Gresham House Energy Storage (LON:GRID) reported a sharp improvement in operating performance in 2025 as the battery storage fund advanced the first year of a three-year plan outlined at its November 2024 Capital Markets Day. Management highlighted higher revenues, expanding capacity, a refinancing that unlocked funding for upgrades, and a continued push to increase contracted income amid volatile market conditions.
Rupert Robinson, Managing Director at Gresham House, said 2025 was “a highly productive year” as the company executed on multiple fronts. He pointed to a “strong turnaround” in financial performance and noted GRID’s share price rose by “a little over 70%” during 2025.
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Robinson said portfolio revenue rose 30% and portfolio EBITDA increased 33% year-over-year. He also reported NAV per share increased 3.7%, though he noted this was “even allowing for a GBP 0.16 haircut from the forward curves,” a topic later addressed by Assistant Fund Manager James Bustin.
Ben Guest, Managing Director of Gresham House’s Energy Transition Business and lead fund manager of GRID, said 2025 marked “significant growth” for the company, with capacity rising to “over 1 GW.” He reported total portfolio revenue of GBP 60 million in 2025 and EBITDA of GBP 38.8 million, noting EBITDA was achieved “despite having certain assets offline,” which affected margins.
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Bustin emphasized that a key portfolio trend during 2025 was a move toward contracted revenues, intended to improve risk-adjusted returns and support financing. He said contracted revenues increased from 25% in 2024 to 39% in 2025, and management expects that share to rise further as floor contracts become more prominent and as the pipeline develops.
Bustin said the current contracted revenue mix reflected “tolling and the Capacity Market,” and that tolling revenues will begin to taper as contracts roll off. He added that as battery duration increases, the revenue mix is expected to shift further toward trading rather than frequency response, with the assets’ flexibility allowing optimization across different revenue sources.
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Guest said the fund concluded a refinancing and “set the groundwork” for the three-year plan, with contracted revenues helping support an “upsized debt facility” that unlocks capital for augmentations and equity for new projects. He described the refinancing as achieving “a lower interest rate and a longer-dated facility.”
