Energy company SSE has announced a £2.5bn increase in its existing five-year investment programme – as it also published its half-year results.
SSE said the strength of its financial position and greater clarity over electricity transmission projects has led the group to upgrade its investment programme to £20.5bn across the five years to the financial year 2027.
This is £2.5bn higher than its previous target with the additional spending also fully funded and focused on electricity infrastructure that will support the transition to net zero.
The group, which is a developer and operator of electricity infrastructure from wind farms to networks and flexible power generation, said adjusted profit before tax increased by 1% to £565.2m in the six months to September 30.
Adjusted earnings per share was 37.0p, down 11% and reflecting the seasonal nature of SSE’s operations that deliver the majority of annual earnings in the second half.
SSE said the first half saw a strong performance from the Thermal business as it benefited from the addition of Keadby 2 and Triton power stations alongside improved availability of its other assets.
In Renewables, profitability increased despite adverse weather conditions due to higher average hedge prices and lower hedge buy-back costs.
In electricity networks, its Transmission business saw operating profits rise 3%while Distribution’s operating profits were down 31% mainly as a result of inflationary costs which are expected to be recouped in future years, and storm costs.
SSE has positioned itself at the heart of the clean energy transition - during the first six months of 2023/24, it had capital expenditures of £1.1bn, delivering a range of nationally significant clean energy projects including:
SSE chief executive Alistair Phillips-Davies said: “Our first half performance reflects both the financial strength of our business and our ability to deliver world-class projects that are at the heart of the clean energy transition.
“There remains strong underlying political consensus on the big drivers of energy security and decarbonisation – accelerating renewables, network investment and flexible power generation – and these are the growth engines powering SSE.
“That we are investing more than £20bn over the five years to 2027 and could invest more than £40bn over the decade to 2032, speaks to the range and quality of opportunities we have, underpinned by an energy transition that is gathering pace, and our continued commitment to creating value for society and shareholders in a disciplined way.”