathways
that enables the government's clean power 2030 goal, including
different energy generation and demand mixes. Based on these
scenarios, the NESO presented a view of a number of network
reinforcements required to deliver Clean Power 2030 alongside wider
analysis such as opportunities, risks and actions needed to enable
delivery of the pathways. As part of this, the NESO has been
working with DNOs to understand how demand flexibility can be used
as an effective lever to help balance a clean energy
system.
From a
connections perspective, the NESO, Ofgem and government are aligned
that the CP2030 scenario will feed into the 'system need' criteria
under the NESO's new
TMO4 gated process, a key enabler to rationalising the
connection pipeline (see above).
Strategic planning for energy infrastructure
In
October, the UK, Scottish and Welsh governments jointly
commissioned the NESO to produce a Strategic Spatial Energy Plan
(SSEP) for Great Britain. This will take a longer-term view of a
spatial strategy for energy infrastructure, serving as a
'blueprint' from which future plans will flow, such as the
Centralised Strategic Network Plan (CSNP). The stated goal of the
SSEP is "to help accelerate and optimise the transition to clean,
affordable and secure energy across Great Britain", and while it is
ultimately anticipated to cover the whole energy system, its first
iteration will focus on infrastructure for electricity generation
and storage, including relevant hydrogen assets. NESO will publish
its consultation on methodology for the SSEP later this year, and
deliver the plan in 2026.
Ofgem RIIO-ED3 Framework Consultation
On 6
November, Ofgem released its RIIO-ED3 Framework Consultation which
asks 65 wide-ranging questions to help shape the next price
control. All NESO published pathways show increased electrification
of demand and decentralised renewable generation during ED3
and beyond. Ofgem stated in the framework consultation that
ensuring electricity distribution networks have the necessary
capacity is a key priority for the ED3 framework. We expect to
submit a response early in the new year.
US regulatory and policy progress
We have
continued to see good regulatory and policy progress across our US
jurisdictions during the half year.
New York rate agreements and filings
On 10
April 2024, we filed a Joint Proposal with the New York Public
Service Commission (PSC) for a three-year rate settlement at our
downstate gas distribution businesses, KEDNY and KEDLI. The Joint
Proposal was approved by the Commission on 15 August. The rate
agreement included funding for capital investment
of $924 million for KEDNY and $646 million for KEDLI in
the first rate year (an increase of around 30% on 2022/23), and a
Return on Equity (RoE) of 9.35% which compares to 8.8% under the
prior rate settlement. It will fund programmes necessary to
modernise the gas network and continue a safe and reliable service
for our customers. In addition, it maintains a focus on customer
affordability through bill assistance programmes, and includes
initiatives to reduce methane emissions, promote non-gas
alternatives, and expand energy efficiency in support of the
State's environmental goals.
On 28
May, we filed for new rates for our Niagara Mohawk (NIMO) electric
and gas distribution business in upstate New York. We requested a
four-year rate plan with a 10.0% RoE; $1.7 billion capital
investment for electric, and $338 million for gas, in the first
rate year; and a revenue increase of $525 million for electric and
$148 million for gas, also in the first rate year. In addition, the
filing includes targeted programmes to better serve residential,
commercial and industrial customers, and enhanced energy
affordability programmes and services to enable clean energy and
energy efficiency benefits for disadvantaged
communities.
On 26
September, the PSC and twelve other parties submitted responses to
our NIMO rate filing. The PSC proposed a lower increase to our
revenue and capital expenditure requirements, but also supported
key elements of our filing including a RoE of 9.5% versus our
current allowed RoE of 9.0%. In addition, the PSC supported
increased funding for major and minor storms and is also supportive
of proposed investments and programmes to run the core business.
The filing continues to progress and we anticipate an outcome of
the rate filing in spring/summer 2025.
New York regulatory proceedings
In
August 2024, the New York PSC initiated a proceeding to proactively
identify and develop future grid infrastructure needs to address
energy loads driven initially by transportation and building
electrification. The PSC directed New York's utility providers to
submit a portfolio of urgent electric infrastructure upgrades to
address the demand from electric vehicles and electrification of
buildings. Each utility project proposal, including National
Grid's, are due to be submitted to the PSC in November 2024. The
PSC also required the New York utilities to jointly develop a
long-term proactive planning and cost recovery framework to meet
continued demands from electrification, including from industrial
load and demand attributable to economic development. The proactive
planning framework is due to be submitted to the PSC in December
2024.
Massachusetts rate orders and filings
On 30
September, the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities
(DPU) issued a 5-year rate
case order for our Massachusetts Electric business (MECO). This
follows the filing for new rates that we made in November 2023. The
order was only the second issued by the current DPU Commission
following the change in the Massachusetts
administration.
One of
the key features of this innovative rate order is a new capital
recovery mechanism that adjusts annually to recover MECO's
increases in core investment costs, up to a recovery cap equivalent
to 3% of MECO's total annual revenue. The tracker will reduce the
time taken to recover capital spend enabling us to earn closer to
the allowed RoE moving forward. Other features included: a RoE of
9.35%; a Performance Based Rate Mechanism to provide inflation
protection against core operations and maintenance (O&M) expense; improved recovery of
storm costs with an incremental $60 million per year; and
an earnings sharing mechanism triggered when actual RoE exceeds
100 basis
points above the allowed RoE, with incremental earnings
shared 75/25 between customers and the company. Additionally, the
order includes approval of the first-of-its-kind tiered low-income
discount rate which is designed to address energy burdens and
promote rate equity. New rates became effective on 1 October
2024.
Massachusetts Electric Sector Modernization Plan
outcome
On 29
August, we welcomed the DPU's order approving our Electric Sector
Modernization Plan (ESMP). The proposed plan, filed with the DPU in
January 2023, outlines the investment required in our electric
distribution network over the next five years and beyond to help
the state meet its clean energy goals under the 2050 Clean Energy
and Climate Plan (CECP). It proposes up to $2 billion investment
over the next five years across the following areas: network
infrastructure, including upgraded power lines, transformers,
substations; technology and platforms, including new planning tools
for smarter decision making; new data and monitoring systems; and
customer programmes, including help for customers seeking to reduce
their carbon footprint and drive smart energy use.
The
ESMP cost recovery mechanism will be determined in a future
proceeding that will conclude by 30 June 2025, as will the final
level of investment and projects. As a result, the ESMP start date
is scheduled for 1 July 2025 for a duration of five years,
concluding 30 June 2030. All electric utilities in Massachusetts
will have an ESMP across this period and each is expected to
provide the DPU with forecasts by September 2029 for the next
ESMP which is expected to run from 2030 through
2035.
FERC regulatory proceedings
Whilst
not directly applicable to the Group, in October the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued a decision to change FERC's RoE
methodology for the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO)
region which lowered RoEs. Given pending cases filed at FERC over
the last decade challenging New England RoE methodology, the Group
will continue to monitor these regulatory proceedings.
Progress at National Grid Ventures (NGV)
Community Offshore Wind (COSW)
COSW,
our joint venture with RWE, continues to respond to offshore wind
solicitations from the authorities in New York and New Jersey
to secure offtake contracts for the 3 GW+ seabed lease in the New
York Bight.
In July
2024, COSW submitted an offtake bid for up to 1.3 GW in response to
the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) solicitation. This
was followed in October with offtake bids of up to 2.7 GW to the
New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA).
We await selection decisions, expected by the end of calendar year
2024.
US NGV transmission projects
During
the half year, our New York Transco joint venture submitted its
'Energy Link NY' proposals to the New York Independent System
Operator (NYISO) for the city's Public Policy Transmission Need (NY
PPTN). The project would consist of multiple HVDC transmission
links to connect over 5 GW of offshore wind to the New York City
grid network. NYISO is currently evaluating proposals from four
bidders and plans to make an award in the second half of calendar
year 2025.
UK Offshore Hybrid Assets (OHAs)
We have
continued to lead the way on future interconnector development and
continue to work with Ofgem to establish the regulatory regime for
Offshore Hybrid Assets (OHAs). OHAs are the next phase of
interconnection, not only linking two countries but also connecting
with offshore wind generation. Our projects, LionLink (a joint
venture with TenneT), and Nautilus (a joint venture with Elia)
are two UK
pilots that would fall into this asset class, paving
the way for a more efficient and interconnected North Sea grid. We
expect Ofgem to confirm the LionLink and Nautilus OHA regulatory
framework parameters by the end of this calendar year. This will
enable us to progress to a Final Investment Decision (FID) during
2027/28.
Delivering our synergy target - Electricity
Distribution
Following
the acquisition of UK Electricity
Distribution, we have continued to make good progress on
achieving £100 million of group synergies before the end
of 2025/26. During the half year, we delivered further synergies to
take the cumulative total to £58 million, over half of
our target. This has been achieved through: (a) leveraging our
increased buying power and supplier base across the Group
including bulk purchase of assets and contract optimisation;
(b) shared sites and operational delivery, where we are
reviewing how we can work collaboratively across 48 joint UK
Electricity Transmission and UK Electricity Distribution sites,
with pilots at Rugeley and Willington underway; and c)
cost savings through IT and
insurance initiatives.
Our responsible business commitments
National Grid has a critical role in enabling net zero and
ensuring that the benefits of the energy transition are shared with
everyone. This responsibility is integral to our core strategy and
underpins our Responsible Business Fundamentals - ensuring safe and
reliable operations, living our values, whilst influencing and
expecting the same of our partners and supply
chain.
During
the half year, we published our second Climate Transition Plan
(CTP) which outlines our greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction
targets and our roadmap to achieve net zero by 2050. This refreshed
CTP provides a credible pathway to meet our science-based climate
targets, encompassing both direct actions and dependencies on
policies, regulations and the decarbonisation of our supply chains.
It is important to note that emissions reductions will not follow a
linear trajectory, resulting in potential year-on-year
fluctuations.
Combustion
of oil and gas at our National Grid Generation facilities on Long
Island is a key source of our Scope 1 emissions.
These assets experienced a notable increase
in generation this year, attributable to contractual obligations
with the Long Island Power Authority (LIPA), as National Grid
fulfilled a temporary surge in demand. This was due to an unplanned
maintenance outage at a third-party power plant which was brought
back into service in August. Generation running conditions are
expected to remain as normal for the remainder of the year,
provided there are no other unforeseen circumstances. We therefore
expect 2024/25 scope 1 GHG emissions to be higher than
2023/24.
SF6 emissions
from our electric equipment is another focus area of Scope 1
emissions, the majority of which (~80%) is in our UK Electricity
Transmission network. During the half year, UK Electricity
Transmission made good progress repairing leaks. Additionally,
Ofgem's Strategic Innovation Fund (SIF) recently awarded UK
Electricity Transmission £8.5 million for a project to develop
a long-term strategy to reduce SF6 dependency
in consultation with industry partners.
To help
reduce our Scope 3 GHG emissions, we have continued to engage with
key strategic suppliers that form a large part of our emissions
linked to the goods and services we procure. We closely collaborate
to ensure transparency and understanding of our new Science-Based
Targets. Given our involvement in global supply chains, achieving
emissions reductions in our construction projects relies on close
collaboration with suppliers.
Across
the Group, our colleagues have volunteered 40,707 hours in our
communities during the half year (15,508 in the UK and 25,199 in
the US). Cumulatively, National Grid colleagues have now
volunteered 220,187 hours since the publication of the Responsible
Business Charter in 2020, achieving 44% of our ten-year Group
commitment of 500,000 hours.
Since the end of 2023/24, the overall Board diversity has remained
at 45.5%. Individually, the Board aspires to comprise at least one
Director from a minority ethnic background and at least 40% women.
Presently, two Directors are from an ethnic minority background
but, as a result of recent changes in Board composition, female
representation currently stands at 36.4%. Given the Board's desire
to stagger the induction of new Directors, gender balance is
expected to be restored in due course. There is no change in the
overall diversity of our Group Executive since 2023/24 which stands
at 53.9%. Since year end, gender and ethnically diverse colleagues
have risen from circa 7,100 to 7,400 and 5,300 to 5,600
respectively[4].
We are
pleased that our efforts to create an inclusive environment are
being recognised by third parties. National Grid has been rated one
of the top 50 employers in the UK for social mobility. The Social
Mobility Index (SMI) is the leading authority on employer-led
social mobility and was created to provide annual benchmarking and
assessments for UK employers. Last year, we made good progress,
moving from ranking 71 to 49; this year, we have made significant
improvements in the right direction and improved our position by a
further 7 places with a new ranking of 42.
In 2024 National Grid took part in the Workforce Disclosure
Initiative for the seventh consecutive year. We were awarded a
disclosure score of 85% compared to the sector average of
62%.
FIVE-YEAR FINANCIAL FRAMEWORK
Our
five-year financial framework is based on our continuing
businesses, as defined by IFRS, Grain LNG and National Grid
Renewables until these businesses are disposed. It excludes the
minority stake in National Gas Transmission, which was sold in
September 2024, and includes contributions from the ESO until it
was sold 1 October 2024. The five-year financial framework
assumes an exchange rate of £1:$1.25.
Capital investment and Group asset growth
We
expect to invest around £60 billion across our energy networks
and adjacent businesses, in the UK and US, over the five-year
period to 2028/29, with Group assets trending towards £100
billion by March 2029. Of the £60 billion investment over
the five years to March 2029, around £51 billion is considered
to be aligned with the principles of the EU Taxonomy legislation as
at the date of reporting.
In the
UK, we expect around £23 billion of investment in UK
Electricity Transmission for asset health and anticipatory system
reinforcement to facilitate offshore generation and other new
onshore system connections. This also includes the investment
across our 17 ASTI projects, as we invest in the critical
infrastructure required to enable the energy transition and a
decarbonised electricity network in the 2030s. We expect our UK
Electricity Distribution network to invest around £8 billion
over the five years to 2028/29 in asset replacement, reinforcement
and new connections, facilitating the infrastructure for electric
vehicles, heat pumps and directly connected
generation.
In our
US regulated businesses, we expect to invest around £17
billion in New York, and £11 billion in New England, over the
five years to 2028/29. From over half of our investment in the
prior five-year plan going to safety related projects in our gas
networks, we now expect to invest nearly 60% in this plan into our
electricity networks, as we see a step up in investment for
renewable connections, transmission network upgrades, and digital
capabilities to enable the energy transition.
NGV has
committed capex of around £1 billion over the five years to
2028/29, including the necessary maintenance investment across the
six operational interconnectors.
With
the large step up in investment, we expect to see higher Group
asset growth of around 10% CAGR through to 2028/29.
Group gearing
We
remain committed to a strong, overall investment grade credit
rating. We expect to maintain credit metrics above our thresholds
for our current Group credit ratings through to at least the end of
the RIIO-T3 price control period, with current thresholds of 10%
for S&P's FFO/adjusted net debt, and 7% for Moody's
RCF/adjusted net debt. Having completed the Rights Issue, we expect
regulatory gearing to be in the low 60% range by March 2025, and
then expected to trend towards the high 60% range by the end of
RIIO-T3.
Group earnings growth and dividend growth
We
expect our CAGR in underlying EPS to be in the 6-8% range from a
2024/25 baseline*. This includes our long-run average scrip uptake
assumption of 25% per annum, which will support our sustainable,
progressive dividend policy into the future.
We will
maintain a progressive level of total dividend growing from the
2023/24 dividend. This equates to a rebased DPS of 45.26p/share for
2023/24 which we aim to grow in line with UK CPIH in keeping with
the current dividend policy (for details of our dividend policy
please refer to page 22).
●
For
more detail on underlying EPS guidance, see the 2024/25 Forward
Guidance section.
2024/25 FORWARD GUIDANCE
This forward
guidance is based on our continuing businesses, as defined by IFRS.
It excludes the minority stake in National Gas Transmission which
was classified as held for sale within discontinued operations
before it was sold on 26 September 2024. The guidance includes
businesses classified as held for sale within continuing
operations; namely the ESO before it was sold on 1 October 2024 as
well as Grain LNG and National Grid Renewables which were
classified as held for sale on 30 September 2024.
The
forward guidance contained in this statement should be reviewed,
together with the forward-looking statements set out in this
release, in the context of the cautionary statement. The forward
guidance in this section is presented on an underlying basis and
excludes remeasurements and exceptional items, deferrable major
storm costs (when greater than $100 million), timing and the impact
on underlying results of deferred tax in our UK regulated
businesses (UK Electricity Transmission and UK Electricity
Distribution). The 2024/25 forward guidance assumes an exchange
rate of £1:$1.30.
UK Electricity Transmission
Underlying net revenue is expected to increase by over £150 million
compared to 2023/24 primarily driven by higher allowances as a
result of growing RAV, including returns on increasing ASTI
investment, and indexation. Depreciation is expected to be up to
£50 million higher in the year due to the increasing asset
base.
We
expect to deliver around 100 bps of outperformance in the fourth
year of RIIO-T2 in Operational Return on Equity. This is in line with
our target to deliver 100 basis
points of operational outperformance on average through
the five-year period of the RIIO-T2 price control.
UK Electricity Distribution
Underlying net revenue is expected to increase by around £100
million compared to 2023/24, driven by allowances on a higher RAV
following continued investment and indexation. Depreciation is
expected to offset around a third of this increase, reflecting the
increasing asset base.
In line
with our target, we expect to deliver around
100-125 basis
points of outperformance in the second year of RIIO-ED2
in operational Return on Equity.
UK Electricity System Operator (ESO)
Underlying operating profit is £115 million, reflecting the contribution
up until sale on 1 October 2024.
New England
Underlying net revenue is expected to be over $270 million higher,
driven by rate increases. This is expected to be offset by around
$80 million higher depreciation as a result of the increasing asset
base and $70 million other costs, driven by continued investment
and business growth.
Return on Equity for New England is expected to be slightly lower
than 2023/24, which had a one-off benefit relating to the
regulatory recovery of a historical property tax matter. Excluding
the one-off benefits, New England Return on Equity is expected to
modestly improve from 2023/24.
New York
Underlying net revenue is expected to be nearly $570 million higher,
including increases from new rate settlements, primarily
KEDNY/KEDLI. Depreciation is expected to be around $100 million
higher, reflecting the increasing asset base, and other costs are
expected to be around $30 million lower, driven by non-recurrence
of environmental reserve increases which occurred in 2023/24 mostly
offset by cost increases driven by the KEDNY/KEDLI rate
case.
Return on Equity for New York is expected to be marginally
improved from 2023/24 because of the KEDNY/KEDLI rate
settlement.
NGV and Other activities
In NGV,
we expect operating
profit to be around £100 million lower than
2023/24 driven by expected lower interconnector revenues.
We also
expect other activities' underlying operating loss to be greater
year-on-year by around £50 million driven by expected lower
returns from our captive insurance provider where we benefited from
unusually low claims in 2023/24.
Joint Ventures and Associates
Our
share of the profit after
tax of joint ventures and associates is expected to be
around £30 million lower than 2023/24 as a result of lower
revenues in our joint venture interconnectors, and reflecting the
classification of the Emerald Joint Venture as held for sale from
the second half.
Interest and Tax (continuing operations)
Net finance costs in 2024/25 are expected to be over £100
million lower than 2023/24 as a result of expected favourable
movements on inflation linked debt costs. Reduced costs also
reflect the receipt of proceeds from the Rights
Issue.
For the
full year 2024/25, the underlying effective tax
rate, excluding the share of post-tax profits from joint
ventures and associates, is expected to be around 15%. This is
calculated following the new definition of underlying earnings
which excludes the impact of deferred tax on underlying results of
our UK regulated businesses (UK Electricity Transmission and UK
Electricity Distribution).
Investment, Growth and Net Debt
Overall
Group capital
investment for continuing operations in 2024/25 is
expected to be around £10 billion.
Group asset
growth is expected to be around 10% reflecting an
increase in investment, predominantly increasing ASTI investment,
offsetting lower UK RAV indexation.
Depreciation is expected to increase, reflecting the impact of
continued high levels of capital investment.
Operating cash flow generated from continuing operations (excluding
acquisitions, disposals and transaction costs) is expected to
decrease by over 10% compared to 2023/24 principally driven by
the impact of ESO's significant 2023/24 timing over-recovery
reversing in 2024/25, offset by increased underlying
performance.
Net debt is expected to decrease by
around £1.5
billion (from £43.6
billion as at 31 March 2024) at a GBP:USD rate of 1.30, driven by
the receipt of proceeds from the Rights Issue largely financing our
continued levels of significant investment in critical clean energy
infrastructure, with regulatory gearing reducing to the low 60%
range. The forecast reflects the sale proceeds from the ESO
disposal and the remaining 20% stake in National Gas
Transmission.
Weighted
average number of shares (WAV) is expected to be
approximately 4,700
million in 2024/25. This includes 929 million shares
directly related to the Rights Issue, representing the full effect
of the bonus element alongside a pro-rating of the fully subscribed
shares. In accordance with IFRS, the number of fully paid shares
are calculated as the number of shares, at the theoretical
ex-rights price, that would generate the proceeds of the Rights
Issue. The bonus shares are then the remaining new shares that are
expected to be issued.
FINANCIAL REVIEW - HY 2024/25
In
managing the business, we focus on various non-IFRS measures which
provide meaningful comparisons of performance between years,
monitor the strength of the Group's balance sheet as well as
profitability, and reflect the Group's regulatory economic
arrangements. Such alternative and regulatory performance measures
are supplementary to, and should not be regarded as a substitute
for, IFRS measures which we refer to as statutory results. We
explain the basis of these measures and reconcile these to
statutory results in 'Alternative performance measures/non-IFRS
reconciliations' on pages 59 to 64. Also, we distinguish between
adjusted results, which exclude exceptional items and
remeasurements, and underlying results, which further take account
of: (i) volumetric and other revenue timing differences arising
from our regulatory contracts, and (ii) major storm costs which are
recoverable in future periods, where these are in excess of $100
million (in aggregate) in the year; and (iii) the impact of
deferred tax on underlying results in our UK regulated businesses
(NGET and NGED); none of which give rise to economic gains or
losses.
Financial summary for continuing operations - performance for the
six months ended 30 September
(£ million)
|
2024
|
2023
|
change %
|
Accounting profit:
|
|
|
|
Gross revenue
|
7,961
|
8,489
|
(6%)
|
Other operating income
|
-
|
12
|
(100%)
|
Operating costs
|
(6,652)
|
(6,516)
|
(2%)
|
Statutory operating profit
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
(34%)
|
Net finance costs
|
(682)
|
(685)
|
-%
|
Share of joint ventures and associates (after tax)
|
57
|
71
|
(20%)
|
Tax
|
(112)
|
(307)
|
64%
|
Non-controlling interest
|
(1)
|
(1)
|
-%
|
Statutory IFRS earnings (see financial statements note
8)
|
571
|
1,063
|
(46%)
|
Exceptional
items and remeasurements (after tax)
|
(101)
|
(101)
|
-%
|
Timing
(after tax)
|
617
|
(87)
|
809%
|
Deferred
tax on underlying profits in NGET and NGED
|
184
|
158
|
16%
|
Underlying
earnings1
|
1,271
|
1,033
|
23%
|
EPS - statutory IFRS (pence) (see financial statements note
8)
|
12.6
|
26.7
|
(53%)
|
EPS -
underlying1 (pence)
|
28.1
|
25.9
|
8%
|
Interim dividend per share (pence)
|
15.84
|
19.40
|
(18%)
|
Dividend
per share (rebased)1,2 (pence)
|
15.84
|
14.98
|
6%
|
|
|
|
|
Capital investment:
|
|
|
|
Capital
investment3
|
4,603
|
3,946
|
17%
|
1.
Non-GAAP
alternative performance measures (APMs). For further details and
reconciliation to GAAP measures, see 'Alternative performance
measures/non-IFRS reconciliations' on pages 59 to 64. Our
definition of underlying results was amended in to exclude the
impact of deferred tax on our underlying results in our UK
regulated businesses (NGET and NGED). Comparative amounts have been
restated accordingly.
2.
Dividend
per share (rebased) calculated by dividing the total dividend paid
by to the total number of shares in issue following the Rights
Issue.
3.
Our
definition of capital investment was amended in 2023/24 to align
with our statutory measure (see note 2). Comparative amounts have
been restated.
Statutory IFRS earnings were £571 million in the first six
months of the year, £492 million, or 46% lower than the six
months to September 2023. The main reason for this decrease is a
£942 million period-on-period adverse swing in timing
(pre-tax), with net under-recoveries of £836 million in
the first six months compared to £106 million net
over-recoveries in the prior period. In our UK Electricity System
Operator (ESO) business we over-collected by £409 million in
the prior period, whereas this year we returned £479 million
of prior period over-collections, resulting in a £888 million
adverse period-on-period swing. Tax on timing for the current year
was £219 million net credit (2023:
£19 million net charge). The current period statutory
results include £108 million (pre-tax)
net exceptional gains, comprising: a £151 million
credit representing the element of the ESO over-recovery that
would be settled through the sale process, £42 million of
charges for our major transformation programme and a
£1 million movement on our US environmental provisions.
The prior period included £42 million of (pre-tax) net
exceptional gains, comprising: a £92 million net
insurance credit in National Grid Ventures, £39 million
of cost efficiency programme expenditure and £11 million of
transaction, separation and integration costs. In the current
period, tax on exceptional items was £11 million credit
(2023: £1 million charge). Statutory results were
adversely impacted by derivative remeasurements in this half year,
with post-tax net losses of £18 million (2023:
£58 million post-tax net gains). The expected future
exceptional costs associated with our multi-year major
transformation programme are anticipated to be in the region of
£250 million over the period to 2028.
Underlying
operating profit of £2,046
million was up 14% and underlying EPS
of 28.1p was
up 8% against the
prior period. This was driven by improved performance in New
York and UK Electricity Transmission and in our Commercial
Property business, partly offset by lower underlying profits in
National Grid Ventures and NG Partners. Underlying net
revenues of £5,750 million were £204 million higher
compared to the prior period, driven by higher UK regulated
business revenues and increases in New England and New York rates.
Regulated controllable costs were higher on a constant currency
basis, with higher workload and inflationary increases being partly
offset by efficiency savings. Pension and other post-employment
benefit costs were higher than the prior period. Depreciation was
higher from our ongoing investment programme, partly offset by the
cessation of depreciation in UK Electricity System Operator
following classification as 'held for sale'. Other costs were
lower, principally related to environmental charges booked in NY in
the prior year, partly offset by higher storm response costs,
US property taxes and also higher costs to deliver outputs
as agreed with our regulators which are offset by higher
revenues. These factors resulted in underlying earnings
of £1,271 million for the first
six months of 2024/25, up £238 million or 23%.
Reconciliation of different measures of profitability and
earnings
The
table below reconciles our statutory profit measures for continuing
operations, at actual exchange rates, to adjusted and underlying
versions.
Reconciliation of profit and earnings from continuing
operations
|
|
|
Operating profit
|
|
Profit after tax
|
|
Earnings per share (pence)
|
(£ million)
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023¹
|
|
2024
|
2023¹
|
Statutory results
|
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
|
572
|
1,064
|
|
12.6
|
26.7
|
Exceptional items and remeasurements
|
|
(99)
|
(83)
|
|
(101)
|
(101)
|
|
(2.2)
|
(2.5)
|
Adjusted results
|
|
1,210
|
1,902
|
|
471
|
963
|
|
10.4
|
24.2
|
Timing
|
|
836
|
(106)
|
|
617
|
(87)
|
|
13.6
|
(2.3)
|
Deferred tax on underlying results in NGET and
NGED
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
184
|
158
|
|
4.1
|
4.0
|
Underlying results
|
|
2,046
|
1,796
|
|
1,272
|
1,034
|
|
28.1
|
25.9
|
1.
Comparative
amounts for underlying results have been re-presented to reflect
the change in definition to now exclude the impact of deferred tax
on our underlying results in our UK regulated businesses (NGET and
NGED).
Segmental income statement
The
following tables set out the income statement on adjusted and
underlying bases.
Segmental analysis for continuing operations
|
|
Adjusted
|
|
Underlying
|
£ million
|
2024
|
2023
|
change %
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
change %
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
642
|
839
|
(23%)
|
|
724
|
656
|
10%
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
764
|
476
|
61%
|
|
573
|
563
|
2%
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
(364)
|
443
|
(182%)
|
|
115
|
34
|
238%
|
New England
|
89
|
(32)
|
378%
|
|
237
|
218
|
9%
|
New York
|
(30)
|
(30)
|
-%
|
|
288
|
119
|
142%
|
National Grid Ventures
|
147
|
219
|
(33%)
|
|
147
|
219
|
(33%)
|
Other
|
(38)
|
(13)
|
(192%)
|
|
(38)
|
(13)
|
(192%)
|
Total operating profit
|
1,210
|
1,902
|
(36%)
|
|
2,046
|
1,796
|
14%
|
Net finance costs
|
(670)
|
(711)
|
(6%)
|
|
(670)
|
(711)
|
(6%)
|
Share of post-tax results of joint ventures and
associates
|
60
|
59
|
2%
|
|
60
|
59
|
2%
|
Profit before tax
|
600
|
1,250
|
(52%)
|
|
1,436
|
1,144
|
26%
|
Tax
|
(129)
|
(287)
|
(55%)
|
|
(164)
|
(110)
|
49%
|
Profit after tax
|
471
|
963
|
(51%)
|
|
1,272
|
1,034
|
23%
|
EPS (pence)
|
10.4
|
24.2
|
(57%)
|
|
28.1
|
25.9
|
8%
|
UK Electricity Transmission statutory operating profit of
£642 million was down from £838 million in the
prior period. The prior period included £1 million of
exceptional charges related to our cost efficiency programme.
Adjusted operating profit included £265 million
unfavourable timing swings (related to UK capital allowances
legislation changes and lower incentives and volume
under-recoveries). Underlying operating profit was
£724 million compared to £656 million in the
prior period. This increase was driven by £84 million
higher underlying net revenues and a net £3 million reduction
in controllable costs, partially offset by higher depreciation
resulting from the higher asset base.
UK Electricity Distribution statutory operating profit of
£759 million was up from £472 million in the
prior period and included exceptional charges of
£5 million for major transformation programme costs
(2023: £4 million of transaction and integration costs).
Adjusted operating profit increased by £288 million to
£764 million (2023: £476 million) and included
£278 million favourable timing swings mainly related to
higher inflation recovery and higher volumes, partly offset by
recovery of pass-through costs. Underlying operating profit
increased by £10 million to £573 million (2023:
£563 million). Underlying net revenues increased by
£57 million, but were partially offset by higher
controllable costs driven by increased workload and higher
depreciation due to the higher asset base.
UK Electricity System Operator made a statutory operating loss of
£213 million down from a statutory operating profit of
£443 million in the prior period. There has been a
material impact on both statutory and adjusted operating profit
from an over-collection of allowed revenues during the prior year
which are being returned to customers in the current period. This
was due to the BSUoS fixed price tariff resulting in collected
revenues significantly exceeding the balancing costs incurred
during the prior period. This tariff is set ahead of the current
financial year, with the objective of the ESO recovering the
estimated system balancing costs forecast to arise in the current
period. Current year statutory results include an exceptional
credit of £151 million representing the element of the
over-recovery that would be settled through the sale process.
Adjusted operating loss was £364 million compared to
£443 million adjusted operating profit in the prior
period. Underlying operating profit was £115 million
compared to £34 million in the prior period, principally
as a result of the cessation of depreciation following
classification as 'held for sale' since November 2023. National
Grid ESO was sold to the UK government on 1 October 2024 for an
agreed enterprise value of £630 million.
New England statutory operating profit of £87 million was
up from a statutory operating loss of £47 million in
the prior period. This included an exceptional charge of
£6 million for major transformation programme costs
(2023: £6 million as part of our cost efficiency
programme and £3 million related to the disposal of NECO),
along with commodity derivative remeasurement gains of £4
million (2023: £6 million losses). New England's adjusted
operating profit of £89 million, was
£121 million favourable to the prior period. This was
principally driven by a £95 million favourable
period-on-period timing swing, mainly related to lower commodity
cost under-recoveries and the impact of energy efficiency programme
cost under-recoveries in the prior period. In-year timing
under-recoveries were £148 million (2023:
£250 million under-recoveries, or £243 million
under-recoveries at constant currency). Underlying operating profit
was £237 million (2023: £218 million, or
£211 million at constant currency), due to increases in
underlying net revenues of £29 million (£60 million at
constant currency) from higher rates (performance based
regulation), increased returns in wholesale networks and higher
revenues from capital trackers. Controllable costs were higher
mainly as a result of inflation and increased workload, partly
offset by efficiency savings. Depreciation increased from the
higher asset base due to ongoing investment. Other costs were
lower, mainly related to lower storm costs incurred compared to the
prior period.
New York statutory operating loss of £50 million was down
from a statutory operating profit of £8 million in
the prior period and included an exceptional charge of £8
million for major transformation programme costs (2023: £9
million as part of our cost efficiency programme), net £1
million movement on environmental provisions (treated as
exceptional in 2023/24), and commodity derivative remeasurement
losses of £11 million (2023: £47 million gains).
Adjusted operating loss of £30 million in the first six
months was in line with the prior period, but included a
£169 million adverse period-on-period timing swing,
primarily from an under-collection of revenues from new rates in
KEDNY and KEDLI and the return of prior year balances, partly
offset by an over-collection of revenues to recover energy
efficiency programme costs. In-year timing under-recoveries were
£318 million (2023: £149 million, or
£145 million at constant currency). Underlying operating
profit was £288 million, £169 million higher
than the prior period (£173 million higher at constant
currency). Underlying net revenues were £82 million
higher (£137 million higher at constant currency) principally
due to increases from the approved KEDNY and KEDLI rate case.
Controllable costs were largely flat compared to the prior period
with inflationary and workload increases being offset by efficiency
savings. Environmental provisions incurred in the prior period were
not repeated in the current period (£128 million lower at
constant currency). Other costs include £50 million higher
storm costs compared to the prior period.
National Grid Ventures' statutory operating profit of
£145 million was down from £310 million in the
prior period mainly due to £92 million exceptional insurance
proceeds related to IFA1 fire property damages. The prior period
included £1 million of exceptional charges as part of our cost
efficiency programme. In the current period, there were £2
million of losses related to derivative remeasurements on capacity
contracts in NSL (2023: £nil). Adjusted operating profit of
£147 million was £72 million lower than the
prior period, driven by no repeat of prior year benefits in NSL
(revenue cap adjustment 'catch-up'), in Grain LNG from sale of EU
carbon trading credit, and the sale of our smart metering business;
along with lower performance in Ventures' US businesses, partly
offset by higher IFA1 revenues and commencement of the Viking Link
interconnector which began operating in December 2023. On 30
September 2024, both our Grain LNG (UK) and our National Grid
Renewables (US) businesses met the IFRS 5 criteria to be classified
as held for sale.
'Other' activities' statutory operating loss of
£61 million was down from a statutory operating profit of
£39 million in the prior period. The current period
includes exceptional charges of £26 million for major
transformation programme costs (2023: £23 million charge as
part of our cost efficiency programme). The adjusted operating loss
of £38 million (2023: £13 million loss) was
adverse to the prior period, due to fair value losses in
NG Partners, along with lower captive insurance profits,
partly offset by increased profits from higher site sales in our
Commercial Property business.
Financing costs and tax
Net finance costs
Statutory
net finance costs of £682 million were down
from £685 million in the prior
period and included derivative remeasurement gains
of £12 million (2023: £26 million). Adjusted net
finance costs for continuing operations of £670 million (2023: £711 million) were £41 million,
or 6% lower than the
prior period (£28 million,
or 4% lower at constant currency). This was driven
by interest benefits from the £7 billion Rights Issue proceeds
received in June 2024 and lower inflation on RPI/CPI-linked debt,
partly offset by refinancing costs and a higher discount unwind on
provisions.
Joint ventures and associates
The
Group's share of net profits from joint ventures and associates on
a statutory basis was £57 million (2023: £71 million) and included
derivative fair value remeasurement losses of £3 million (2023: £12 million gains).
On an adjusted basis, the share of net profits from joint
ventures and associates was broadly flat at £60 million (2023: £59 million).
Tax
The
statutory tax charge for continuing operations
was £112
million (2023: £307 million) including the impact
of tax on exceptional items and remeasurements
of £17
million credit (2023: £20 million charge). The adjusted
tax charge for continuing operations was £129 million (2023: £287 million), resulting in an
effective tax rate for continuing operations (excluding
profits from joint ventures and associates) of 23.9% (2023: 24.1%). The underlying effective tax
rate for continuing operations (excluding profits from joint
ventures and associates) was 11.9% (2023: 10.1%).
Our
underlying tax (a non-GAAP measure) takes our adjusted tax charge
and further excludes the tax impacts on timing and major storm
costs and deferred tax in our UK regulated businesses (NGET and
NGED). The underlying effective tax rate of 11.9% is higher
than the prior period (10.1%), primarily due to the geographic
profit mix of the Group and prior year adjustments, partly offset
by a higher level of investment in NGET plc resulting in
increased levels of capital allowances resulting in a larger
deferred tax adjustment in NGET plc.
Net debt
Net
debt is a measure derived from IFRS (comprising cash and cash
equivalents, current financial investments, borrowings and bank
overdrafts and financing derivatives) and is defined and reconciled
to these balances in note 12 to the financial
statements.
During
the first six months of the year, net debt decreased
to £38.5
billion, £5.1
billion lower than at 31 March 2024. This was significantly lower as a
result of the receipt of £6.8 billion of proceeds (net of
transaction costs) from the Rights Issue in June 2024.
Movements in exchange rates benefited reported opening net debt by
£1.3 billion, along with £0.7 billion of
proceeds from the sale of our 20% interest in National Gas
Transmission. In addition, cash generated from continuing
operations of £2.7
billion and dividends received on financial investments
of £0.1 billion were offset
by £4.3
billion of cash outflows for capital investment
(net of disposals) and movements in financial investment
outside net debt, £0.1
billion of tax paid, £0.8 billion of interest
outflows, £0.8 billion paid in
dividends, £0.1
billion of accretions on index-linked debt and other
non-cash movements.
During
the period we raised around £1.8 billion of new
long-term senior debt to refinance maturing debt and to fund a
portion of our significant capital programme. As at 30
September 2024, we have
£7.9 billion of committed facilities available for general
corporate purposes.
There
are no significant updates relating to credit rating agency
actions. National Grid's balance sheet remains robust and we remain
committed to a strong, overall investment grade credit
rating.
Interim dividend
The Board has approved an interim dividend of 15.84p per ordinary
share ($1.0196 per American Depositary Share). The interim
dividend is expected to be paid on 14 January 2025 to
shareholders on the register as at 22 November 2024.
As part
of the Rights Issue, the Board announced that the overall cash
dividend would be maintained, but the additional shares from the
Rights Issue would result in a reduction to calculated dividend per
share. The total dividend to shareholders (cash plus scrip) in
respect of the financial year to 31 March 2024 was 58.52p per share
(£1,455 million). The total dividend of £1,455 million
spread across the higher number of shares following the Rights
Issue equates to a 'rebased' dividend per share in respect of
2023/24 of 45.26p (see
calculation on page 63). The Board will aim to grow this rebased
annual dividend per share in line with UK CPIH, thus maintaining
the dividend per share in real terms. The Board will review this
policy regularly, taking into account a range of factors including
expected business performance and regulatory
developments.
The
scrip dividend alternative will again be offered in respect of
the 2024/25 interim
dividend. As previously announced, we do not expect to buy back any
of the scrip shares issued during 2024/25.
GROWTH
A balanced portfolio to deliver asset and dividend
growth
National
Grid seeks to create value for shareholders through developing a
balanced portfolio of businesses that offer an attractive
combination of asset growth and cash returns.
£4.6 billion of capital investment for continuing operations
across the Group
We
continued to make significant investment in energy infrastructure
in the first six months of the year. Capital investment across the
Group was £4,603 million, an increase
of £657
million or 17% at actual exchange rates
(19% at constant currency)
compared to the first half of 2023/24.
Group capital investment (continuing operations)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Six
months ended 30 September
(£
million)
|
|
At actual exchange rates
|
|
At constant currency
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
% change
|
|
2023
|
% change
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
|
1,290
|
899
|
43%
|
|
899
|
43%
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
|
647
|
608
|
6%
|
|
608
|
6%
|
UK Electricity System Operator (ESO)
|
|
-
|
75
|
(100%)
|
|
75
|
(100%)
|
New England
|
|
814
|
789
|
3%
|
|
764
|
7%
|
New York
|
|
1,569
|
1,257
|
25%
|
|
1,217
|
29%
|
National Grid Ventures
|
|
279
|
316
|
(12%)
|
|
312
|
(11%)
|
Other
|
|
4
|
2
|
100%
|
|
2
|
100%
|
Total Group capital investment (continuing operations)
|
|
4,603
|
3,946
|
17%
|
|
3,877
|
19%
|
UK Electricity Transmission invested £1,290 million for
the first six months of the year, an increase of
£391 million on the prior period, primarily
driven by increased spend on customer connections, early
ASTI project spend, overhead lines, and Visual Impact Provisions
(VIPs); partially offset by lower spend on the Hinkley connection
project. For
further information on our ASTI projects, please refer to page 8 of
the Strategic Overview. UK Electricity Distribution invested
£647 million, an increase of
£39 million on the prior
period, principally
driven by planned asset health work and network
reinforcement.
Investment
in New York was £1,569 million, an increase
of £312 million over the period
at actual exchange rates (an increase of £352 million at constant
currency). This was primarily driven by: (a) continued
investment in our electric infrastructure with a ramp up of Smart
Path Connect and CLCPA investment; and (b) gas main replacements
across our gas distribution networks, including increased
leak-prone pipe replacement. For New England, investment
reached £814 million, an increase
of £25 million at actual
exchange rates (an increase of £50 million at constant
currency). This was principally driven by a higher volume of asset
condition projects in electricity distribution and
transmission compared to the prior period, along with increased
miles of replaced leak-prone pipe.
Investment
in National Grid Ventures during the period was £279 million, a decrease
of £37 million at actual
exchange rates (£33 million at constant
currency) on the prior period. The decrease was primarily through
reduced expenditure on Viking Link following the commissioning of
the asset, offset by spend on Grain LNG for the Cap25 capacity
expansion programme and NG Renewables projects.
HALF-YEAR BUSINESS REVIEW
UK ELECTRICITY TRANSMISSION
■
Capital expenditure
reached £1,290
million, up £391
million on the prior period. This increase was
primarily driven by increased spend on customer connections, early
ASTI projects, overhead lines and Visual Impact Provisions (VIPs),
partially offset by lower spend on the Hinkley connection
project.
■
Main capital
investment projects remain on track, including:
■
London Power
Tunnels 2 (LPT2) - the first of six circuits went live in August
(Hurst-Crayford); significant progress made on the first fully
SF6-free substation
build at Bengeworth Road; cable installation in tunnels progressing
well with works underway across all six circuit sections; over 1.3
million hours worked without a Lost Time Injury.
■
Hinkley Point C
connection - majority of construction works on course to be
completed by September 2025.
■
VIPs - Dorset
and Peak District
East VIPs now energised; Snowdonia and Cotswolds VIPs
progressing; over 1,000,000 hours now worked without a Lost Time
Injury.
■
On course to
connect a further 4.5 GW of new projects to the transmission
network in 2024/25, versus the 3.4 GW delivered in
2023/24.
■
Targeting delivery
of the Sofia Offshore Wind Farm (a further 1.2 GW) by the end of
the financial year.
■
Connected the 100
MW TagEnergy battery storage project in North Yorkshire, the
largest transmission connected Battery Energy Storage System (BESS)
in the UK.
■
Connected the
Greenlink interconnector at Pembroke, Wales, a HVDC link owned by
Partners Group and operated by the Irish electricity grid operator,
EirGrid.
■
Continued to
accelerate distributed connections, working with the ENA and all
DNOs on the Technical Limits initiative (see page 11 of the
Strategic Overview), aimed at releasing capacity for distribution
networks to offer potential accelerated connections to
customers:
■
By summer 2024,
this had enabled close to 30 GW of capacity to be
offered.
■
This equated to 250
projects being offered accelerations by DNOs with an average
acceleration of 7.7 years.
■
Delivered a 27%
reduction in SF6 emissions
compared to the prior period through active intervention to fix and
repair leaks over the second half of last year and this half
year.
For
further information on UK Electricity Transmission regulatory and
connection progress, please refer to the Strategic Overview
section, pages 10 to 11.
UK ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION
■
Capital expenditure
reached £647 million, £39 million higher than the
prior period principally driven by planned asset health work, new
connections and network reinforcement.
■
£58 million of
cumulative synergy benefits have now been delivered across the
Group as a result of the UK Electricity Distribution
acquisition.
■
Secured additional
allowances through both the RIIO-ED1 'closeout' process for
specified street works costs, and through RIIO-ED2 uncertainty
mechanisms for additional investment in network resilience and
security.
■
Connected 269 MW
new projects, of which 263 MW was renewable plant (196 MW solar, 67
MW energy storage).
■
Connected 46,000
Low Carbon Technologies (LCTs), including 17,000 EV chargers (an
increase of 40% compared to the prior half year), and 8,000 heat
pumps (95% more than the prior half year).
■
Published our first
annual vulnerability report, highlighting how we delivered record
benefits of more than £23 million in fuel poverty savings
in 2023/24, supporting close to 24,000 customers.
■
Published our first
Distribution System Operator (DSO) report and panel assessment as
part of the new DSO Incentive for RIIO-ED2. Ofgem announced
that UK Electricity Distribution (NGED) scored 8.24/10, the second
highest score of all UK Distribution Network
Operators.
■
Through the DSO,
awarded flexibility contracts for operation in 2025/26, including
new trials for demand turn up/generation turn down
markets.
■
Maintained a high
level of customer satisfaction with a score of 9/10, and achieved
8.7/10 for major connections satisfaction.
For
further information on UK Electricity Distribution regulatory and
connection progress, please refer to the Strategic Overview
section, pages 10 to 11.
NEW ENGLAND
■
Capital expenditure
reached £814 million, £25 million higher
(£50 million higher at
constant currency) than the prior period principally driven by a
higher volume of asset condition projects in Electricity
Distribution and Transmission compared to the prior period, along
with increased miles of replaced Leak Prone Pipe
(LPP).
■
LPP replacement
programme continued on track with 66 miles of pipeline replaced
between the start of April and the end of September.
■
Delivered a strong
storm response during the half year, particularly for two major
events in April and July that had peak customer outages of 28,000
and 18,000 respectively. We have also benefited from greater
installation of FLISR (Fault Location, Isolation and System
Restoration) across the network with 31 successful operations
restoring power to more than 40,000 customers in around one
minute.
■
Completed
construction on our transmission lines from Medway to Brayton Point
with 760 structures installed over 50 miles over the last five
years.
■
Good regulatory
progress through a new five-year rate order for MECO, and DPU
approval for our ESMP as a strategic roadmap. For more
information, please see pages 12 to 13 in the Strategic
Overview section.
■
Exited all
remaining Transition Service Agreements for Rhode Island on 30
September.
■
All US customers
(New England and New York) now on a single billing platform
following the successful migration of 2.2 million accounts from
older legacy systems.
■
Awarded funding
from the Department of Energy for our proposed Brayton Point
Transmission project. If built, the project will help the region
accommodate more offshore wind power.
■
Recognised by the
Northeast Gas Association for an Excellence in Safety Award, and by
the American Gas Association for our Quality Assurance Best
Practice Program (this programme carries out audits and inspections
on our gas infrastructure work and is aligned with recommended
practice for safe management of gas pipelines).
NEW YORK
■
Capital expenditure
reached £1,569 million during the
half year, an increase of £312 million at actual
exchange rates (£352 million at constant
currency) compared to the prior period. This was primarily driven
by: (a) continued investment in our electric infrastructure
with a focus on reinforcing the network, increasing capacity, and
fulfilling our commitment to a clean and renewable energy future
with a ramp up of Smart Path Connect and CLCPA investment; and (b)
gas main replacements across our gas distribution networks,
including our LPP and LNG tank replacement programmes.
■
Of our large-scale
projects:
■
Smart Path Connect
remains on track for energisation in December 2025. The $550
million project includes the rebuild and upgrade of approximately
55 miles (110 circuit miles) of our Adirondack-Porter 230 kV
transmission circuits to 345 kV in Northern New York;
■
construction is
ongoing on the first stage of our substation upgrade as part of the
$800 million CLCPA Phase 1 funding for transmission upgrades;
and
■
we received bids in
October for the procurement and construction of transmission
projects as part of the $2.1 billion CLCPA Phase 2 funding for
transmission networks and modernising the electric
network.
■
LPP replacement
programme continued on track with 161 miles of pipeline replaced
between the start of April and the end of September.
■
Good regulatory
progress through a new three-year rate agreement for KEDNY-KEDLI,
and the ongoing NIMO rate filing process. For more information,
please refer to page 12 in the Strategic Overview
section.
■
During the period,
around 935,000 customers across our service territory experienced
supply interruptions due to storms or severe weather events.
Despite the increased storm activity, our average time to restore
service to 95% of the affected customers for each event remained
consistent at around 12 hours, aligning with the performance of the
previous year. Compared to the previous year, a higher number of
customers experienced interruptions (935,000 vs 375,000) despite a
similar number of events (34 vs 32). However, our restoration times
for 95% of affected customers remained similar, averaging between
9-12 hours for both years. Additionally, our New York and New
England crews provided support to other utilities including AEP,
Appalachian Power, Duke Energy and Tampa Electric in their
restoration efforts following Hurricanes Helene and
Milton.
NATIONAL GRID VENTURES (NGV)
■
Lower underlying
operating profit than prior year primarily due to lower
interconnector revenues (following a one-off catch up in North
Sea Link (NSL) revenues in the prior year), lower National Grid
Renewables (NG Renewables) sales as we prepare for divestment,
the sale of NG Smart and carbon credits in Grain LNG
in 2023/24.
■
Capital investment
reached £279 million in the half
year, a decrease of £37 million at actual
exchange rates (£33 million at constant
currency) on the prior period. The decrease was primarily through
reduced expenditure on Viking Link following the commissioning of
the asset, offset by spend on Grain LNG for the Cap25 programme and
NG Renewables projects.
■
Good interconnector
performance during the half year:
■
On 17 October,
Viking Link achieved 60 days' continuous service at full technical
capacity, meaning the link met Ofgem's 60-day test, and the revenue
floor now comes into effect under the cap and floor regime. Viking
achieved 86% availability in the period which represents a strong
performance in its first year of operation. Restrictions imposed by
the Denmark system operator remain in place, limiting capacity to
1,000 MW to Great Britain and 1,100 MW to
Denmark.
■
Across our other
interconnectors, availability was 84% reflecting extended planned
maintenance on BritNed and IFA, as well as an unplanned outage on
IFA2 following a converter valve fault.
■
Grain LNG continues
to perform well and the expansion programme to deliver additional
LNG storage on site (Capacity 25) remains on track to be ready for
commercial operations in summer 2025. When complete, the expansion
will increase total site storage to 1,200,000 cubic metres and
total regasification capacity to 800 GWh/day, equivalent to
one-third of UK gas demand.
■
Continued to
progress our two Offshore Hybrid Asset (OHA) pilot projects with
our European partners: LionLink to the Netherlands with TenneT; and
Nautilus to Belgium with Elia. These will combine interconnection
and offshore wind, offering strong benefits to consumers through
contributions to security of supply, facilitating decarbonisation
and reduced renewable curtailment.
■
COSW submitted
offtake bids of up to 2.7 GW to NYSERDA and 1.3 GW to the New
Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU). We await selection
decisions by the end of the calendar year.
■
On transmission,
NGV's New York Transco joint venture submitted its Energy Link NY
proposals to the NYISO for the NYC PPTN solicitation, with the
project looking to connect over 5 GW of offshore wind to the New
York City grid. We also continue to progress development of our
Propel NY Energy electric project.
■
Reached a Final
Investment Decision (FID) on 217 MW of renewable developments
including Apple River and Sycamore projects in our renewable
business.
OTHER ACTIVITIES
■
Underlying
operating loss was £38 million during the half
year, £25 million adverse to the
prior period. This was principally driven by a revaluation in NG
Partners of one of our main investments, partially offset by the
sale of 19 sites in our remaining property portfolio.
APPENDIX
Unless
otherwise stated, all financial commentaries in this results
statement are given on an underlying basis at actual exchange rates
for continuing operations. Underlying represents statutory results
excluding exceptional items, remeasurements, timing and major storm
costs. The underlying basis is further defined on page
60.
Alternative Performance Measures derived from IFRS
The
following are terms or metrics that are reconciled to IFRS measures
and are defined on pages 59 to 64:
Net
revenue and underlying net revenue
Adjusted
profit measures
Underlying
results
Constant
currency
Timing
impacts
Net
debt - defined in note 12 on page 53
Rebased
dividend per share.
PROVISIONAL 2024/25 FINANCIAL TIMETABLE
Date
|
Event
|
7
November 2024
|
2024/25 half-year
results
|
21
November 2024
|
Ordinary
shares and ADRs go ex-dividend for 2024/25 interim dividend
|
22
November 2024
|
Record
date for 2024/25 interim dividend
|
28
November 2024
|
Scrip
reference price announced for 2024/25 interim dividend
|
12
December 2024 (5pm
London time)
|
Scrip
election date for 2024/25 interim dividend
|
14 January 2025
|
2024/25 interim
dividend paid to qualifying shareholders
|
15
May 2025
|
2024/25 full-year
results
|
29
May 2025
|
Ordinary
shares and ADRs go ex-dividend for 2024/25 final dividend
|
30
May 2025
|
Record
date for 2024/25 final dividend
|
5
June 2025
|
Scrip
reference price announced for 2024/25 final dividend
|
19
June 2025 (5pm London
time)
|
Scrip
election date for 2024/25 final dividend
|
9
July 2025
|
2025 AGM
|
17
July 2025
|
2024/25 final
dividend paid to qualifying shareholders
|
6
November 2025
|
2025/26 half-year results
|
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT
This
announcement contains certain statements that are neither reported
financial results nor other historical information. These
statements are forward-looking statements within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section
21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These
statements include information with respect to National Grid's (the
Company) financial condition, its results of operations and
businesses, strategy, plans and objectives. Words such as 'aims',
'anticipates', 'expects', 'should', 'intends', 'plans', 'believes',
'outlook', 'seeks', 'estimates', 'targets', 'may', 'will',
'continue', 'project' and similar expressions, as well as
statements in the future tense, identify forward-looking
statements. This document also references climate-related targets
and climate-related risks which differ from conventional financial
risks in that they are complex, novel and tend to involve
projection over long-term scenarios which are subject to
significant uncertainty and change. These forward-looking
statements are not guarantees of National Grid's future performance
and are subject to assumptions, risks and uncertainties that could
cause actual future results to differ materially from those
expressed in or implied by such forward-looking statements or
targets. Many of these assumptions, risks and uncertainties relate
to factors that are beyond National Grid's ability to control,
predict or estimate precisely, such as changes in laws or
regulations and decisions by governmental bodies or regulators,
including those relating to current and upcoming price controls in
the UK and rate cases in the US, as well as the future of system
operation in the UK; the timing of construction and delivery by
third parties of new generation projects requiring connection;
breaches of, or changes in, environmental, climate change and
health and safety laws or regulations, including breaches or other
incidents arising from the potentially harmful nature of its
activities; network failure or interruption, the inability to carry
out critical non-network operations and damage to infrastructure,
due to adverse weather conditions including the impact of major
storms as well as the results of climate change, or due to
counterparties being unable to deliver physical commodities;
reliability of and access to IT systems, including due to the
failure of or unauthorised access to or deliberate breaches of
National Grid's systems and supporting technology; failure to
adequately forecast and respond to disruptions in energy supply;
performance against regulatory targets and standards and against
National Grid's peers with the aim of delivering stakeholder
expectations regarding costs and efficiency savings, as well as
against targets and standards designed to support its role in the
energy transition; and customers and counterparties (including
financial institutions) failing to perform their obligations to the
Company. Other factors that could cause actual results to differ
materially from those described in this announcement include
fluctuations in exchange rates, interest rates and commodity price
indices; restrictions and conditions (including filing
requirements) in National Grid's borrowing and debt arrangements,
funding costs and access to financing; regulatory requirements for
the Company to maintain financial resources in certain parts of its
business and restrictions on some subsidiaries' transactions such
as paying dividends, lending or levying charges; the delayed timing
of recoveries and payments in National Grid's regulated businesses,
and whether aspects of its activities are contestable; the funding
requirements and performance of National Grid's pension schemes and
other post-retirement benefit schemes; the failure to attract,
develop and retain employees with the necessary competencies,
including leadership and business capabilities, and any significant
disputes arising with National Grid's employees or breaches of laws
or regulations by its employees; the failure to respond to market
developments, including competition for onshore transmission; the
threats and opportunities presented by emerging technology; the
failure by the Company to respond to, or meet its own commitments
as a leader in relation to, climate change development activities
relating to energy transition, including the integration of
distributed energy resources; and the need to grow the Company's
business to deliver its strategy, as well as incorrect or
unforeseen assumptions or conclusions (including unanticipated
costs and liabilities) relating to business development activity,
including the announced intended sales of its US onshore renewables
business and its UK Grain LNG terminal. For further details
regarding these and other assumptions, risks and uncertainties that
may impact National Grid, please read the Strategic Report section
and the 'Risk factors' on pages 226 to 231 of National Grid's
Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 March 2024, as
updated by the principal risks and uncertainties statement on page
56 of this announcement. In addition, new factors emerge from time
to time and National Grid cannot assess the potential impact of any
such factor on its activities or the extent to which any factor, or
combination of factors, may cause actual future results to differ
materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement.
Except as may be required by law or regulation, the Company
undertakes no obligation to update any of its forward-looking
statements, which speak only as of the date of this
announcement.
UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED INTERIM FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
Consolidated income statement
|
|
|
|
|
|
for the six months ended 30 September
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
Notes
|
|
Before
exceptional
items and
remeasurements
£m
|
Exceptional
items and
remeasurements
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
2(a),3
|
|
7,961
|
-
|
7,961
|
Provision for bad and doubtful debts
|
|
|
(81)
|
-
|
(81)
|
Other operating costs
|
4
|
|
(6,670)
|
99
|
(6,571)
|
Operating profit
|
2(b),4
|
|
1,210
|
99
|
1,309
|
Finance income
|
4,5
|
|
231
|
3
|
234
|
Finance costs
|
4,5
|
|
(901)
|
(15)
|
(916)
|
Share of post-tax results of joint ventures and
associates
|
2(b),4
|
|
60
|
(3)
|
57
|
Profit before tax
|
2(b),4
|
|
600
|
84
|
684
|
Tax
|
4,7
|
|
(129)
|
17
|
(112)
|
Profit after tax from continuing operations
|
4
|
|
471
|
101
|
572
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations
|
6
|
|
4
|
72
|
76
|
Total profit for the period (continuing and
discontinued)
|
|
|
475
|
173
|
648
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity shareholders of the parent
|
|
|
474
|
173
|
647
|
Non-controlling interests
|
|
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
Earnings per share (pence)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per share (continuing)
|
8
|
|
|
|
12.6
|
Diluted earnings per share (continuing)
|
8
|
|
|
|
12.6
|
Basic earnings per share (continuing and discontinued)
|
8
|
|
|
|
14.3
|
Diluted earnings per share (continuing and
discontinued)
|
8
|
|
|
|
14.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023
|
Notes
|
|
Before
exceptional
items
and
remeasurements
£m
|
Exceptional
items
and
remeasurements
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
2(a),3
|
|
8,489
|
-
|
8,489
|
Provision for bad and doubtful debts
|
|
|
(91)
|
-
|
(91)
|
Other operating costs
|
4
|
|
(6,508)
|
83
|
(6,425)
|
Other operating income
|
|
|
12
|
-
|
12
|
Operating profit
|
2(b),4
|
|
1,902
|
83
|
1,985
|
Finance income
|
4,5
|
|
123
|
(8)
|
115
|
Finance costs
|
4,5
|
|
(834)
|
34
|
(800)
|
Share of post-tax results of joint ventures and
associates
|
2(b),4
|
|
59
|
12
|
71
|
Profit before tax
|
2(b),4
|
|
1,250
|
121
|
1,371
|
Tax
|
4,7
|
|
(287)
|
(20)
|
(307)
|
Profit after tax from continuing operations
|
4
|
|
963
|
101
|
1,064
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations
|
6
|
|
7
|
58
|
65
|
Total profit for the period (continuing and
discontinued)
|
|
|
970
|
159
|
1,129
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity shareholders of the parent
|
|
|
969
|
159
|
1,128
|
Non-controlling interests
|
|
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
Earnings per share (pence)¹
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per share (continuing)
|
8
|
|
|
|
26.7
|
Diluted earnings per share (continuing)
|
8
|
|
|
|
26.6
|
Basic earnings per share (continuing and discontinued)
|
8
|
|
|
|
28.3
|
Diluted earnings per share (continuing and
discontinued)
|
8
|
|
|
|
28.2
|
1.
Restated
to reflect the impact of the bonus element of the Rights Issue (see
note 9).
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
|
|
|
|
|
for the six months ended 30 September
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit after tax from continuing operations
|
|
|
572
|
1,064
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations
|
|
|
76
|
65
|
Other comprehensive income from continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
Items from continuing operations that will never be reclassified to
profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
Remeasurement
gains/(losses) on pension assets and post-retirement benefit
obligations
|
13
|
|
51
|
(263)
|
Net
losses in respect of cash flow hedging of capital
expenditure
|
|
|
(25)
|
(2)
|
Tax
on items that will never be reclassified to profit or
loss
|
|
|
(8)
|
64
|
Total items from continuing operations that will never be
reclassified to profit or loss
|
|
|
18
|
(201)
|
Items from continuing operations that may be reclassified
subsequently to profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
Retranslation
of net assets offset by net investment hedge
|
|
|
(799)
|
118
|
Net
gains in respect of cash flow hedges
|
|
|
78
|
201
|
Net
(losses)/gains in respect of cost of hedging
|
|
|
(12)
|
40
|
Net
gains/(losses) on investments in debt instruments measured at fair
value through other
comprehensive
income
|
|
|
13
|
(16)
|
Tax
on items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss
|
|
|
(17)
|
(59)
|
Total items from continuing operations that may be reclassified
subsequently
to profit or loss
|
|
|
(737)
|
284
|
Other comprehensive (loss)/income for the period, net of tax, from
continuing operations
|
|
|
(719)
|
83
|
Other comprehensive loss for the period, net of tax, from
discontinued operations
|
6
|
|
(10)
|
(9)
|
Other comprehensive (loss)/income for the period, net of
tax
|
|
|
(729)
|
74
|
Total comprehensive (loss)/income for the period from continuing
operations
|
|
|
(147)
|
1,147
|
Total comprehensive income for the period from discontinued
operations
|
6
|
|
66
|
56
|
Total comprehensive (loss)/income for the period
|
|
|
(81)
|
1,203
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Equity shareholders of the parent
|
|
|
|
From
continuing operations
|
|
(147)
|
1,146
|
From
discontinued operations
|
|
66
|
56
|
|
|
(81)
|
1,202
|
|
|
|
|
Non-controlling interests
|
|
-
|
1
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
|
for the six months ended 30 September
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
account
|
Retained
earnings
|
Other
equity
reserves
|
Total
share-
holders'
equity
|
Non-
controlling
interests
|
Total
equity
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
At 1 April 2024
|
|
493
|
1,298
|
32,066
|
(3,990)
|
29,867
|
25
|
29,892
|
Profit for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
647
|
-
|
647
|
1
|
648
|
Other comprehensive income/(loss) for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
38
|
(766)
|
(728)
|
(1)
|
(729)
|
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
685
|
(766)
|
(81)
|
-
|
(81)
|
Rights Issue
|
9
|
135
|
-
|
-
|
6,704
|
6,839
|
-
|
6,839
|
Transfer between reserves
|
9
|
-
|
-
|
6,704
|
(6,704)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Equity dividends
|
10
|
-
|
-
|
(811)
|
-
|
(811)
|
-
|
(811)
|
Scrip dividend-related share issue
|
|
9
|
(9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Issue of treasury shares
|
|
-
|
-
|
15
|
-
|
15
|
-
|
15
|
Transactions in own shares
|
|
-
|
-
|
(5)
|
-
|
(5)
|
-
|
(5)
|
Share-based payments
|
|
-
|
-
|
16
|
-
|
16
|
-
|
16
|
Cash flow hedges transferred to the statement
of financial position, net of tax
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
At 30 September 2024
|
|
637
|
1,289
|
38,670
|
(4,755)
|
35,841
|
25
|
35,866
|
At 1 April 2023
|
|
488
|
1,302
|
31,608
|
(3,860)
|
29,538
|
24
|
29,562
|
Profit for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
1,128
|
-
|
1,128
|
1
|
1,129
|
Other comprehensive (loss)/income for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
(199)
|
273
|
74
|
-
|
74
|
Total comprehensive income for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
929
|
273
|
1,202
|
1
|
1,203
|
Equity dividends
|
10
|
-
|
-
|
(1,325)
|
-
|
(1,325)
|
-
|
(1,325)
|
Scrip dividend-related share issue
|
|
1
|
(1)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Issue of treasury shares
|
|
-
|
-
|
20
|
-
|
20
|
-
|
20
|
Transactions in own shares
|
|
-
|
-
|
(1)
|
-
|
(1)
|
-
|
(1)
|
Share-based payments
|
|
-
|
-
|
19
|
-
|
19
|
-
|
19
|
Cash flow hedges transferred to the statement
of financial position, net of tax
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2
|
2
|
-
|
2
|
At 30 September 2023
|
|
489
|
1,301
|
31,250
|
(3,585)
|
29,455
|
25
|
29,480
|
Consolidated statement of financial position
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30 September 2024
|
31 March 2024
|
|
Notes
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Goodwill
|
|
|
9,367
|
9,729
|
Other intangible assets
|
2(c)
|
|
3,393
|
3,431
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
2(c)
|
|
69,195
|
68,907
|
Other non-current assets
|
|
|
850
|
848
|
Pension assets
|
13
|
|
2,478
|
2,407
|
Financial and other investments
|
|
|
795
|
880
|
Investments in joint ventures and associates
|
|
|
901
|
1,420
|
Derivative financial assets
|
11
|
|
413
|
324
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
|
87,392
|
87,946
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories and current intangible assets
|
|
|
639
|
828
|
Trade and other receivables
|
|
|
2,661
|
3,415
|
Current tax assets
|
|
|
19
|
11
|
Financial and other investments
|
12
|
|
6,140
|
3,699
|
Derivative financial assets
|
11
|
|
145
|
44
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
12
|
|
1,125
|
559
|
Assets held for sale
|
6
|
|
3,731
|
1,823
|
Total current assets
|
|
|
14,460
|
10,379
|
Total assets
|
|
|
101,852
|
98,325
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
12
|
|
(2,703)
|
(4,859)
|
Derivative financial liabilities
|
11
|
|
(419)
|
(335)
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
|
(3,969)
|
(4,076)
|
Contract liabilities
|
|
|
(91)
|
(127)
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
|
(181)
|
(220)
|
Provisions
|
|
|
(314)
|
(298)
|
Liabilities held for sale
|
6
|
|
(1,309)
|
(1,474)
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
|
(8,986)
|
(11,389)
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
12
|
|
(42,473)
|
(42,213)
|
Derivative financial liabilities
|
11
|
|
(854)
|
(909)
|
Other non-current liabilities
|
|
|
(848)
|
(880)
|
Contract liabilities
|
|
|
(2,200)
|
(2,119)
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
|
|
(7,357)
|
(7,519)
|
Pensions and other post-retirement benefit obligations
|
13
|
|
(603)
|
(593)
|
Provisions
|
|
|
(2,665)
|
(2,811)
|
Total non-current liabilities
|
|
|
(57,000)
|
(57,044)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
|
(65,986)
|
(68,433)
|
Net assets
|
|
|
35,866
|
29,892
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
|
637
|
493
|
Share premium account
|
|
|
1,289
|
1,298
|
Retained earnings
|
|
|
38,670
|
32,066
|
Other equity reserves
|
|
|
(4,755)
|
(3,990)
|
Total shareholders' equity
|
|
|
35,841
|
29,867
|
Non-controlling interests
|
|
|
25
|
25
|
Total equity
|
|
|
35,866
|
29,892
|
Consolidated cash flow statement
|
|
|
|
|
for the six months ended 30 September
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
|
Operating profit from continuing operations
|
2(b)
|
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
|
Exceptional
items and remeasurements
|
4
|
|
(99)
|
(83)
|
Other
fair value movements
|
|
|
21
|
(19)
|
Depreciation,
amortisation and impairment
|
2(b)
|
|
1,058
|
1,021
|
Share-based
payments
|
|
|
16
|
19
|
Changes
in working capital
|
|
|
429
|
119
|
Changes
in provisions
|
|
|
(30)
|
39
|
Changes
in pensions and other post-retirement benefit
obligations
|
|
|
24
|
27
|
Cash flows relating to exceptional items
|
|
|
(38)
|
(46)
|
Cash generated from operations - continuing operations
|
|
|
2,690
|
3,062
|
Tax paid
|
|
|
(78)
|
(201)
|
Net cash flow from operating activities - continuing
operations
|
|
|
2,612
|
2,861
|
Net cash flow from operating activities - discontinued
operations
|
|
|
-
|
-
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Purchases of intangible assets
|
|
|
(243)
|
(269)
|
Purchases of property, plant and equipment
|
|
|
(3,985)
|
(3,210)
|
Disposals of property, plant and equipment
|
|
|
10
|
18
|
Investments in joint ventures and associates
|
|
|
(102)
|
(151)
|
Dividends received from joint ventures, associates and other
investments
|
|
|
71
|
121
|
Disposal of interest in the UK Gas Transmission
business
|
6
|
|
686
|
-
|
Disposal of financial and other investments
|
|
|
33
|
65
|
Acquisition of financial investments
|
|
|
(49)
|
(32)
|
Contributions to National Grid Renewables
and Emerald Energy Venture LLC
|
|
|
-
|
(5)
|
Net movements in short-term financial investments
|
|
|
(2,995)
|
885
|
Interest received
|
|
|
162
|
69
|
Cash inflows on derivatives
|
|
|
-
|
103
|
Cash outflows on derivatives
|
|
|
(6)
|
(4)
|
Net cash flow used in investing activities - continuing
operations
|
|
|
(6,418)
|
(2,410)
|
Net cash flow from investing activities - discontinued
operations
|
|
|
22
|
-
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Proceeds of Rights Issue
|
9
|
|
7,001
|
-
|
Transaction fees related to Rights Issue
|
9
|
|
(162)
|
-
|
Proceeds from issue of treasury shares
|
|
|
15
|
20
|
Transactions in own shares
|
|
|
(5)
|
(1)
|
Proceeds received from loans
|
|
|
1,809
|
3,033
|
Repayments of loans
|
|
|
(916)
|
(839)
|
Payments of lease liabilities
|
|
|
(75)
|
(61)
|
Net movements in short-term borrowings
|
|
|
(1,313)
|
(444)
|
Cash inflows on derivatives
|
|
|
73
|
68
|
Cash outflows on derivatives
|
|
|
(33)
|
(60)
|
Interest paid
|
|
|
(1,002)
|
(779)
|
Dividends paid to shareholders
|
10
|
|
(811)
|
(1,325)
|
Net cash flow from/(used in) financing activities - continuing
operations
|
|
|
4,581
|
(388)
|
Net cash flow from financing activities - discontinued
operations
|
|
|
-
|
-
|
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
|
797
|
63
|
Reclassification to held for sale
|
|
|
(166)
|
-
|
Exchange movements
|
|
|
(65)
|
1
|
Net cash and cash equivalents at start of period
|
|
|
559
|
163
|
Net cash and cash equivalents at end of period
|
|
|
1,125
|
227
|
Notes to the financial statements
1. Basis of preparation and new accounting standards,
interpretations and amendments
The half year financial information covers the six month period
ended 30 September 2024 and has been prepared in
accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting' as issued by
the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and as adopted
by the United Kingdom (UK); and the Disclosure and Transparency
Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority. This condensed set of
financial statements comprises the unaudited financial information
for the half years ended 30 September 2024 and 2023, together
with the audited consolidated statement of financial position as at
31 March 2024. The half year financial information has been
prepared applying consistent accounting policies to those applied
by the Group for the year ended 31 March 2024 and are expected
to be applicable for the year ending 31 March 2025. The notes
to the unaudited financial information are prepared on a continuing
basis unless otherwise stated.
The financial information for the six months ended
30 September 2024 does not constitute statutory accounts
as defined in Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006. It should
be read in conjunction with the statutory accounts for the year
ended 31 March 2024, which were prepared in accordance with
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the
IASB and as adopted by the UK, and have been filed with the
Registrar of Companies. The Deloitte LLP audit report on those
statutory accounts was unqualified, did not contain an emphasis of
matter and did not contain a statement under Section 498 of the
Companies Act 2006.
The key sources of estimation uncertainty and areas of judgement
for the period ended 30 September 2024 are aligned to those
disclosed in the Annual Report and Accounts for year ended
31 March 2024, with the following amendments:
●
in
relation to the planned disposals of Grain LNG, our UK LNG
business, and National Grid Renewables Development LLC (NG
Renewables), our US onshore renewables business, judgement has been
applied in concluding that the criteria required for held for sale
classification have been met (see note 6); and
●
the
classification of our 20% equity investment in GasT TopCo Limited,
together with the Remaining Acquisition Agreement (RAA) over the
remaining interest, as held for sale is no longer considered to
represent an area of judgement following the disposal on 26
September 2024 (see note 6).
Our consolidated income statement and segmental analysis (see note
2) separately identify financial results before and after
exceptional items and remeasurements. The Directors believe that
presentation of the results in this way is relevant to an
understanding of the Group's financial performance. Presenting
financial results before exceptional items and remeasurements is
consistent with the way that financial performance is measured by
management and reported to the Board and improves the comparability
of reported financial performance from year to year. Items which
are classified as exceptional items or remeasurements are defined
in the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended
31 March 2024.
1. Basis of preparation and new accounting standards,
interpretations and amendments continued
Going concern
As part of the Directors' consideration of the appropriateness of
adopting the going concern basis of accounting
in preparing the half year financial information, the
Directors have considered the Group's principal risks (discussed on
page 56) alongside potential downside business cash flow scenarios
impacting the Group's operations. The Directors specifically
considered both a base case and a reasonable worst-case scenario
for business cash flows. The assessment is prepared on the
conservative assumption that the Group has no access to the
debt capital markets.
The main additional cash flow impacts identified in the reasonable
worst-case scenario are:
●
the
timing of the sale of assets classified as held for sale (see note
6);
●
adverse
impacts of higher spend on our capital expenditure
programme;
●
adverse
impact from timing across the Group (i.e. a net under-recovery of
allowed revenues or reductions in over-collections) and slower
collections of outstanding receivables;
●
higher
operating and financing costs than expected; including non-delivery
of planned efficiencies across the Group; and
●
the
potential impact of further significant storm costs in the
US.
As part of their analysis, the Board also considered the following
potential levers at their discretion to improve the position
identified by the analysis if the debt capital markets are not
accessible:
●
the
payment of dividends to shareholders;
●
significant
changes in the phasing of the Group's capital expenditure
programme, with elements of non-essential works and programmes
delayed; and
●
a
number of further reductions in operating expenditure across the
Group.
As at 30 September 2024, the Group had undrawn committed
facilities available for general corporate purposes amounting to
£7.7 billion. Based on these available liquidity
resources and having considered the reasonable worst-case scenario,
and the further levers at the Board's discretion, the Group has not
identified any material uncertainties relating to events or
conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant
doubt on its ability to continue as a going concern for the
foreseeable future, a period not less than 12 months from the date
of this report.
In addition to the above, the ability to raise new and extend
existing financing was separately included in the analysis, and the
Directors noted the c.£1.8 billion of new long-term
senior debt issued in the period from 1 April to
30 September 2024 as evidence of the Group's ability to
continue to have access to the debt capital markets
if needed.
Based on the above, the Directors have concluded the Group is well
placed to manage its financing and other business risks
satisfactorily, and have a reasonable expectation that the Group
will have adequate resources to continue in operation for at
least 12 months from the signing date of these consolidated interim
financial statements. They therefore consider it appropriate to
adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing
the half year financial information.
New IFRS accounting standards, interpretations and amendments
adopted in the period
There are no new standards, interpretations or amendments, issued
by the IASB or by the IFRS Interpretations Committee (IFRIC), that
are applicable for the period commencing on 1 April 2024 and
have had a material impact on the Group's results.
2. Segmental analysis
Revenue and the results of the business are analysed by operating
segment, based on the information the Board use internally for
the purposes of evaluating the performance of each operating
segment and determining resource allocation between them. The
Board is National Grid's chief operating decision maker (as defined
by IFRS 8 'Operating Segments') and assesses the profitability of a
profit measure that excludes certain income and expenses. We call
that measure 'adjusted profit'. Adjusted profit excludes
exceptional items and remeasurements (as defined in note 4) and is
used by management to monitor financial performance as it is
considered that it aids the comparability of our reported financial
performance from year to year. As a matter of course, the Board
also considers profitability by segment, excluding the effect of
major storms, timing adjustments relating to revenue, certain
pass-through costs and deferred tax for our UK Electricity
Transmission and UK Electricity Distribution businesses. However,
the measure of profit disclosed in this note is operating
profit before exceptional items and remeasurements, as this is the
measure that is most consistent with the IFRS results reported
within these financial statements.
The results of our six principal businesses are reported to the
Board and are accordingly treated as reportable operating
segments. All other operating segments are either reported to the
Board on an aggregated basis or do not meet the quantitative
threshold in order to be considered a separate operating segment.
The following table describes the main activities for each
reportable operating segment:
UK Electricity Transmission
|
The
high-voltage electricity transmission networks in England and
Wales. This includes our Accelerated Strategic Transmission
Investment projects to connect more clean, low-carbon power
to the transmission network in England and Wales.
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
The electricity distribution networks of NGED in the East Midlands,
West Midlands and South West of England and South
Wales.
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
The
Great Britain system operator which is classified as held for sale
(see note 6).
|
New England
|
Gas distribution networks, electricity distribution networks and
high-voltage electricity transmission networks in New
England.
|
New York
|
Gas distribution networks, electricity distribution networks and
high-voltage electricity transmission networks in New
York.
|
National Grid Ventures
|
Comprises
all commercial operations in LNG at the Isle of Grain in the UK
(Grain LNG) and Providence, Rhode Island in the US, our electricity
generation business in the US, our electricity interconnectors in
the UK and our investment in NG Renewables, our renewables business
in the US. Whilst NGV operates outside our regulated core
business, the electricity interconnectors in the UK are
subject to indirect regulation by Ofgem regarding the level of
returns they can earn. NG Renewables and Grain LNG were
classified as held for sale at 30 September 2024 (see note
6).
|
The New England and New York segments typically experience seasonal
fluctuations in revenue and operating profit due to higher delivery
volumes during the second half of the financial year, for example
as a result of colder weather over the winter months driving
increased heating demand. These seasonal fluctuations have
a consequential impact on the working capital balances
(primarily trade debtors and accrued income) in the consolidated
statement of financial position at 30 September 2024 when
compared to 31 March 2024. The majority of UK revenues are
derived from the supply of network capacity rather than the supply
of commodities and therefore are not subject to the same seasonal
fluctuations as in New York and New England.
Other activities that do not form part of any of the segments in
the above table primarily relate to our UK property business
together with insurance and corporate activities in the UK and US
and the Group's investments in technology and innovation companies
through National Grid Partners.
2. Segmental analysis continued
(a) Revenue
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
Total
sales
|
Sales
between
segments1
|
Sales to
third
parties
|
|
Total sales
|
Sales
between
segments1
|
Sales to
third
parties
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating segments - continuing operations:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
Electricity Transmission
|
1,274
|
(92)
|
1,182
|
|
1,356
|
(19)
|
1,337
|
UK
Electricity Distribution
|
1,166
|
(2)
|
1,164
|
|
850
|
(2)
|
848
|
UK
Electricity System Operator
|
1,029
|
(17)
|
1,012
|
|
1,734
|
(17)
|
1,717
|
New
England
|
1,545
|
-
|
1,545
|
|
1,441
|
-
|
1,441
|
New
York
|
2,341
|
-
|
2,341
|
|
2,365
|
-
|
2,365
|
National
Grid Ventures
|
650
|
(26)
|
624
|
|
666
|
(27)
|
639
|
Other
|
98
|
(5)
|
93
|
|
142
|
-
|
142
|
Total revenue from continuing operations
|
8,103
|
(142)
|
7,961
|
|
8,554
|
(65)
|
8,489
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Geographical areas:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
|
|
3,755
|
|
|
|
4,309
|
US
|
|
|
4,206
|
|
|
|
4,180
|
Total revenue from continuing operations
|
|
|
7,961
|
|
|
|
8,489
|
1.
Sales
between operating segments are priced having regard to the
regulatory and legal requirements to which the businesses are
subject. The analysis of revenue by geographical area is on
the basis of destination. There are no material sales between the
UK and US geographical areas.
(b) Operating profit/(loss)
|
Before exceptional items
and remeasurements
|
|
Exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
|
After exceptional items
and remeasurements
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating segments - continuing operations:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
Electricity Transmission
|
642
|
839
|
|
-
|
(1)
|
|
642
|
838
|
UK
Electricity Distribution
|
764
|
476
|
|
(5)
|
(4)
|
|
759
|
472
|
UK
Electricity System Operator
|
(364)
|
443
|
|
151
|
-
|
|
(213)
|
443
|
New
England
|
89
|
(32)
|
|
(2)
|
(15)
|
|
87
|
(47)
|
New
York
|
(30)
|
(30)
|
|
(20)
|
38
|
|
(50)
|
8
|
National
Grid Ventures
|
147
|
219
|
|
(2)
|
91
|
|
145
|
310
|
Other
|
(38)
|
(13)
|
|
(23)
|
(26)
|
|
(61)
|
(39)
|
Total operating profit from continuing operations
|
1,210
|
1,902
|
|
99
|
83
|
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Geographical areas:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
1,173
|
1,956
|
|
121
|
60
|
|
1,294
|
2,016
|
US
|
37
|
(54)
|
|
(22)
|
23
|
|
15
|
(31)
|
Total operating profit from continuing operations
|
1,210
|
1,902
|
|
99
|
83
|
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
|
Before exceptional items
and remeasurements
|
|
Exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
|
After exceptional items
and remeasurements
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Reconciliation to profit before tax:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating
profit from continuing operations
|
1,210
|
1,902
|
|
99
|
83
|
|
1,309
|
1,985
|
Share
of post-tax results of joint ventures
and associates
|
60
|
59
|
|
(3)
|
12
|
|
57
|
71
|
Finance
income
|
231
|
123
|
|
3
|
(8)
|
|
234
|
115
|
Finance
costs
|
(901)
|
(834)
|
|
(15)
|
34
|
|
(916)
|
(800)
|
Total profit before tax from continuing operations
|
600
|
1,250
|
|
84
|
121
|
|
684
|
1,371
|
2. Segmental analysis continued
The following items are included in the total operating profit by
segment:
Depreciation, amortisation and impairment
|
30 September
2024
|
30 September
2023
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating segments:
|
|
|
UK
Electricity Transmission
|
(267)
|
(250)
|
UK
Electricity Distribution
|
(122)
|
(105)
|
UK
Electricity System Operator
|
-
|
(52)
|
New
England
|
(221)
|
(204)
|
New
York
|
(351)
|
(321)
|
National
Grid Ventures
|
(92)
|
(84)
|
Other
|
(5)
|
(5)
|
Total
|
(1,058)
|
(1,021)
|
|
|
|
Asset type:
|
|
|
Property,
plant and equipment
|
(936)
|
(868)
|
Non-current
intangible assets
|
(122)
|
(153)
|
Total
|
(1,058)
|
(1,021)
|
(c) Capital investment
Capital investment represents additions to property, plant and
equipment, prepayments to suppliers to secure production capacity
in relation to our capital projects, non-current intangibles and
additional equity investments in joint ventures and associates.
Segmental information used for internal decision making was revised
in the year ended 31 March 2024 to include capital expenditure
prepayments and additional equity investments in joint ventures and
associates. Capital investments exclude additions for assets or
businesses from the point they are classified as held for
sale.
|
30 September
2024
|
30 September
2023¹
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating segments:
|
|
|
UK
Electricity Transmission
|
1,290
|
899
|
UK
Electricity Distribution
|
647
|
608
|
UK
Electricity System Operator
|
-
|
75
|
New
England
|
814
|
789
|
New
York
|
1,569
|
1,257
|
National
Grid Ventures
|
279
|
316
|
Other
|
4
|
2
|
Total
|
4,603
|
3,946
|
|
|
|
Asset type:
|
|
|
Property,
plant and equipment
|
4,200
|
3,413
|
Non-current
intangible assets
|
196
|
257
|
Equity
investments in joint ventures and associates
|
102
|
151
|
Capital
expenditure prepayments
|
105
|
125
|
Total
|
4,603
|
3,946
|
1.
Comparative amounts have been represented to reflect the change in
presentation for capital investments.
(d) Geographical analysis of non-current assets
Non-current assets by geography comprise goodwill, other intangible
assets, property, plant and equipment, investments in joint
ventures and associates and other non-current assets.
|
30 September
2024
|
31 March
2024
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Split by geographical area:
|
|
|
UK
|
40,738
|
40,065
|
US
|
42,968
|
44,270
|
Total
|
83,706
|
84,335
|
|
|
|
Reconciliation to total non-current assets:
|
|
|
Pension
assets
|
2,478
|
2,407
|
Financial
and other investments
|
795
|
880
|
Derivative
financial assets
|
413
|
324
|
Non-current assets
|
87,392
|
87,946
|
3. Revenue
Under IFRS 15 'Revenue from Contracts with Customers', revenue is
recorded as or when the Group satisfies a performance
obligation by transferring a promised good or service to a
customer. A good or service is transferred when the customer
obtains control of that good or service.
The transfer of control of our distribution or transmission
services coincides with the use of our network, as electricity
and gas pass through our network and reach our customers. The Group
principally satisfies its performance obligations over time
and the amount of revenue recorded corresponds to the amounts
billed and accrued for volumes of gas and electricity
delivered/transferred to/from our customers.
Revenue for the six months
ended 30 September
2024
|
UK Electricity
Transmission
£m
|
UK Electricity
Distribution
£m
|
UK Electricity
System
Operator
£m
|
New
England
£m
|
New
York
£m
|
National
Grid
Ventures
£m
|
Other
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Revenue under IFRS 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transmission
|
1,116
|
-
|
46
|
46
|
126
|
430
|
-
|
1,764
|
Distribution
|
-
|
1,113
|
-
|
1,468
|
2,181
|
-
|
1
|
4,763
|
System Operator
|
-
|
-
|
966
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
966
|
Other1
|
16
|
49
|
-
|
4
|
8
|
43
|
-
|
120
|
Total IFRS 15 revenue
|
1,132
|
1,162
|
1,012
|
1,518
|
2,315
|
473
|
1
|
7,613
|
Other revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Generation
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
191
|
-
|
191
|
Other2
|
50
|
2
|
-
|
27
|
26
|
(40)
|
92
|
157
|
Total other revenue
|
50
|
2
|
-
|
27
|
26
|
151
|
92
|
348
|
Total revenue from continuing operations
|
1,182
|
1,164
|
1,012
|
1,545
|
2,341
|
624
|
93
|
7,961
|
Geographic split of revenue for the six months
ended 30 September
2024
|
UK Electricity
Transmission
£m
|
UK Electricity
Distribution
£m
|
UK Electricity
System
Operator
£m
|
New England
£m
|
New
York
£m
|
National
Grid
Ventures
£m
|
Other
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Revenue under IFRS 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
1,132
|
1,162
|
1,012
|
-
|
-
|
430
|
-
|
3,736
|
US
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,518
|
2,315
|
43
|
1
|
3,877
|
Total IFRS 15 revenue
|
1,132
|
1,162
|
1,012
|
1,518
|
2,315
|
473
|
1
|
7,613
|
Other revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
50
|
2
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(38)
|
5
|
19
|
US
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
26
|
189
|
87
|
329
|
Total other revenue
|
50
|
2
|
-
|
27
|
26
|
151
|
92
|
348
|
Total revenue from continuing operations
|
1,182
|
1,164
|
1,012
|
1,545
|
2,341
|
624
|
93
|
7,961
|
1.
The UK Electricity Transmission and UK Electricity Distribution
other IFRS 15 revenue principally relates to engineering recharges,
which are the recovery of costs incurred for construction work
requested by customers, such as the re-routing of existing network
assets. Within NGV, the other IFRS 15 revenue principally relates
to revenue generated by NG Renewables which was classified as held
for sale in the period (see note 6).
2.
Other revenue, recognised in accordance with accounting standards
other than IFRS 15, includes property sales by our UK commercial
property business, net fair value gains and losses in respect
of investments in our National Grid Partners business, rental
income, income arising in connection with the Transition Services
Agreements in place following the sales of NECO and the UK Gas
Transmission businesses and the planned sale of the ESO, and
an adjustment to NGV revenue in respect of the interconnector
cap and floor and Use of Revenue regimes constructed by
Ofgem.
3. Revenue continued
Revenue for the six months ended 30 September 2023
|
UK Electricity
Transmission
£m
|
UK Electricity
Distribution
£m
|
UK Electricity
System
Operator
£m
|
New England
£m
|
New York
£m
|
National
Grid
Ventures
£m
|
Other
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Revenue under IFRS 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transmission
|
1,299
|
-
|
5
|
43
|
283
|
426
|
-
|
2,056
|
Distribution
|
-
|
810
|
-
|
1,329
|
2,047
|
-
|
-
|
4,186
|
System Operator
|
-
|
-
|
1,712
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,712
|
Other1
|
9
|
36
|
-
|
4
|
7
|
75
|
-
|
131
|
Total IFRS 15 revenue
|
1,308
|
846
|
1,717
|
1,376
|
2,337
|
501
|
-
|
8,085
|
Other revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Generation
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
181
|
-
|
181
|
Other2
|
29
|
2
|
-
|
65
|
28
|
(43)
|
142
|
223
|
Total other revenue
|
29
|
2
|
-
|
65
|
28
|
138
|
142
|
404
|
Total revenue from continuing operations
|
1,337
|
848
|
1,717
|
1,441
|
2,365
|
639
|
142
|
8,489
|
Geographic split of revenue for the six months
ended 30 September
2023
|
UK Electricity
Transmission
£m
|
UK Electricity
Distribution
£m
|
UK Electricity
System
Operator
£m
|
New England
£m
|
New York
£m
|
National
Grid
Ventures
£m
|
Other
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Revenue under IFRS 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
1,308
|
846
|
1,717
|
-
|
-
|
430
|
-
|
4,301
|
US
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,376
|
2,337
|
71
|
-
|
3,784
|
Total IFRS 15 revenue
|
1,308
|
846
|
1,717
|
1,376
|
2,337
|
501
|
-
|
8,085
|
Other revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
29
|
2
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(50)
|
27
|
8
|
US
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
65
|
28
|
188
|
115
|
396
|
Total other revenue
|
29
|
2
|
-
|
65
|
28
|
138
|
142
|
404
|
Total revenue from continuing operations
|
1,337
|
848
|
1,717
|
1,441
|
2,365
|
639
|
142
|
8,489
|
1.
The UK Electricity Transmission and UK Electricity Distribution
other IFRS 15 revenue principally relates to engineering recharges,
which are the recovery of costs incurred for construction work
requested by customers, such as the re-routing of existing network
assets. Within NGV, the other IFRS 15 revenue principally relates
to revenue generated by NG Renewables.
2.
Other revenue, recognised in accordance with accounting standards
other than IFRS 15, includes property sales by our UK commercial
property business, rental income, income arising in connection with
the Transition Services Agreements in place following the sales of
The Narragansett Electric Company (NECO) and the UK Gas
Transmission business, and an adjustment to NGV revenue in respect
of the interconnector cap and floor and Use of Revenue regimes
constructed by Ofgem.
4. Exceptional items and remeasurements
To monitor our financial performance, we use an adjusted
consolidated profit measure that excludes certain income and
expenses. We exclude items from adjusted profit because, if
included, these items could distort understanding of our
performance in the period and the comparability between periods.
With respect to restructuring and transformation costs, these
represent additional expenses incurred that are not related
to normal business and day-to-day activities. These can
take place over multiple reporting periods given the scale of the
Group, the nature and complexity of the transformation
initiatives and due to the impact of strategic transactions. In
assessing items to exclude from adjusted profit, management uses an
exceptional items framework that has been discussed and approved by
the Audit & Risk Committee, as detailed in note 5 of the Annual
Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 March
2024.
Remeasurements comprise unrealised gains or losses recorded in the
consolidated income statement arising from changes in the fair
value of certain financial assets and liabilities categorised as
held at fair value through profit and loss (FVTPL). Once the fair
value movements are realised (for example, when the derivative
matures), the previously recognised fair value movements are then
reversed through remeasurements and recognised within earnings
before exceptional items and remeasurements. These assets and
liabilities include commodity contracts and derivative financial
instruments to the extent that hedge accounting is either not
achieved or is not effective. We have also classified the
unrealised gains or losses reported in profit and loss on certain
additional assets treated as FVTPL within remeasurements. These
relate to financial assets (which fail the 'solely payments of
principal and interest test' under IFRS 9), the money market fund
investments used by Group Treasury for cash management purposes and
the net foreign exchange gains and losses on borrowing activities.
These are offset by foreign exchange gains and losses on financing
derivatives measured at fair value. In all cases, these fair values
increase or decrease because of changes in foreign exchange,
commodity or other financial indices over which we have no
control.
Six months ended 30 September 2024
|
Exceptional items
£m
|
Remeasurements
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Included within operating profit from continuing
operations
|
|
|
|
Provision
for UK electricity balancing costs
|
151
|
-
|
151
|
Major
transformation programme
|
(42)
|
-
|
(42)
|
Changes
in environmental provisions
|
(1)
|
-
|
(1)
|
Net
losses on commodity contract derivatives
|
-
|
(9)
|
(9)
|
|
108
|
(9)
|
99
|
Included within net finance costs (note 5)
|
|
|
|
Net
losses on derivative financial instruments
|
-
|
(15)
|
(15)
|
Net
gains on financial assets at fair value through profit and
loss
|
-
|
3
|
3
|
|
-
|
(12)
|
(12)
|
Included within share of post-tax results of joint ventures and
associates
|
|
|
|
Net
losses on financial instruments
|
-
|
(3)
|
(3)
|
|
-
|
(3)
|
(3)
|
|
|
|
|
Total included within profit before tax from continuing
operations
|
108
|
(24)
|
84
|
Tax on exceptional items and remeasurements
|
11
|
6
|
17
|
Total exceptional items and remeasurements after tax
from
continuing operations
|
119
|
(18)
|
101
|
4. Exceptional items and remeasurements continued
Six months ended 30 September 2023
|
Exceptional items
£m
|
Remeasurements
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Included within operating profit from continuing
operations
|
|
|
|
Cost
efficiency programme
|
(39)
|
-
|
(39)
|
Transaction,
separation and integration costs1
|
(11)
|
-
|
(11)
|
IFA1
fire insurance proceeds
|
92
|
-
|
92
|
Net
gains on commodity contract derivatives
|
-
|
41
|
41
|
|
42
|
41
|
83
|
Included within net finance costs (note 5)
|
|
|
|
Net
gains on derivative financial instruments
|
-
|
34
|
34
|
Net
losses on financial assets at fair value through profit and
loss
|
-
|
(8)
|
(8)
|
|
-
|
26
|
26
|
Included within share of post-tax results of joint ventures and
associates
|
|
|
|
Net
gains on financial instruments
|
-
|
12
|
12
|
|
-
|
12
|
12
|
|
|
|
|
Total included within profit before tax from continuing
operations
|
42
|
79
|
121
|
Tax on exceptional items and remeasurements
|
1
|
(21)
|
(20)
|
Total exceptional items and remeasurements after tax
from
continuing operations
|
43
|
58
|
101
|
1.
Transaction, separation and integration costs represent the
aggregate of distinct activities undertaken by the
Group.
Provision for UK electricity balancing costs: During the year ended
31 March 2024, the ESO's operating profit increased due to a
substantial over-recovery of allowed revenues received under its
regulatory framework. Under IFRS a corresponding liability is not
recognised for the return of over-recoveries as this relates to
future customers and services that have not yet been delivered.
Following legislation to enable the separation of the ESO and the
formation of the National Energy System Operator (NESO), the Group
recognised a liability of £498 million representing the
element of the over-recovery that would be settled through the sale
process, as detailed in note 5 of the Annual Report and Accounts
for the year ended 31 March 2024. In the period, the liability
has been remeasured to reflect the final amount of over-recovered
revenues which will transfer through the disposal which completed
on 1 October 2024 (see note 6).
Major transformation programme: Following the announcement of our
new strategic priorities in May 2024, the Group entered into a new
four-year transformation programme designed to implement our
refreshed strategy to be a pre-eminent pureplay networks
business. In the period, the Group incurred £42 million
of costs in relation to the programme. The costs recognised
primarily relate to technology implementation costs, employee costs
and professional fees incurred in delivering the programme. Whilst
the costs incurred in the six-month period do not meet the
quantitative threshold to be classified as exceptional on a
standalone basis, when taken in aggregate with the costs
expected to be incurred over the duration of the programme, we have
concluded that the costs should be classified as exceptional in
line with our exceptional items policy. Estimated costs expected to
be incurred in future years are disclosed in the Financial review
on page 19. The total cash outflow for the period
was £33 million.
Changes in environmental provisions: In the US, we recognise
environmental provisions related to the remediation of the Gowanus
Canal, Newtown Creek and the former manufacturing gas plant
facilities previously owned or operated by the Group or its
predecessor companies. The sites are subject to both state and
federal environmental remediation laws in the US. Potential
liability for the historical contamination may be imposed on
responsible parties jointly and severally, without regard to fault,
even if the activities were lawful when they occurred. The
provisions and the Group's share of estimated costs are
re-evaluated at each reporting period. During the period, following
discussions with the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation and the Environmental Protection Agency on the scope
and design of remediation activities related to certain of our
responsible sites, we have re-evaluated our estimates of total
costs and recognised net movements of £1 million in
relation to our provisions. Under the terms of our rate plans, we
are entitled to recovery of environmental clean-up costs from rate
payers in future reporting periods. Such recoveries through overall
allowed revenues are not classified as exceptional in the future
periods that they occur due to the extended duration over which
such costs are recovered and the immateriality of the recoveries in
any given year.
4. Exceptional items and remeasurements continued
Cost efficiency programme: During the prior period, the
Group incurred a further £39 million of costs in
relation to the major cost efficiency programme announced in
November 2021, that targeted at least £400 million
savings per annum across the Group by the end of three years. The
costs recognised primarily related to redundancy provisions,
employee costs and professional fees incurred in delivering the
programme. The total cash outflow in relation to these costs
was £28 million. The cost efficiency programme completed
in the year ended 31 March 2024, with total costs of
£207 million recognised over the duration of the
programme.
Transaction, separation and integration costs: During the prior period, the
Group incurred £11 million of transaction and separation
costs in relation to the disposals of NECO and the UK Gas
Transmission business (see note 6) and the integration of NGED. The
costs incurred primarily related to legal fees, professional
fees, and employee costs. The total cash outflow in relation to
these costs for the period was
£9 million.
IFA1 interconnector insurance recovery: In September 2021, a fire at the
IFA1 converter station in Sellindge, Kent caused significant damage
to infrastructure on-site. In the prior period, the Group
recognised net insurance claims of £92 million which were
recognised as exceptional in line with our exceptional items policy
and consistent with previous related claims. The total cash inflow
for the period was £nil.
5. Finance income and costs
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
Notes
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Finance income before exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
|
|
|
|
Interest income from financing activities
|
|
|
143
|
52
|
Net interest on pensions and other post-retirement benefit
obligations
|
|
|
50
|
51
|
Other interest income
|
|
|
38
|
20
|
|
|
|
231
|
123
|
Finance costs before exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
|
|
|
|
Interest
expense on financial instruments1
|
|
|
(950)
|
(903)
|
Unwinding of discount on provisions and other
liabilities
|
|
|
(64)
|
(50)
|
Other interest
|
|
|
(21)
|
(8)
|
Less:
interest capitalised2
|
|
|
134
|
127
|
|
|
|
(901)
|
(834)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net finance costs before exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
|
|
(670)
|
(711)
|
Total
exceptional items and remeasurements3
|
4
|
|
(12)
|
26
|
Net finance costs including exceptional items and
remeasurements
from continuing operations
|
|
|
(682)
|
(685)
|
1.
Finance costs include principal accretion on inflation-linked debt
of £87 million (2023: £149 million) and income
related to principal accretion on inflation-linked swaps of
£4 million (2023: £18 million
expense).
2.
Interest on funding attributable to assets in the course of
construction in the current period was capitalised at a rate of
4.3% (2023: 4.7%). In the UK, capitalised interest qualifies
for a current year tax deduction with tax relief claimed
of £16 million (2023: £21 million). In the US,
capitalised interest is added to the cost of property, plant
and equipment and qualifies for tax
depreciation allowances.
3.
Includes a net foreign exchange gain on borrowing activities,
offset by foreign exchange gains and losses on financing
derivatives measured at fair value.
6. Assets held for sale and discontinued operations
Assets and businesses are classified as held for sale when their
carrying amounts are recovered through sale rather than through
continuing use. They only meet the held for sale condition
when the assets are ready for immediate sale in their present
condition, management is committed to the sale and it is highly
probable that the sale will complete within one year. Once
assets and businesses are classified as held for sale, depreciation
and equity accounting ceases and the assets and businesses are
remeasured if their carrying value exceeds their fair value less
expected costs to sell.
The results and cash flows of assets or businesses classified as
held for sale or sold during the year, that meet the criteria of
being a major separate line of business or geographical area of
operation, are shown separately from our continuing operations, and
presented within discontinued operations in the income statement
and cash flow statement.
The following assets and liabilities were classified as held for
sale:
|
30 September 2024
|
|
31 March 2024
|
|
Total assets
held for sale
£m
|
Total liabilities
held for sale
£m
|
Net
assets/(liabilities)
held for sale
£m
|
|
Total assets
held for sale
£m
|
Total liabilities
held for sale
£m
|
Net
a
ssets/(liabilities)
held
for sale
£m
|
UK
Electricity System Operator
|
1,549
|
(992)
|
557
|
|
1,134
|
(1,427)
|
(293)
|
National Grid Renewables
|
1,146
|
(10)
|
1,136
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Grain LNG
|
1,036
|
(307)
|
729
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Investment in GasT TopCo Limited
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
689
|
-
|
689
|
RAA
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
(47)
|
(47)
|
Net assets/(liabilities) held for sale
|
3,731
|
(1,309)
|
2,422
|
|
1,823
|
(1,474)
|
349
|
UK Electricity System Operator
In October 2023, legislation required to enable the separation of
the ESO and the formation of the NESO, which will undertake
responsibilities across both the electricity and gas systems, was
passed through Parliament. The assets and liabilities of the ESO
were consequently presented as held for sale in the consolidated
financial statements in the year ended 31 March 2024. The
disposal subsequently completed on 1 October 2024 for consideration
of £630 million, subject to certain completion adjustments.
The gain on disposal will be reported in the Annual Report and
Accounts for the year ended 31 March 2025.
Based on the scale and pass-through nature of the ESO, it is not
considered a separate major line of business or geographic
operation under IFRS 5 for treatment as a discontinued operation,
and its disposal is not part of a single coordinated plan being
undertaken by the Group. Accordingly, the results of the ESO have
not been separately disclosed on the face of the income
statement.
The following assets and liabilities of the ESO were classified as
held for sale at 30 September 2024.
|
|
|
£m
|
Intangible assets
|
485
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
121
|
Trade and other receivables
|
375
|
Pension asset
|
16
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
51
|
Financing derivatives
|
501
|
Total assets
|
1,549
|
Borrowings
|
(13)
|
Other liabilities
|
(632)
|
Provision for UK electricity balancing costs
|
(347)
|
Total liabilities
|
(992)
|
Net assets
|
557
|
The ESO generated profit after tax of £103 million for the
period ended 30 September 2024 (2023: £455 million
profit).
6. Assets held
for sale and discontinued operations continued
NG Renewables and Grain LNG
The Group has previously announced its intention to sell NG
Renewables, its US onshore renewables business, and Grain LNG, its
UK LNG asset. As both sales are considered to be highly probable
and expected to complete within a year, the associated assets and
liabilities have been presented as held for sale in the
consolidated statement of financial position at 30 September 2024.
However, as NG Renewables and Grain LNG do not represent separate
major lines of business or geographical operations, they have not
met the criteria for classification as discontinued operations and
therefore their results for the period are not separately disclosed
on the face of the income statement.
The following assets and liabilities were classified as held for
sale at 30 September 2024.
|
National Grid
Renewables
|
Grain LNG
|
£m
|
£m
|
Goodwill
|
80
|
-
|
Other intangible assets
|
-
|
5
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
90
|
856
|
Investments in joint ventures and associates
|
704
|
-
|
Trade and other receivables
|
74
|
47
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
39
|
106
|
Financial investments
|
23
|
-
|
Other assets
|
136
|
22
|
Total assets
|
1,146
|
1,036
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
(2)
|
(120)
|
Other liabilities
|
(8)
|
(187)
|
Total liabilities
|
(10)
|
(307)
|
Net assets
|
1,136
|
729
|
Upon disposal of NG Renewables, the Group will also release
deferred income related to profits on previous sales to the
joint venture Emerald Energy Venture LLC which are deferred in
accordance with IAS 28. In line with our exceptional items
framework, the release of the deferred income will be classified as
exceptional given the crystallisation event for the release is the
sale of the Group's interest in NG Renewables. No impairment
losses were recognised on reclassification of the
NG Renewables and Grain LNG assets and liabilities classified
to held for sale. The aggregate profit after tax for NG
Renewables and Grain LNG for the period ended 30 September
2024 was £52 million (2023: £83
million).
The UK Gas Transmission business
On 31 January 2023, the Group disposed of 100% of the UK Gas
Transmission business for cash consideration of £4.0 billion
and a 40% interest in a newly incorporated UK limited company, GasT
TopCo Limited. The other 60% was purchased by Macquarie
Infrastructure and Real Assets (MIRA) and British Columbia
Investment Management Corporation (BCI) (together, the
'Consortium'). The Group also entered into a Further Acquisition
Agreement (the FAA option) with the Consortium over its remaining
40% interest. Both the investment in GasT TopCo Limited and the FAA
option were immediately classified as held for sale and the Group
has not applied equity accounting in relation to its investment in
GasT TopCo Limited.
The FAA was partially exercised by the Consortium on 11 March 2024
and the Group disposed of 20% of the 40% interest in GasT
TopCo Limited, as detailed in note 10 of the Annual Report and
Accounts for the year ended 31 March 2024. As part of the
transaction, the Group also entered into a new agreement with the
Consortium, the RAA, to replace the FAA option for the potential
sale of all or part of the remaining 20% equity interest in GasT
TopCo Limited (the Remaining Interest).
On 26 July 2024, the Consortium exercised its option under the RAA
and the disposal of the Group's remaining interest in GasT TopCo
Limited completed on 26 September 2024. The total sales proceeds
were £686 million and the gain on disposal, after
transaction costs, was £25 million.
6. Assets held
for sale and discontinued operations continued
The disposal of the Group's Remaining Interest in GasT TopCo
Limited is the final stage of the plan to dispose of the UK
Transmission business first announced in 2021. As a result, the
gain on disposal and any remeasurements pertaining to the financial
derivatives noted above are shown separately from the continuing
business for all periods presented on the face of the income
statement as a discontinued operation. This is also reflected in
the statement of comprehensive income, as well as earnings per
share (EPS) being shown split between continuing and discontinued
operations.
The summary income statements for the periods ended
30 September 2024 and 2023 are as follows:
|
Before exceptional items
and remeasurements
|
|
Exceptional items
and remeasurements
|
|
Total
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating profit
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
Finance income
|
5
|
9
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
5
|
9
|
Finance
costs1
|
-
|
-
|
|
47
|
61
|
|
47
|
61
|
Profit before tax
|
5
|
9
|
|
47
|
61
|
|
52
|
70
|
Tax
|
(1)
|
(2)
|
|
-
|
(3)
|
|
(1)
|
(5)
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations
|
4
|
7
|
|
47
|
58
|
|
51
|
65
|
Gain on disposal
|
-
|
-
|
|
25
|
-
|
|
25
|
-
|
Total profit after tax from discontinued operations
|
4
|
7
|
|
72
|
58
|
|
76
|
65
|
1.
Exceptional finance costs include the remeasurement of the FAA
option, the FAA forward and the RAA.
The summary statements of comprehensive income are as
follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations
|
76
|
65
|
Other comprehensive (loss)/income from discontinued
operations
|
|
|
Items from discontinued operations that may be reclassified
subsequently to profit or loss:
|
|
|
Net
losses on investments in debt instruments measured at fair value
through other
comprehensive
income
|
(13)
|
(12)
|
Tax
on items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss
|
3
|
3
|
Total losses from discontinued operations that may be reclassified
subsequently to profit or loss
|
(10)
|
(9)
|
Other comprehensive loss for the period, net of tax, from
discontinued operations
|
(10)
|
(9)
|
Total comprehensive income for the period from discontinued
operations
|
66
|
56
|
7. Tax from continuing operations
The tax charge from continuing operations for the six month period
ended 30 September 2024 is £112 million (2023:
£307 million), and before tax on exceptional items and
remeasurements, is £129 million (2023:
£287 million). It is based on management's estimate
of the weighted average effective tax rate by jurisdiction expected
for the full year. The effective tax rate excluding tax on
exceptional items and remeasurements is 21.5% (2023: 22.9%),
which includes the impact of our share of post-tax results of joint
ventures and associates. The half year effective tax rate before
exceptional items and remeasurements, including our share of
post-tax results of joint ventures and associates, is lower than
the Group's full year effective tax rate, as shown below, primarily
as a result of seasonality of earnings in the US
Group.
For the full year, we expect the Group's effective tax rate
excluding tax on exceptional items and remeasurements to be around
25% which includes the impact of our share of post-tax results of
joint ventures and associates. The effective tax rate for the year
ended 31 March 2024 before exceptional items and
remeasurements was 24.1% including the impact of our share of
post-tax results of joint ventures and associates.
The legislation implementing the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development's (OECD) proposals for a global
minimum corporation tax rate (Pillar Two) was enacted into UK law
on 11 July 2023. The legislation includes an income inclusion rule
and a domestic minimum tax, which together are designed to ensure a
minimum effective tax rate of 15% in each country in which the
Group operates. Similar legislation is being enacted by other
governments around the world. The legislation became effective for
National Grid from 1 April 2024. The Group has applied the
mandatory exception in the UK to recognising and disclosing
information about the deferred tax assets and liabilities related
to Pillar Two income taxes in accordance with the amendments to IAS
12 published by the IASB on 23 May 2023. The Group does not expect
there to be a material impact on our current period or future tax
charges.
8. Earnings per share
Earnings per share (EPS), excluding exceptional items and
remeasurements are provided to reflect the adjusted profit
subtotals used by the Group, as set out in note 1. The earnings per
share calculations are based on profit after tax attributable to
equity shareholders of the parent company which excludes
non-controlling interests.
(a) Basic earnings per share
|
Earnings
|
EPS
|
Earnings
|
EPS
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023¹
|
£m
|
pence
|
£m
|
pence
|
Profit after tax before exceptional items and remeasurements -
continuing
|
470
|
10.4
|
962
|
24.2
|
Exceptional items and remeasurements after tax -
continuing
|
101
|
2.2
|
101
|
2.5
|
Profit after tax from continuing operations attributable to the
parent
|
571
|
12.6
|
1,063
|
26.7
|
Profit after tax before exceptional items and remeasurements -
discontinued
|
4
|
0.1
|
7
|
0.2
|
Exceptional items and remeasurements after tax -
discontinued
|
72
|
1.6
|
58
|
1.4
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations attributable to the
parent
|
76
|
1.7
|
65
|
1.6
|
Total profit after tax before exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
474
|
10.5
|
969
|
24.4
|
Total exceptional items and remeasurements after tax
|
173
|
3.8
|
159
|
3.9
|
Total profit after tax attributable to the parent
|
647
|
14.3
|
1,128
|
28.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
|
2023¹
|
|
|
millions
|
|
millions
|
Weighted average number of shares - basic
|
|
4,526
|
|
3,981
|
1.
Comparative amounts have been restated to reflect the impact of the
bonus element of the Rights Issue (see note 9).
(b) Diluted earnings per share
|
Earnings
|
EPS
|
Earnings
|
EPS
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023¹
|
£m
|
pence
|
£m
|
pence
|
Profit after tax before exceptional items and remeasurements -
continuing
|
470
|
10.3
|
962
|
24.1
|
Exceptional items and remeasurements after tax -
continuing
|
101
|
2.3
|
101
|
2.5
|
Profit after tax from continuing operations attributable to the
parent
|
571
|
12.6
|
1,063
|
26.6
|
Profit after tax before exceptional items and remeasurements -
discontinued
|
4
|
0.1
|
7
|
0.2
|
Exceptional items and remeasurements after tax -
discontinued
|
72
|
1.5
|
58
|
1.4
|
Profit after tax from discontinued operations attributable to the
parent
|
76
|
1.6
|
65
|
1.6
|
Total profit after tax before exceptional items and
remeasurements
|
474
|
10.4
|
969
|
24.3
|
Total exceptional items and remeasurements after tax
|
173
|
3.8
|
159
|
3.9
|
Total profit after tax attributable to the parent
|
647
|
14.2
|
1,128
|
28.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
|
2023¹
|
|
|
millions
|
|
millions
|
Weighted average number of shares - diluted
|
|
4,547
|
|
3,999
|
1.
Comparative amounts have been restated to reflect the impact of the
bonus element of the Rights Issue (see note 9).
9. Rights Issue
In June 2024, the Company completed a Rights Issue to support the
future capital investment plans of the Group. The Company raised
£6,839 million (net of expenses of £162 million) through
the issue of 1,085 million new ordinary shares at 645 pence each on
the basis of 7 new ordinary shares for every 24 existing ordinary
shares. The issue price represented a discount of 33% to the
closing ex-div share price on 23 May 2024, the announcement date of
the Rights Issue. The structure of the Rights Issue gave rise to a
merger reserve, representing the net proceeds of the Rights Issue
less the nominal value of the new shares issued. Following
the receipt of the cash proceeds through the structure, the
excess of the net proceeds over the nominal value of the share
capital issued was considered realised and has been transferred
from the merger reserve to retained earnings.
The discount element inherent in the Rights Issue is treated as a
bonus issue of shares. Basic and diluted earnings per share figures
have been restated for the comparative period, by adjusting the
weighted average number of shares for a factor of 1.0811 to reflect
the bonus element of the June 2024 Rights Issue, in accordance with
IAS 33 Earnings per Share (note 8). For comparability, dividends
per share are also restated after taking account of the bonus
element of the Rights Issue, in note 10.
Allotted, called up and fully paid shares of 12204⁄473 pence
each:
|
Allotted, called-up and fully paid
|
|
Shares
|
Nominal value
|
million
|
£m
|
At 1 April
2024
|
3,967
|
493
|
Issued in Rights Issue
|
1,085
|
135
|
Issued during the period in lieu of dividends1
|
74
|
9
|
At 30 September
20242
|
5,126
|
637
|
1.
The issue of shares under the scrip dividend programme is
considered to be a bonus issue under the terms of the Companies Act
2006, and the nominal value of the shares is charged to the share
premium account.
2.
At 30 September 2024, the Company held 241 million
(31 March 2024: 247 million) of its own
shares.
10. Dividends
|
Pence
per share
|
Cash
dividend
paid
£m
|
Scrip
dividend
£m
|
Ordinary dividends
|
|
|
|
Final
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March 2024
|
39.12
|
811
|
643
|
Interim
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March 2024
|
19.40
|
393
|
320
|
Final
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March 2023
|
37.60
|
1,325
|
56
|
For comparability purposes the table below presents dividends per
share adjusted for a factor of 1.0811 to reflect the bonus element
of the Rights Issue:
|
Pence
per share
(actual)
|
Impact of
Rights Issue
|
Pence
per share
(adjusted)
|
Ordinary dividends
|
|
|
|
Final
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March 2024
|
39.12
|
(2.93)
|
36.19
|
Interim
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March 2024
|
19.40
|
(1.46)
|
17.94
|
Final
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March 2023
|
37.60
|
(2.82)
|
34.78
|
The Directors are proposing an interim dividend of 15.84 pence per
share to be paid in respect of the year ending 31 March 2025.
This would absorb approximately £774 million of shareholders'
equity.
A final dividend for the year ended 31 March 2024 of 39.12
pence per share was paid in August 2024. The cash dividend paid was
£811 million with an additional £643 million settled via
a scrip issue.
11. Fair value measurement
Assets and liabilities measured at fair value
Included in the statement of financial position are certain
financial assets and liabilities which are measured
at fair value. The following table categorises these
assets and liabilities by the valuation methodology applied
in determining their fair value using the fair value hierarchy
described on page 202 of the Annual Report and Accounts for the
year ended 31 March 2024.
|
30 September 2024
|
|
31 March 2024
|
|
Level 1
£m
|
Level 2
£m
|
Level 3
£m
|
Total
£m
|
|
Level 1
£m
|
Level 2
£m
|
Level 3
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments held at fair value through profit and loss
|
5,589
|
-
|
406
|
5,995
|
|
3,084
|
-
|
483
|
3,567
|
Investments
held at fair value through other comprehensive income1
|
-
|
389
|
-
|
389
|
|
-
|
397
|
-
|
397
|
Financing derivatives
|
-
|
467
|
53
|
520
|
|
-
|
293
|
40
|
333
|
Commodity contract derivatives
|
-
|
34
|
4
|
38
|
|
-
|
35
|
-
|
35
|
|
5,589
|
890
|
463
|
6,942
|
|
3,084
|
725
|
523
|
4,332
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financing derivatives
|
-
|
(1,044)
|
(105)
|
(1,149)
|
|
-
|
(1,022)
|
(104)
|
(1,126)
|
Commodity contract derivatives
|
-
|
(102)
|
(22)
|
(124)
|
|
-
|
(105)
|
(13)
|
(118)
|
|
-
|
(1,146)
|
(127)
|
(1,273)
|
|
-
|
(1,127)
|
(117)
|
(1,244)
|
Total
|
5,589
|
(256)
|
336
|
5,669
|
|
3,084
|
(402)
|
406
|
3,088
|
1.
Investments held include instruments which meet the criteria of
IFRS 9 or IAS 19.
The estimated fair value of total borrowings, excluding lease
liabilities, using market values at 30 September 2024 is
£41,604 million (31 March 2024: £42,617
million).
Our level 1 financial investments and liabilities held at fair
value are valued using quoted prices from liquid markets and
primarily comprise investments in short-term money market
funds.
Our level 2 financial investments held at fair value primarily
include bonds with a tenor greater than one year and are
valued using quoted prices for similar instruments in active
markets, or quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in
inactive markets. Alternatively, they are valued using models where
all significant inputs are based directly or indirectly on
observable market data.
Our level 2 financing derivatives include cross-currency, interest
rate and foreign exchange derivatives. We value these derivatives
by discounting all future cash flows by externally sourced market
yield curves at the reporting date, taking into account the credit
quality of both parties. These derivatives can be priced using
liquidly traded interest rate curves and foreign exchange rates,
and therefore we classify our vanilla trades as level 2 under the
IFRS 13 framework.
Our level 2 commodity derivatives include over-the-counter gas
swaps and power swaps as well as forward physical gas deals. We
value our contracts based on market data obtained from the New York
Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE)
where forward monthly prices are available. We discount based on
externally sourced market yield curves at the reporting date,
taking into account the credit quality of both parties and
liquidity in the market. Our commodity contracts can be priced
using liquidly traded swaps. Therefore we classify our vanilla
trades as level 2 under the IFRS 13 framework.
Our level 3 financing derivatives include inflation-linked swaps,
where the market is illiquid. In valuing these instruments we
use in-house valuation models and obtain external valuations to
support each reported fair value.
Our level 3 commodity contract derivatives primarily consist of our
forward purchases of electricity and gas that we value using
proprietary models. Derivatives are classified as Level 3
where significant inputs into the valuation technique are
neither directly nor indirectly observable (including our own
data, which are adjusted, if necessary, to reflect the assumptions
market participants would use in
the circumstances).
11. Fair value
measurement continued
Our level 3 investments include equity instruments accounted for at
fair value through profit and loss. These equity holdings are part
of our corporate venture capital portfolio held by National Grid
Partners and comprise a series of relatively small,
early-stage non-controlling minority interest unquoted investments
where prices or valuation inputs are unobservable. Out of 38 equity
investments, 11 are fair valued based on the latest transaction
price (a price within the last 12 months), either being the price
we paid for the investments, marked to a latest round of funding
and adjusted for our preferential rights or based on an internal
model. In addition, we have 25 investments without a transaction in
the last 12 months that underwent an internal valuation process
using the Black-Scholes Murton Option Pricing Model (OPM
Backsolve). Between 12 and 18 months a blend between OPM Backsolve
and other techniques are utilised such as proxy group revenue
multiples, discounted cash flow, comparable company analysis and
probability weighted expected return approach in order to
triangulate a valuation. After 18 months the valuation is based on
these alternative methods as the last fundraising price is no
longer a reliable basis for valuation.
Our level 3 investments also include our investment in Sunrun
Neptune 2016 LLC, which is accounted for at fair value through
profit and loss. The investment is fair valued by discounting
expected cash flows using a weighted average cost of capital
specific to Sunrun Neptune 2016 LLC.
The impacts on a post-tax basis of reasonably possible changes in
significant assumptions used in valuing assets and liabilities
classified within level 3 of the fair value hierarchy are as
follows:
|
Financing derivatives
|
|
Commodity contract
derivatives
|
|
Other
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
10% increase in commodity prices
|
-
|
-
|
|
2
|
15
|
|
-
|
-
|
10% decrease in commodity prices
|
-
|
-
|
|
(2)
|
(15)
|
|
-
|
-
|
+10% market area price change
|
-
|
-
|
|
11
|
12
|
|
-
|
-
|
-10% market area price change
|
-
|
-
|
|
(10)
|
(11)
|
|
-
|
-
|
+20 basis point increase in Limited Price Index
(LPI) market curve
|
(40)
|
(38)
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
-20 basis point decrease in LPI market curve
|
38
|
38
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
+20 basis point increase between Retail Price Index (RPI)
and Consumer Price Index (CPI)
|
36
|
36
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
-20 basis point decrease between RPI and CPI
market curves
|
(33)
|
(33)
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
+100 basis points change in discount rate
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
(6)
|
(8)
|
-100 basis points change in discount rate
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
7
|
9
|
+10% change in venture capital price
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
26
|
30
|
-10% change in venture capital price
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
(26)
|
(30)
|
The impacts disclosed above were considered on a contract by
contract basis with the most significant unobservable inputs
identified. A reasonably possible change in assumptions for other
level 3 assets and liabilities would not result in a material
change in fair values.
11. Fair value
measurement continued
The
changes in fair value of our level 3 financial assets and
liabilities in the six months to 30 September are presented
below:
|
Financing derivatives
|
|
Commodity contract
derivatives
|
|
Other1
|
|
Total
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
At 1 April
|
(64)
|
(100)
|
|
(13)
|
(36)
|
|
483
|
433
|
|
406
|
297
|
Net
gains/(losses) through the consolidated income statement for the
period2,3
|
12
|
25
|
|
(19)
|
(4)
|
|
(54)
|
26
|
|
(61)
|
47
|
Purchases
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
(10)
|
|
19
|
11
|
|
19
|
1
|
Settlements
|
-
|
-
|
|
4
|
7
|
|
(42)
|
3
|
|
(38)
|
10
|
Reclassification/transfers out of level 3⁴
|
-
|
-
|
|
10
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
10
|
-
|
At 30 September
|
(52)
|
(75)
|
|
(18)
|
(43)
|
|
406
|
473
|
|
336
|
355
|
1.
Other comprises our investments in Sunrun Neptune 2016 LLC and the
investments made by National Grid Partners, which are accounted for
at fair value through profit and loss. Net gains and loss are
recognised within finance income and costs in the income
statement.
2.
Gains of £12 million (2023: gains of £25 million) are
attributable to derivative financial instruments held at the end of
the reporting period and have been recognised in finance costs
in the income statement.
3.
Losses of £19 million (2023: losses of £4 million) are
attributable to the commodity contract derivative financial
instruments held at the end of the reporting period
and have been recognised in other operating costs in the
consolidated income statement.
4.
£10 million of US Commodity contract derivatives were
reclassified out of Level 3 to Level 2 in the period due to
improved observability of the fair value
of these instruments.
The Group also has a number of financial instruments which are not
measured at fair value in the balance sheet. The carrying value of
current financial assets at amortised cost approximates their fair
values, primarily due to short-dated maturities.
12. Net debt
Net debt is comprised as follows:
|
30 September 2024
|
31 March 2024
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
1,125
|
559
|
Current financial investments
|
6,140
|
3,699
|
Borrowings and bank overdrafts
|
(45,176)
|
(47,072)
|
Financing
derivatives1
|
(629)
|
(793)
|
Net debt (net of related derivative financial
instruments)
|
(38,540)
|
(43,607)
|
1.
Includes £58 million liability (31 March 2024: £36
million liability) in relation to the hedging of capital
expenditure. The cash flows related to these derivatives
are included within investing activities in the consolidated
cash flow statement which gives alignment with the presentation of
the hedged item. The financing derivatives balance included in net
debt exclude the commodity derivatives.
The following table splits out the total derivative balances on the
face of the consolidated statement of financial position by
category:
|
30 September 2024
|
|
31 March 2024
|
|
Assets
£m
|
Liabilities
£m
|
Total
£m
|
|
Assets
£m
|
Liabilities
£m
|
Total
£m
|
Financing derivatives
|
520
|
(1,149)
|
(629)
|
|
333
|
(1,126)
|
(793)
|
Commodity contract derivatives
|
38
|
(124)
|
(86)
|
|
35
|
(118)
|
(83)
|
Total derivative financial instruments
|
558
|
(1,273)
|
(715)
|
|
368
|
(1,244)
|
(876)
|
13. Pensions and other post-retirement benefit
obligations
|
30 September 2024
|
31 March 2024
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Present value of funded obligations
|
(17,058)
|
(17,601)
|
Fair value of plan assets
|
19,247
|
19,733
|
|
2,189
|
2,132
|
Present value of unfunded obligations
|
(253)
|
(266)
|
Other post-employment liabilities
|
(61)
|
(52)
|
Net defined benefit asset
|
1,875
|
1,814
|
Presented in consolidated statement of financial
position:
|
|
|
Assets
|
2,478
|
2,407
|
Liabilities
|
(603)
|
(593)
|
|
1,875
|
1,814
|
Key actuarial assumptions
|
30 September 2024
|
31 March 2024
|
Discount rate - UK past service
|
5.02%
|
4.87%
|
Discount rate - US
|
4.90%
|
5.15%
|
Rate of increase in RPI - UK past service
|
2.95%
|
3.05%
|
The movement in the net pensions and other post-retirement benefit
(OPEB) obligations position in the period can be analysed as
follows:
|
30 September 2024
|
30 September 2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Opening net defined benefit asset
|
1,814
|
1,951
|
Cost recognised in the income statement
|
(29)
|
(34)
|
Employer contributions
|
81
|
80
|
Remeasurement and foreign exchange effects recognised in the
statement of other comprehensive income
|
18
|
(257)
|
Other movements
|
(9)
|
(3)
|
Closing net defined benefit asset
|
1,875
|
1,737
|
The pension and OPEB surpluses in both the UK and the US of
£1,359 million and £1,119 million respectively
(31 March 2024: £1,317 million and
£1,090 million) continue to be recognised as assets under
IFRIC 14 as explained on page 180 of the Annual Report and
Accounts for the year ended 31 March 2024.
In June 2023, the UK High Court issued a ruling, which was
subsequently upheld by the Court of Appeal in July 2024, in the
case of Virgin Media Limited versus NTL Pension Trustees II Limited
and others relating to the validity of certain historical pension
changes. The Group has performed its review of past significant
changes made to its UK defined benefit pension arrangements and it
has concluded that there is no financial impact from the ruling of
the case.
14. Commitments and contingencies
At 30 September 2024, there were commitments for future energy
purchase agreements of £13,403 million (31 March
2024: £14,175 million) and future capital expenditure
contracted but not provided for in relation to the acquisition of
property, plant and equipment of £3,697 million
(31 March 2024: £3,250 million).
We also have contingencies in the form of certain guarantees and
letters of credit. These are described in further detail in note 30
to the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 March
2024.
Legal and regulatory proceedings
Through the ordinary course of our operations, we are party to
various litigation, claims, regulatory proceedings and
investigations. We do not expect the ultimate resolution
of any proceedings to have a material adverse effect on our results
of operations, cash flows or financial position.
15. Exchange rates
The consolidated results are affected by the exchange rates used to
translate the results of our US operations and US dollar
transactions. The US dollar to pound sterling exchange rates used
were:
30 September
|
2024
|
2023
|
Year
ended 31 March
2024
|
Closing rate applied at period end
|
1.34
|
1.22
|
1.26
|
Average rate applied for the period
|
1.30
|
1.25
|
1.26
|
16. Related party transactions
Related party transactions in the six months ended
30 September 2024 were substantially the same in nature to
those disclosed in note 31 of the Annual Report and Accounts for
the year ended 31 March 2024. There were no other related
party transactions in the period that have materially affected the
financial position or performance of the Group.
17. Post balance sheet events
On 1 October 2024, the Group completed the disposal of the ESO (see
note 6). The gain on disposal, which is subject to certain
completion adjustments, will be reflected in the Annual Report and
Accounts for the year ended 31 March 2025.
On 31 October 2024, the Trustees of the National Grid Electricity
Group of the Electricity Supply Pension Scheme entered into a
buy-in transaction of £1.7 billion covering the pensioner and
dependant members of the plan. This buy-in is a bulk annuity policy
held by the Trustees and provides the income needed to pay the
pensions to the members covered by the policy. It was funded by
existing scheme assets (mainly gilts) and also included the
novation of the longevity swap policy to the insurer. IAS 19
requires that the asset value placed on buy-in policies such as
this one to be consistent with the corresponding value of
liabilities (rather than the price paid). Accordingly, this will
result in a reduction in the pension asset for the year ended 31
March 2025, with the recognition of actuarial losses within the
consolidated statement of other comprehensive income.
Principal risks and uncertainties
When
preparing the half year financial information the risks as reported
in the Annual Report and Accounts for the year
ended 31 March
2024 (Group Principal Risks on pages 24-30 and inherent
risks on pages 226-231) were reviewed to ensure that the
disclosures remained appropriate and adequate. Below is a summary
of our key risks as at 30 September 2024:
People risks
■
Risk that we do not
have, across our workforce and within our leadership, the
capability or capacity necessary to deliver on existing or future
commitments because of ineffective planning for future people
needs, insufficient development of people and failure to attract
and retain people in a competitive market for skills and talent,
leading to failure to deliver on our business goals, strategic
priorities and vision to be at the heart of a clean, fair and
affordable energy future.
Financial risks
■
Risk that we are
unable to fund our business efficiently as a result of a lack of
access to a wide pool of investors, market volatility,
unsatisfactory regulatory outcomes or unsatisfactory financial or
operational performance of the business, leading to a lack of
access to capital, impacting our ability to achieve our strategic
objectives, including our proposed capital investment
programme.
Strategic risks
■
Failure to
influence future energy policies and secure satisfactory regulatory
agreements because of lack of insight or unsuccessful negotiations
leading to poor regulatory outcomes, energy policies that
negatively impact our operations, impacts on market prices, reduced
financial performance, fines/penalties, increased costs to remain
compliant and/or reputational damage.
■
Failure to identify
and/or deliver upon the actions necessary to meet our climate
change targets and enable the wider energy transition because of
poor monitoring and response to external developments associated
with mitigating climate change, leading to legal risks or
reputational impacts of not meeting our climate change targets and
in the longer-term reaching net zero by 2050.
■
Risk in not
positioning ourselves appropriately to political and societal
expectations because of a failure to proactively monitor the
landscape or to anticipate and respond to changes leading to
reputational damage, political intervention, threats to the Group's
licences to operate and our ability to achieve our
objectives.
Operational risks
■
Failure to
adequately anticipate and manage disruptive forces on our systems
because of a cyber-attack, poor recovery of critical systems or
malicious external or internal parties resulting in an inability to
operate the network, damage to assets, loss of confidentiality,
integrity and/or availability of systems.
■
Failure to predict
and respond adequately to significant energy disruption events to
our assets resulting from asset failure (including third party
interactions e.g. control systems protection etc.), climate change,
storms, attacks or other emergency events leading to significant
customer harm, lasting reputational damage with customers,
regulators and politicians, material financial losses, loss of
franchise or significant damage to investor
confidence.
■
Failure to predict
and respond adequately to disruptions in upstream energy supply
because of energy falling short of capacity needs leading to
challenges in balancing supply and customer demand, with adverse
impacts on customers and/or the public, reputational damage and
regulatory impacts.
■
Risk of a
catastrophic asset failure or bulk power system failure because of
failure of a critical asset or system, substandard operational
performance or inadequate maintenance, third-party damage and
undetected system anomalies leading to a significant public or
employee safety and/or environmental event.
■
Failure to deliver
on our major capital project programme within the required
timeframes because of misalignment or lack of clarity with
regulatory expectations, unclear financial frameworks to
incentivise investment, complex planning requirements, external
impacts on supply chain or a failure to demonstrate
clear, long-term economic benefits to communities leading to
increased costs, schedule over-runs, compromised quality,
reputational damage and detrimentally impacting our ability to
deliver our clean energy transition strategy.
Statement of Directors' Responsibilities
The
half year financial information is the responsibility of, and has
been approved by, the Directors. The Directors are responsible for
preparing the half year financial information in accordance with
the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules (DTR) of the United
Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
The
Directors confirm that to the best of their knowledge:
a) the
condensed consolidated interim financial statements have been
prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting' as
issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and as
adopted by the United Kingdom;
b)
the half year management report includes a fair review of the
information required by DTR 4.2.7R (indication of important events
during the first six months and description of principal risks and
uncertainties for the remaining six months of the year);
and
c)
the half year management report includes a fair review of the
information required by DTR 4.2.8R (disclosure of related parties'
transactions and changes therein).
By
order of the Board
...................................
..........................................
John
Pettigrew
Andy Agg
6
November 2024 6
November 2024
Chief
Executive
Chief Financial Officer
Independent Review Report to National Grid plc
Conclusion
We have
been engaged by the Company (National Grid plc) to review the
condensed consolidated set of financial statements in the
half-yearly financial report for the six months
ended 30 September
2024 which comprises the consolidated income statement,
the consolidated statement of comprehensive income, the
consolidated statement of changes in equity, the consolidated cash
flow statement and related notes 1 to 17 (collectively referred to as the
'interim financial information').
Based
on our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to
believe that the condensed set of financial statements in the
half-yearly financial report for the six months
ended 30 September
2024 is not prepared, in all material respects, in
accordance with United Kingdom adopted International Accounting
Standard 34 and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of
the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
Basis for Conclusion
We
conducted our review in accordance with International Standard on
Review Engagements (UK) 2410 'Review of Interim Financial
Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity'
issued by the Financial Reporting Council for use in the United
Kingdom (ISRE (UK) 2410). A review of interim financial information
consists of making inquiries, primarily of persons responsible for
financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other
review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an
audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on
Auditing (UK) and consequently does not enable us to obtain
assurance that we would become aware of all significant matters
that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not
express an audit opinion.
As
disclosed in note 1, the
annual financial statements of the Group are prepared in accordance
with United Kingdom adopted international accounting standards. The
condensed set of financial statements included in
this half-yearly financial report has been prepared in
accordance with United Kingdom adopted International Accounting
Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting'.
Conclusion Relating to Going Concern
Based
on our review procedures, which are less extensive than those
performed in an audit as described in the Basis for Conclusion
section of this report, nothing has come to our attention to
suggest that the Directors have inappropriately adopted the going
concern basis of accounting or that the Directors have identified
material uncertainties relating to going concern that are not
appropriately disclosed.
This
Conclusion is based on the review procedures performed in
accordance with ISRE (UK) 2410; however future events or conditions
may cause the entity to cease to continue as a going
concern.
Responsibilities of the Directors
The
Directors are responsible for preparing the half-yearly financial
report in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency
Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct
Authority.
In
preparing the half-yearly financial report, the Directors are
responsible for assessing the Group's ability to continue as a
going concern, disclosing as applicable, matters related to going
concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the
Directors either intend to liquidate the Company or to cease
operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do
so.
Auditor's Responsibilities for the review of the financial
information
In
reviewing the half-yearly financial report, we are responsible for
expressing to the Company a conclusion on the condensed
consolidated set of financial statements in the half-yearly
financial report. Our Conclusion, including our Conclusion Relating
to Going Concern, are based on procedures that are less extensive
than audit procedures, as described in the Basis for Conclusion
paragraph of this report.
Use of our report
This
report is made solely to the Company in accordance with ISRE (UK)
2410. Our work has been undertaken so that we might state to
the Company those matters we are required to state to it in an
independent review report and for no other purpose. To the fullest
extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility
to anyone other than the Company, for our review work, for this
report, or for the conclusions we have formed.
Deloitte LLP
Statutory
Auditor
London,
United Kingdom
6
November 2024
Alternative performance measures/non-IFRS
reconciliations
Within
the Half Year Results Statement, a number of financial measures are
presented. Some of these measures have been categorised as
alternative performance measures (APMs), as per the European
Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) guidelines and the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) conditions for use of
non-IFRS Financial Measures.
An APM
is a financial measure of historical or future financial
performance, financial position, or cash flows, other than a
financial measure defined under IFRS. The Group uses a range of
these measures to provide a better understanding of its
underlying performance. APMs are reconciled to the most directly
comparable IFRS financial measure where
practicable.
The
Group has defined the following financial measures as APMs derived
from IFRS within the Half Year Results Statement: net revenue, the
various adjusted operating profit, earnings and earnings per share
metrics detailed in the 'adjusted profit measures' section
below. For each of these we present a reconciliation to the
most directly comparable IFRS measure. We present 'constant
currency' comparative period performance and capital investment by
applying the current period average exchange rate to the relevant
US dollar amounts in the comparative periods presented, to remove
the year-on-year impact of foreign exchange
translation.
Net revenue and underlying net revenue
'Net
revenue' is revenue less pass-through costs, such as system
balancing costs, and gas and electricity commodity costs in the US.
Pass-through costs are fully recoverable from our customers and are
recovered through separate charges that are designed to recover
those costs with no profit. Any over- or under-recovery
of these costs is returned to, or recovered from, our
customers. Underlying net revenue further adjusts this to reflect
the impact of 'timing', i.e. the in-year difference between allowed
and collected revenues, including revenue incentives, as governed
by our rate plans in the US or regulatory price controls in the UK
(but excluding totex-related allowances and
adjustments).
|
|
|
2024
|
|
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
Gross
revenue
£m
|
Pass-
through
costs
£m
|
Net revenue
£m
|
Timing
£m
|
Underlying
net revenue
£m
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
1,274
|
(203)
|
1,071
|
82
|
1,153
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
1,166
|
(95)
|
1,071
|
(191)
|
880
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
1,029
|
(1,217)
|
(188)
|
479
|
291
|
New England
|
1,545
|
(663)
|
882
|
148
|
1,030
|
New York
|
2,341
|
(869)
|
1,472
|
318
|
1,790
|
National Grid Ventures
|
650
|
-
|
650
|
-
|
650
|
Other
|
98
|
-
|
98
|
-
|
98
|
Sales between segments
|
(142)
|
-
|
(142)
|
-
|
(142)
|
Total from continuing operations
|
7,961
|
(3,047)
|
4,914
|
836
|
5,750
|
|
|
|
2023
|
|
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
Gross
revenue
£m
|
Pass-
through
costs
£m
|
Net revenue
£m
|
Timing
£m
|
Underlying
net revenue
£m
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
1,356
|
(104)
|
1,252
|
(183)
|
1,069
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
850
|
(114)
|
736
|
87
|
823
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
1,734
|
(1,123)
|
611
|
(409)
|
202
|
New England
|
1,441
|
(690)
|
751
|
250
|
1,001
|
New York
|
2,365
|
(806)
|
1,559
|
149
|
1,708
|
National Grid Ventures
|
666
|
-
|
666
|
-
|
666
|
Other
|
142
|
-
|
142
|
-
|
142
|
Sales between segments
|
(65)
|
-
|
(65)
|
-
|
(65)
|
Total from continuing operations
|
8,489
|
(2,837)
|
5,652
|
(106)
|
5,546
|
Alternative performance measures/non-IFRS
reconciliations (continued)
Adjusted profit measures
In
considering the financial performance of our business and segments,
we use various adjusted profit measures in order to aid
comparability of results year-on-year. The various measures are
presented on page 18 and reconciled below.
Adjusted results: These exclude the impact of exceptional items and
remeasurements that are treated as discrete transactions under IFRS
and can accordingly be classified as such. Further details of these
items are included in note 4.
Underlying results: Further adapts our adjusted results to take
account of volumetric and other revenue timing differences arising
due to the in-year difference between allowed and collected
revenues, including revenue incentives, as governed by our rate
plans in the US or regulatory price controls in the UK (but
excluding totex-related allowances and adjustments). As defined on
page 63 of the Annual Report and Accounts for the year
ended 31 March
2024, major storm costs are
costs (net of certain deductibles) that are recoverable under our
US rate plans but expensed as incurred under IFRS. Where the
total incurred costs (after deductibles) exceed $100 million in any
given year we also exclude the net amount from underlying earnings.
Underlying results also exclude deferred tax in our UK regulated
business (NGET and NGED). Our UK regulated revenue contain an
allowance for current tax, but not for deferred tax, so excluding
the IFRS deferred tax charge aligns our underlying results APM more
closely with our regulatory performance measures. Group underlying
EPS is one of the incentive targets set annually and part of the
LTPP target for remunerating certain Executive
Directors.
Constant currency: 'Constant Currency Basis' refers to the reporting
of the actual results against the results for the same period last
year which, in respect of any US dollar currency-denominated
activity, have been translated using the weighted average US dollar
exchange rate for the six months ended 30 September
2024, which was
$1.30 to £1.00. The weighted average rate
for the six months ended 30 September
2023, was $1.25 to £1.00. Assets and liabilities as
at 30 September
2024 have been
retranslated at the closing rate at 30 September
2024 of
$1.34 to £1.00. The closing rate for the
balance sheet date 31 March
2024 was
$1.26 to £1.00.
Alternative performance measures/non-IFRS
reconciliations (continued)
Reconciliation of Statutory, Adjusted and Underlying Profits and
Earnings - at actual exchange rates - continuing
operations
Six months ended 30 September 2024
|
Statutory
|
Exceptionals and
remeasurements
|
Adjusted
|
Timing
|
Major storm
costs
|
Deferred tax on
underlying
profits in NGET
and NGED
|
Underlying
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
642
|
-
|
642
|
82
|
-
|
-
|
724
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
759
|
5
|
764
|
(191)
|
-
|
-
|
573
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
(213)
|
(151)
|
(364)
|
479
|
-
|
-
|
115
|
New England
|
87
|
2
|
89
|
148
|
-
|
-
|
237
|
New York
|
(50)
|
20
|
(30)
|
318
|
-
|
-
|
288
|
National Grid Ventures
|
145
|
2
|
147
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
147
|
Other
|
(61)
|
23
|
(38)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(38)
|
Total operating profit
|
1,309
|
(99)
|
1,210
|
836
|
-
|
-
|
2,046
|
Net finance costs
|
(682)
|
12
|
(670)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(670)
|
Share of post-tax results of JVs and associates
|
57
|
3
|
60
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
60
|
Profit before tax
|
684
|
(84)
|
600
|
836
|
-
|
-
|
1,436
|
Tax
|
(112)
|
(17)
|
(129)
|
(219)
|
-
|
184
|
(164)
|
Profit after tax
|
572
|
(101)
|
471
|
617
|
-
|
184
|
1,272
|
Six months ended 30 September 2023
|
Statutory
|
Exceptionals and
remeasurements
|
Adjusted
|
Timing
|
Major storm
costs
|
Deferred tax on
underlying
profits in NGET
and NGED
|
Underlying1
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
838
|
1
|
839
|
(183)
|
-
|
-
|
656
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
472
|
4
|
476
|
87
|
-
|
-
|
563
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
443
|
-
|
443
|
(409)
|
-
|
-
|
34
|
New England
|
(47)
|
15
|
(32)
|
250
|
-
|
-
|
218
|
New York
|
8
|
(38)
|
(30)
|
149
|
-
|
-
|
119
|
National Grid Ventures
|
310
|
(91)
|
219
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
219
|
Other
|
(39)
|
26
|
(13)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(13)
|
Total operating profit
|
1,985
|
(83)
|
1,902
|
(106)
|
-
|
-
|
1,796
|
Net finance costs
|
(685)
|
(26)
|
(711)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(711)
|
Share of post-tax results of JVs and associates
|
71
|
(12)
|
59
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
59
|
Profit before tax
|
1,371
|
(121)
|
1,250
|
(106)
|
-
|
-
|
1,144
|
Tax
|
(307)
|
20
|
(287)
|
19
|
-
|
158
|
(110)
|
Profit after tax
|
1,064
|
(101)
|
963
|
(87)
|
-
|
158
|
1,034
|
1.
Prior year comparatives have been restated to reflect the change in
our underlying earnings definition to remove the deferred tax in UK
regulated businesses (NGET and NGED).
Alternative performance measures/non-IFRS
reconciliations (continued)
Reconciliation of Adjusted and Underlying Profits - at constant
currency
|
|
|
At constant currency
|
Six months ended 30 September 2023
|
Adjusted
at actual
exchang
e rate
|
|
Constant c
urrency
adjustment
|
Adjusted
|
Timing
|
Major storm
costs
|
Underlying1
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
839
|
|
-
|
839
|
(183)
|
-
|
656
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
476
|
|
-
|
476
|
87
|
-
|
563
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
443
|
|
-
|
443
|
(409)
|
-
|
34
|
New England
|
(32)
|
|
-
|
(32)
|
243
|
-
|
211
|
New York
|
(30)
|
|
-
|
(30)
|
145
|
-
|
115
|
National Grid Ventures
|
219
|
|
-
|
219
|
-
|
-
|
219
|
Other
|
(13)
|
|
-
|
(13)
|
-
|
-
|
(13)
|
Total operating profit
|
1,902
|
|
-
|
1,902
|
(117)
|
-
|
1,785
|
Net finance costs
|
(711)
|
|
13
|
(698)
|
-
|
-
|
(698)
|
Share of post-tax results of JVs and associates
|
59
|
|
(1)
|
58
|
-
|
-
|
58
|
Profit before tax
|
1,250
|
|
12
|
1,262
|
(117)
|
-
|
1,145
|
1.
Prior year comparatives have been restated to reflect the change in
our underlying earnings definition to remove the deferred tax in UK
regulated businesses (NGET and NGED).
Earnings per share calculations from continuing operations - At
actual exchange rates
The
table below reconciles the profit after tax from continuing
operations per the previous tables back to the earnings per share
from continuing operations for each of the adjusted profit
measures. Earnings per share is only presented for those
adjusted profit measures that are at actual exchange rates, and not
for those at constant currency.
Six months ended 30 September 2024
|
Profit after tax
£m
|
Non-controlling interest
£m
|
Profit after tax
attributable to
the parent
£m
|
Weighted
average number
of shares
Millions
|
Earnings
per share
pence
|
Statutory
|
572
|
(1)
|
571
|
4,526
|
12.6
|
Adjusted (also referred to as Headline)
|
471
|
(1)
|
470
|
4,526
|
10.4
|
Underlying
|
1,272
|
(1)
|
1,271
|
4,526
|
28.1
|
Six
months ended 30 September
2023
|
Profit after tax
£m
|
Non-controlling interest
£m
|
Profit after tax
attributable to
the parent
£m
|
Weighted
average
number
of
shares
Millions2
|
Earnings
per share
pence
|
Statutory
|
1,064
|
(1)
|
1,063
|
3,981
|
26.7
|
Adjusted (also referred to as Headline)
|
963
|
(1)
|
962
|
3,981
|
24.2
|
Underlying¹
|
1,034
|
(1)
|
1,033
|
3,981
|
25.9
|
1.
Prior year comparatives have been restated to reflect the change in
our underlying earnings definition to remove the deferred tax in UK
regulated businesses (NGET and NGED).
2.
Comparatives have been restated to reflect the impact of the bonus
element of the Rights Issue (see note 9).
Alternative performance
measures/non-IFRS reconciliations (continued)
Timing impacts from continuing operations
Under
the Group's regulatory frameworks, the majority of the revenues
that National Grid is allowed to collect each year are governed by
a regulatory price control or rate plan. If National Grid collects
more than this allowed level of revenue, the balance must be
returned to customers in subsequent years, and if it collects less
than this level of revenue, it may recover the balance from
customers in subsequent years. These variances between allowed and
collected revenues give rise to 'over and under-recoveries'. A
number of costs in the UK and the US are pass-through costs
(including commodity and energy efficiency costs in the US), and
are fully recoverable from customers. Timing differences between
costs of this type being incurred and their recovery through
revenues are also included in over and under-recoveries. In the UK,
timing differences include an estimation of the difference between
revenues earned under revenue incentive mechanisms and associated
revenues collected. UK timing balances and movements exclude
adjustments associated with changes to controllable cost (totex)
allowances or adjustments under the totex incentive mechanism.
Opening balances of over and under-recoveries have been restated
where appropriate to correspond with regulatory filings and
calculations.
|
UK Electricity
Transmission
£m
|
UK Electricity
Distribution
£m
|
UK Electricity
System Operator
£m
|
New
England1
£m
|
New
York1
£m
|
Total
£m
|
1 April 2024 opening
balance2
|
154
|
(288)
|
941
|
(441)
|
647
|
1,013
|
Over/(under)-recovery
|
(82)
|
191
|
(479)
|
(148)
|
(318)
|
(836)
|
30 September 2024 closing
balance
to (recover)/return
|
72
|
(97)
|
462
|
(589)
|
329
|
177
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK Electricity
Transmission
£m
|
UK Electricity
Distribution
£m
|
UK Electricity
System Operator
£m
|
New
England1
£m
|
New
York1
£m
|
Total
£m
|
1 April 2023 opening
balance2
|
(217)
|
(119)
|
78
|
(381)
|
676
|
37
|
Over/(under)-recovery
|
183
|
(87)
|
409
|
(243)
|
(145)
|
117
|
30 September 2023 closing
balance
to (recover)/return
|
(34)
|
(206)
|
487
|
(624)
|
531
|
154
|
1.
New England and New York in-year over/(under)-recovery and all New
England and New York balances have been translated using the
average exchange rate for the half year ended 30 September
2024.
2.
Opening balances have been restated to reflect the finalisation of
calculated over/(under)-recoveries in the UK and the US and also
adjusted for the regulatory time value of money impact on opening
balances, where appropriate, in the UK.
Rebased dividend per share
The
table below reconciles the actual dividend per share paid with a
'rebased dividend per share' calculated using a hypothetical
assumption that all of the additional shares from the Rights Issue
existed for previous reporting periods.
|
Total
dividend
£m
|
Number of
shares
millions
|
Actual dividend
per share
pence
|
Rights Issue
additional shares
millions
|
Total number
of shares
(rebased)
millions
|
Rebased
dividend
per share
pence
|
Final dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March
2024
|
1,454
|
3,717
|
39.12
|
1,085
|
4,802
|
30.28
|
Interim dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March
2024
|
713
|
3,676
|
19.40
|
1,085
|
4,761
|
14.98
|
Total dividend for the year ended 31 March 2024
|
2,167
|
n/a
|
58.52
|
1,085
|
n/a
|
45.26
|
Alternative performance measures/non-IFRS
reconciliations (continued)
Capital investment - at constant currency
We have updated our definition of capital investment this year.
'Capital investment' or 'investment' both refer to additions to
property, plant and equipment and intangible assets, including
capital prepayments plus equity contributions to joint
ventures and associates during the period. This measure of
capital investment is aligned with how we present our segmental
information (see note 2(c) to the financial statements for further
details). References to 'capital investment' in our regulated
networks include the following segments: UK Electricity
Transmission, UK Electricity Distribution, UK Electricity System
Operator (prior to classification as held for sale), New England
and New York, but exclude National Grid Ventures and 'Other'.
Capital investment measures are presented at actual exchange rates,
but are also shown on a constant currency basis to show the
year-on-year comparisons excluding any impact of foreign
currency translation movements.
|
At actual exchange rates
|
|
At constant currency
|
Six months ended 30 September
|
2024
|
2023
|
% change
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
% change
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
UK Electricity Transmission
|
1,290
|
899
|
43
|
|
1,290
|
899
|
43
|
UK Electricity Distribution
|
647
|
608
|
6
|
|
647
|
608
|
6
|
UK Electricity System Operator
|
-
|
75
|
(100)
|
|
-
|
75
|
(100)
|
New England
|
814
|
789
|
3
|
|
814
|
764
|
7
|
New York
|
1,569
|
1,257
|
25
|
|
1,569
|
1,217
|
29
|
Capital investment (regulated networks)
|
4,320
|
3,628
|
19
|
|
4,320
|
3,563
|
21
|
National Grid Ventures
|
279
|
316
|
(12)
|
|
279
|
312
|
(11)
|
Other
|
4
|
2
|
100
|
|
4
|
2
|
100
|
Group capital investment - total
|
4,603
|
3,946
|
17
|
|
4,603
|
3,877
|
19
|
[1]
Subject to customary closing adjustments, including timing
differences.
[2] All figures exclude
ESO employees. As at 31 March 2024, Group gender and ethnically
diverse headcount inclusive of ESO was circa 7,700 and 5,800,
respectively.
[3]
Subject to customary closing adjustments, including timing
differences.
[4] All figures exclude
ESO employees. As at 31 March 2024, Group gender and ethnically
diverse headcount inclusive of ESO was circa 7,700 and 5,800,
respectively.
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly
authorized.
|
NATIONAL GRID
plc
|
|
|
|
|
By:
|
Beth Melges
|
|
|
Beth Melges
Head of Plc Governance
|
Date:
07 November
2024
Niagara Mohawk (PK) (USOTC:NMPWP)
Graphique Historique de l'Action
De Nov 2024 à Déc 2024
Niagara Mohawk (PK) (USOTC:NMPWP)
Graphique Historique de l'Action
De Déc 2023 à Déc 2024