Prospectus • Dec 14, 2022
Prospectus
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(A Public Limited Liability Company incorporated under the laws of Norway)
This prospectus ("Prospectus") has been prepared by Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA ("Company" or "Cloudberry" and together with its consolidated subsidiaries the "Group") in connection with the admission to listing on Oslo Stock Exchange (the "Listing") of 4,639,148 new shares, each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25 (the "Private Placement Shares") issued in the private placement announced by the Company on 22 September 2022 (the "Private Placement"). The Company's shares (the "Shares") are listed on Oslo Børs, a stock exchange operated by Oslo Børs ASA ("Oslo Stock Exchange").
This Prospectus serves a listing prospectus only. The Prospectus does not constitute an offer, or invitation to purchase, subscribe or sell, any of the securities described herein, and no Shares or other securities are being offered or sold in any jurisdiction pursuant to this Prospectus.
Investing in the Company's Shares involves risks. Prospective investors should read the entire Prospectus and, in particular, consider Section 2 (Risk factors) when considering an investment in the Company.
The date of this Prospectus is 14 December 2022
This Prospectus has been prepared by the Company solely in connection with the Listing of the Private Placement Shares.
This Prospectus has been prepared to comply with the Norwegian Securities Trading Act of 29 June 2007 no. 75, as amended (the "Norwegian Securities Trading Act") and related secondary legislation, including Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 June 2017 on the prospectus to be published when securities are offered to the public or admitted to trading on a regulated market, and as implemented in Norway in accordance with Section 7-1 of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act (the "EU Prospectus Regulation"). This Prospectus has been prepared solely in the English language.
This Prospectus has been approved by the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway (Nw.: Finanstilsynet) (the "NFSA"), as the competent authority under the EU Prospectus Regulation. The NFSA only approves this Prospectus as meeting the standards of completeness, comprehensibility and consistency imposed by the EU Prospectus Regulation, and such approval should not be considered as an endorsement of the issuer or the quality of the securities that are the subject of this Prospectus. Investors should make their own assessment as to the suitability of investing in the securities.
For definitions of certain other terms used throughout this Prospectus, see Section 21 (Definitions and terms).
Carnegie AS, Pareto Securities AS and Jefferies GmbH acted as joint global coordinators and joint bookrunners in relation to the Private Placement (collectively referred to as the "Managers").
The information contained herein is current of the date hereof and is subject to change, completion and amendment without notice. In accordance with Article 23 of the EU Prospectus Regulation, significant new factors, material mistakes or material inaccuracies relating to the information included in this Prospectus, which may affect the assessment of the Shares and which arises or is noted between the time when the Prospectus is approved by the NFSA and the Listing of the Private Placement Shares on the Oslo Stock Exchange, will be mentioned in a supplement to this Prospectus without undue delay. Neither the publication nor distribution of this Prospectus shall under any circumstances imply that there has been no change in the Group's affairs or that the information herein is correct of any date subsequent to the date of this Prospectus.
No person is authorised to give information or to make any representation concerning the Group the Listing other than as contained in this Prospectus. If any such information is given or made, it must not be relied upon as having been authorised by the Company or by any of the affiliates, representatives, or advisors.
No Shares or any other securities are being offered or sold in any jurisdiction pursuant to this Prospectus. The distribution of this Prospectus in certain jurisdictions may be restricted by law. The Prospectus does not constitute an offer of, or an invitation to purchase, subscribe or sell any of the Shares in any jurisdiction, including in any jurisdiction in which such offer, subscription or sale would be unlawful. No one has taken any action that would permit a public offering of the Shares. Accordingly, neither this Prospectus nor any advertisement may be distributed or published in any jurisdiction except under circumstances that will result in compliance with applicable laws and regulations. Persons in possession of the Prospectus are required to inform themselves about and to observe any applicable restrictions. In addition, the Shares are subject to restrictions on transferability and resale and may not be transferred or resold except as permitted under applicable securities laws and regulations. Investors should be aware that they may be required to bear the financial risks of this investment for an indefinite period of time. Any failure to comply with these restrictions may constitute a violation of applicable securities laws.
The securities of the Company have not been, and will not be, registered under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "U.S. Securities Act"), or with any securities regulatory authority of any state or jurisdiction of the United States or under the securities laws or with any securities regulatory authority of any state or other jurisdiction of the United States. Accordingly, the securities of the Company may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration under the U.S. Securities Act. No public offering of the securities will be made in the United States.
This Prospectus shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, Norwegian law. The courts of Norway, with Oslo City Court as legal venue, shall have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute which may arise out of or in connection with this Prospectus.
In making an investment decision, prospective investors must rely on their own examination, analysis of, and enquiry into, the Group and the Shares, including the merits and risks involved. Neither the Company nor any of its affiliates, representatives, or advisors, is making any representation regarding the legality of an investment in the Shares by such purchaser under the laws applicable to such purchaser. Each investor should consult with his or her own advisors as to the legal, tax, business, financial and related aspects of a purchase of the Shares.
All Sections of the Prospectus should be read in context with the information included in Section 4 (General information).
The Company is a public limited liability company incorporated under the laws of Norway. As a result, the rights of the shareholders in the Company (the "Shareholders") will be governed by Norwegian law and the Company's articles of association (the "Articles of Association" or the "Articles"). The rights of shareholders under Norwegian law may differ from the rights of shareholders of companies incorporated in other jurisdictions.
The members of the Company's board of directors (the "Board Members" and the "Board of Directors", respectively) and the members of the management of the Company (the "Management") are not residents of the United States, and none of the Company's assets are located within the U.S. As a result, it may be impossible or difficult for investors in the U.S. to effect service of process on the Company, the Board Members and the Management in the U.S. or to enforce judgments obtained in U.S. courts against the Company or those persons, whether predicated upon civil liability provisions of federal securities laws or other laws of the U.S. (including any State or territory within the U.S.).
The U.S. and Norway do not currently have a treaty providing for reciprocal recognition and enforcement of judgements (other than arbitral awards) in civil and commercial matters. Uncertainty exists as to whether courts in Norway will enforce judgments obtained in other jurisdictions, including the U.S., against the Company or its Board Members or the Management under the securities laws of those jurisdictions or entertain actions in Norway against the Company or its Board Members or the Management under the securities laws of other jurisdictions. In addition, awards of punitive damages in actions brought in the U.S. or elsewhere may not be enforceable in Norway.
Similar restrictions may apply in other jurisdictions.
| SUMMARX 1 |
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | RISK FACTORS | |||
| 2.1 | Market related risks | |||
| 2.2 | Commercial and operational risks | |||
| 2.3 | Specific risks related to the Group's projects | |||
| 2.4 | Financial risks | |||
| 2.5 | Risk related to the Shares | |||
| RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE PROSPECTUS | ||||
| 4 | ||||
| 4.1 The approval of this Prospectus by the Norwegian Financial Supervisory Authority રેર |
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| 4.2 | ||||
| 4.3 | Presentation of financial and other information | |||
| 4.4 | Cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements | |||
| ഗ്രാമത്തിന്റെ ഗ്രാമത്തിന്റെ സമ്മാനിത്രിക്കുന്നു. അവലംബം അവലംബം സംഭവിശേഷം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസം വിശ്വാസ | DIVIDENDS AND DIVIDEND POLICY | |||
| 5.1 | Dividend policy | |||
| 5.2 | ||||
| 5.3 | Manner of dividend payment | |||
| 6 | MARKET OVERVIEW | |||
| 6.1 | Introduction | |||
| 6.2 | The shift toward renewable energy | |||
| 6.3 | Supply and demand for Nordic electricity | |||
| 6.4 | Competitive landscape | |||
| 6.5 | Nordic power prices | |||
| 6.6 | Other sources of revenue from power production | |||
| 6.7 | Regulatory framework | |||
| THE BUSINESS OF THE GROUP | ||||
| 7.1 | Introduction | |||
| 7.2 | Overview of the Group's operations and activities | |||
| 7.3 | Recent M&A Activities | |||
| 7.4 | Cloudberry Production AS, operation and activities | |||
| 7.5 | Cloudberry Develop AS, operations and activities | |||
| /.6 | Captiva Group, operation and activities | |||
| 7.7 | History and important events | |||
| 7.8 | Competitive strengths | |||
| 7.9 | Strategy and objectives | |||
| 7.10 |
| 7.11 | Material agreements 74 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 7.12 | Dependency on contracts, patents, licenses etc. 75 | ||
| 7.13 | Properties 75 | ||
| 7.14 | Insurance 76 | ||
| 7.15 | Legal and arbitration proceedings 76 | ||
| 8 | CAPITALISATION AND INDEBTEDNESS 77 | ||
| 8.1 | Introduction 77 | ||
| 8.2 | Capitalisation 77 | ||
| 8.3 | Net Financial Indebtedness 78 | ||
| 8.4 | Working Capital Statement 79 | ||
| 8.5 | Contingent and indirect indebtedness 79 | ||
| 9 | SELECTED FINANCIAL AND OTHER INFORMATION 81 | ||
| 9.1 | Introduction and basis for preparation 81 | ||
| 9.2 | Summary of accounting policies and principles 81 | ||
| 9.3 | Statement of profit and loss 82 | ||
| 9.4 | Selected statement of financial position 83 | ||
| 9.5 | Selected statement of cash flow 84 | ||
| 9.6 | Selected statement of changes in equity 85 | ||
| 10 | OPERATING AND FINANCIAL REVIEW 86 | ||
| 10.1 | Results by operating business segment and geographic area 86 | ||
| 10.2 | Recent developments and trends 107 | ||
| 10.3 | Liquidity and capital resources 108 | ||
| 10.4 | Financing arrangements and other commitments 111 | ||
| 10.5 | Investments 114 | ||
| 10.6 | Off-balance sheet arrangements 119 | ||
| 10.7 | Related party transactions 120 | ||
| 10.8 | Grants 121 | ||
| 10.9 | Critical accounting policies and estimates 121 | ||
| 10.10 | Significant changes 122 | ||
| 11 | UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION 123 | ||
| 11.1 | Introduction 123 | ||
| 11.2 | General information and purpose of the Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Financial Information 129 |
||
| 11.3 | Basis for the preparation 129 | ||
| 11.4 | Independent practitioner's assurance report on the compilation of pro forma condensed | ||
| financial information included in a prospectus 130 | |||
| 11.5 | Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Financial Information 130 | ||
| 11.6 | Preliminary purchase price allocations 138 |
| 12 - BOARD OF DIRECTORS, MANAGEMENT, EMPLOYEES AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE |
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|---|---|---|---|
| 12.1 | |||
| 12.2 Management | |||
| 12.3 | Remuneration and benefits | ||
| 12.4 | Benefits upon termination | ||
| 12.5 Employees | |||
| 12.6 | Pension and retirement benefits | ||
| 12.7 Corporate governance requirements | |||
| 12.8 - Nomination committee | 12.9 | ||
| 12.10 Compensation committee | |||
| 12.11 | |||
| 12.12 Conflicts of interests, etc. | |||
| 13 | |||
| 13.1 | |||
| 13.2 Ownership structure 13.3 |
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| 13.4 | |||
| 13.5 Shareholder rights 14 CORPORATE INFORMATION |
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| 14.1 Company corporate information | |||
| 14.2 | |||
| 14.3 | |||
| 15 | |||
| 15.1 | |||
| 15.2 Shareholder agreements | |||
| 16 - | SECURITIES TRADING IN NORWAY | ||
| 16.1 | |||
| 16.2 | |||
| 16.3 | Trading and settlement | ||
| 16.4 | |||
| 16.5 | |||
| 16.6 | |||
| 16.7 | |||
| 16.8 | |||
| 16.9 | |||
| 16.10 Mandatory offer requirement |
| 16.11 | Compulsory acquisition 168 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 16.12 | Foreign exchange controls 169 | ||
| 17 | TAXATION 170 | ||
| 17.1 | Norwegian taxation 170 | ||
| 18 | THE COMPLETED PRIVATE PLACEMENT 173 | ||
| 18.1 | Overview 173 | ||
| 18.2 | Reasons for the offer and use of proceeds 173 | ||
| 18.3 | Resolution regarding the Private Placement Shares 173 | ||
| 18.4 | Delivery and listing of the Private Placement Shares 175 | ||
| 18.5 | The rights conferred by the Private Placement Shares 175 | ||
| 18.6 | Dilution 176 | ||
| 18.7 | Interests of natural and legal persons involved in the Private Placement 176 | ||
| 18.8 | Participation of existing shareholders or primary insiders in the Private Placement 176 |
||
| 19 | TRANSFER RESTRICTIONS 177 | ||
| 19.1 | General 177 | ||
| 19.2 | The United States 177 | ||
| 19.3 | European Economic Area 177 | ||
| 19.4 | The United Kingdom 177 | ||
| 20 | ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 179 | ||
| 20.1 | Auditor 179 | ||
| 20.2 | Advisors 179 | ||
| 20.3 | Incorporated by reference 179 | ||
| 20.4 | Documents available 180 | ||
| 21 | DEFINITIONS AND TERMS 181 | ||
Appendix B-2 Independent auditor's assurance report on the compilation of unaudited pro forma condensed financial information
Appendix C Bøen Kraft AS' audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021, 2020, and 2019
Securities Shares; ISIN NO 001 0876642.
To the Company's knowledge, as of the date of this Prospectus, the following persons are directly or indirectly interested (within the meaning of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act) in 5% or more of the Company's issued share capital:
| Shareholder | Number of Shares | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Ferd AS | 33,919,686 | 11.64% |
| Joh Johannson Eiendom AS | 29,512,098 | 10.13% |
| Havfonn AS | 24,761,554 | 8.50% |
| HSBC Trinkaus & Burkhardt AG | 16,935,000 | 5.81% |
| Snefonn AS | 16,203,725 | 5.56% |
| The Northern Trust Comp., London | 15,881,595 | 5.45% |
Key
The Group's management team are set out in the table below.
managing directors
| Name | Current position |
|---|---|
| Anders J. Lenborg | Chief Executive Officer |
| Christian A. Helland | Chief Value Officer |
| Jon Gunnar Solli | Chief Operating Officer |
| Charlotte Bergquist | Chief Development Officer |
| Stig Østebrøt | Chief Technology Officer |
| Ingrid Bjørdal | Chief Compliance & Organisation Officer |
Independent auditors
Ernst & Young AS, with company registration number 976 389 387, and business address Dronning Eufemias gate 6A, 0191 Oslo, Norway, has been the independent auditor of the Company since 17 June 2020. BDO AS, with company business registration number 993 606 650, and business address at Munkedamsveien 45A, 0250 Oslo, Norway, was the Company's auditor from 19 January 2018 to 17 June 2020.
The financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 and 31 December 2020 respectively are prepared in accordance with IFRS. For the periods up to and including the year ended 31 December 2019, the Company prepared its financial statements in accordance with NGAAP.
Accordingly, the Company has prepared financial statements that comply with IFRS, applicable as of 31 December 2021 and 31 December 2020, together with the comparative period data for the year ended 31 December 2019. In preparing the financial statements, the Group's opening statement of financial position was prepared as of 1 January 2019, the Group's date of transition from NGAAP to IFRS.
The Group was established 15 February 2020. Comparable information in previous periods is from the Company only. Consequently, undue reliance should not be placed on the comparability of these line items in the Prospectus.
The tables set out below contain key financial information extracted from the Company's audited Financial Statements for the years ended 31 December 2021, 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019 (2019 IFRS is extracted from 2020 comparable statements) as well as the Company's unaudited interim financial statements for the three and nine-month periods ended on 30 September 2022 and 2021, which have been prepared by the Company in accordance with IAS 34.
| (In NOK 1,000) | 3 months | 9 months | Year ended | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |||
| 1/7-30/09 | 1/7-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | |||
| IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP | |||
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | ||||||
| Total revenue | 54,812 | 6,671 | 142,257 | 19,242 | 40,898 | 3,640 | 279 | 279 | ||
| Operating profit | 64,875 | -5,807 | 92,632 | -30,067 | -41,361 | -33,111 | -2,613 | -2,613 | ||
| Profit/(loss) after tax | 60,400 | -11,077 | 85,014 | -42,992 | -63,038 | -33,865 | -2,609 | -2,609 |
| (In NOK 1,000) | Year ended | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| 30.sep | 31.dec | 31.dec | 31.dec | 31.dec | |
| IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP | |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | ||||
| Total assets | 4,799,485 | 3,118,391 | 1,396,861 | 5,304 | 5,304 |
| Total equity | 3,752,040 | 2,636,199 | 1,054,711 | 4,829 | 4,829 |
| Total liabilities | 1,047,445 | 482,192 | 342,151 | 475 | 475 |
| (In NOK 1,000) | Year ended | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| 1/7-30/09 | 1/7-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | |
| IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP | |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | ||||
| Cash flows from operating activities | 115,375 - | 60,018 | 152,839 - | 74,257 - | 70,722 - | 4,314 - | 2,906 - | 2,906 |
| Cash flows from investing activities | - 47,732 - |
349,600 - | 197,336 - | 674,800 - | 828,916 - | 354,184 | - | - |
| Cash flows from financing activities | 755,790 | 22,187 | 783,996 | 832,975 | 1,411,316 | 958,355 | 8,000 | 8,000 |
In 2021 and 2022, the Group has acquired 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Skåråna Kraft AS, Usma Kraft AS, Åmotsfoss Kraft AS, Tinnkraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS, RE Energi AS and Bøen Kraft AS. Additionally, the Group acquired 60% of the shares in Captiva Digital Services AS, increased its shareholding in Odal Vind AS from 15% to 33.4%, increased the ownership in Enestor AS from 25.01% to 51% and acquired the Kafjärden project. Furthermore, the Group agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS in 2022. Finally, the Group has in 2022 sold 100% of the shares in Jåstadkraft AS and 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS. These transactions represent a significant gross change for the Group. Consequently, Cloudberry has in this Prospectus included unaudited pro forma condensed financial information to illustrate how the Group's acquisition of these entities could have affected the Company's consolidated income statement for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 as if each of these transactions had taken place on 1 January 2021.
The effect of all acquisitions, with the exception of the acquisition of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS which is expected to be completed in 2024, are reflected as at 30 September 2022 in the Interim Financial Statements.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information included in Section 11 and Appendix B-1 to this Prospectus is presented for illustrative purposes only and does not purport to represent what the Company's actual financial statements would have been if each of the transactions occurred on the relevant dates. The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information does not include all of the information required for financial statement prepared in accordance with IFRS and the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information should be read in conjunction with the Company's consolidated financial statements for the financial years ended 31 December 2021, 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019.
Selected unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated statement of profit and loss for 2021
| Unaudited | Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group (1.1-31.12) |
Selselva Kraft AS (1.1-12.1) |
Skåråna Kraft AS (1.1-23.2) |
Nessakraft AS |
Bjørgelva Kraft AS |
Odal Vind AS |
Usma Kraft AS |
Åmotsfoss Kraft AS |
Captiva Group A |
Tinnkraft AS (1.1-29.6) (1.1-29.6) (1.1-4.7) (1.1-19.8) (1.1-30.11) (1.1-31.12) (1.1-31.12) (15.6-31.12) (1.5-31.12) (1.1-31.12) (1.1-31.12) |
Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS |
Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB |
Kafjärden project |
Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS |
RE Energi AS (1.1- 31.12) |
Bøen Kraft AS (1.1-31.12) |
Entities acq. and sold by Captiva, and Stenkalles Holding AS B |
Adjustments NGAAP/IFRS |
Pro forma adjustments/ eliminations |
Pro Forma Condensed Financial Information |
|
| (NOK 1000) | (IFRS) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | |||||||||||
| Total revenue | 40,898 | 121 | 0 3,541 |
351 | 5,470 | 1,871 | 21,691 | 3,647 | 0 0 |
0 | 0 | 12 | 10,528 | 17,037 | -2,867 | -2,451 | 99,849 | |||
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -41,360 | 64 | -1 | 1,930 | -265 | -435 | 804 | -197 | -16,221 | 1,951 | 0 -12 |
0 | -87 | -2,978 | 2,655 | -161 | 755 | -21,617 | -75,176 | |
| Profit/(loss) after tax | -63,038 | 64 | -1 | 840 | -452 | -435 | -644 | -238 | -12,217 | 1,261 | 0 -12 |
0 | -87 | -2,978 | 1,192 | -2,022 | -5,977 | -16,711 | -101,454 |
nominal value
| Material risk factors |
1. | In October 2022, the Norwegian authorities proposed a new tax regime for Norwegian land-based wind farms and hydropower plants. If resolved, the new tax rules will have a material adverse effect on the asset value of certain of the Group's assets and reduce the expected cash flows from certain of the Group's power |
|---|---|---|
| 2. | producing assets. The major part of the Company's revenue comes from sale of electricity which is exposed to fluctuations in the market. Further, the revenues from the Group's power plants are dependent on metrological conditions, which can vary materially from season to season and from year to year. |
|
| 3. | Several of the Group's projects under development are subject to various governmental concessions and approvals and may not be realized. |
|
| 4. | The Group has over the last two years made a number of acquisitions and expects to continue to have an active M&A strategy. The Group may not be able to identify potential acquisitions targets and successfully integrate the acquired businesses. |
|
| 5. | The Group may not be able to complete the preparatory steps related to the Stenkalles Vind project, which is under development, on favourable terms, which ultimately may lead to that the project will not be realized. |
|
| 6. | To operate its business the Group relies on subcontractors for construction, operation, maintenance etc. Failure by the subcontractors may lead to additional costs for the Group. |
|
| 7. | In order to continue to grow its business the Group is dependent on external financing on a timely basis and on attractive terms. In case the Group needs to raise further equity, this may have a dilutive effect on the existing shareholders. |
|
| KEY INFORMATION ABOUT THE SECURITIES | ||
| What are the main features of the securities? | ||
| Type, class and ISIN |
All of the Shares are shares in the Company and have been created under the Public Companies Act. The Shares are registered in book-entry form with the VPS and have ISIN NO 001 0876642. |
|
| Currency, | The Shares are traded in NOK on the Oslo Stock Exchange. As of the date of this Prospectus, |
Shares, each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25.
the issued share capital of the Company is NOK 72,824,976.25, comprising 291,299,905
| and number of securities |
|
|---|---|
| Rights attached to the securities |
The Company has one class of shares in issue, and in accordance with the Public Companies Act, all shares in that class provide equal rights in the Company, including the rights to dividends. Each Share carries one vote. |
| Transfer restrictions |
The Shares are freely transferrable. |
| Dividend and dividend policy |
The amount, timing and frequency of future distributions will be at the sole discretion of the Board and will be declared based upon various factors, including but not limited to, legal restrictions, return on capital of available organic and acquisition investment opportunities, the Group's financial condition and operating cash flows, undertakings to creditors and loan covenants. As of the date of this Prospectus the Company has not paid any dividends. The Company's dividend policy is that the Company does not expect to pay any dividend in the short to medium term as the Company intends to use its profit for both organic and acquisitions related growth initiatives. The Company's long-term objective is to pay Shareholders consistent and growing cash dividends. Over time, the intention is to pay its Shareholders dividends representing 30 – 50% of free cash distributed from the producing power plant companies. However, there can be no assurance that in any given year a dividend will be proposed or declared, or if proposed or declared, that the dividend will be as contemplated by the policy. |
The Company's Shares are trading on Oslo Stock Exchange. The Company has not applied for admission to trading of the Shares on any other stock exchange, regulated market or multilateral trading facility.
| Material risk | 1. | Future issuances of shares in the Company or other securities, including by use of |
|---|---|---|
| factors | board authorizations, may dilute the holdings of the Shareholders and could materially | |
| affect the trading price of the Company's Shares. | ||
| 2. | Shareholders holding shares registered on nominee accounts will not be able to | |
| exercise their voting rights unless their ownership is re-registered in their names in the | ||
| VPS prior to any General Meeting. | ||
| 3. | The Group has a limited operating history, which makes it difficult for prospective | |
| investors to evaluate and forecast the Group's future results of operations. | ||
| 4. | Transfer of the Shares is subject to restrictions under the securities laws of the United | |
| States and other jurisdictions as none of the Shares have been registered under the US | ||
| Securities Act or any US state securities law or any other jurisdiction outside of | ||
| Norway. | ||
The Prospectus is a listing prospectus for securities already issued by the Company, and consequently does not constitute an offer to buy or subscribe for any securities.
The Company's total number of Shares was increased by 51,612,903 new Shares in relation to the Private Placement. Therefore, the combined dilutive effect for shareholders not participating in the Private Overview of dilutive effect:
| Prior to Private | After Private | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placement | Placement | |||
| Shares outstanding | 239,663,707 | 291,276,610 | ||
| Dilutive effect | - | 17.7% |
The net asset value per existing Share as at 31 December 2021 was approximately NOK 11.21 per Share (equals the booked equity per share). The subscription price in the Private Placement was NOK 15.50 per Share.
Total expenses of the issue/offer No issue of Shares is being conducted as part of the Listing.
The Prospectus is being produced to allow all Shares issued in relation to the Private Placement to be admitted to trading on Oslo Stock Exchange.
Investing in the Shares involves a high degree of risk. An investor should consider carefully the risks and uncertainties described below, together with all of the other information in this Prospectus before deciding whether to invest in the Shares. The risks and uncertainties described in this Section 2 (Risk factors) are the material known risks and uncertainties faced by the Group as of the date hereof that the Company believes are the material risks relevant to an investment in the Shares.
If any of the risks were to materialise, individually or together with other circumstances, it could have a material and adverse effect on the Group and/or its business, financial condition, results of operations, cash flow and/or prospects, which may cause a decline in the value of the Shares that could result in a loss of all or part of any investment in the Shares.
The risks and uncertainties described below are not the only risks the Group may face. Additional risks and uncertainties that the Company currently believes are immaterial, or that are currently not known to the Company, may also have a material adverse effect on its business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flow.
The order in which the risks are presented below is not intended to provide an indication of the likelihood of their occurrence nor of their severity or significance.
The risk factors described in this Section 2 are sorted into five categories:
The Company has sought to place each individual risk factor in the most appropriate category based on the nature of the risk it represents. The list of risk factors should not be perceived as a ranking of importance, and it is not exhaustive. The risks mentioned herein could materialise individually or cumulatively.
The information in this Section 2 is as of the date of this Prospectus.
The Group is engaged in the production and sale of renewable electrical power. The power industry is highly regulated, and regulations may change over time. If the governments or international community were to withdraw, reduce or change support for the use of energy from renewable sources, including generation of electricity wind farms and hydropower plants, for whatever reason, this may have a material adverse effect on the support of national or international authorities in respect of the promotion of the use of energy from such renewable sources. This may reduce the demand for the power produced by the Group's wind and hydro power assets compared to power produced by other sources. Further, governmental promotion for increased use of other energy sources than wind or hydro power may reduce the value of the Group's assets.
A number of broader regulatory changes to the electricity market, such as changes to integration of transmission allocation, changes to energy trading, potential caps on energy prices and transmission charging, are being implemented or evaluated across Europe. These changes may have an impact on the electricity prices and the costs of selling electrical power, which may reduce the Group's profitability.
The Group also has several projects under development, which require support from local and/or national authorities. Changes in the political landscape may lead to that certain of the Group's projects under development must be abandoned due to lack of political support or regulatory changes which result in that the projects no longer are expected to meet the Group's minimum profitability requirements.
In addition, the Group's business may be exposed to new risks as a result of broadened or increased sustainability requirements. As an example, when the Taxonomy Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2020/852) is implemented into Norwegian law, the Company will be obliged to publicly disclose its alignment with such framework. Should the Group not meet the expected level of alignment of the investors this could adversely impact the public perception of the Group. Further, should the Group's existing or new project no longer be labelled as green, the capital costs of such projects may increase.
Further, the Group is subject to political risk related to the taxation of sale of electrical power, as further described in Section 2.4.2 (Risks related to changes in taxation and public fees) below.
The profitability of the Group's producing power plants depends on the volume and prices of the electricity produced. The majority of the Group's sale will be exposed to price risk related to electricity sold at spot rates. The Group's production volume is sold in the spot market and consequently exposed to fluctuations in the market prices for electricity, unless new fixed terms agreements are entered into.
Electricity prices are inter alia dependent on substitute or adjacent commodity prices such as e.g. oil, gas and coal prices, but also dependent on metrological conditions, CO2 pricing and other supply and demand factors going into the clearing of the market price of electricity.
Further, massive climate goal subsidy schemes may put downward pressure on revenues (i.e. electricity prices) of non-subsidised existing assets. Cloudberry considers subsidised offshore wind power as the most likely threat.
As sale of electricity constitutes a material share of the Group's revenues, the price risks related to electricity prices could result in reduced revenue and profitability for the Group and also reduce the fair market value of the Group's assets.
Unexpected success in other areas of renewable energy may reduce the pressure on the authorities to allow for development of wind parks and hydropower plants. This may affect the Group's future investment opportunities and reduce the second-hand value of its power plants. The same may also hold true for non-renewable or currently unknown energy technologies. The uncertainties associated with the development of the renewable sector, as well as the emergence of other technologies, are factors which could adversely affect the Group's business and growth opportunities.
Several of the Group's projects are under development and may not be realised. The right to build and operate a renewable project is subject to public concessions and permits in addition to private ownership rights to land and waterfalls. This comprises all stages of a renewable project, from early development stage to construction, production, transmission and sale of power. The necessary concessions and permits will depend on size and type of project, classification, development stage of the projects and jurisdiction. In addition to the energy/production related concessions and permits other permits, licenses and regulatory requirements are also applicable, such as licenses related to safety, pollution, noise, etc.
The Group is required to obtain various governmental concessions and approvals for each of its projects, including inter alia construction concessions, grid concessions and sales concessions. As of the date hereof, all permits and licenses have been obtained for the assets that are in production and all relevant concessions and permits for the projects under construction. Completion permissions, concession for sale of power, etc. are not yet in place due to the stage of the construction work.
Following public and political hearings throughout 2019/2020, the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate ("NVE") are likely to be working from a revised and more conservative framework when considering permits for new power production projects, which may include new criteria for award, local production fee/tax requirements and/or other new regulatory initiatives. Currently, a temporary pause in the award of new on-shore wind permits has been effected, awaiting the finalisation and approval of an updated and more stringent award framework for new permits.
For greenfield projects that are not under construction and/or in operation, the Group will need to obtain necessary concessions, permits and contracts with landowners.
Whether the projects will be profitable depends on several factors outside the Group's control. Before construction of any projects commence, the Group will make an assessment of whether it is expected that the project will be profitable. If a project does not move to the construction phase, the development costs will not be recoverable. For several projects, the granted concessions include deadlines for initiation of the construction phase. If the deadlines are not met, the concessions will lapse. In such case, the Group must write down the investment made in the relevant project.
The Group was created in 2020 through a business combination of three separate businesses. During 2020, 2021 and 2022 the Group has had an active mergers and acquisition strategy. Making acquisitions will continue to be an important part of the Group's strategy to support growth and profitability.
Successful growth through acquisitions is dependent upon the Group's ability to identify suitable acquisition targets, conduct appropriate due diligence, negotiate transactions on favourable terms, obtain required licenses and authorisations and ultimately complete such acquisitions and integrate acquired entities into the Group. If the Group makes acquisitions, it may be unable to generate expected margins or cash flows, or realise the anticipated benefits of such acquisitions, including growth or expected synergies. The Group's assessment of and assumptions regarding acquisition targets could prove to be incorrect, and actual developments may differ significantly from expectations. The Group may not be able to integrate acquisitions successfully and such integration may require greater investment than anticipated, and the Group could incur or assume unknown or unanticipated liabilities or contingencies with respect to customers, employees, government authorities or other parties. The process of integrating acquisitions may also be disruptive to the Group's operations, as a result of, among other things unforeseen legal, regulatory, contractual and other issues and difficulties in realising operating synergies, which could cause the Group's results of operations to decline. Moreover, any acquisition may divert management's attention from day-to-day business and may result in the incurrence of additional debt. Should any of the above occur in connection with an acquisition, there could be a material adverse effect on the Group's profitability, business and prospects.
Kraftanmelding offers forecasting, reporting, market access and settlement of power production for its customers. On the day-ahead market, contractual orders for the delivery of electricity the following day is made between buyers and sellers through the Nord Pool day-ahead trading system. When these power contracts are physically delivered, i.e. when electricity is provided to the buyer, in accordance with the purchase orders there is a risk of a mismatch occurring in the trade between the registered volume of electricity available and the actual volume of electricity in the trading hour. Such mismatch is referred to as an imbalance. For approximately 85% of the total volume Kraftanmelding sells on behalf of its customers, the customers bear the risk of the imbalance result. For the remaining 15% of the volume, Kraftanmelding assumes the risk of the balance settlement on behalf of the customer(s). If the hourly volumes are over or underestimated, Kraftanmelding will consequently bear the economic risk. This can lead to gain or losses depending on the actual market price of power versus the agreed settlement price.
The Group has entered into two power purchase agreements, covering the sale of a fixed amount of power to be produced by Bøen and Røyrmyra. Should the power production of these plants be lower than the volume sold, the Group will be forced to purchase the deficit energy to be delivered in the spot market. To the extent the spot price is higher than the fixed price, the Group will incur a loss on the power purchase agreements, which depending on the spot price, may be significant. The power purchase agreements cover approximately 12% of the Group's current estimated aggregate annual production in the relevant price area.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has resulted in severe implications on inter alia global trade, global markets, energy prices and commodity prices. It is highly uncertain how the conflict will continue to have an impact on the global economy.
For Cloudberry's business, the mid- and long-term consequences are still uncertain. Higher commodity and transportation costs may result in that one or more of the Group's projects under development will not be sufficiently profitable due to increased construction costs. Should the Group choose abandon projects under development, the investments made related to such projects may have to be written off.
Further, Cloudberry has several projects under construction. As certain of the construction contracts are not fixed-price contracts, Cloudberry bears the risk of increased prices. Consequently, the construction costs will be affected by the high volatility in commodity prices and transportation costs. Higher commodity prices and logistic challenges will lead to higher capex costs and potentially lower profitability for Cloudberry's projects going forward.
The estimated capital expenditures, financing costs and costs for the Group's development and construction projects are based on the Group's best assessment and are subject to final negotiations and agreements with suppliers, financial institutions and contractors. Before the Group spends time and resources on negotiations with relevant stakeholders, the Group makes an assessment of whether or not they expect a project to be profitable. However, should the actual capital expenditures, financing costs and costs for such projects deviate from the Group's best estimates, projects which were expected to be profitable may turn out to be non-profitable. If the actual capital expenditures, financing costs and other costs are higher than estimated, projects may be abandoned, which may force the Group to write off parts of or the entire investments made in such projects. Further, should the capital expenditure's increase above the Group's best assessment, the relevant projects may require additional financing to be fully financed.
Cloudberry's power producing assets are located and built based on comprehensive historical metrological assessments in order to optimise their power production capability. However, metrological conditions (rain and wind) at particular sites at which the Group's power plants are located can vary materially from season to season and from year to year and may also change over time. If a site proves to have lower resources than anticipated in the Group's business model or suffers a sustained decline in metrological conditions, such power plants are likely to generate lower electricity volumes and lower revenue than anticipated. This will reduce the Group's revenue and may also result in that the Group must write down the value of the relevant assets.
There may be errors in the assumptions or methodology used in the financial models used by the Group in relation to its decisions to acquire or develop renewable energy assets, whether as part of the Group's current portfolio or subsequent acquisitions or investments. This may result in the returns generated by such projects being materially lower than expected. Although the Group has more than 10 years of experience with development of renewable energy assets, the Group has only been engaged in acquisition of turn-key projects or assets under production for a few years. This is relatively short time compared to many of its more established competitors. The financial models of the Group are constantly being developed and refined based on the experience gained by the Group. Further, given the lean organisation of the Group, there are only a few persons who review and provide input to the financial models used in relation to business decisions. These factors increase the risk of errors in the assumption or methodology used in the financial models used by the Group compared to other more established players in the market. Further, the Group will develop, own, operate and make investments in assets and projects which are illiquid. The realisation of such assets may take time and there can be no assurances that the Group will be able to sell its assets or realise its projects as planned. This could have a material adverse effect on the Group's business, operating results, financing condition and prospects.
Investments in power generation and energy-related infrastructure involve technical and operational risks. The Group will seek to invest in power plants of expected good technical standard to reduce the technical risk of the investment. The Group will prioritise technical solutions that are well-proven and delivered by reputable suppliers, so that any repairs can be made within reasonable timeframes and at reasonable cost, and that it is possible with attractive insurance terms. Despite the aim of choosing sound solutions, technical problems may occur meaning possible stops in production or costly reinvestments that reduce the Group's revenue, profitability and/or financial position.
Work in the energy sector is dangerous, particularly for personnel which are engaged in construction, operation, maintenance and repair of the Group's new and existing power plants, and work-related accidents occur from time to time. The Group's wind turbines may also be subject to ice throw indictments, which may cause damage to persons in close proximity to the turbines. Accidents and incidents may further result in operational stoppages. Accidents and unwanted incidents may lead to financial damages and reputational damages to the Group and could have adverse effects on the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and prospects.
Increases in charges relating to the connection to and use of the electricity transmission and distribution networks and relating to balancing of electricity supply and demand, and/or restrictions on the capacity in such networks available for use by the Group's power plants, may result in higher operating costs, lower revenues and fewer growth opportunities for the Group.
Subsequent decisions by the Group to develop renewable energy assets are subject to reaching an agreement with the landowners of the contemplated properties for development. Consequently, the ability to develop further power plants is subject to negotiations with the landowners and thus the Group's revenues and costs are subject to the inherent risk thereof.
Renewable projects are often large and complex, and their construction, operation and maintenance will normally require goods and services to be provided from several parties. During all phases, issues may occur as a result of, inter alia, delays in delivery, defect parts and materials or accidents. Cloudberry has traditionally favoured multi-contract arrangements rather than turnkey contracts for its projects. Multi-contract arrangements involved a higher risk for the project owner, who normally assumes the risk for the interface between the different suppliers to the project. This contract strategy increases the risk of litigation and that members of the Group becoming subject to legal disputes. Whether or not the member of the Group ultimately prevails, legal disputes are costly and can divert management's attention from the Group's business. In addition, the relevant member of the Group may decide to settle a legal dispute, which could cause the Group to incur significant costs. An unfavourable outcome of any legal dispute could inter alia imply that the relevant member of the Group becomes liable for damages, payments or will not be able to realise some of its projects. A settlement or an unfavourable outcome in a legal dispute could have adverse effects on the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and prospects.
Historically, the Group has not had in-house expertise required to construct, operate and maintain its power plants. Although the Group has acquired some in-house capacity as part of the acquisition of the Captiva Group, the Group will still continue to use external suppliers for construction, operation and maintenance of its power plants.
The contracts governing the operation and maintenance of wind farms are generally negotiated and entered into with turbine suppliers at the same time as the construction contracts for such wind farms. Operation and maintenance contracts typically have a term from 5 to 15 years for the Group's wind assets.
Hydro power plants do not tend to have long term operation and maintenance contracts with the turbine suppliers or the suppliers of principal components but tend to have shorter term contracts with local utility partners.
Upon expiry of an operation and maintenance contract or their earlier termination (in the event of, for example, contractor insolvency or default), there is no assurance that replacement or renewal contracts can be negotiated on similar terms and less favourable terms could result in increased operation and maintenance costs and reduced profitability for the Group. Where the Group will be required to appoint a replacement contractor, there is a further risk that finding a suitable contractor may take time, which could potentially lead to downtime for the relevant power producing asset.
The Group is further exposed to cost overruns on maintenance and/or reconstruction projects and/or construction projects, for example as a result of changes in plans or additional work that becomes necessary over and above what was included in the initial agreement with the subcontractor. In addition, the Group's costs may also increase as a result of failure by its subcontractors which is not recoverable from such subcontractor, for example in case of contractor insolvency.
Cloudberry's projects under development and construction are dependent on supplies of machinery and equipment from third party suppliers. Further, Cloudberry's assets in operation require supply of parts for repair and maintenance. In order for the supply chain to work efficiently, it is a precondition that open and integrated markets function efficiently. As the global market is put under pressure, inter alia as a result of increased global instability, ongoing climate changes and shortage of raw materials, the risk of supply chain disruptions are increasing. A disruption in the supply chain may cause that Cloudberry does not receive required parts or materials in time.
Due to the fact that Cloudberry is a relatively small player in the market, there is a risk that supply chain disruptions will impact Cloudberry disproportionately, as smaller players may receive less attention and be lower prioritised compared to its larger competitors by the suppliers. This increases the risk of delays in project under development and construction and increase the risk of operational down time of the Group's power producing assets. Should these risks materialise, it may have adverse effects on the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and prospects.
Cloudberry has experienced some adverse impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic, such as travel and entry restrictions, absence due to lockdowns and mandatory quarantine. More specifically, this has caused increased case handling time for governmental approvals of Cloudberry's projects or disruptions in Cloudberry's supply chain as a result of delayed deliveries from suppliers.
While most Covid-19 related public health measures has been lifted at the date of this Prospectus in Cloudberry's main markets, new variants of the virus may emerge and the future developments of the Covid-19 pandemic and the public-health measures adopted as reactions to such developments, may result in delays and/or increased costs in Cloudberry's construction and development projects as a result of the pandemic. Increased costs may result in that development projects become unprofitable and cannot be realised. Any such consequences may also affect the Group's ability to raise capital or secure financing. Delays in the completion of the Group's projects may also result in that the Group's portfolio companies defaults on its obligations towards its customers. Such breaches may result in claims for remedies of breach and rights to termination of the contracts and have a material adverse effect on the Group.
Potential losses as a result of increased costs or delays may not be recoverable from the suppliers who may, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, trigger force majeure provisions under contracts.
The Stenkalles Vind project, currently owned through a 50/50 joint venture with Hafslund Vekst AS, is a shallow water wind project in Lake Vänern under development. The current development plan includes 16 turbines with an estimated installed effect of 100 MW and an annual power production around 350 GWh. The project has been granted a project permit from the Swedish Land and Environmental Court (Sw: Mark- och miljödomstolen) and a construction license from the Swedish Mark-och Miljödomstolen. The project is located in fresh- and shallow-water and construction deadline is Q3 2024. No final investment decision has been made with regard to the project. Before an investment decision will be made, the Group must inter alia negotiate and conclude agreements related to construction, maintenance and operation of the plant and obtain financing for the project. There can be no guarantee that the Group will be able to complete these preparatory steps, or that if completed, the required agreements are entered into on favourable terms or in a timely manner to meet the deadlines set forth in the project timeline. Consequently, it cannot be guaranteed that the project will be realised.
On 28 January 2022, the Company entered into an agreement to acquire the Swedish late-stage development wind project Kafjärden outside Stockholm. The project is still under development. The project does already have parts of the infrastructure in place and there are currently on-going dialogues with the local authorities with respect to the possibility of newer and more efficient turbines. It is uncertain if and when the project will be realised. If the project is not realised the Company may have to write off the investments made in the project and pay the expected cost of the retirement.
Cloudberry's budgets and business plan is based on an assumption that the investment in Odal Vind AS will generate a positive cash flow. The expected cash flows from Odal Vind AS will be significantly reduced should the tax proposal described in Section 2.4.2 (Risks related to changes in taxation and public fees) be resolved. Further, as a minority shareholder in Odal Vind AS, the Group is not in a position to control the business and operations of Odal Vind AS or Odal Vind AS' payment of dividends to its shareholders. It is therefore a risk that the Group's investment in Odal Vind AS will not generate the expected returns or cash flows.
Hån wind farm is a 21 MW wind project located in Sweden. Due to limited grid capacity in the area the projected wind farm is located, the power produced must be exported and sold into Norway. The Group has been granted a concession to build and operate a 22 kV cable between Norway and Sweden and has also been granted a power export license from the Swedish authorities. At the date of this Prospectus, all turbines have been erected and initial full-scale testing of grid connection and turbines have initiated. The park is however still undergoing full-scale testing and there are still technical risks related to the park's performance under full scale operation. Until the park is fully operational, and testing has been completed, the Group's revenue from the park will be limited and there is a risk that delays in the completion may occur. If the park's performance is lower than expected when fully operational, the Group's revenue may be lower than expected and the fair market value of the park may be lower than estimated when the investment decision was made. In such case, the Group may have to write down the value of the investment.
Duvhällen wind farms is an in-house project where the Group has been granted a construction permit of 60 MW/165 GWh. However, due to limited power grid capacity, the project has only been granted a power grid capacity permit of 30 MW/82 GWh. The grid owner, Vattenfall, has completed an environmental impact assessment and filed for an increased power grid capacity permit with the relevant authorities to match the construction permit. A final investment decision for the project will not be made until an increased power grid capacity permit has been granted. If such permit is not granted, the project may not be realised and the Group may have to write off the investments made in the project.
The Group owns 34% of the shares in Forte Energy Norway AS. As a minority shareholder in Forte Energy Norway AS, the Group will not be in position to control the business and operations of Forte Energy Norway AS or Forte Energy Norway AS' payment of dividends to its shareholders. It is therefore a risk that the Group's investment in Forte Energy Norway AS will not generate the expected returns or cash flows. In case Forte Energy Norway AS requires additional funding, the Group's ownership in Forte Energy Norway AS could be reduced, e.g. due to dilution as a result of share capital increases in Forte Energy Norway AS if the Group does not subscribe for its pro rata share or at all. If the Group's ownership in Forte Energy Norway AS is reduced to below 10% the Group's influence as a shareholder in Forte Energy Norway AS will be significantly limited. The shares in Forte Energy Norway AS are also subject to certain share transfer restrictions. If the Group should wish to sell all or parts of its shares in Forte Energy Norway AS, there is a risk that the share price could be negatively impacted by such transfer restrictions or that the Group will not be able to complete any such sale at all.
Inflation may have an adverse impact on Group's projects under development. The Group's development projects are capital intensive and increasing commodity prices will result in higher capital expenditures to develop and construct the projects (i.e. due to higher construction costs and turbine costs). High inflation may carve out the value of the expected cash flows from the Group's development projects relative to the up-front investments. Further, high inflation is expected to lead to higher short and longterm interest rates, affecting the financial costs for the Group's development projects. These factors and uncertainties may result in lower expected profitability of projects under development and ultimately that projects under development are postponed or abandoned. For projects where financing has been secured, high inflation may increase the financing needs which may not be available, or which may result in dilution for the existing shareholders.
Norwegian wind farms have historically only been subject to ordinary taxation, including property tax where applicable. With effect from 1 July 2022, the Norwegian government implemented a production fee on power from wind farms at NOK 0.01/kWh (approx. 1 EUR/MWh). In October 2022 it was proposed that the production fee is increased to NOK 0.02/kWh (approx. 2 EUR/MWh). With respect to land-based wind farms (both existing and new) which are subject to license requirement and hydropower plants with an installed effect of minimum 1 MW, the Norwegian government has proposed to introduce a high price contribution tax on energy sold at a price above NOK 0.70/kWh at a rate of 23%, with effect from 1 January 2023. The high price contribution tax is not expected to be deductible in the calculation of corporate income tax or resource rent tax. Further, the Norwegian government has informed that they plan to introduce a resource rent tax and natural resource tax for land-based wind farms (both existing and new) which are subject to license requirement, with effect from 1 January 2023. The Norwegian government's plan is to publish a consultation paper during the autumn of 2022, and for the Parliament to resolve legislation relating to the new taxation during spring 2023. When the new taxes were announced, the market price of Cloudberry's shares immediately dropped by NOK 2.6 per share. The proposal has not yet been resolved by the Norwegian government. Should the proposal be implemented as proposed, it will have an adverse negative change on the cash flows from Odal Vind and the Group may be required to provide Odal Vind with additional equity which will reduce the funds available for new projects. Further, if the tax rates are increased or other elements of the proposal are amended compared to the current proposal, this may have a material adverse effect on the asset values of Cloudberry and the market price of Cloudberry's shares. The Company also expects that the new tax proposal will make it significantly more difficult for the Company to obtain financing for new projects, both because the tax proposal has a negative impact on the cash flows from such projects and because the new tax proposal has introduced significant uncertainty among investors with regard to the Norwegian taxation of renewable energy in general, which is expected to reduce the appetite for investment in renewable projects.
The Group has two credit facilities in Sparebank 1 SR Bank ASA, amounting to NOK 1,400 million, which may be increased with an additional NOK 500 million. The credit facilities are secured with inter alia a first priority pledge in 100% of the shares in Cloudberry Production AS and 100% of the shares of Cloudberry Develop AS and a first priority pledge in machinery and equipment, accounts receivables and inventory in Cloudberry Production AS.
As of the date of this Prospectus, the Group has a positive consolidated net financial indebtedness. However, as the Group draws on the credit facilities, the level of debt will increase. The Group's level of debt could have material consequences for the Group, including but not limited to (i) hindering the Group's ability to obtain additional financing or financing on favourable terms, (ii) increasing the Group's costs of borrowing as it becomes more leveraged and (iii) require the Group to use a substantial portion of its cash from operations to make principal and interest payments on its debt, reducing the funds that would otherwise be available for operations, future business opportunities and dividends to its shareholders.
The Group's ability to service its debt will depend upon, amongst other things, its future financial and operating performance, which will be affected by prevailing economic conditions as well as financial, business, regulatory and other factors, some of which are beyond its control.
If the Group's operating income is not sufficient to service its current or future indebtedness, or if the Group is unable to comply with the covenants in its financial arrangements the Group will be forced to take action such as reducing or delaying its business activities, acquisitions, investments or capital expenditures, selling assets, restructuring or refinancing its debt or seeking additional equity capital, any of which could adversely impact the Group's results of operations, cash flow and financial condition. In addition, there can be no assurance that the Group will be able to affect any of these remedies on satisfactory terms, or at all. In such case the lender may force the sale of the pledged assets.
Further expansion of the Group's business will require external financing. If the Group is not able to obtain required financing on a timely basis and on attractive terms this could result in lost business opportunities, shortened lifetime of current assets and/or that the Group is forced to realise its interest in certain projects.
The Group presents its financial statements in NOK. However, Norwegian power companies sell the power through Nord Pool where EUR is the official trading currency. Electricity Certificates are traded in SEK. Further, the Group's investment in Odal Vind AS is exposed to EUR in its entirety. Consequently, the Group is exposed to currency risk. Any fluctuations in exchange rates between NOK, SEK and EUR could materially and adversely affect the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and/or prospects.
Additionally, the Group is also exposed to currency risk by having employees and operations in Sweden. Any fluctuations in exchange rates between NOK and SEK could materially and adversely affect the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and/or prospects. The Group may want to do business in other countries in the future, exposing the Group to additional currency risk. Should it choose to do so, any fluctuations in exchange rates between NOK and the relevant foreign currency could materially and adversely affect the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and/or prospects.
The Company expects that it will need to raise additional equity funding to, among other things, fund its various projects, acquisitions and for other purposes. Such additional funding may not be available on favourable terms and/or on a timely basis, or at all. Failure to obtain this necessary capital when needed may force the Company to significantly curtail, delay, or discontinue some or all of its projects, acquisition opportunities and other development efforts. Moreover, the terms of any financing may adversely affect the holdings or the rights of the Company's shareholders.
The Company's general meeting ("General Meeting") has resolved an equity incentive scheme which may cover up to 5% of the at any time outstanding shares in the Company. Currently, 10,700,000 warrants have been authorised or issued under the incentive scheme, with a strike price between NOK 11.10 and NOK 17.40 per share. Each warrant entitles the holder to subscribe for one ordinary share in the Company. If the participants of the equity incentive program exercise their rights under the incentive scheme, this will have a dilutive effect on the existing Shareholders.
Further, the Company seeks to have a board authorisation in place at all times, which will allow the Board to resolve to issue new shares on short notice to meet its obligations.
Depending on the structure of any future fund raising, existing Shareholders may not be able to purchase or subscribe for additional equity securities. If the Company raises additional funds by issuing additional shares or other equity securities, the relative holdings and voting interests and the financial interests of the Shareholders may be diluted.
As of 7 December 2022, approximately 31.17% of the Company's Shares are registered on nominee accounts, which constitutes a significant number of the Shares. Beneficial owners of the Shares that are registered in a nominee account or otherwise through a nominee arrangement (such as brokers, dealers or other third parties) may not be able to vote for such shares unless their ownership is re-registered in their names in the VPS prior to any General Meeting. The Company cannot guarantee that beneficial owners of the Shares will receive the notice of any General Meeting in time to instruct their nominees to either effect a re-registration of the beneficial interests registered in the VPS or otherwise instruct the VPS Registrar to vote their Shares in the manner desired by such beneficial owners.
None of the Shares have been registered under the US Securities Act or any US state securities laws or any other jurisdiction outside of Norway and are not expected to be registered in the future. As such, the shares may not be offered or sold except pursuant to an exemption from, or in transactions not subject to, the registration requirements of the US Securities Act and other applicable securities laws. In addition, there is no assurances that shareholders residing or domiciled in the United States will be able to participate in future capital increases or rights offerings. Further, investors in the United States and other jurisdictions may have difficulty enforcing any judgment obtained in their local jurisdiction against the Company or its directors or executive officers in Norway.
This Prospectus has been prepared in connection with the Listing of 4,639,148 new shares issued in the Private Placement on Oslo Stock Exchange.
The Board of Directors of Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA accepts responsibility for the information contained in this Prospectus. The members of the Board of Directors confirm that, after having taken all reasonable care to ensure that such is the case, the information contained in this Prospectus is, to the best of their knowledge, in accordance with the facts and contains no omission likely to affect its import.
14 December 2022
The Board of Directors of Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA
Frank Jarle Berg Chairperson
Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum Board Member
Liv Eiklo Lønnum Board Member
Stefanie Witte Board Member
Nicolai Nordstrand
Board Member
Petter Winther Borg Board Member
Henrik Joelsson Board Member
This Prospectus has been approved by the NFSA, as competent authority under the EU Prospectus Regulation. The NFSA only approves this Prospectus as meeting the standards of completeness, comprehensibility and consistency imposed by the EU Prospectus Regulation, and such approval should not be considered as an endorsement of the issuer or the quality of the securities that are the subject of this Prospectus. Investors should make their own assessment as to the suitability of investing in the securities.
The Company has provided the information in this Prospectus. The Managers make no representation or warranty, express or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness or verification of the information set forth herein, and nothing contained in this Prospectus is, or shall be relied upon, as a promise or representation in this respect, whether as to the past or the future. The Managers disclaim, to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, any and all liability whether arising in tort, contract or otherwise, which they might otherwise be found to have in respect of this Prospectus or any such statement.
The Managers have been acting exclusively for the Company and no one else in connection with the Private Placement.
The information contained herein is current as of the date hereof and subject to change, completion and amendment without notice. In accordance with Article 23 of the EU Prospectus Regulation, significant new factors, material mistakes or material inaccuracies relating to the information included in this Prospectus, which may affect the assessment of the Private Placement Shares and which arises or is noted between the time when the Prospectus is approved by the NFSA and the Listing of the Shares on Oslo Stock Exchange, will be mentioned in a supplement to this Prospectus without undue delay. Neither the publication nor distribution of this Prospectus shall under any circumstance imply that there has not been any change in the Group's affairs or that the information herein is correct as of any date subsequent to the date of this Prospectus.
No person is authorised to give information or to make any representation concerning the Group or in connection with the Private Placements other than as contained in this Prospectus. If any such information is given or made, it must not be relied upon as having been authorised by the Company, or the Managers or by any of the affiliates, representatives, advisers or selling agents of any of the foregoing.
Investing in the Shares involves a high degree of risk. See Section 2 (Risk factors).
The Group's audited financial statements as of, and for the year ended 31 December 2021, included in the financial statements incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 to this Prospectus, has been prepared in accordance with International Financing Reporting Standards ("IFRS"). The Group's audited financial statements as of, and for the year ended 31 December 2020 was prepared in accordance with IFRS, with comparable figure as of, and for the year ended 31 December 2019 presented according to IFRS together with the opening balance 1 January 2019, which was the IFRS transition date for the Group.
The financial statements prepared for the years ended 31 December 2019 were prepared in accordance with Norwegian General Accepted Accounting Principles ("NGAAP"), the Norwegian Accounting Act of 17 July 1998 no 56 (the "Norwegian Accounting Act") and Norwegian Accounting Standard Board (Nw.: Norsk RegnskapsStiftelse) standard no. 8 (good accounting practice for small businesses) (Nw.: Norsk Regnskaps Standard nr 8, God regnskapsskikk for små foretak).
The financial statements prepared for the years ended 31 December 2019, 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2021 is together referred to as the annual financial statements (the "Annual Financial Statements"). The Annual Financial Statements are prepared and presented in NOK (presentation currency).
The financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 were audited by Ernst & Young AS, as set forth in their report included in the financial statements incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 (Incorporated by reference). The auditor's opinion was unqualified. The financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2020 were audited by Ernst & Young AS, as set forth in their report included in the financial statements incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 (Incorporated by reference). The auditor's opinion was unqualified. For the year ended 31 December 2019 the financial statements were audited by BDO AS as set forth in their reports included in the financial statements incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 (Incorporated by reference). The auditor's opinion was unqualified.
See note 2 to the 2021 consolidated Annual Financial Statements related to general accounting policies and principles for further details.
The Group's has further prepared consolidated interim financial statements for the three and nine-month periods ended 30 September 2022 (the "Interim Financial Statements"), which have been incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 (Incorporated by reference). The Interim Financial Statements for the three and nine-month periods ended 30 September 2022 have been prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34 "Interim Financial Reporting" ("IAS 34"). The Interim Financial Statements have not been audited or subject to review.
In addition to the Annual Financial Statements, this Prospectus contain unaudited pro forma condensed financial information to illustrate how the Company's acquisitions of Selselva Kraft AS, Skåråna Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Odal Vind AS (increase from 15% to 33.4% minority stake), Usma Kraft AS, Åmotsfoss Kraft AS, Captiva Group (60%), Tinnkraft AS, Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, RE Energi AS, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS, the Kafjärden project, Bøen Kraft AS and Enestor AS (increase from 25.01% to 51%), and the sale of 100% of the shares in Jåstadkraft AS and 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS (as further described in Section 11.1 (Introduction) below) would have affected the Group's profit and loss accounts as included in the consolidated financial statements for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 as if each of these transactions had taken place on 1 January 2021.
The effect of all acquisitions, with the exception of the acquisition of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS which is expected to be completed in 2024, are reflected as at 30 September 2022 in the Interim Financial Statements.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is presented for illustration purposes only and does not purport to represent what the Company's consolidated financial statements would have been had each of the transactions occurred on the relevant dates. The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information does not include all of the information required for financial statements prepared according to IFRS and the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information should be read in conjunction with the Annual Financial Statements and related notes.
Ernst & Young AS has issued an independent assurance report on the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information, included in Appendix B-2. There are no qualifications or emphasis of matter set out in the report prepared by Ernst & Young AS.
See Section 11.3 (Basis for the preparation) for further information about the basis for preparation of the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information.
To provide a better understanding of Cloudberry's performance, the Company has in this Prospectus presented a number of alternative performance measures ("APMs") as defined by the European Securities and Markets Authority ("ESMA") in the ESMA Guidelines on Alternative Performance Measures 2015/1057, APMs which the Company will apply when communicating with its investors. An APM is defined by ESMA guidelines as a financial measure of historical or future financial performance, financial position, or cash flows, other than a financial measure defined or specified in the relevant accounting rules (IFRS).
It is the Company's view that the APMs provides the investors relevant and specific operating figures which may enhance their understanding of the Group and its performance. APMs should not be considered as a substitute for or superior measures of performance in accordance with IFRS. APMs are calculated consistently over time and are based on financial data presented in accordance with IFRS and other operational data as described below. The Group uses the following financial APMs:
| Measure | Description | Reason for including |
|---|---|---|
| Proportionate reporting: |
Proportionate reporting includes Cloudberry's proportionate share of the financials which are not fully consolidated, or excluding the non controlling interests of subsidiaries held less than 100% on a line-by line basis in the profit or loss statement, and share of assets and net debt. (In consolidated IFRS reporting, associated companies and joint ventures are consolidated with equity method). |
Proportionate reporting is actively used by the management and the board to manage, report and strategically align Cloudberry's short and long-term business decisions. Proportionate reporting does also make it easier for investors and analysts to analyse, compare and understand Cloudberry's operational performance and risks. |
| Revenue and profit between segments are eliminated in the consolidated IFRS figures, while in proportionate segment reporting these items are retained. Proportionate interest-bearing debt and net-interest bearing debt does not include shareholder loans. |
| EBITDA: | EBITDA is net earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortisation & impairments. |
Shows performance regardless of capital structure, tax situation or effects arising from different depreciation methods. Management believes the measurement enables an evaluation of operating performance. |
|---|---|---|
| EBIT: | EBIT is net earnings before interest and tax. |
Shows performance regardless of capital structure and tax situation. Management believes the measurement enables an evaluation of operating performance. |
| Net interest bearing debt (NIBD): |
Net interest-bearing debt is interest-bearing debt, less cash and cash equivalents. IFRS 16 leasing liabilities are not included in the net interest-bearing debt. For proportionate reporting, debt is excluded shareholder loans. |
Shows the interest-bearing debt position of the company adjusted for the cash position. Management believes the measure provides an indicator of net indebtedness and risk. |
| Equity ratio: | Equity ratio equals total equity divided by total assets |
Shows the equity relative to the assets. Management believes the measurement enables an evaluation the financial strength and an indicator of risk. |
| Other | Proportionate share | Residual ownership | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | eliminations | Equity | of line items | fully consolidated | Total | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | Consolidated | group | accounted Excess value | ass.comp. | entitied | proportionate | |
| T otal revenue | 54,882 | 211,393 | - | - | 138,522 | -17,935 | 386,861 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -57,056 | -14,040 | - | - | -48,885 | 17,202 | -102,780 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 76,071 | - | -76,071 | - | - | - | - |
| EBITDA | 73,896 | 197,353 | -76,071 | - | 89,636 | -733 | 284,082 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -9,236 | - | - | -766 | -6,396 | 1,385 | -15,014 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 64,660 | 197,353 | -76,071 | -766 | 83,240 | 652 | 269,068 |
| Net financial items | -4,968 | - | - | - | 6,000 | -2,000 | -968 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 59,692 | 197,353 | -76,071 | -766 | 89,240 | -1,348 | 268,100 |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| T otal assets | 4,799,485 | 588,000 | -903,000 | 152,600 | 2,219,400 | -1,076,000 | 5,780,485 |
| Interest bearing debt | 374,739 | - | - | - | 549,000 | -4,000 | 919,739 |
| Cash | 1,852,935 | - | - | - | 135,700 | -190,000 | 1,798,635 |
| NIBD | -1,478,195 | - | - | - | 413,000 | 186,000 | -878,895 |
| Other | Proportionate share | Residual ownership | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T otal | eliminations | Equity | of line items | fully consolidated | T otal | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | Consolidated | group | accounted Excess value | ass.comp. | entitied | proportionate | |
| Total revenue | 6,500 | - | - | - | 16,900 | - | 23,900 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -14,900 | - | - | - | -7,500 | - | -22,400 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 5,000 | - | -5,000 | - | - | - | - |
| EBIT DA | -3,400 | - | -5,000 | - | 9,400 | - | 1,500 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -2,998 | - | - | -700 | -1,600 | - | -5,298 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -6,398 | - | -5,000 | -700 | 7,800 | - | -4,298 |
| Net financial items | -5,226 | - | - | - | - | - | -5,226 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -11,625 | - | -5,000 | -700 | 7,800 | - | -9,025 |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Total assets | 2,421,163 | - | -517,000 | 159,000 | 917,000 | - | 2,980,163 |
| Interest bearing debt | 227,030 | - | - | - | 534,000 | - | 761,030 |
| Cash | 689,346 | - | - | - | 224,000 | - | 913,346 |
| NIBD | -462,316 | - | - | - | 310,000 | - | -152,316 |
YTD 2021
| Other | Proportionate share | Residual ownership | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | eliminations | Equity | of line items | fully consolidated | Total | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | Consolidated | group | accounted Excess value | ass.comp. | entitied | proportionate | |
| Total revenue | 142,328 | 213,222 | - | - | 185,055 | -31,000 | 509,605 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -124,408 | -15,869 | - | - | -70,552 | 27,000 | -183,829 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 99,811 | - | -99,811 | - | - | - | - |
| EBIT DA | 117,731 | 197,353 | -99,811 | - | 114,503 | -4,000 | 325,776 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -25,314 | - | - | -2,178 | -11,322 | 4,000 | -34,814 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 92,417 | 197,353 | -99,811 | -2,178 | 103,181 | - | 290,962 |
| Net financial items | -9,979 | - | - | - | 22,000 | -2,000 | 10,021 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 82,438 | 197,353 | -99,811 | -2,178 | 125,181 | -2,000 | 300,983 |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Total assets | 4,799,485 | 588,000 | -903,000 | 152,600 | 2,219,400 | -1,076,000 | 5,780,485 |
| Interest bearing debt | 374,739 | - | - | - | 549,000 | -4,000 | 919,739 |
| Cash | 1,852,935 | - | - | - | 135,700 | -190,000 | 1,798,635 |
| NIBD | -1,478,195 | - | - | - | 413,000 | 186,000 | -879,195 |
| Other | Proportionate share | Residual ownership | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | eliminations | Equity | of line items | fully consolidated | Total | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | Consolidated | group | accounted Excess value | ass.comp. | entitied | proportionate | |
| Total revenue | 19,200 | - | - | - | 27,400 | - | 46,600 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -49,500 | - | - | - | -12,500 | - | -62,000 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 5,900 | - | -5,900 | - | - | - | - |
| EBIT DA | -24,400 | - | -5,900 | - | 14,900 | - | -15,400 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -5,700 | - | - | -2,118 | -4,700 | - | -12,518 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -30,100 | - | -5,900 | -2,118 | 10,200 | - | -27,918 |
| Net financial items | -13,400 | - | - | - | - | - | -13,400 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -43,500 | - | -5,900 | -2,118 | 10,200 | - | -41,318 |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Total assets | 2,421,163 | - | -517,000 | 159,000 | 917,000 | - | 2,980,163 |
| Interest bearing debt | 227,030 | - | - | - | 534,000 | - | 761,030 |
| Cash | 689,346 | - | - | - | 224,000 | - | 913,346 |
| NIBD | -462,316 | - | - | - | 310,000 | - | -152,316 |
| Other | Proportionate share | Residual ownership | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | eliminations | Equity | of line items | fully consolidated | Total | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | Consolidated | group | accounted Excess value | ass.comp. | entitied | proportionate | |
| Total revenue | 40,885 | - | - | - | 41,588 | - | 83,473 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -88,781 | - | - | - | -19,501 | - | -107,282 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 16,370 | - | -16,370 | - | - | - | - |
| EBIT DA | -31,526 | - | -16,370 | - | 22,087 | - | -24,809 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -9,706 | - | - | -2,823 | -6,839 | - | -19,368 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -41,232 | - | -16,370 | -2,823 | 15,248 | - | -44,177 |
| Net financial items | -22,221 | - | - | - | 8,321 | - | -13,900 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -63,453 | - | -16,370 | -2,823 | 23,569 | - | -58,077 |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Total assets | 3,118,370 | 110,000 | -678,080 | 160,120 | 1,103,443 | - | 3,814,853 |
| Interest bearing debt | 304,200 | - | - | - | 522,102 | - | 826,302 |
| Cash | 1,114,936 | - | - | - | 167,119 | - | 1,282,055 |
| NIBD | -810,736 | - | - | - | 354,983 | - | -455,753 |
| Other | Proportionate share | Residual ownership | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | eliminations | Equity | of line items | fully consolidated | Total | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | Consolidated | group | accounted Excess value | ass.comp. | entitied | proportionate | |
| Total revenue | 3,640 | 200 | - | - | 1,493 | - | 6,333 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -29,904 | - | - | - | -1,930 | - | -30,834 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | -3,556 | - | 3,556 | - | - | - | - |
| EBIT DA | -29,822 | 200 | 3,556 | - | -437 | - | -25,501 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -3,289 | - | - | -591 | -1,259 | - | -5,139 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -33,110 | 200 | 3,556 | -591 | -1,696 | - | -30,640 |
| Net financial items | -1,141 | 139 | - | - | -1,270 | - | -2,272 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -34,253 | 339 | 3,556 | -591 | -2,966 | - | -32,912 |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Total assets | 1,396,861 | -46 | -337,081 | 148,332 | 445,003 | - | 1,654,069 |
| Interest bearing debt | 263,207 | - | - | - | 235,742 | - | 498,949 |
| Cash | 605,126 | - | - | - | 43,572 | - | 648,698 |
| NIBD | -341,918 | - | - | - | 192,170 | - | -149,748 |
| 3 months | 9 months | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOK 1000 | Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | FY 2021 | FY 2020 |
| EBITDA | 74,111 | -3,074 | 117,946 | -24,390 | -31,615 | -29,822 |
| EBIT | 64,875 | -5,807 | 92,632 | -30,067 | -41,361 | -33,111 |
| Equity ratio | 78.2 % | 86.0 % | 78.2 % | 86.0 % | 84.5 % | 75.5 % |
| Net interest bearing debt | -1,478,195 | -462,300 | -1,478,195 | -462,300 | -810,741 | -341,919 |
| NOK 1000 | Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | FY 2021 | FY 2020 |
| Long-term interest bearing debt | 362,739 | 219,100 | 362,739 | 219,100 | 294,087 | 26,440 |
| Short-term interest bearing debt | 12,000 | 7,500 | 12,000 | 7,500 | 10,105 | 236,767 |
| Cash and cash equivalent | -1,852,935 | -688,900 | -1,852,935 | -688,900 | -1,114,934 | -605,126 |
| Net interest bearing debt | -1,478,195 | -462,300 | -1,478,195 | -462,300 | -810,741 | -341,919 |
| NOK 1000 | Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | FY 2021 | FY 2020 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 64,875 | -5,807 | 92,632 | -30,067 | -41,361 | -33,111 |
| Depreciations and amortizations | 9,236 | 2,733 | 25,314 | 5,677 | 9,746 | 3,289 |
| EBITDA | 74,111 | -3,074 | 117,946 | -24,390 | -31,615 | -29,822 |
Further, the Group uses the following non-financial APMs:
| Measure | Description | Reason for including |
|---|---|---|
| Power Production: |
Power delivered to the grid over the defined time period (one year). Units are measured in GWh. Example A typical 4 MW turbine produces 3,000 full-load hours during a year. 4 MW x 3,000 hours = 12,000 MWh or 12 GWh. For illustration, according to the International Energy Agency1 ("IEA") the electrical power consumption per capita in Europe is approximately 6 MWh per year. |
Shows Cloudberry's total production in GWh for the full year including the proportionate share of the production from Cloudberry's associated companies and joint ventures. |
| Production & under construction, secured: |
At the time of measure, the estimated power output of the secured production and under construction portfolio. The measure is at year-end. Units are measured in MW. |
Shows Cloudberry's total portfolio of secured projects that are either producing or under construction. |
| Construction permits: |
At the time of measure, the estimated total power output to be installed in projects with construction permit. Construction permit is |
Shows Cloudberry's total portfolio of projects with construction permit. |
1 https://www.iea.org/data-and-
statistics/?country=WEOEUR&fuel=Energy%20consumption&indicator=ElecConsPerCapita (accessed 14 June 2021)
| at the stage when concession has been granted, but before a final investment decision has been made. The measure is at year-end. Units are measured in MW. |
||
|---|---|---|
| Backlog: | At the time of measure, the estimated total effect to be installed related to projects that are exclusive to the Group and in a concession application process. The measure is at year-end. Units are measured in MW. |
Shows Cloudberry's portfolio of project where Cloudberry has an exclusive right to the projects. The projects are still under development. |
| Direct emissions: |
Measure in tons of CO2 equivalents. The use of fossil fuels for transportation or combustion in owned, leased or rented assets. It also includes emission from industrial processes. |
Shows Cloudberry's direct emissions (Scope 1, GHG emissions) for the full year. |
| Indirect emissions: |
Measure in tons of CO2 equivalents. Related to purchased energy; electricity and heating/cooling where the organisation has operational control. The electricity emission factors used are based on electricity production mixes from statistics made public by the IEA. Emissions from value chain activities are a result of the Group's upstream and downstream activities, which are not controlled by the Group. Examples are consumption of products, business travel, goods transportation and waste handling. |
Shows Cloudberry's indirect emissions (Scope 2 and Scope 3, GHG emissions) for the full year. |
| CO2 reduction: | Refers to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions relative to baseline emissions from the European electricity mix (EU-27 electricity mix, IEA 2021). |
Shows Cloudberry's reduction of greenhouse gases for the full year relative to the European Electricity mix after the direct and indirect emissions from Cloudberry's operation is subtracted. |
| Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | 2022 | 2021 | FY 2021 | FY 2020 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Power Production (GWh) | 70 | 35 | 172 | 70 | 117 | 21 |
| Production & under construction (MW) | 156 | 139 | N/R | N/R | 150 | 109 |
| Construction permit (MW) | 168 | 160 | N/R | N/R | 160 | 151 |
| Backlog (MW) | 420 | 370 | N/R | N/R | 370 | 370 |
| Direct emissions (CO2 equivalent) | - | - | ||||
| Indirect emissions (CO2 equivalent) | 203 | 185 | ||||
| CO2 reduction (tons) | 17 430 | 8 715 | 42 828 | 17 430 | 28 633 | 5 378 |
This Prospectus contains statistics, data, statements and other information relating to markets, market sizes, market shares, market positions and other industry data pertaining to the Group's business and the industries and markets in which it operates. Unless otherwise indicated, such information reflects the Group's estimates based on analysis of multiple sources, including data compiled by professional organisations, consultants and analysts and information otherwise obtained from other third party sources, such as annual and interim financial statements and other presentations published by listed companies operating within the same industry as the Group, as well as the Group's internal data and its own experience, or on a combination of the foregoing. Unless otherwise indicated in the Prospectus, the basis for any statements regarding the Group's competitive position is based on the Company's own assessment and knowledge of the market in which it operates.
For the purpose of this Prospectus, industry and market data obtained from independent industry publications, market research, internal surveys and other publicly available information, has been used. Such data has not been verified by us. Neither, have our internal surveys been verified by independent sources. Thus, Cloudberry do not guarantee or assume any responsibility for the accuracy of the data, estimates, forecasts or other information taken from sources in the public domain.
The Company confirms that where information has been sourced from a third party, such information has been accurately reproduced and that as far as the Company is aware and is able to ascertain from information published by that third party, no facts have been omitted that would render the reproduced information inaccurate or misleading. Where information sourced from third parties has been presented, the source of such information has been identified.
Industry publications or reports generally state that the information they contain has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but the accuracy and completeness of such information is not guaranteed. The Company has not independently verified and cannot give any assurances as to the accuracy of market data contained in this Prospectus that was extracted from industry publications or reports and reproduced herein.
Market data and statistics are inherently predictive and subject to uncertainty and not necessarily reflective of actual market conditions. Such data and statistics are based on market research, which itself is based on sampling and subjective judgments by both the researchers and the respondents, including judgments about what types of products and transactions should be included in the relevant market.
Prospective investors should be aware that statistics, data, statements and other information relating to markets, market sizes, market shares, market positions and other industry data in this Prospectus (and projections, assumptions and estimates based on such information) may not be reliable indicators of the Company's future performance and the future performance of the industry in which it operates. Such indicators are necessarily subject to a high degree of uncertainty and risk due to the limitations described above and to a variety of other factors, including those described in Section 2 (Risk factors) and elsewhere in this Prospectus.
The following third-party sources have been used in this Prospectus:
None of the third-party sources referred to above are incorporated by reference into or otherwise form part of this Prospectus.
Certain figures included in this Prospectus have been subject to rounding adjustments (by rounding to the nearest whole number or decimal or fraction, as the case may be). Accordingly, figures shown for the same category presented in different tables may vary slightly. As a result of rounding adjustments, the figures presented may not add up to the total amount presented.
This Prospectus includes forward-looking statements that reflect the Group's current views with respect to future events and financial and operational performance. These forward-looking statements may be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, such as the terms "anticipates", "assumes", "believes", "can", "could", "estimates", "expects", "forecasts", "intends", "may", "might", "plans", "projects", "should", "will", "would" or, in each case, their negative, or other variations or comparable terminology. These forward-looking statements are not historic facts.
Prospective investors in the Shares are cautioned that forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and that the Company's actual financial position, operating results and liquidity, and the development of the industry in which the Company operates, may differ materially from those made in, or suggested, by the forward-looking statements contained in this Prospectus. The Company cannot guarantee that the intentions, beliefs or current expectations upon which its forward-looking statements are based will occur.
By their nature, forward-looking statements involve, and are subject to, known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions as they relate to events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future. Because of these known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions, the outcome may differ materially from those set out in the forward-looking statements. For a nonexhaustive overview of important factors that could cause those differences, please refer to Section 2 (Risk factors).
These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this Prospectus. Except as required by Article 23 of the EU Prospectus Regulation or by other applicable law, the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or publicly revise any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements attributable to the Company or to persons acting on the Company's behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by the cautionary statements referred to above and contained elsewhere in this Prospectus.
The Company's dividend policy is that the Company does not expect to pay any dividend in the short to medium term as the Company intends to use its profit for both organic and acquisitions related growth initiatives. The Company's long-term objective is to pay Shareholders consistent and growing cash dividends. Over time, the intention is to pay its Shareholders dividends representing 30 – 50% of free cash distributed from the producing power plant companies. However, there can be no assurance that in any given year a dividend will be proposed or declared, or if proposed or declared, that the dividend will be as contemplated by the policy.
In deciding whether to propose a dividend and in determining the dividend amount, the Board of Directors will take into account legal restrictions, as further described in Section 5.2 (Legal and contractual constraints on the distribution of dividends) below, as well as the Company's capital expenditure plans, financial condition, restrictions following from credit arrangements or other contractual arrangement and the ability to maintain appropriate financial flexibility to meet the Group's strategic plans.
The Company has not paid any dividends on its Shares since its incorporation.
In accordance with the Public Companies Act, when proposing and determining the dividend amount, the Board of Directors must take into account the (i) Company's capital requirements, including capital expenditure requirements, (ii) the Company's financial condition, (iii) general business conditions and (iv) any restrictions that its contractual arrangements in force at the time of the dividend may place on its ability to pay dividends and the maintenance of appropriate financial flexibility. With a few statutory limited exceptions, the amount of dividends paid may not exceed the amount recommended by the Board of Directors.
Dividends may be paid in cash or in some instances in kind. The Public Companies Act provides the following constraints on the distribution of dividends applicable to the Company:
The time when an entitlement to dividend arises depends in accordance with the Public Companies Act on the resolution passed by the General Meeting regarding issuance of new shares. Normally, a subscriber of new shares in a Norwegian public limited liability company will be entitled to dividends from the time when the relevant share capital increase is registered with the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises. There are no statutory limits in the Public Companies Act regarding lapse of dividend entitlement. However, subject to various exceptions, Norwegian law in general provides a limitation period of three years from the date an obligation is due. There are no dividend restrictions or specific procedures for non-Norwegian resident Shareholders to claim dividends. For a description of withholding tax on dividends applicable to non-Norwegian residents, see Section 17 (Taxation).
There are no dividend restrictions in any of the loan agreements for Cloudberry or its subsidiaries.
Any future payments of dividends on the Shares will be denominated in the currency of the bank account of the relevant Shareholder and will be paid to the Shareholders through the VPS.
Shareholders registered in the VPS who have not supplied the VPS with details of their bank account, will not receive payment of dividends unless they register their bank account details with the VPS Registrar.
The exchange rate(s) that is applied when denominating any future payments of dividends to the relevant Shareholder's currency will be the VPS Registrar's exchange rate on the payment date.
Dividends will be credited automatically to the Shareholders' bank accounts registered in the VPS or in lieu of such registered account, at the time when the Shareholder has provided the VPS Registrar with their bank account details.
Shareholders' right to payment of dividend will lapse three years following the resolved payment date for those Shareholders who have not registered their bank account details with the VPS Registrar within such date.
An energy transition is ongoing: clean energy without greenhouse gas emissions is needed to address the climate challenge, meet the ambitions of the Paris Agreement, contribute to the UN Sustainable Development Goals as well as the European Green Deal. All of Europe is in the process of reducing carbon emissions in everything from households to industry. The most efficient way of getting emissions down globally is to reduce fossil fuelled electricity production from coal-, gas- and oil-fired power plants.1 The reason why this is efficient is because of the huge existing emissions from the sector today, and because there are commercially available alternatives to produce electricity through renewable sources, that is primarily by the means of hydropower, wind power or solar PV. Wind and solar power production have seen significant cost reductions over the last decade due to scaling and technological development. At the same time electricity from CO2-emitting fossil-fuelled plants have grown more expensive due to increased pricing of CO2.2 Hydropower has been commercially competitive all along, but rather naturally limited to certain mountainous regions where most economical potential is already built out or protected. However quite a few hydropower projects previously deemed un-economical are becoming competitive for buildout due to interconnectors to Europe, increase in long-term power price forecasts and their production profile that does not correlate to wind or solar.
Additionally, an efficient way of reducing emissions in other sectors is through further electrification, i.e. to electrify processes that use fossil fuels today such as replacing gas heating by heat pumps or petrol fuelled cars by electric vehicles. This ongoing electrification will further strengthen the demand for new renewable electricity.
Renewable hydro and wind energy resources in the Nordics offer local communities and continental Europe a more sustainable energy solution. The EU's Projects of Common Interest are key cross border infrastructure projects that link the energy systems between EU countries. Due to the interconnected electricity market, the new renewable production does not have to be located exactly where the outdated CO2-emitting power plants were. Cloudberry believes that an increased power interconnection capacity between the Nordics and Europe, will drive a sustained long-term increase in the demand for Nordic renewables and as such also the power prices.
After the Russian invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, the European Union announced decisive steps to reduce its dependency on Russian oil and gas. About 40% of the gas used in the Union came from Russia3 , and in March 2022 EU announced the REPowerEU strategy with an aim to make Europe independent of Russian fossil fuels well before 20304. The plan is, among other aspects, to speed up the green energy transition and increasing investments in renewable energy.
There is a strong regulatory, environmental and economic push for the shift towards renewable energy. After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, energy security and non-dependency of Russian gas added further pressure to shift the economies of especially Europe towards a renewable future. On October 2022 EIA
1https://www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-outlook-2022/an-updated-roadmap-to-net-zero-emissions-by-2050 (accessed 28 October 2022)
2 https://www.barchart.com/futures/quotes/CKZ21 (accessed 28 October 2022)
3 https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-61497315 / (accessed 28 October 2022)
4 https://ec.europa.eu/info/strategy/priorities-2019-2024/european-green-deal/repowereu-affordable-secure-andsustainable-energy-europe_en (accessed 28 October 2022)
published its World Energy Outlook1 highlighting how Europe is in the midst of a global energy crisis as countries adjust to a rapture of Russia-Europe energy flows. Further the report concludes that policy responses are fast-tracking the emergence of a clean energy economy with faster deployment of renewables and efficiency improvements in the European Union. This will bring down EU natural gas and oil demand by 20% this decade, and coal demand by 50%, a push given additional urgency by the need to find new sources of economic and industrial advantage beyond Russian gas.
The ongoing energy transition in Europe is driven by multiple key drivers such as technology development, policies and regulations and last but not least, individuals, businesses, capital markets and society responding to climate change and environmental issues. These drivers are having an increasing impact on energy supply and demand, and ultimately power pricing.
Technology development impacts the European energy outlook, the pace of the energy transition and the supply and demand of renewable energy. The levelised cost of energy ("LCOE") for renewables, particularly wind and solar, have dropped significantly over the last ten years. Further improvement in renewables' LCOE will increase the competitiveness of renewables compared to fossil fuels. A price on carbon will also promote renewable investments and give an economical signal to polluters who can either reduce emissions or pay for it.2 Storage and battery technologies, both short-term and seasonal solutions, may also have a significant impact on the energy system. Storage in combination with renewable energy may lead to improved balance and offload the transmission system during peak demand periods. With the uncertain effects of the war in Ukraine on the energy markets in relation to energy security, and the subsequent phase-out of Russian gas, the need for both demand- and supply side flexibility as well as data driven integration of more production, Cloudberry sees a strengthened potential for Captiva and its data driven services and digital solutions across Europe. With further roll out of wind power across Europe, partly developed and financed by institutional investors, Cloudberry also see a further potential for a one-stop-shop on data driven technology-based operation and management services for Nordic renewables. Captiva's ability to provide a full scope basis with all activities necessary for asset owners, or module based to fit with and complement client organisation and in/outsourcing strategy, puts Captiva in an attractive position to capitalise on the growth.
The world's electricity production is expected to more than double with the share of electricity rising from 19% to 36% in the global energy mix over the next 30 years (DNV Energy Transition Outlook3 ), with solar and wind representing 69% of grid connected renewable electricity generation. With an 83% share of the electricity system in 2050, renewables are squeezing the fossil share of the overall energy mix to just below the 50% mark in 2050. Digital technology enabling smarter electricity use will increase energy efficiency. Digital technology is also expected to play an important role in balancing the energy system as more renewable and variable energy is connected to the grid. DNV concludes that in order to reach net-zero by 2050, leading regions and sectors will have to go much faster and OECD countries must reach net-zero by 2043 and negative thereafter.
The technology development within the electric mobility ecosystem is expected to impact the overall demand for electricity in general and clean electricity in particular. In the Road Traffic Information Council's (Nw.: Opplysingsrådet for veitrafikkens) statistic per September 20224 , it is informed that 93.4% of all cars sold in Norway for year to date per September 2022 were either electric or hybrid, with pure electric cars accounting for 77.8%. The rapid shift towards low emission vehicles is explained by growing restrictions on the use of fossil fuel cars combined with financial incentives. It is thus an
1 https://www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-outlook-2022/executive-summary(accessed 28 October 2022)
2 https://www.worldbank.org/en/programs/pricing-carbon(accessed 28 October 2022)
3 https://www.dnv.com/energy-transition-outlook/download.html (accessed 28 October 2022)
4 https://ofv.no/bilsalget/bilsalget-i-september-2022 (accessed 31 October 2022)
example of how rapidly the demand for electricity can rise if incentives and regulations take effect. Europe is in a decarbonisation mode to meet EU's climate and emissions goals. On 21 April 2021, the European Commission welcomed a provisional agreement between the co-legislators on the European climate law. As one of the key elements of the European Green Deal, the European Climate Law enshrines the EU's commitment to reaching climate neutrality by 2050 and the intermediate target of reducing net greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030, compared to 1990 levels.1
In Cloudberry's home markets, Norway targets at least 50% reduction in non-quota emissions compared to 1990 within 20302 while Sweden targets a 100% renewable power system by 2040 and net zero CO2 emissions by 2045.3 The EU Commission has a vision of secure, sustainable, competitive and affordable energy. This vision is paving the way for new EU strategies, policies and regulations such as the European Green Deal and the EU taxonomy for sustainable activities and more. The EU's climate and energy targets together with national emission targets drive both the supply and demand of renewable energy.
The EU Emission Trading System ("EU ETS") which regulates the price of carbon emissions is a central instrument in EU's climate policy. The carbon price impacts continental power prices directly through adding marginal costs to the production bids from gas and coal fired power plants. Indirectly the price levels of the continent are also affecting the Nordic prices, due to the interconnections. Cloudberry believes that tighter regulations of the carbon market will boost the demand for renewable energy, both directly but also indirectly through higher power prices. EU ETS saw a significant price increase throughout 2021, with a price increase from EUR 33 per MWh to EUR 87 per MWh during 20214 . Prices continued to rise in 2022 until the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, which led to a significant drop. Prices have stabilised again at high levels around ~EUR 80 per MWh (as of 31 October 2022).
As with all commodities within an open market, the price of electricity is a function of supply and demand. What is rather unique about electricity is the fact that it cannot be easily stored, and for every point in time there needs to be an exact match between supply and demand to keep the system stable. To keep this balance is the responsibility of the respective transmission system operators ("TSOs"), being Statnett in Norway and Svenska Kraftnät in Sweden. To ensure the current balance, Statnett uses balance markets to regulate consumption / production up or down, depending on the imbalance.
The unit for quantifying instant power consumed and produced is the watt (symbol: W); typically scaled up by either thousand (kW), million (MW), or even billion (GW). Energy is power consumed or produced over a certain period of time. A commonly used unit of electric energy would be the watt-hour (Wh), which equals the energy supplied from one watt over a full hour. Since a watt-hour is a very small unit it is usually scaled up to kilowatt-hours (kWh), megawatt-hours (MWh) or gigawatt-hours (GWh).
The Nordic region, and especially Norway and Sweden, has a very good starting point for leading the green transition due to the existing power production mix as well as other factors. This because both countries already produce more electricity than they consume in a normal year, the lion's share of which comes from sources not emitting CO2.
1 https://ec.europa.eu/clima/policies/eu-climate-action\_en (accessed 31 October 2022)
2 https://unfccc.int/sites/default/files/resource/LTS1\_Norway\_Oct2020.pdf (accessed 31 October 2022)
3 https://unfccc.int/sites/default/files/resource/LTS1\_Sweden.pdf (accessed 31 October 2022)
4 https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/carbon(accessed 31 October 2022)
Both countries are blessed with vast hydropower resources and on a per capita basis they are the second and fifth largest worldwide.1 Compared to consumption, Norway is covered in a normal year, whereas Sweden gets additional baseload energy from nuclear reactors. Additionally, both countries have great potential for building wind power due to windy climates, scarcely populated unutilised land, and vast coastlines. Also, since most of the existing (Norwegian) hydropower is actually flexible with water potentially stored in reservoirs for later use (comparable to a large-scale battery), the region can accommodate more intermittent wind power than most other regions.
The split of production between countries and production sources for 2021 is illustrated in the following figure. If seen also in relation with the next subsection on demand, one sees a substantial net export of power from the two countries amounting to more than 40 TWh, or 13% of supply, in 2021.

Source: Figure based on Statistics Norway (SSB) Table 12824 and
https://www.energimyndigheten.se/nyhetsarkiv/2022/fortsatt-hog-elproduktion-och-elexport-under-2021/ (accessed 24 November 2022)
Due to the current and historical abundant supply of relatively cheap electricity both countries of Norway and Sweden sees high consumption numbers compared to their population.2 The countries have a cold climate with a large share of electric heating that adds substantial consumption during winter months. In addition, both countries have a large share of power intensive industry. As can be seen in the following figure, households and services actually accounts for more than half of the total electricity consumption in the two countries. Norwegian electricity consumption in 2021 was approximately on the same level as Sweden, despite the country have just more than half the population. Most analysts and governmental agencies expect a high growth in electricity demand going forward, driven by
1 https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/hydro-electricity-per-capita?tab=table(accessed 31 October 2022)
2 https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/per-capita-electricity-consumption?tab=table (accessed 31 October 2022)
electrification of processes now run on fossil fuels, typically industries and transports, as well as by new industry establishments such as data centres, hydrogen and battery factories.1,2,3

Source: Figure based on Statistics Norway (SSB) Table 12824 and https://www.energimyndigheten.se/nyhetsarkiv/2022/fortsatt-hog-elproduktion-och-elexport-under-2021/ (accessed 24 November 2022)
The Nordic transmission system is part of the transmission network in north-western Europe, which connects the Nordic region to one large synchronous power system (excl. western Denmark). Currently Norway and Sweden have direct connections towards Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, Poland, Lithuania, UK and Germany. The latest interconnection with Germany, the 1400 MW NordLink from Norway, was officially opened on 27 May 2021 after having been in trial operation since December 2020. The 1400 MW North Sea Link between Norway and the UK was completed in October 2021.
https://www.nho.no/contentassets/67d09fd17be24b91be4c05147e8d4d20/rapport-felles-energi--ogindustripolitisk-plattform-.pdf (accessed 31 October 2022)
2https://publikasjoner.nve.no/rapport/2021/rapport2021_29.pdf (accessed 31 October 2022)
1NHO, LO, Industri Energi, Energi Norge and more:
3https://www.statnett.no/globalassets/for-aktorer-i-kraftsystemet/planer-og-analyser/lma/2021-07-02-lmaoppdatering.pdf (accessed 31 October 2022)

Source: Statnett, prior to completion of NordLink and North Sea Link
International interconnection, similarly to connections within country, increase the social welfare though improving both security of supply as well as competition. If one single country where to rely solely on their own wind and solar power production, they would need more than 100% backup capacity for windless nights or during wintertime when the sun does not shine. Through being interconnected with other countries, other production mixes and other weather patterns, the total system need for backup capacity decreases dramatically. For the Nordic countries this implies that our hydropower works as a large-scale battery towards continental Europe, storing water (by covering demand through import of electricity) when power prices are low and exporting power when the continent produce less energy as a result of shortage of wind and sun.
ENTSO-E1 , the European Network of Transmission System Operators, was established in 2008 in order to coordinate closer cooperation across the national transmission systems and thus enable further integration of renewable energy sources into the power system, which is central to meeting the European Union's energy policy objectives of affordability, sustainability and security of supply.
Also within Norway and Sweden the TSOs have established price zones in order to achieve more socioeconomic pricing incentives. Typically, this implies power flow from lower priced northern price zones often limited by transmission bottlenecks towards the higher priced southern areas where most of the demand is.
1 https://www.entsoe.eu/ (accessed 31 October 2022)

Source: https://www.statnett.no/om-statnett/bli-bedre-kjent-med-statnett/om-strompriser/fakta-om-prisomrader/ (accessed 31 October 2022)
When investigating the competitive landscape of Cloudberry, one must separate between the competition in owning power production assets versus in development of new production assets. Note also that there is a fragmentation of players across the Norwegian-Swedish border as well as in terms of technology, hydro versus wind, so in the Company's view there are no direct competitors with the exact same focus areas as Cloudberry. For information about the competitive landscape for Captiva, please see Section 6.4.3 (Competition within the market for independent service providers).
The competitive landscape within upstream electricity production is characterised by the fact that most of the producing assets were built prior to the market deregulation. As such the ownership of existing supply is still dominated by publicly owned companies, led on by the state-owned giants of Norwegian Statkraft and Swedish Vattenfall, followed by regional integrated utilities. This is especially true for the large-scale hydropower, where ~90% of all Norwegian hydropower above 10 MW is publicly owned. Looking to the more recently built wind power or small-scale hydro, where ownership is not affected by neither legacy nor regulation, the picture is more nuanced. For instance, in Norway 60% of the wind power was held by private players as of April 2020.1
Among these privately owned assets the last decade has seen consolidation, from local landowners and farmers, towards more professional players that run or outsource operations at scale. Typically, these
1 https://www.regjeringen.no/no/dokumenter/meld.-st.-28-20192020/id2714775/?ch=8 (accessed 31 October 2022)
players are owned by international institutional investors, like for instance Aquila Capital behind Småkraft AS or BKW and EIP owning Fosen Vind alongside Statkraft and TrønderEnergi.
Recently there has also been quite some interest from companies that has been primarily oil- and gasbased focused. HitechVision has partnered with TrønderEnergi to establish a new Nordic renewable company Aneo1 . Another example is the creation of Orrön Energy in 2022, after Lundin Energy divested its oil and gas business to Aker BP creating Orrön as the new renewable vehicle in the Lundin group2 .
All else alike new entrants will add an upwards price pressure to the valuation of producing assets.
Historically the regional or state-owned utilities has tended to develop projects in close vicinity to their existing assets, with examples being Finnmark Kraft and TrønderEnergi AS developing and building wind power in the north and middle of Norway respectively. Utility owned Zephyr AS is an exception working projects in all but their owners' region of South-Eastern Norway. Most of the larger Norwegian utilities have been hesitant to develop or invest in wind power, due likely to owner preferences and capital restrictions. The largest owner of Norwegian wind power, Statkraft, said back in March of 2019 that they will stop development of onshore wind in Norway after having completed their at that time permitted projects.3
Within onshore wind development there are as such most private players, that to a higher extent work unrelated to where their headquarters are located. OX2 AB, Arise AB, Eolus Vind AB, Rabbalshede Kraft AB, Norsk Vind Energi AS are all examples of privately owned wind developers that span several counties and even countries with their onshore wind portfolio. Further the newly established players Orrön Energi and Aneo represent new private players with a more flexible mandate. Also, within development there are some traditional oil and gas players coming along to get a hold on projects already in early phase, however Cloudberry believes it is most likely that they will develop such projects in collaboration with local partners, such as Cloudberry.
There is a growing market for independent service providers (ISPs) in the Nordic market, driven by asset owners without in-house operations and management teams. Norwegian Zephyr and TrønderEnergi are examples of companies offering such services. On a general note, the Swedish ISP market is more mature than the Norwegian, especially on wind management.
The competition on data driven services and digital solutions is lower. The solutions are cost- and time consuming to develop, and there is, in Cloudberry's view, a significant first mover advantage. However, as the market further develops, one cannot rule out further competition emerging, either through existing players from other regions, or through Nordic ISPs developing new digital solutions in direct competition with Captiva.
When talking about power prices in the Nordics people are usually referring to the day-ahead spot prices as calculated by the auction-based power exchange of Nord Pool. However, the wholesale market for
1 https://www.aneo.com/(accessed 1 November 2022)
2https://www.orron.com/about-us/(accessed 1 November 2022)
3 https://www.dn.no/energi/statkraft-dropper-vindkraft-i-norge/2-1-574784(accessed 31 October 2022)
Nordic electricity consists of several layers with different and to some extent also competing marketplaces.

Looking chronologically through the electricity's path towards actual physical delivery, the first decision for a participant would be related to risk management and the uncertainties of future power price levels. Either through the use of a bilateral PPAs, or through utilising the central clearing service of Nasdaq Commodities, one can and will buy/sell financial products to limit the financial consequences of future spot prices. In order to forecast future power prices, market participants and analysts typically analyse the following market drivers:
Typically, the power price in the short-term is volatile and will be affected by short term changes in weather and availabilities. The longer view on power prices is more stable and dependent on long term view on fuel / CO2 prices, interconnection buildouts, and also the long-term marginal costs of building new renewable production and accompanying storage solutions.
Even though long-term power price forecasts have been relatively stable during 2021 and the start of 2022, the last year has seen an unprecedented rise in short to medium term prices. Whilst 2020 gave record low electricity prices in the Nordics, 2021 ended up with the highest power prices recorded for the three southernmost price areas of Norway, primarily driven by the significant price increase of fossil gas. The price increased further due to a dry year in Southern and Western Norway, which led to the highest power price, on average over the year, at EUR 61 per MWh. However, the price differences within the country were significant, with the northernmost price area (NO4) coming in at EUR 36 per MWh, and the three southernmost (NO1, NO2 and NO5) came in at EUR 76 per MWh.
The war in Ukraine has further elevated prices across Europe, primarily driven by a further price increase for fossil gas, as the European Union has said it will rid itself of the dependency of Russian gas. Fears over a supply constraint has pushed prices further up, resulting in unprecedented price levels with the southern price areas in Norway seeing prices above EUR 300 per MWh.1
1 https://e24.no/olje-og-energi/i/bGEWA3/aarets-dyreste-stroem-i-soervest-hopper-til-tre-kroner (accessed 1 November 2022)
In October 2021, NVE published its long-term power analysis report. A summary of the expected forward prices is presented in the figure below (presented in EUR/MWh). There are no updated reports released by NVE per the date of this Prospectus, i.e. the report is published prior to the Ukraine invasion causing the prices to temporarily spike as shown in the Volue projections further below. 1

The figure below shows Volue's (formerly named Wattsight) analysis and price projections for Nordic power prices 2022 – 2050:2
1 https://www.nve.no/energi/analyser-og-statistikk/langsiktig-kraftmarkedsanalyse (accessed 1 November 2022)
2 Volue Insight, September 2022 report. Long Term Price Forecast in the Nordic Countries (2022 – 2050)

Both NVE and Cloudberry believe that the interconnectors from the Nordics to Europe will result in lower price differences to the continent/UK in the future. According to NVE's 2021 long term power report, real power prices in the Nordics are expected to increase due to higher climate targets, resulting in a higher CO2 price.1
Both NVE's report and Volue's reports have very similar conclusions with NVE and Volue projecting long-term real power prices around EUR 50 per MWh. However, both Volue and NVE predicts differences in prices for the different price areas, in addition to Volue being updated with the 2022 spikes caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in their 2022 average.
However, the long -term effects on the power prices due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine are unclear due to the uncertainty around the European gas supply affecting gas prices. Volue notes in its March 2022 report that: "Gas is the fuel most directly affected by the invasion, due to Europe's reliance on Russian pipeline exports. Roughly 40% of Europe's gas consumption origins from Russia. The TTF April contract increased from €88/MWh on the day before the invasion to a close of €166/MWh on March 3rd, being a new record for an April contract. In response to the Russian aggression, Germany has halted the approval process for the Nord Stream 2. The pipeline could very well be permanently scrapped."
Sale of electricity certificates ("Electricity Certificates") and guarantees of origin ("Guarantees of Origin") are two other revenue sources for producers of renewable energy. In today's market, both revenue sources have minimal value in Cloudberry's financial models and is therefore only discussed briefly below.
An Electricity Certificate is an electronic document granted to producers of new renewable electricity for each MWh of electricity they produce. From 1 January 2012 Norway and Sweden have had a common market for Electricity Certificates. Newly built renewable power plants which were put into operation by the end of 2021 are entitled to Electricity Certificates following certain criteria and
1 https://www.nve.no/energi/analyser-og-statistikk/langsiktig-kraftmarkedsanalyse/(accessed 1 November 2022)
approvals. Power plants approved in the scheme will be awarded electricity certificates for up to 15 years. Even though Electricity Certificates have a potentially interesting option value, Cloudberry has put minimal value on certificates in the in-house financial models. Prices has dropped to close to zero value, and Cloudberry expects that to continue for the duration of the scheme.

Average, monthly spot price of el-certificates from latest published NVE report (NOK).
Source: https://www.nve.no/media/14086/1kv2022\_kvartalsrapport-for-elsertifikatordningen\_endelig.pdf (accessed 01 November 2022)
A Guarantee of Origin is an electronic document proving to a final customer that the corresponding 1 MWh of electrical energy was produced from renewable sources. The Renewables Directive 2009/28/EC specifies that all producers of renewable power have a right to receive Guarantees of Origin for their renewable power production. Guarantees of Origins are primarily traded bilaterally and as a consequence it is not a particularly transparent market. Historically, information in the market indicates that Guarantees of Origin are sold for a price between 1 and 3 EUR/MWh.1 However as per the date of this Prospectus, the prices for Guarantees of Origin have increased significantly and are now trading around 7-9 EUR/MWh.2 As the market is not transparent, the reason for the increase is uncertain but believed to be caused by low European renewable production in 2022 combined with strong demand. Cloudberry recently sold 115,000 MWh of its 2023 Guarantees of Origins production through a forward
1 https://www.greenpowerhub.com/market-report/www.montelnews.com (accessed 1 November 2022)
2 https://www.greenpowerhub.com/guarantees-of-origin/ (accessed 06 December 2022)
contract at a price of 9 EUR/MWh with delivery in December 2023. The Group sells some Guarantees of Origin in the market through its balancing service provider.
Cloudberry has no particular flexible power producing assets and as such has indirectly more costs than revenue potential in the balancing markets. As per current strategy, Cloudberry utilised third parties for market operation of our assets, which includes both bidding and balancing services.
The Group complies with local and national laws and regulations in the countries in which it operates. Compliance with such laws and regulations is an important aspect of the Group's ability to continue its current operations.
The laws and regulations to which the Group is subject govern, among other things, management of water and wind resources, construction and operation of power plants and transmission and sale of electricity, the protection of the environment and natural resources, and the remediation of environmental contamination. The operations require the Group to obtain and comply with the terms and conditions of public permits and licenses, some of which are difficult and costly to obtain and could be subject to legal challenges.
Environmental standards applicable to the Group are established by the laws and regulations that apply in the countries in which the Group operates, standards adopted by regulatory agencies and the permits and licenses. Violations of these laws, regulations or permits and licenses may result in substantial civil and criminal fines, penalties, and possibly orders to cease the violating operations or to conduct or pay for corrective works. In some instances, violations may also result in the suspension or revocation of permits and licenses.
The risk of substantial environmental costs and liabilities is inherent in industrial operations, including the industries in which the Group is operating.
The EU has for many years taken steps to open the electricity market for competition. Already back in 1996, the 1996 Electricity Market Directive (96/92/EC) was adopted, which set out common rules for the internal market in electricity. This was the first step towards an open, common European electricity market. This directive has been revised several times. In June 2019, a Fourth Energy Package was adopted consisting of one directive (Electricity Directive (2019/944/EU) and three regulations: the Electricity Regulation (2019/943/EU), the Risk-Preparedness Regulation (2019/941/EU) and the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators (ACER) Regulation (2019/942/EU). The Fourth Energy package introduces new electricity market rules to meet the needs of renewable energies and to attract investments. It provides incentives for consumers and introduces a new limit for power plants to be eligible to receive subsidies as capacity mechanisms. It also makes it a requirement for the Member States to prepare contingency plans for potential electricity crises and increases the ACER's competences in cross-border regulatory cooperation when there is the risk of national and regional fragmentation.
The Renewable Energy Directive (2009/28/EC) establishes an overall policy for the production and promotion of energy from renewable sources in the EU. It requires the EU to fulfil at least 32% of its total energy needs with renewable energy by 2030.
In December 2018, the recast Renewable Energy Directive 2018/2001/EU entered into force, as part of the clean energy for all Europeans package, aimed at keeping the EU a global leader in renewables and, more broadly, helping the EU to meet its emissions reduction commitments under the Paris Agreement.
The recast directive moves the legal framework to 2030 and sets a new binding renewable energy target for the EU for 2030 of at least 32%, with a clause for a possible upwards revision by 2023 and comprises measures for the different sectors to make it happen.
The recast Renewable Energy Directive 2018/2001/EU also extends the Guarantee of Origin Scheme until 2030. Further, acknowledging that permitting processes can be an obstacle to renewable energy projects in general, and of wind power in particular, the EU has addressed this issue in the revised Renewable Energy Directive (2018/2001/EU), which includes provisions that aim to simplify permitting processes.
Production, conversion and transmission of energy in Norway is subject to the Norwegian Energy Act of 29 June 1990 no. 50, which provides a framework for competition in production transferring and trading of electricity. The act provides key regulations for the marketplaces of electrical energy, responsibility for system operation, energy planning and electricity supply quality. Further, the act prescribes a compulsory license for the construction of wind farms and hydroelectrical power plants exceeding a certain size and capacity. The Norwegian Energy Act also requires that a trading license must be obtained before a power plant can deliver electricity to the grid.
To construct, own and operate a wind farm in Norway, a facility license under to the Norwegian Energy Act is required. In addition, the wind farm must comply with the local municipal zoning regulations, which is normally achieved by obtaining a dispensation from the zoning plan in question. Prior to construction, a detail plan and an environmental, transport and construction plan must be approved by the NVE. Ultimately, permits must be obtained for any additional measures outside of the planning area (as described in the facility license).
On 8 April 2022 the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy announced that the processing of applications for new onshore wind projects were to resume. It is a requirement for processing that the host municipality supports the project. The Ministry also announced that the processing will include more stringent requirements and greater emphasis on local participation in the licensing process. The Ministry has also stated that it intends to continue the process for regulatory revisions as decided by the Norwegian Parliament in 2020 (cf. Meld. St. 28 (2019-2020)). The key item in these revisions were the implementation of planning and construction of onshore wind farms in the Planning and Building Act. As of the time of this Prospectus, the new set of policy and regulations are yet to be announced. The current expectations are that a public hearing for the necessary legislative changes will be conducted in Q1 2023.
Norwegian wind farms have until now only been subject to ordinary taxation. The Company is subject to corporate tax of 22% and 21.8% in Norway and Sweden respectively. Norwegian wind farms have historically only been subject to ordinary taxation, including property tax where applicable. However, with effect from 1 July 2022, the Norwegian government implemented a production fee on power from wind farms at NOK 0.01/kWh (approx. 1 EUR/MWh). In October 2022 it was proposed that the production fee is increased to NOK 0.02/kWh (approx. 2 EUR/MWh). With respect to land-based wind farms (both existing and new) which are subject to license requirement and hydropower plants with an installed effect of minimum 1 MW, the Norwegian government has proposed to introduce a high price contribution tax levied on energy sold at a price above NOK 0.70/kWh at a rate of 23%, with effect from 1 January 2023. The high price contribution tax is not expected to be deductible in the calculation of corporate income tax or resource rent tax. Further, the Norwegian government has informed that they plan to introduce a resource rent tax and natural resource tax for land-based wind farms (both existing and new) which are subject to license requirement, with effect from 1 January 2023. The Norwegian government's plan is to publish a consultation paper during the autumn of 2022, and for the Parliament to resolve legislation relating to the new taxation during spring 2023.
In order to make use of water for energy production, the developer must have the ownership rights to the waterfall. For small-scale hydropower projects the developer is required to obtain a license under the Norwegian Concession Act of 28 November 2003 no. 98 to acquire such rights. For larger hydropower a non-state developer is required to obtain a license under the Norwegian Waterfall Rights Act of 14 December 1917 no. 16 (Nw.: vannfallsrettighetsloven) to acquire such rights. Such licenses are privilege to companies that must be at least two-thirds publicly owned. The Group's hydro power plants are all small-scale projects below the threshold for a license under the Waterfall Rights Act.
Energy projects of small scale may also be subject to the Water Resources Act, under which a license containing conditions to ensure compensation for damage or to mitigate damage may be issued.
Furthermore, the regulation of river systems will be subject to the Watercourse Regulation Act as of 14 December 1917 no. 17. In order to regulate flow in a river or transfer water between river systems for utilization in power generation above a certain threshold, a license under the Watercourse Regulation Act is required.
The EU Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC) has been implemented in Norwegian law through the Water Management Regulations, which were adopted under the Planning and Building Act of 27 June 2008 no. 71, the Water Resources Act of 24 November 2000 no. 82 and the Pollution Control Act of 13 March 1981 no. 6. The regulations stipulate provisions on river basin management plans, whose objective is to safeguard the ecological status of coastal waters, rivers and lakes.
Various other acts do also provide relevant legislation for the management of water and wind resources in Norway, such as the Expropriation Act of 23 October 1959 no. 3, the Cultural Heritage Act as of 9 June 1978 no. 50, the Competition Act of 5 March 2004 no. 12, the Consumer Purchases Act of 26 June 2002 no. 34 and the Public Administration Act as of 10 February 1967.
With regard to the legal framework for the operations in Sweden, the permitting process for wind farms is regulated by the Swedish Environmental Code, which stipulates different procedures depending on whether the wind farm is classified as mid-sized or large. Further, in case of infringement of a protected area under the Environmental Code, a permit must be obtained. If the wind farm is built on or close to an ancient monument, the developer is also required to have a permit in accordance with the Swedish Cultural Heritage Act.
Land rights for wind farms are normally obtained through leasehold or freehold (ownership). The rights of passage and wiring on another property can be secured by registering an easement on the property over which it passes. In case the landowner cannot agree on the right of passage, an administrative procedure may grant such rights.
In accordance with EU legislation, power plants in the EEA may get approved for Guarantees of Origin for five years at a time. Energy suppliers may buy such Guarantees of Origin from the power producer in order to guarantee its customers that the delivered energy is produced from renewable sources.
The relevance of the latest revision of the current European Renewable Energy Directive is currently being assessed by the EEA/EFTA. The revision seems to extend the Guarantee of Origin scheme, although no decision has been made. The future of the scheme is thus subject to political risk, which in turn may affect the Group's business, income and financial condition.
Unless otherwise stated, this Section provides an overview of the Group's business as of the date of this Prospectus. The following discussion contains forward-looking statements that reflect the Company's plans and estimates (please refer to Section 4.4 (Cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements) above regarding forward-looking statements) and should be read in conjunction with other parts of this Prospectus, in particular Section 2 (Risk factors).
The Company was established in November 2017 and is the parent company of the Group. The Group owns and develops Nordic renewable energy assets. The Company currently has three direct subsidiaries to reflect its business segments, Cloudberry Production AS ("CB Production"), Cloudberry Develop AS ("CB Develop") and the operating segment Captiva Group ("Captiva") where Cloudberry is a 60% owner.

A group chart with a full overview of the Company's subsidiaries is set out in Section 14.2 (Legal structure).
CB Develop develops hydro and wind power assets with the help of externally sourced construction partners. CB Develop holds, through a number of subsidiaries, a stake in a significant development portfolio with renewable assets both in Sweden and Norway. Post development, certain assets are kept by the Group through an intra-group transfer to CB Production while others are sold to third parties.
CB Production acquires and holds the producing hydro and power assets through special purpose vehicles with the help of externally sourced operating partners.
Captiva is a data-driven operator, manager and developer of renewable energy in the Nordics. The company also manages and advices third party clients with their Nordic renewable assets. Cloudberry is a 60% owner of the Captiva Group.
The illustration below provides an overview of the portfolio as of 25 October 2022:

(1): Asset portfolio per reporting date 25 October 2022 with proportionate ownership to Cloudberry. (2): Stenkalles project: 50% ownership-based on sale of 50% of project to Hafslund AS. Kafjarden project. Based on full capacity of 40 MW. Duvhällen project included as 60 MW – Cloudberry has grid capacity permit for 30 MW and has applied for increased grid capacity to match the construction permit. Munkhyttan project, included as 18 MW (not including option for Munkhyttan II). The Company (excluding Captiva) has offices in Oslo, Norway (headquarter), Karlstad, Sweden, Eskildstuna, Sweden and Gothenburg, Sweden. As of the date of this Prospectus, 9 of the employees are located in Oslo, 8 in Karlstad/Eskilstuna and 3 employees in Gothenburg.
The Captiva Group has four offices in Norway, in Oslo, Lillestrøm, Horten and Porsgrunn and one office in Bern, Switzerland. Captiva has a total of 41 employees where 18 are in the Oslo office, 10 in Lillestrøm, 8 in Horten, 3 is in Porsgrunn and 3 in Bern.
Cloudberry's portfolio of power producing assets and secured assets under construction consists of 28 hydropower and 3 wind power assets, with a total capacity of 156 MW (127 MW is currently in production and the remaining 29 MW under construction). The Group also owns 100% of four additional construction permits, which if completed will grow the total portfolio to 324 MW. Below is an illustration of the status of the assets per last reporting date showing the net capacity to Cloudberry.

The 28 hydropower assets are Finnesetbekken (1 hydro asset), Forte (15 hydro assets), Selselva (1 hydro asset), Nessakraft (1 hydro asset), Bjørgelva (1 hydro asset), Usma (1 hydro asset), Åmotsfoss (1 hydro asset), Tinnkraft (1 hydro asset), Bøen I & II (2 hydro assets), Skåråna (2 hydro assets), Ramsliåna (1 hydro asset) and Kvemma (1 hydro asset). The three wind power assets are Røyrmyra (1 wind asset), Odal (1 wind asset) and Hån (1 wind asset).
The four projects with construction permits are Kafjärden (1 wind asset), Munkhyttan (1 wind asset), Duvhallen (1 wind asset) and the shallow-water project Stenkalles (1 wind asset). Below is more detailed information about the assets.
| Total | Net | Est. net | Concession | Land lease | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Project | Technology | Location | Price area |
capacity (MW) |
Owner ship |
capacity (MW) |
production (GWh p.a.) |
(remaining years) |
(remaining years) |
Status |
| Fi nnes etbekken | Hydro | Norwa y NO-5 | 1 | 100 % | 1 | 3 | > 100 | 40 | Producing | |
| Røyrmyra | Wind | Norwa y NO-2 | 2 | 100 % | 2 | 8 | 20 | 45 | Producing | |
| Forte (5 a s sets , NO-2) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-2 | 26 | 34 % | 8 | 29 | > 100 | Avg. 38 | Producing | |
| Forte (4 a s sets , NO-3) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-3 | 19 | 34 % | 6 | 21 | > 100 | Avg. 49 | Producing | |
| Forte (6 a s sets , NO-5) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-5 | 33 | 34 % | 11 | 37 | > 100 | Avg. 53 | Producing | |
| Sel s el va | Hydro | Norwa y NO-3 | 5 | 100 % | 5 | 20 | > 100 | 59 | Producing | |
| Nes s a kra ft | Hydro | Norwa y NO-5 | 9 | 100 % | 9 | 34 | > 100 | 49 | Producing | |
| Bjørgelva | Hydro | Norwa y NO-4 | 3 | 100 % | 3 | 7 | > 100 | 59 | Producing | |
| Us ma | Hydro | Norwa y NO-3 | 9 | 100 % | 9 | 26 | > 100 | > 100 | Producing | |
| Åmotfos s | Hydro | Norwa y NO-2 | 5 | 100 % | 5 | 23 | > 100 | > 100 | Producing | |
| Ti nnkraft (new, 2022) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-2 | 2 | 100 % | 2 | 6 | > 100 | 60 | Producing | |
| Bøen I & II (new, 2022) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-2 | 6 | 100 % | 6 | 18 | > 100 | 42 | Producing | |
| Ra ms l iå na | Hydro | Norwa y NO-2 | 2 | 100 % | 2 | 6 | > 100 | 50 | Producing | |
| Skåråna (2 as s ets ) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-2 | 4 | 100 % | 4 | 14 | > 100 | 40 | Producing | |
| Oda l Vi nd | Wind | Norwa y NO-1 | 163 | 33.4 % | 54 | 176 | 30 | 30 | Producing (> 90%) | |
| Hån | Wind | Sweden | NO-1 | 21 | 100 % | 21 | 74 | 32 | 32 | 5 of 5 turbi nes erected |
| Kvemma (new, 2022) | Hydro | Norwa y NO-5 | 8 | 100 % | 8 | 20 | > 100 | 40 | Cons t/Prod. H1 2024 | |
| Total 1 (Producing/under cons tr.) | 317 | 156 | 522 | |||||||
| Kafjarden (new, 2022)* | Wind | Sweden | SE-3 | 40 | 100 % | 40 | 90 | 30 | 30 Permit/final procurement | |
| Munkhytta n (new, 2022) | Wind | Sweden | SE-3 | 18 | 100 % | 18 | 60 | 30 | 30 Permit/final procurement | |
| Stenka ll es (Va nern)** | Offs hore | Sweden | SE-3 | 100 | 50 % | 50 | 164 | > 100 | > 100 Permit/final procurement | |
| Duvha lll en | Wind | Sweden | SE-3 | 60 | 100 % | 60 | 165 | 27 | 27 | Constr. permit |
| Total 2 (incl. cons tr. permit) | 535 | 324 | 1 001 |
* Project capacity 32 - 40 MW pending final turbine selection
** Based on final agreement with Hafslund AS signed Sept. 2022 (sale of 50% of project)
Concessions from the NVE are granted without a time limit, and "remaining years" in the table above is related to the remaining years of the lease period in the agreements with the landowners. The majority of the lease agreements with landowners have mechanisms for extension beyond the initial lease period.
The Group also holds a backlog of exclusive projects under development (420 MW and 15 projects) and a pipeline of non-exclusive projects of > 2,500 MW (including hydro, on- and offshore wind in Norway and Sweden). These projects are not shown in the table above; please refer to Section 7.5 (Cloudberry Develop AS, operations and activities) for further details.
In the period since 1 January 2021, the Group has been involved in a large number of M&A transactions, as further described below in this Section 7.3.
In December 2020, Cloudberry Production AS entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS, which owns a power producing hydropower plant with expected annual production of 20 GWh. The transaction was completed in on 13 January 2021. The plant is generating revenue. The total purchase price of NOK 65 million was paid in cash and was equity financed.
In December 2020, Cloudberry Production AS entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS, which is the owner of two hydropower plants. The power plants commenced production in third quarter 2022 and are expected to have an annual production at a normalised level of 14 GWh. The transaction was completed in February 2021. The purchase price was originally NOK 23.7 million, of which NOK 17.0 million was settled in cash, while NOK 6.0 million was held back since the purchase price is subject to adjustments in case of cost overruns related to construction projects. As per the end of third quarter 2022, there have been cost overruns exceeding NOK 6.0 million, and hence there will be no final settlement with the seller.
At the time the Company acquired Cloudberry Production AS in February 2020, Cloudberry Production AS had already agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Nessakraft AS. Nessakraft AS consists of a producing hydropower plant with expected annual production of 34 GWh. The transaction was completed in June 2021. The purchase price amounted to NOK 79.0 million, which was paid in cash and was equity financed.
At the time the Company acquired Cloudberry Production AS in February 2020, Cloudberry Production AS had already agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Bjørgelva Kraft AS. Bjørgelva Kraft AS owns a producing hydropower plant with expected annual production of 7 GWh. The transaction was completed in June 2021. The purchase price amounted to NOK 10.8 million, which was paid in cash and equity financed.
In December 2020, Cloudberry Production AS entered into an agreement to acquire up to 33.4% of the shares of Odal Vindkraftverk AS (now Odal Vind AS). Odal Vind AS owns a wind farm in production (33 of 34 turbines operational) located in Nord-Odal municipality in Norway. The wind farm (100% basis) has an installed effect of 163 MW with an annual expected production of approximately 500 GWh.
The Group completed the acquisition of 15% of the shares in December 2020. In July 2021, Cloudberry Production AS exercised its option to increase its shareholding from 15% to 33.4%. The purchase price for the additional 18.4% of the shares amounted to NOK 239.7 and was settled with cash and equity financed.
On 20 August 2021, Cloudberry Production AS agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS. Usma Kraft AS consists of a producing hydropower plant located in Selbu in Trøndelag, Norway, with an annual production of approximately 25.5 GWh. The transaction was completed on 20 August 2021. The purchase price amounted to NOK 82.9 million, which was paid in cash and equity financed.
In September 2020, Cloudberry Production AS agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS, a company owning a producing hydropower plant located in Nissedal in Telemark, Norway. The hydropower plant has an estimated annual production of 22.7 GWh. The transaction was completed 1 December 2021. The purchase price amounted to NOK 91.4 million, which was paid in cash and was equity financed.
The Company acquired 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS on 7 January 2022. Captiva Digital Services AS is the sole shareholder of (i) Captiva Asset Management AS, (ii) Captiva Digital Solutions AS and (iii) Captiva Energi AS, with subsidiaries and related companies (together the "Captiva Group"). The Captiva Group's primary activity is development of hydropower projects and operation of power plants. Pursuant to the share purchase agreement, Cloudberry has the right, but not an obligation, to acquire the remaining 40% of the shareholding of Captiva Digital Services AS at a predetermined price by 30 June 2025.
The agreed enterprise value for the Captiva group was NOK 160 million (on 100% basis) on a cash- and debt free basis, taking into account normalised working capital. The purchase price for 60% of the shares amounted to NOK 101 million, which was settled (i) by a cash payment of NOK 50.5 million and (ii) by issuance of 3,484,041 new shares in the Company at a subscription price of NOK 14.50 per share, equal to approximately 1.46% of the total issued and outstanding shares in Cloudberry following completion of the transaction.
On 1 February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS completed its acquisition 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS, which owns a producing hydropower plant located in Tinn municipality, Norway, with an annual production of 7 GWh. The purchase price amounted to NOK 27.7 million and was paid with cash settlement.
On 3 February 2022, Cloudberry Utveckling II AB acquired 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB. Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB consist of a late-stage wind power development project located in the municipality of Lindesberg in the SE3 price area of Sweden. Munkhyttan is a project with construction permit for 18 MW. Cloudberry has also secured an option to acquire additional 18MW project Munkhyttan II, on the same terms. This project is in the process of obtaining required concessions.
The purchase price for Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB amounted to SEK 20 million, of which SEK 14 million was paid at completion and the remaining SEK 6 million will be paid when the project reaches commercial operations date.
On 28 January 2022, the Company entered into an asset purchase agreement regulating the acquisition of the Kafjärden project through its subsidiary Oxenstierna Vind AB. The Kafjärden project consists of certain existing assets, rights and liabilities related to a proposed wind park to be located in the municipality of Eskilstuna, Sweden, comprising of nine turbine locations including permits to construct and install up to nine wind turbines.
The asset transfer was completed 18 March 2022 at a fixed purchase price of SEK 3 million. An additional purchase price may become payable depending on the final outcome of the on-going development of the project. Such payment is subject to a final investment decision being made by Cloudberry.
In March 2021, the Group entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares in Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS, a hydropower plant in Flekkefjord, Norway with an expected annual production of 6 GWh. The plant was connected to the grid in December 2021 and the transaction was completed on 30 March 2022, after a three-month commissioning period. A preliminary purchase price amounted to NOK 5.7 million which was settled with cash. The purchase price is subject to adjustments based on the normal production level calculated 24 months after the date of completion.
In February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS made a proposal to all shareholders of RE Energi AS regarding the purchase of minimum 68% of the shares in the company. The purchase price per share was equal to the nominal value amount of NOK 1 per share. The purchase price will be subject to future adjustments conditional upon the development and construction of a hydro power plant located in Gloppen municipality in Vestland, Norway.
At the date of this Prospectus, Cloudberry Production AS has completed the acquisition of 100% of the shares at a purchase price of NOK 0.1 million. In addition, Cloudberry has invested NOK 3.0 million in a capital contribution in the company.
In June 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS. Bøen Kraft AS consists of the two hydro power plants Bøen 1 and 2, with the former in operation since 2006, and the latter from 2016. The expected average combined production of the two plants located in Hjelmeland, Rogaland is 17 GWh per year. The plants are located in the NO2 price area.
In addition to the operating plants, a third license application is expected to be filed during 2022. If the application proves successful, Bøen 3 will be built with a dam at the outlet of Kaldavatnet, thus adding flexibility of production to also Bøen 1 and 2, both situated downstream from the planned Bøen 3 plant. The Bøen 3 plant is planned with an expected annual production of 5 GWh, pending license approval.
The acquisition was completed on 9 June 2022. The total purchase price was NOK 101.7 million, of which NOK 16.2 million was settled through issuance of 935,020 new shares in the Company at a subscription price of NOK 17.32 per share.
On 17 June 2021, Captiva Asset Management AS entered into an agreement to acquire up to 51% of the shares of Enestor AS. Captiva Asset Management AS completed the initial purchase of 25.01% of the shares in June 2021 and increased its ownership in Enestor AS from 25.01% to 51% in June 2022.
The transaction for the additional 25.99% of the shares was completed on 30 June 2022 for a purchase price of NOK 4.65 million.
On 15 June 2022, Captiva Energi AS agreed to sell 100% of its shares of Jåstadkraft AS. The sale was completed on 30 June 2022 for a price of NOK 21 million.
On 6 July 2022, Cloudberry Develop AS agreed to sell 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS to Hafslund Vekst AS ("Hafslund") with the intention to form a 50/50 joint venture with Hafslund. Stenkalles Holding AS indirectly owns the 100 MW shallow-water wind development project Stenkalles Grund in the lake of Vänern in south-central Sweden (SE3).
The sale was completed on 19 September 2022 for an initial purchase price of NOK 16.2 million. In addition, Cloudberry will be entitled to an earn-out payment depending on the success of the project at the commercial operation date.
On 1 February 2022, the Group entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, which owns a hydropower plant under construction located in Lærdal municipality, Norway. The hydropower plant has an estimated annual production of 19.4 GWh, which is expected to commence during H1 2024. The transaction is expected to be completed in H1 2024 once the construction of the power plant has been completed and following a successful commissioning period. The purchase price is estimated to NOK 124 million, adjusted for net debt at completion. At the entering of the agreement NOK 12.4 million (10% of the estimated purchase price) was transferred to an escrow account.
CB Production is focused on owning renewable energy projects in the Nordics with long-term cash flow expectations. The Group has long experience from managing power plants and technical suppliers. CB Production has focused on building a scalable platform with relatively low overhead costs and outsources construction, operations and maintenance of its power plants.
Construction, operation and maintenance are normally outsourced to selected experienced local utility partners and turbine manufacturers, securing access to well proven technological solutions, local presence and sharing in their economies of scale. CB Production's hydro plants are currently operated by Captiva. Outsourced operational tasks include inter alia continuous monitoring, 24h emergency central and local monitoring/servicing, planned servicing and optimisation of daily production (including daily weather monitoring).
Due to technological development, most of the plants are equipped with sensors and surveillance systems in order to minimise operations and maintenance costs. Operations and maintenance costs typically account for approximately 10% of revenue (slightly lower for the hydro power assets and slightly higher for the wind assets), property tax normally 0.7% of book values and other cost (insurance, accounting etc.) approximately 1% of the revenue. Wind assets in Norway do also have a production fee to the local municipalities of about EUR 2 per MWh.
Land lease agreements vary between the hydro projects and are specified in the table under Section 7.2 (Overview of the Group's operations and activities). In some agreements, the land-lease cost is normally 10% of revenue, while in other contracts a minimum net equity return of typically 4%-7% is secured before the upside is shared between Cloudberry and the landowner(s). For the wind projects, the landlease cost is 4% of the revenue.
With regard to construction of new plants, the Group prefers to outsource construction in order to minimise overhead costs, secure high quality expertise and minimise project risk.
The market for construction of hydropower plants in Norway is mature and has developed over the last 100 years. The market for construction of wind power plants is less mature,but has developed significantly over the last decade. CB Production's experience is that high quality expertise is available, pricing is competitive, and benchmarking is relatively manageable. A majority of Cloudberry's hydro plants are new.
A power plant's revenue is sourced through the sale of power, Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin. Revenue equals volume produced multiplied by the price of power, Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin. 98% of all electricity produced is currently sold in the spot marked.
Water volumes in the rivers over time and high consistent wind speeds are important input factors for volume produced, while the power price is the most sensitive price input (please refer to Section 6.3 (Supply and demand for Nordic electricity) for information regarding expected long term power prices in the Nordics). CB Production borrow water and wind resources from landowners, and act as a longterm owner and steward of land, wind and water resources. Access to the land is secured through longterm lease agreements with the landowners.
By the latest reporting date, 25 October 2022, CB Production had a production portfolio of 127 MW in operation. Cloudberry's historical production volumes has been 172 GWh (three first quarters of 2022), 117 GWh for 2021 and 21 GWh in 2020. Annual production is expected to increase considerably in 2023, following acquisitions made in 2021-2022, as well as the completion of several power plants under construction (please refer to Section 7.2 (Overview of the Group's operations and activities) for further details related to the portfolio).
Cloudberry has one wind project (Hån) and one hydropower plant (Øvre Kvemma) under construction. Below is a closer description of the two projects under construction.
The construction of Hån commenced on 2 August 2021. The construction work is on schedule and within budget. The project is located in Årjäng municipality, Sweden, and is planned with an installed capacity of 21 MW. The wind turbine consists of five Vestas V150 4.2 MW turbines with a total height of 200 meters. They are expected to provide an annual production of 74 GWh. The power will be delivered to the Norwegian power grid (NO1, Oslo price area). All five turbines are currently erected, and electrification and testing has started. Revenue generating production is expected from the end of 2022.
The hydro project Øvre Kvemma is located in Lærdal municipality, Norway. The estimated, annual power production is 19 GWh (8 MW). Cloudberry secured the project in early 2022 and the construction has just started. Cloudberry will not take construction risk and expects to have financial close in H1 2024 once the power plant is completed and after a commissioning period.
During 2021 and 2022, Europe, and the Nordics, have seen record high power prices, primarily driven by the lack of energy in the European market. The energy prices have been driven up by the war in Ukraine and lack of gas, strong increase in the CO2 prices, little rain in southern parts of Norway and less-than-normal wind across Europe. For the year 2021, the Nordic System price ended at above EUR 62 per MWh. For the first three quarters in 2022 the Nordic System price ended at EUR 171 per MWh the highest ever recorded price. However, the internal price difference between the regions were at record levels due to significant variations in perception levels. In 2022 the power price in the Oslo area (price region NO 1) was EUR 242 per MWh while in the northern area (price region NO 4) only EUR 35 per MWh.
During 2021, about 90% of Cloudberry's power sale was sold at spot prices. So far in 2022, 98% of Cloudberry's power production is exposed to spot prices.
Cloudberry Develop AS develops hydro and wind power assets from early stage through to obtaining construction permits. Assets developed are then sold, either to Cloudberry Production AS or wholly or partly to third parties.
Cloudberry Develop AS is focused on growing and improving the Nordic backlog of renewable projects. The company has a dynamic approach to the project backlog portfolio and projects will either be developed, sold or discontinued based on the projects' characteristics and prospects for further development.
Cloudberry Develop AS is also focused on the early phase planning, procurement and project oversight while construction is outsourced to third parties.
Cloudberry Develop AS currently has four main onshore development projects with construction license; project Kafjärden (20 – 40 MW, expected 32 MW (90 GWh)), project Munkhyttan (18 MW), project Duvhällen (30 – 60 MW) and the shallow-water project Stenkalles (100 MW).
Kafjärden is located in Eskilstuna municipality (SE 3 region). The project has a construction permit and parts of the infrastructure is already in place including roads, crane pads, foundations and power grid. Cloudberry is currently optimising the project (expected 32 MW with an annual expected production of 90 GWh) and finalising the final development and procurement process (i.e. turbine negotiations). The project is planned to be completed by 2023/2024.
Munkhyttan is located in the SE 3 region in Sweden. Final development and procurement are on-going. The project has a construction permit of 18 MW. Cloudberry has secured the option to purchase Munkhyttan II (additional 18 MW) at same terms and conditions. Munkhyttan II is currently in the development phase while Munkhyttan I is expected to start construction in 2023 and be completed in 2024.
Project Duvhällen is a wholly owned wind farm project located in Eskilstuna, Sweden (SE 3 region). The project has received a construction license of 165 GWh/60MW. However, the current power grid capacity is limited to 30 MW/82 GWh. The grid owner, Vattenfall, has completed an environmental impact assessment and filed for an increased power grid capacity permit to match the construction permit to Elmarknadsinspektionen. The receipt of increased power grid capacity permit is still not received from Vattenfall. Procurement and construction will be initiated following receipt of the full grid permit.
The Stenkalles Project is a nearshore shallow water wind project in Lake Vänern, the largest lake in Sweden. Stenkalles is owned 50/50 by Cloudberry and Hafslund. The project has received a permit to build 20 wind turbines with a total installed capacity of 100 MW and has secured and signed the power grid connection agreement. Detailed planning and procurement are underway for Stenkalles. The joint Cloudberry and Hafslund offshore team work closely with the project team from the Dutch company Ventolines to optimise the project and further reduce risk before making the final investment decision.. Commercial operation is targeted for 2025.
Cloudberry Develop AS also holds a backlog portfolio of 420 MW. These projects are exclusive, but without construction permit.
Björnetjärnsberget is one of the named projects in the project backlog. During Q4 2021 Cloudberry sent a consultation document (Samrådshandling) for the Björnetjärnsberget project in Eda municipality, Sweden. This means that the formal process related to the project to the authorities and stakeholders has begun. The project is within municipal plans for wind power. The project is planned with 15-18 wind turbines. A collaboration has also been initiated with Hilmer Andersson AB, a local sawmill that over several years has had major challenges with poor power supply, both security of supply and capacity.
Cloudberry Develop is also working on a non-exclusive pipeline of more than 20 projects with a capacity above 2,500 MW. All projects are located in Norway or Sweden and are combinations of off-shore wind (shallow-water), on-shore wind and hydro-power projects. The projects are primarily in an early phase of the development process.
Cloudberry Develop AS has been involved in offshore wind power since 2010 and has built up significant development expertise. The team was in January strengthened with Charlotte Bergquist (Head of Development) and new offices in Eskilstuna and Gothenburg, Sweden.
Based on the experience and expertise gained from the Stenkalles Project, Cloudberry intends use the know-how for offshore projects in the Baltic Sea, which have similar water-depths and is expected to use similar technical solutions. Cloudberry recently announced the first hearings regarding the possibility of an offshore wind farm outside the Simpevarp peninsula in Oskarshamn located on the Swedish east coast in SE3. A strong grid connection in combination with good water depths, suitable ports and a unique industrial energy expertise nearby create favourable conditions for what Cloudberry believes to be Sweden's first large-scale unsubsidised offshore wind farm.
On 7 January 2022 Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA acquired 60% of the shares in Captiva Digital Services AS.
Captiva Digital Services AS with subsidiaries is a data-driven operator, manager and developer of renewable energy in the Nordics. The Group comprises of the following business areas with respective subsidiaries and associated companies:
(1) Captiva Asset Management AS with subsidiaries, delivers management services within operations and maintenance, development and construction, technical and commercial, and finance and accounting services to renewable energy projects in the Nordics.
Captiva Asset Management AS provides technical, commercial and asset management services on wind and hydro power assets in the Nordics. As an integrated service for its asset management customers, Captiva offers accounting services, provided through Captiva Financial Services AS, which holds an authorisation as an accounting firm (Nw.: regnskapsførerselskap) and is subject to supervision by the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway (Nw.: Finanstilsynet).
Captiva Asset Management AS operates more than 50 small scale hydro power plants with a total installed capacity of approx. 180 MW and an annual production of approximately 0.5 TWh in Norway. On Nordic wind assets, Captiva Asset Management AS delivers services on 16 wind farms with a total installed capacity of 1.6 GW.
The asset management services are supported by live data stream and analytics based on own and leased technology combined with an inhouse data science team. Captiva Asset Management AS also delivers transaction support services in terms of valuation and due diligence, in addition to project management services during the construction phase on wind and hydro power projects.
Captiva Asset Management AS holds 33.3% of the shares of Proxima Hydrotech AS, a small-scale hydro power operation specialist delivering operation and maintenance services and local supervision. Further, Captiva Asset Management AS holds 51% of the shares of the technical adviser Enestor AS, a boutique engineering company focused on hydro power.
Captiva Digital Solutions AS develops and delivers industrial digital solutions to the renewable energy sector. The company's main product is the Captiva Portal, a web-based visualisation, reporting and stakeholder tool with live data stream. There are currently more than 500 hydro plants connected to the Captiva Portal.
Captiva Digital Solutions AS holds 50.5% of the shares of Kraftanmelding AS, a technology company delivering balancing services including forecasting, scheduling and settlement of power sales. Further, Captiva Digital Solutions AS holds a 56% ownership in Broentech Solution AS, a software company developing and delivering the industrial analytic tool Tyde. Tyde is a cloud-based software solution used to compile, analyse, and structure data from operating hydro power plants for the purpose of monitoring and optimising production.
Captiva Energi AS develops small scale hydro power projects in Norway. During the five last years, Captiva Energi AS has developed and constructed 15 small scale hydro plants with a total annual production of more than 150 GWh. Captiva Energi AS focuses on late-stage development, but also engages acquisition of private rights and the process of obtaining required licences. Captiva Energi AS seeks limited to no construction risk on own books.
The table below shows the key events in the history of the Cloudberry Group:
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2017 November | The Company (formerly Cloudberry Capital AS) is incorporated. |
| 2020 February | The Company acquires 100% of the shares of Cloudberry Develop AS (formerly Scanergy AS) and Cloudberry Production AS (formerly CB Nordic Renewable & Infrastructure Fund I AS) and the new group is formed. |
| 2020 March | The Company completes a NOK 158 million private placement. |
| 2020 April | The Company's shares are admitted to trading on Euronext Growth Oslo (formerly Merkur Market). |
| 2020 June | The Group agrees to acquire 34% of the shares of Forte Energy Norway AS (owner of a producing hydropower portfolio). |
| 2020 July | The Company completes a NOK 200 million private placement. |
| 2020 August | The Group agrees to purchase 100% of the shares of Skogvind AS (industrial wind developer). |
| 2020 September | The Group enters into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS (owner of a hydropower plant under construction). |
| 2020 September | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS (owner of a 100 MW shallow-water project in lake Vänern in Sweden). |
| 2020 December | The Company completes a NOK 500 million private placement. |
| 2020 December | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS (owner of two hydropower plants under construction) and Selselva Kraft AS (owner of producing hydropower plant). |
| 2020 December | The Group agrees to acquire up to 33.4% of the shares in Odal Vindkraft AS (owner of a 163 MW wind farm under construction) and completes the acquisition of the initial 15% of the shares. |
| 2021 March | The Group enters into a NOK 700 million credit facility agreement with SpareBank 1 SR Bank ASA (term loan of NOK 400 million and a related revolving credit facility of NOK 300 million). |
| 2021 May | The Company is converted to a public limited liability company. |
| 2021 June | The Company completes a NOK 1,075 million private placement. |
| 2021 August | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS. |
| 2021 November | The Company increases its existing credit facility with SpareBank 1 SR Bank ASA from NOK 700 million to NOK 1,400 million. |
|---|---|
| 2021 December | The Company completes a NOK 600 million private placement. |
| 2022 January | The Company agrees to acquire 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS, with an option to acquire the remaining 40%. |
| 2022 January | The Company enters into an asset purchase agreement to acquire the Kafjärden project. |
| 2022 February | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS. |
| 2022 February | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS. |
| 2022 February | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Kraftverk AB. |
| 2022 June | The Group agrees to acquire 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS. |
| 2022 September | The Group agrees to sell 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS. |
| 2022 September | The Company completes a NOK 800 million private placement (the Private Placement). |
Cloudberry is a local developer and owner of renewable projects in the Nordics. The Company considers that the following are the Group's main competitive strengths:
Cloudberry was founded with the purpose of providing renewable energy for future generations, contributing to a sustainable society for the long term and creating value for stakeholders. Cloudberry owns, develops and operates hydro- and wind power assets in the Nordics. Cloudberry aims to only develop new renewable energy assets in a way which creates local value. Cloudberry strives to strike the right balance between environmental, social and economic elements to ensure value for all stakeholders.
The Group has an integrated business model with three revenue generating business segments, Development, Production and Operations, enabling a transparent value chain. A sustainable and local approach is key to the Group's strategy, together with a commitment to long-term value creation for all stakeholders.
Development holds a portfolio of renewable projects in Sweden and Norway and is responsible for developing the projects with external construction partners. Production is the owner of the operating assets, with power sold in the spot market (NordPool) and under fixed price PPAs. Operations focuses on optimising day to day operations and also supporting the development and construction of new projects in the Group. Cloudberry aims to cultivate the portfolio to ensure a diversification and balance of risk, returns, assets and geographical scope.
Cloudberry considers material financial and ESG related factors in making strategic decisions. Cloudberry aims to build a robust business through a diversified and balanced portfolio and uses competitive financing to deliver sustainable, profitable and long-term growth.
In 2020, Cloudberry built a listed growth platform for renewable projects in the Nordics. The segments have grown significantly, while overhead costs have been kept at a low level with a lean management team. Cloudberry seeks to maintain an optimised capital structure, taking both return and risk levels into consideration. The Company uses its local knowledge and network to grow the development and production segment and is well positioned for taking part in structural opportunities in the rapidly growing Nordic renewable sector.
The Company believes in being local, focused and agile. The long-term growth strategy rests upon our ability to create value for all stakeholders, use the best possible technology available, bring down costs, and enhance sustainable operations.
Several long-term alternatives are available for financing, depending on project size, transaction type and counterparty, including (but not limited to):
Cloudberry is a renewable energy company, born, bred and operating in the Nordics. Sustainability is at the very core of Cloudberry's business and seen as a necessity for the Company's long-term achievements and value creation. Cloudberry is a part of the transition to a sustainable future by providing renewable energy today and for future generations. The Company creates value in the local communities, together with and for its employees, business partners, shareholders and other stakeholders.
Cloudberry seeks to understand and manage the Company's impact on society as well as stakeholders' expectations. The Company has conducted sustainability assessment based upon valuable input from key stakeholders, and this laid the foundation for electing the sustainability topics in the Company's value chain that are material for Cloudberry and its key stakeholders.
The development of renewable energy capacity contributes to the energy transition, which is necessary to reach net zero, European and national climate targets and the UN Sustainable Development Goals ("SDGs"). In 2021 Cloudberry reviewed its sustainability strategy towards the SDGs targets to highlight and update goals and key performance indicators and furthermore align them with the indicators defined in the UN SDGs.
Cloudberry's ESG reporting and the Company's approach to sustainability, is in accordance to the World Economic Forum (WEF) Stakeholder Capitalism Metrics.1 The metrics include non-financial disclosures centred around four pillars; Principles of Governance, Planet, People and Prosperity, which are aligned among existing ESG standards and disclosures, e.g., Global Reporting Initiative (GRI),
1 https://www.weforum.org/reports/measuring-stakeholder-capitalism-towards-common-metrics-and-consistentreporting-of-sustainable-value-creation (accessed 10 April 2022)
Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), and Task Force on Climate Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), as well as essential elements of the UN Sustainability Development Goals.
Cloudberry positively impacts the energy transition by producing renewable energy. At the same time, the company impacts the planet through the construction and production of wind farms and hydropower plants. It is important to Cloudberry to reduce the environmental footprint as much as possible.
Cloudberry made the strategic decision in 2020 to measure its greenhouse gas emissions in accordance with the guidelines of the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol. In 2021, the reported greenhouse gas emissions from scope 1, 2, and 3 were 203 tons of CO2e. Cloudberry is a fossil-free company and has no direct emissions in Scope 1. The Company's climate strategy includes compensating for its emissions by purchasing carbon credits. Cloudberry has therefore been net-zero in its own operations (Scope 1 and 2) by removing CO2 from the atmosphere through funding the restoration of mangrove forests. In addition, Cloudberry compensates for the emissions generated by its employees. Moving forward, Cloudberry will conduct the calculation to determine a decarbonisation pathway to reach net-zero in the value chain by 2040.
Cloudberry has a scalable platform and is positioned for valuable growth, both in terms of energy production and building a strong backlog and pipeline through in-house development. Cloudberry's strategy is to continue its sustainable growth organically and inorganically in the Nordic market. Areas of its business will have residual carbon emissions, which the Company will neutralise, while minimising its footprint as much as possible. To limit global warming to the 1.5-degree scenario, Cloudberry will further calculate the total emission in Scope 3 and determine a decarbonisation pathway to do its part for society to become a low-carbon economy.
In 2021, Cloudberry produced 117 GWh of renewable energy, which is equivalent to reducing 29,133 tCO2e, relative to baseline emissions from the European electricity mic (EU-27 electricity mix, IEA 2021). After taking into account the greenhouse gas emissions (Scope 1, 2 and 3) of 203 tCO2e from Cloudberry's carbon emissions accounting and carbon emissions of 297 tCO2e from all employees in Cloudberry, the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from Cloudberry's operations in 2021 was 28,633 tCO2e.
Cloudberry's proportionate power production accumulated per third quarter 2022 totaled 173 GWh. This is equivalent to reducing 43,007 tCO2e, relative to baseline emissions from the European electricity mix (EU-27 electricity mix, IEA 2021). Cloudberry's carbon emissions accounting from Scope 1, 2 and 3 is not reflected in the number of avoided emissions in 2022.
In line with the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), Cloudberry updated the risk assessment related to its business development and expansion during 2021. Cloudberry will continuously analyse and assess its climate-related risk strategy. To further prevent the climate-related risks, work on an integrated scenario analysis will be incorporated into the Cloudberry strategy.
The development, construction and operations of renewable energy plants may have several environmental impacts. Wind farms have an impact on both off- and onshore land areas, and hydropower plants impact river systems. At wind power plants, among other things, there is an environmental impact both under construction and in operation. For onshore wind energy, the first and foremost environmental impact relates to visibility in the landscape, shadows, and noise. For offshore wind, the impact is similar to onshore wind although the visibility and noise is less if the turbines are put far from shore. There are specific environmental impacts to address when constructing an offshore wind farm to protect the wildlife at sea. Hydropower plants impact the water flow, fish and sediment load.
Development, construction and production of wind and hydropower is highly regulated both in Norway and Sweden, with stringent environmental regulations. Cloudberry maintains a continuous dialogue with authorities and local stakeholders. The Company aims to minimise the environmental footprint in its projects and to maximise local value creation. Cloudberry always considers the environmental and social impacts prior to final investment decisions, and this is integrated in Cloudberry's ESG due diligence guideline in all its development and construction projects.
100% of Cloudberry`s turnover, operating expenses, and investments within the Production and Development segments are EU Taxonomy eligible. Third-party assessments to evaluate alignment with the technical screening criteria in the EU Taxonomy Regulation are ongoing and will be reported on from 2023. Newly acquired Captiva Group and the Operations segment will be part of the taxonomy reporting from 2023.
Internal analysis and estimates of life cycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from Cloudberry's producing hydro power assets indicate emissions significantly below the threshold set out in the EU Taxonomy (100g CO2e/kWh). Reporting on Lifecycle GHG emissions, Power Density of the Electricity Generation Facility (above 5 W/m2), Do No Significant Harm (DNSH) and Minimum Safeguard principles are assessed, and Cloudberry is prepared to report in accordance with the EU Taxonomy requirements on its hydro- and wind energy assets, and will strive to ensure that the activities meet the criteria. Cloudberry's goal is to have 100% alignment in the forthcoming years.
Cloudberry adheres to good governance standards and will at all times seek to ensure that the Company endorses the Norwegian Code of Practice for Corporate Governance ("NUES"), last revised on 14 October 2021, which is available at the web site of the Norwegian Corporate Governance Board (www.nues.no). This includes disclosure and transparency in all our business to provide shareholders and stakeholders with precise and accurate information concerning all aspects regarding Cloudberry. More detailed information on NUES is included in the "Corporate Governance Report 2021" in the Annual Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 (Incorporated by reference).
Cloudberry has strengthened its sustainability strategy into the overall business strategy, and the focus on ESG is incorporated in development projects, producing assets and in our overall operating business. As a part of the reporting structure, environmental, social and governance concerns are embedded. The management and Board of Directors review specific sustainability topics including procurement, stakeholder engagement, health and safety, security, and environmental and social impacts in all our business units.
At the management level, the CEO monitors the implementation of the sustainability strategy and is responsible for ensuring that climate-related risks and opportunities are integrated into the company's long-term business strategy. The CEO oversees and reports to the Board of Directors on the management's progress related to Cloudberry's key strategic sustainability and climate-related objectives. Furthermore, Cloudberry has hired a Chief Compliance and Organisation Officer who is in charge of the Company's systems and processes related to ESG and organisational development.
In 2021, the Board of Directors established an ESG committee consisting of two Board directors and the Chief Sustainability Officer. The purpose of the committee is to ensure alignment with the Company's sustainability strategy and to discuss and evaluate ESG concerns relevant to Cloudberry. The committee is responsible of evaluating, following up the implementation of the company's ESG strategy, and to review relevant ESG initiatives. The committee reviews and advises on the Cloudberry's sustainability performance, ESG goals and key performance indicators.
A due diligence guideline on evaluation of environmental, social and governance aspects has been incorporated as an integral part of Cloudberry's investment decisions. The guideline takes into account a selection of ESG aspects that may have material impacts, both positive and negative, and secures mitigation plans where needed. The company also reports on number of projects rejected and underlaying reason as related to environmental, social and governance issues.
A Supplier Code of Conduct has been completed and implemented in procurement phases. Adherence with the Code is required of all suppliers, and Cloudberry expects that their policies, statements, and commitments are implemented in the operations, and throughout the value chain of suppliers and their sub-suppliers. Cloudberry will annually review its Supplier Code of Conduct to ensure incorporation of relevant developments going forward.
Cloudberry's Code of Conduct sets out the key expectations to all employees, the Board of Directors, and other representatives of the company and specifies the ethical requirements for everybody who works for and on behalf of Cloudberry, including suppliers and other business partners. The Code is the basis for how the Company acts and performs its business, it describes Cloudberry's ethical culture and behavior, and provides general guidelines on issues such as anti-corruption, human and labor rights, health and safety, business ethics, legal compliance, insider trading and other relevant issues related to the Company's operations. The Code of Conduct was reviewed, revised, and finally approved by the Board of Directors in February 2022.
The Company rolled out its whistleblowing reporting channel for employees, representatives of the Company as well as suppliers and business partners during 2021, to notify misconduct within the Cloudberry Group.
Cloudberry's responsibility towards employees and hired personnel working on projects is of top priority. In addition, the Company closely monitors the impact on the local communities where the Company operates. Cloudberry takes an active approach and reports transparently in its annual and sustainability reports about its achievements and performance towards diversity and inclusion.
The Act relating to enterprises' transparency and work on fundamental human rights and decent working conditions (the "Transparency Act") came in force 1 July 2022. The Transparency Act is intended to strengthen the impact of international guidelines and principles for responsible business, such as the UN guiding principles on business and human rights and the OECD guidelines for multinational companies. In June 2022, Cloudberry conducted a due diligence assessment in accordance with the requirements of the Transparency Act. The company will publish a report on the due diligence assessments and the mitigating actions in accordance with the guidelines of the Transparency Act by 30 June 2023.
Cloudberry's construction and operation partners have safety policies and report on a variety of measures to safeguard the workplace during the development and construction of new projects, and on the powerplants in production. These measures include training of employees and contractors, procedures for notification of accidents, registration and reporting of nonconformities, whistleblowing etc. More information is provided in the "Corporate Governance Report 2021" in the Annual Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3
Prosperity relates to Cloudberry's role in contributing to a societal value creation. Cloudberry contributes to economic growth by providing employment, local value creation, and renewable energy supply.
Operating and providing renewable energy assets enables the necessary transition to more renewable energy, to reach the climate goals. Cloudberry's long-term success is linked to conducting its business in a sustainable way with a long-term growth strategy that rests upon the ability to create value for stakeholders.
Local value creation is important for Cloudberry in all its developing, construction and operating projects. The Company seeks to identify local stakeholders' needs and try to accommodate these in the plans. Constructing hydro and wind power plants have an impact on nature, but the production of renewable energy contributes to the necessary renewable energy transition. Cloudberry seeks to thoroughly analyse and assess the impacts to minimise footprint where possible on environment and society. In the sustainability report Cloudberry describes which initiatives the Company has implemented.
The development and production of wind and hydropower is highly regulated both in Norway and Sweden, with stringent environmental regulations. Cloudberry maintains a continuous dialogue with authorities and local stakeholders. Cloudberry aims to minimise the environmental footprint from projects and to maximise the local value creation. Below is a description of the process of gaining permits for new wind and hydro projects, and how Cloudberry assesses sustainability within each stage of the process.
In this stage, the opportunities in an area for a windfarm or a hydropower plant are explored and involves assessing the power grid capacity. Cloudberry aims to seek locations where impact on nature already have been made in order to limit the size of the area impacted.
When a suitable location has been identified, an evaluation of the landowners' interests in having a producing power plant on their ground, and an assessment of the local political view towards such an establishment is made. In Sweden, municipal plans for wind power are already publicly available. In Norway, this must be researched on a case-by-case basis.
Cloudberry seeks to minimise the visual impact and aims to build larger, but fewer, windmills to reduce land use and noise level on the ground whilst seeking to balance the size of the shade area and potential ice throw during cold weather. Wind farms and surrounding infrastructure may also impact the conditions of rare plants, animals and birdlife and may change their conditions.
Further studies relating to the environment, nature and wildlife are carried out to identify potential negative consequences of the project. The next step is negotiating and entering into agreements with the landowners and other third parties.
In the development stage, the formal notification with a description of the project is submitted to the authorities. Public meetings are held to inform stakeholders of the project. In Norway, NVE handles both wind power and hydropower applications, whilst in Sweden, they are handled by the County Administrative Board (onshore wind power) and the Land and Environmental Court (hydropower and offshore wind power).
Necessary environmental impact assessments are carried out and describe any negative environmental consequences e.g., on biodiversity, caused by the construction and operation of the power plant. The environmental impact assessments are prepared by third party specialist consultants. The benefits of the project must exceed the perceived negative environmental impact. If the environmental impacts are acceptable and within regulatory requirements, the final application is prepared and submitted to the authorities and the development process of the project can proceed.
When a project obtains governmental approvals, the detailed planning of the project begins. This includes descriptions and drawings of the design and layout of the wind power plant, road sections, foundations, cable trenches, crane sites, or a pipeline, dam, and a power station in the case of a hydropower plant. The detailed plan must be approved by the authorities before the actual construction begins. Due consideration of local recreational areas must be taken into consideration when building roads and tracks. To the extent possible it is required to leverage on existing infrastructure, such as inter alia roads and networks and excavated masses are re-used. The permit obtained, specifies numerous environmental conditions that the project needs to fulfil in the construction and production phase. This is applicable to both hydropower and wind farms.
For a hydropower plant this may involve monitoring the area around the power station to identify any changes and need for risk reducing initiatives. For wind farms similar requirements apply. In addition to ongoing conditions that are monitored, the projects may have to involve in specific activities directed towards certain areas i.e. monitoring of birds flying patterns. Cloudberry may also adopt additional voluntary actions, such as reducing waterflow and installing fish ladders. At the same time, hydro dams may also have positive impacts such as limiting the risk of flooding during extreme weather and reducing erosion of rivers and streams.
In the construction phase, Cloudberry evaluates potential suppliers. Cloudberry seeks to engage local suppliers and contractors to create value locally. Safety, health and environment are monitored and followed up by the Group and the engaged suppliers, in order to ensure compliance with laws and regulations. Part of the construction is also to secure that all biodiversity requirements in the concession granted is met. This is monitored closely during the construction process. After the construction work itself is finished, efforts are put into restoring the environment as good as possible to pre-construction situation. In cases of temporary dredging work, Cloudberry seek to restore the area to the original condition after the construction is completed.
Upon completion of the construction stage, the commissioning phase is initiated. During commissioning power plants are tested thoroughly, inter alia by stress tests. Calibration and optimisation are also done during commission. After commissioning all certificates and documentation will be issued by the contractors and suppliers. The final stage involves getting necessary approvals based on documentation prepared in the commissioning period.
The day-to-day operations of the producing power plants in the Group's portfolio are managed under service contracts and operation and maintenance contracts entered into before the operational stage start. Service and operational contracts are with specialised and experienced companies. In addition, there is a contract with a local representative – often a landowner – that physically inspects the powerplants on an ongoing basis. The power plants are remotely monitored 24/7, and any alarms or faults will be addressed immediately. Periodic maintenance is carried out by qualified personnel approved by the suppliers of the main components in the power plants. The Group has online access to all key information about the power plants. Through periodic meetings performance of the assets are discussed and critical factors such as performance, maintenance requirements and identified opportunities are addressed to enhance the asset utilisation and efficiency.
The Group regularly enters into agreements related to acquisition and sale of renewable energy projects. During the two years immediately preceding the date of this Prospectus, the Group has entered into the following material contracts:
| 2020 December | An agreement to acquire (i) 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft, further described in 7.3.1.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS), and (ii) 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS, further described in Section 7.3.1.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS). |
|---|---|
| 2020 December | The agreement to acquire up to 33.4% of the shares in Odal Vindkraftverk AS, further described in Section 7.3.1.5 (Acquisition of additional 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS). |
| 2021 March | A NOK 700 million credit facility agreement with SpareBank 1 SR Bank ASA (Term Loan of NOK 400 million and a related revolving credit facility of NOK 300 million), further described in Section 10.4.1 (Borrowings). |
| 2021 April | An agreement with Captiva Asset Management AS for the operation of Cloudberry's 100% owned hydropower plants. |
| 2021 August | An agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS, further described in Section 7.3.1.6 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS). |
| 2021 November | An agreement to increase its existing credit facility with SpareBank 1 SR Bank ASA from NOK 700 million to NOK 1,400 million, further described in Section 10.4.1 (Borrowings). |
| 2022 January | An agreement to acquire 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS with an option to acquire the remaining 40%, further described in Section 7.3.2.1 (Acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS). |
| 2022 February | An agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS, further described in Section 7.3.2.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS). |
| 2022 February | An agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, further described in Section 7.3.3.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS). |
| 2022 February | An agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Kraftverk AB, further described in Section 7.3.2.3 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB). |
| 2022 June | An agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS, further described in Section 7.3.2.7 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS). |
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 September | An agreement to sell 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS to form a 50/50 joint venture with Hafslund Vekst AS, further described in Section 7.3.2.10 (Sale of 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS). |
Neither the Company, nor any other member of the Group has entered into any other material contracts outside the ordinary course of the business for the two years prior to the date of this Prospectus. Further, the Group has not entered into any contract outside the ordinary course of business that contains any provision under which any member of the Group has any obligation or entitlement that is material to the Group as of the date of this Prospectus.
All renewable energy projects that the Group is involved in are subject to numerous concession and permit requirements from governmental bodies. The right to build and operate a renewable project is subject to public concessions and permits in addition to private ownership rights to land and waterfalls. These comprise all stages of a renewable project, from early development stage to construction, production, transmission and sale of power. The necessary concessions and permits will depend on size and type of project, classification, development stage of the projects and jurisdiction. In addition to the energy/production related concessions and permits, other permits, licenses and regulatory requirements are also applicable, such as licenses related to safety, pollution, noise, etc.
The Group is required to obtain various governmental concessions and approvals for each of its projects, including inter alia construction concessions and sales concessions. As of the date of this Prospectus, all permits and licences have been obtained for the assets that are in production and all relevant concessions and permits have been obtained for the projects under construction. However, completion permissions, concession for sale of power, etc. are not yet in place due to the stage of the construction work.
The Group applies for all necessary concessions and permits for the assets under construction in due course. The Group has an ongoing dialogue with all relevant and necessary governmental bodies.
For greenfield projects that are not under construction and/or in operation, the Group will normally need to obtain necessary concession, permits and contracts with landowners. It will be an ongoing process to obtain required concessions and permits to commence construction, production and operations on any of the Group's current or future greenfield sites.
As an integrated service for its asset management customers, Captiva offers accounting services, provided through Captiva Financial Services AS, which holds an authorisation as an accounting firm (Nw.: regnskapsførerselskap) and is subject to supervision by the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway (Nw.: Finanstilsynet).
The Group's existing business is not dependent on any other licenses, patents, or other intellectual property rights.
The Group's headquarters are located at Frøyas gate 15, 0273 Oslo, Norway. The Group leases facilities in Norway, Sweden and Switzerland. The table below shows the geographic location and function of each property leased by the Group:
| Country | Address | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Norway | Frøyas gate 15, 0273 Oslo, Norway | Headquarters |
| Sweden | Gustaf Anders Gata 15E, 653 40 Karlstad, Sweden | Local office |
| Sweden | Furubergsvägen 3, 429 41 Särö, Sweden | Local office |
| Sweden | Energy Evolution Center, 63221 Eksilstuna, Sweden | Local office |
| Norway | Grandavegen 5, 6823 Sandane, Norway | Local office |
| Norway | Brobekkveien 53, 0598 Oslo Norway | Local office |
| Norway | Maridalsveien 91, 0461 Oslo, Norway | Local office |
| Norway | Jonas Lies gata 5, 2000 Lillestrøm, Norway | Local office |
| Norway | Langmyra 11b, 3185 Skoppum, Norway | Local office |
| Switzerland | Effingerstrasse 25, 3008 Bern, Switzerland | Local office |
In addition, the Group has entered into lease agreements with landowners to ensure access to the ground for the assets. Such agreements are typically entered into for periods between 30 to 100 years. Landowners are normally compensated based on the revenue from annual power production.
The Group does not own any property.
The Group's insurance coverage covers risks associated with its business, including property and business interruption insurance, business travel insurance, corporate responsibility, professional indemnity, employee liability insurance, accident and workers' compensation insurance and D&O insurance. The Company believes the Group has taken out the insurances that are customary for the industry in which the Group operates and at a level which is generally adequate. However, no assurance can be given that the Group will not incur any damages that are not covered by its insurance policies or that exceed the coverage limits of such insurance policies.
From time to time, the Group is and may become involved in litigation, disputes and other legal proceedings arising in the course of its business. Neither the Company nor any other member of the Group, is, nor has been, during the course of the preceding 12 months involved in any legal, governmental or arbitration proceedings which may have, or have had in the recent past, significant effects on the Company's and/or the Group's financial position or profitability, and neither the Company nor any member of the Group are, aware of any such significant proceedings which are pending or threatened.
The information presented below should be read in conjunction with the other parts of this Prospectus, in particular Section 9 (Selected financial and other information), the Annual Financial Statements and the Interim Financial Statements.
This Section 8 (Capitalisation and Indebtedness) provides information about the Group's consolidated capitalisation and net financial indebtedness on an actual basis as of 30 September 2022.
The "Adjustment" column provides information about the estimated effect of the following significant transactions which have occurred between 30 September 2022 and the date of this Prospectus:
Other than as set forth above, there has been no material change to the Group's combined capitalisation and net financial indebtedness since 30 September 2022.
The following table sets forth information about the Group's unaudited consolidated capitalisation as of 30 September 2022, with estimated adjustments for significant transactions between 30 September 2022 and the date of this Prospectus and the estimated impact to the Group's unaudited consolidated net financial indebtedness following the Private Placement:
| (In NOK 1,000) | As of 30 September 2022 |
Adjustments | As adjusted as of the date of the Prospectus |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indebtedness | ||||
| Total current debt: | ||||
| Guaranteed | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Secured1 | 12,000 | 0 | 12,000 | |
| Unguaranteed and unsecured | 480,966 | 0 | 480,966 | |
| Total current debt | 492,966 | 0 | 492,966 | |
| Total non-current debt: | ||||
| Guaranteed | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Secured2 | 362,739 | -32,000 4 | 330,739 | |
| Unguaranteed and unsecured | 191,739 | 0 | 191,739 | |
| Total non-current debt | 554,478 | -32,000 | 522,478 | |
| Total indebtedness | 1,047,445 3 | -32,000 5 | ||
| Shareholders' equity | ||||
| Share capital | 72,819 | 6 6 |
72,825 | |
| Legal reserves | 3,494,915 | 242 7 | 3,495,157 | |
| Other reserves | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Retained earnings | 103,242 | 0 | 103,242 | |
| Non-controlling interest | 81,064 | 0 | 81,064 | |
| Total equity | 3,752,040 | 248 | 3,752,288 | |
| Total capitalisation | 4,799,485 | -31,752 | 4,767,733 |
The following table set forth information about the Group's unaudited combined net financial indebtedness as of 30 September 2022, with adjustments for significant transactions between 30 September 2022 and the date of this Prospectus and the impact to the Group's unaudited combined net financial indebtedness following the Private Placement:
| (In NOK 1,000) | As of 30 September 2022 |
Adjustments | As adjusted as of the date of the |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) | Cash | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| (B) | Cash equivalents | 1,852,935 | -31,752 1 | 1,821,182 |
| (C) | Other current financial assets | 115,458 | 0 | 115,458 |
| (D) | Liquidity (A)+(B)+(C) | 1,968,393 | -31,752 | 1,936,640 |
| (E) | Current financial debt | 480,966 | 0 | 480,966 |
| (F) | Current portion of non-current debt | 12,000 | 0 | 12,000 |
| (G) | Current financial indebtness (E)+(F) | 492,966 | 0 | 492,966 |
| (H) | Net current financial indebtedness (G)-(D) | -1,475,426 | 31,752 | 0 -1,443,674 |
| (I) | Non-current financial debt | 362,739 | -32,000 2 | 330,739 |
| (J) | Debt instruments | |||
| (K) | Non-current trade and other payables | 58,286 | 0 | 58,286 |
| (L) | Non-current financial indebtedness (I)+(J)+(K) | 421,026 | -32,000 | 389,026 |
| (M) | Total financial indebtness (H)+(L) | -1,054,401 | -248 | 0 -1,054,648 |
The Company is of the opinion that the working capital available to the Company is sufficient for the Company's present requirements, for the period covering at least 12 months from the date of this Prospectus.
As of the date of this Prospectus, the Group has the following contingent liabilities:
development process results in a 20 MW project, the additional purchase price will be SEK 14 million. If the project reaches its full potential the additional purchase price will be SEK 49 million.
The Group does not have any material indirect indebtedness as of the date of this Prospectus.
The following selected consolidated financial information has been extracted from the following financial statements:
The selected financial information included herein should be read in connection with, and is qualified in its entirety by reference to, the financial statements incorporated by reference in Section 20.3, and should be read together with Section 10 (Operating and financial review).
The financial statements are all presented in NOK (presentation currency).
The financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 and 31 December 2020 respectively are prepared in accordance with IFRS. For periods up to and including the year ended 31 December 2019, the Group prepared its financial statements in accordance with NGAAP. Accordingly, the Group has prepared financial statements that comply with IFRS, applicable as of 31 December 2020, together with the comparative period data for the year ended 31 December 2019. In preparing the financial statements, the Group's opening statement of financial position was prepared as of 1 January 2019, the Group's date of transition from NGAAP to IFRS.
Adjustments from transition to IFRS impacts, but is not limited to, leasing, capitalised development, goodwill amortisation, contract costs, prepaid commissions, revenue recognition, deferred tax assets, reclassifications of contract costs and contract assets, business combinations and derivative financial liability. In combination with impacts described herein, other adjustments and non-material impacts are described in the Group's audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2020. Please refer to note 6 of the Group's audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2020, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3, for information on how the Group adopted IFRS.
The Group was established 15 February 2020 when the Company acquired Cloudberry Production AS and Cloudberry Develop AS. Comparable information in previous periods is from the Company only. Consequently, undue reliance should not be placed on the comparability of these line items in the Prospectus.
The Interim Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with IAS 34. The Interim Financial Statements have not been audited or subject to review.
The Group has had an active M&A strategy and acquired a number of development projects and turnkey hydropower plants which are not yet operational, please see Section 7.3 (Recent M&A Activities) for an overview. This limits the comparability of the historical consolidated financial statements.
For further information regarding accounting policies and the use of estimates and judgements, please refer to note 2 and 3 of the Group's audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2021 (prepared in accordance with IFRS), incorporated by reference in Section 20.3. For the Company, please refer to note 2 of the respective audited financial statements for the period ended 31 December 2019 (prepared in accordance with NGAAP), incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
The following table sets forth a summary of the Group's audited consolidated statement of profit and loss for the financial years ended 31 December 2021 (IFRS), 31 December 2020 (IFRS), and 31 December 2019 (NGAAP), and the three- and nine-month periods ended 30 September 2022 and 2021. Comparable figures for 2019 (prepared in accordance with IFRS) is extracted from the Group's audited consolidated statement of profit and loss for the year ended 31 December 2020.
For the consolidated statements the figures include the acquired companies from the acquisition date. Hence for the statement for 2019 the figures presented are for the Company only.
Please note that for the NGAAP figures presented in the table they are presented in the below format to align with the 2020 Annual Financial Statement. No changes have been made to the figures.
| 3 months | 9 months | Year ended | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| 1/7-30/09 | 1/7-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1 – 31/12 | |
| IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP | |
| (In NOK 1,000) | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | |||
| Revenues | 55,264 | 6,831 | 138,493 | 14,398 | 35,152 | 3,633 | 279 | 279 |
| Other operating income | -453 | -159 | 3,764 | 4,844 | 5,746 | 7 | 0 | 0 |
| Total revenue | 54,812 | 6,671 | 142,257 | 19,242 | 40,898 | 3,640 | 279 | 279 |
| Cost of goods sold | -6,290 | -1,035 | -11,122 | -1,416 | -5,447 | -143 | -27 | -27 |
| Salary and personnel costs | -32,457 | -6,376 | -62,293 | -17,406 | -28,106 | -17,419 | -1,981 | -1,981 |
| Other operating expenses | -18,024 | -7,141 | -50,707 | -30,725 | -55,332 | -12,343 | -877 | -877 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies and JV | 76,071 | 4,806 | 99,811 | 5,915 | 16,373 | -3,556 | 0 | 0 |
| Depreciation, amortizations and write downs | -9,236 | -2,733 | -25,314 | -5,677 | -9,746 | -3,289 | -7 | -7 |
| Operating profit | 64,875 | -5,807 | 92,632 | -30,067 | -41,361 | -33,111 | -2,613 | -2,613 |
| Financial income | 34,655 | -194 | 51,700 | 1,869 | 6,420 | 984 | 5 | 5 |
| Financial expenses | -39,968 | -5,303 | -61,729 | -15,221 | -28,706 | -2,125 | -1 | -1 |
| Profit before tax | 59,562 | -11,305 | 82,602 | -43,419 | -63,648 | -34,253 | -2,609 | -2,609 |
| Income tax expense | 838 | 228 | 2,411 | 427 | 609 | 387 | 0 | 0 |
| Profit after tax | 60,400 | -11,077 | 85,014 | -42,992 | -63,038 | -33,865 | -2,609 | -2,609 |
| Attributable to: | ||||||||
| Equity holders of the parent company | 57,356 | -11,077 | 80,397 | -42,992 | -63,038 | -33,865 | -2,609 | -2,609 |
| Non-controlling interests | 3,044 | 0 | 4,617 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Profit for the year | 60,400 | -11,077 | 85,014 | -42,992 | -63,038 | -33,865 | -2,609 | -2,609 |
The following table sets forth a summary of the Group's consolidated statement of financial position for the financial years ended 31 December 2021 (IFRS), 31 December 2020 (IFRS), and 31 December 2019 (NGAAP) and as of 30 September 2022. Comparable figures for year ended 2019 (prepared in accordance with IFRS) is extracted from the Group's audited consolidated statement of financial position for the year ended 31 December 2020.
| Year ended | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| 30.09. | 31.12. | 31.12. | 31.12. | 31.12. | |
| (In NOK 1,000) | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | ||||
| ASSETS | |||||
| Non-current assets | |||||
| Property, plant and equipment | 1,435,043 | 1,009,123 | 58,426 | 11 | 11 |
| Intagible assets | 97,063 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Goodwill | 124,277 | 38,221 | 36,933 | 0 | 0 |
| Investment in associated companies and joint ventures | 903,533 | 677,407 | 337,080 | 0 | 0 |
| Financial assets and other non-current assets | 92,345 | 10,425 | 2,358 | 0 | 0 |
| Total non-current assets | 2,652,261 | 1,735,175 | 434,797 | 11 | 11 |
| Current assets | |||||
| Inventory | 121,746 | 153,575 | 196,029 | 0 | 0 |
| Accounts receivable | 57,086 | 12,033 | 2,828 | 0 | 0 |
| Contract assets | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other current assets | 115,458 | 102,674 | 158,081 | 70 | 70 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 1,852,935 | 1,114,934 | 605,126 | 5,223 | 5,223 |
| Total current assets | 2,147,225 | 1,383,215 | 962,064 | 5,293 | 5,293 |
| TOTAL ASSETS | 4,799,485 | 3,118,391 | 1,396,861 | 5,304 | 5,304 |
| EQUITY AND LIABILITIES | |||||
| Equity | |||||
| Paid in capital | 72,819 | 58,811 | 26,266 | 950 | 950 |
| Share premium | 3,494,915 | 2,676,075 | 1,061,675 | 7,800 | 7,800 |
| Total paid in capital | 3,567,734 | 2,734,886 | 1,087,941 | 8,750 | 8,750 |
| Other reserves / retained earnings | 103,242 | -98,688 | -33,230 | -3,921 | -3,921 |
| Non-controlling interests | 81,064 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total equity | 3,752,040 | 2,636,199 | 1,054,711 | 4,829 | 4,829 |
| Non-current liabilities | |||||
| Provisions | 32,919 | 10,753 | 15,868 | 0 | 0 |
| Deferred tax | 133,453 | 83,055 | 13,668 | 0 | 0 |
| Lease liabilities | 25,367 | 3,416 | 3,296 | 0 | 0 |
| Interest-bearing loans and borrowings | 362,739 | 294,087 | 26,440 | 0 | 0 |
| Total non-current liabilities | 554,478 | 391,311 | 59,272 | 0 | 0 |
| Current liabilities | |||||
| Interest bearing short term debt | 12,000 | 10,105 | 236,767 | 0 | 0 |
| Current lease liabilities | 4,000 | 1,167 | 1,105 | 0 | 0 |
| Provisions short term | 326,538 | 41,320 | 26,162 | 475 | 475 |
| Accounts payable and other current liabilities | 150,429 | 38,289 | 18,845 | 0 | 0 |
| Total current liabilities | 492,966 | 90,881 | 282,879 | 475 | 475 |
| Total liabilities | 1,047,445 | 482,192 | 342,151 | 475 | 475 |
| TOTAL EQUITY AND LIABILITIES | 4,799,485 | 3,118,391 | 1,396,861 | 5,304 | 5,304 |
The following table sets forth a summary of the Group's consolidated cash flow statement for the for the financial years ended 31 December 2021 (IFRS), 31 December 2020 (IFRS), and 31 December 2019 (NGAAP), and the three- and nine-month periods ended 30 September 2022 and 2021, with comparable figures for 2019 (prepared in accordance with IFRS) extracted from the Group's audited consolidated statement for the year ended 31 December 2020.
| Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/7-30/09 | 1/7-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1 - 31/12 | 1/1 - 31/12 | 1/1 - 31/12 | 1/1 - 31/12 | |
| IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP | |
| (In NOK 1,000) | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | |||
| Cash flow from operating activities | ||||||||
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 59,562 | -11,305 | 82,602 | -43,419 | -63,648 | -34,252 | -2,609 | -2,609 |
| Net gain from sale of PPE | 452 | 0 | -3,764 | 0 | ||||
| Depreciations and amortizations | 9,236 | 2,733 | 25,314 | 5,677 | 9,746 | 3,289 | 7 | 7 |
| Write down, project inventory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3,010 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Net income from associated companies and JVs | -76,071 | -4,806 | -99,811 | -5,915 | -16,373 | 3,556 | 0 | 0 |
| Share based payment - non cash to equity | 16,838 | 2,000 | 21,329 | 3,100 | 4,388 | 1,251 | 0 | 0 |
| Net interest paid/received | 19,808 | 4,500 | 24,283 | 8,700 | 8,531 | 1,656 | 0 | 0 |
| Unrealised foreign exchange (gain)/loss | -11,647 | 0 | -10,142 | 0 | 0 | -1,514 | 0 | 0 |
| Change in inventories due to capitalized salaries and other expenses | -15,731 | -2,200 | -39,103 | -5,200 | -9,245 | -6,100 | 0 | 0 |
| Change in accounts payable | -50,053 | -34,100 | -57,053 | -17,000 | 12,369 | 6,128 | 0 | 0 |
| Change in accounts receivabe | 71,053 | -440 | 83,053 | -700 | -8,791 | 5,477 | -611 | -611 |
| Change in other short term assets and liabilities | 91,928 | -16,400 | 126,133 | -19,500 | -10,710 | 16,195 | 307 | 307 |
| Net cash flow from operating activities | 115,375 | -60,018 | 152,839 | -74,257 | -70,722 | -4,314 | -2,906 | -2,906 |
| Cash flow from investing activeties | ||||||||
| Interest received | 7,596 | -200 | 9,834 | 1,000 | 653 | 984 | 0 | 0 |
| Investments in property, plant and equipment and intagibles | -96,460 | -27,000 | -168,400 | -115,600 | -179,501 | -2,842 | 0 | 0 |
| Proceeds from sale of PPE and project inventory | 41,132 | 0 | 62,122 | 0 | ||||
| Acquisition of shares in subsidiaries, net liquidity outflow | 0 | -82,700 | -69,892 | -228,400 | -318,262 | -11,690 | 0 | 0 |
| Investments in associated companies | 0 | -239,700 | -31,000 | -331,800 | -331,806 | -340,637 | 0 | 0 |
| Net cash flow from (used in) investing activities | -47,732 | -349,600 | -197,336 | -674,800 | -828,916 | -354,184 | 0 | 0 |
| Cash flow from financing activeties | ||||||||
| Payment to escrow account | 0 | -85,000 | -16,000 | -85,100 | -84,828 | -152,422 | 0 | 0 |
| Transfer from escrow account | 0 | 152,400 | 60,000 | 152,400 | 152,422 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Proceeds from new term loans | 0 | 20,000 | 116,000 | 114,400 | 226,348 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Repayment of term loan | 0 | -93,990 | -118,000 | -169,700 | -282,646 | -28,621 | 0 | 0 |
| Repayment of short-term interest-bearing liabilities | -2,621 | 67 | -9,911 | -236,700 | -236,767 | 236,767 | 0 | 0 |
| Interest paid other than lease | -5,227 | -4,200 | -10,893 | -9,500 | -9,029 | -2,394 | 0 | 0 |
| Payment on lease liabilities - interest | -300 | -100 | -719 | -100 | -155 | -153 | 0 | 0 |
| Repayment on lease liabilities | -2,197 | -340 | -2,616 | -825 | -974 | -750 | 0 | 0 |
| Share capital increase | 766,135 | 33,350 | 766,135 | 1,068,100 | 1,646,945 | 905,928 | 8,000 | 8,000 |
| Group contributions/dividends paid | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Net cash flow from financing activities | 755,790 | 22,187 | 783,996 | 832,975 | 1,411,316 | 958,355 | 8,000 | 8,000 |
| Total change in cash and cash equivalents | 823,434 | -387,431 | 739,499 | 83,918 | 511,679 | 599,856 | 5,094 | 5,094 |
| Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents | -1,498 | 0 | -1,498 | 0 | -1,872 | 47 | 0 | 0 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at start of period | 1,031,000 | 1,076,600 | 1,114,934 | 605,126 | 605,126 | 5,223 | 129 | 129 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at end of period | 1,852,935 | 689,169 | 1,852,934 | 689,045 | 1,114,934 | 605,126 | 5,223 | 5,223 |
The table below sets out selected data from the Company's statement of changes in equity for the years ended 31 December 2021 and 31 December 2020 (both prepared in accordance with IFRS), the period ended 31 December 2019 (prepared in accordance with NGAAP) and the nine-month period ended 30 September 2022.
| Non | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attributable to parent company equity holders | controlling | Total equity | ||||||||
| interests | ||||||||||
| (In NOK 1,000) | Paid in capital Other Equity |
|||||||||
| Cash flow | ||||||||||
| Share | Share based | hedge | Exchange | Retained | Total other | |||||
| Share capital | premium | payment | reserves | differences | earnings | equity | ||||
| Equity as at 01.01 2019: | 750 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -1,312 | -1,312 | -562 | 0 | -562 |
| Sharecapital increase | 200 | 7,800 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 8,000 | 0 | 8,000 |
| Profit for the period | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -2,609 | -2,609 | -2,609 | 0 | -2,609 |
| Total comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -2,609 | -2,609 | -2,609 | 0 | -2,609 |
| Transaction with non-controlling intrest | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Transfer to other equity | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Equity as at 31.12 2019 | 950 | 7,800 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -3,921 | -3,921 | 4,829 | 0 | 4,829 |
| Equity as at 01.01.2020: | 950 | 7,800 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -3,921 | -3,921 | 4,829 | 0 | 4,829 |
| Sharecapital increase | 25,316 | 1,053,875 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1,079,191 | 4,939 | 1,084,130 |
| Share based payments in the year | 0 | 0 | 1,251 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1,251 | 1,251 | 0 | 1,251 |
| Loss for the period | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -33,865 | -33,865 | -33,865 | 0 | -33,865 |
| Other comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 907 | -2,542 | 0 | -1,634 | -1,634 | 0 | -1,634 |
| Total comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 907 | -2,542 | -33,865 | -35,500 | -35,500 | 4,939 | -35,500 |
| Transaction with non-controlling intrest | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4,041 | 4,041 | 4,041 | -4,041 | 0 |
| Transfer to other equity | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 898 | 898 | 898 | -898 | 0 |
| Equity as at 31.12 2020 | 26,266 | 1,061,675 | 1,251 | 907 | -2,542 | -32,847 | -33,230 | 1,053,712 | 0 | 1,054,711 |
| Equity as at 01.01.2021: | 26,266 | 1,061,675 | 1,251 | 907 | -2,542 | -32,847 | -33,230 | 1,053,712 | 0 | 1,053,711 |
| Sharecapital increase | 32,545 | 1,614,550 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1,647,095 | 0 | 1,647,095 |
| Share based payments in the year | 0 | 0 | 4,388 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4,388 | 4,388 | 0 | 4,388 |
| Loss for the period | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -62,415 | -62,415 | -62,415 | 0 | -62,415 |
| Other comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,245 | -9,060 | 0 | -6,815 | -6,815 | 0 | -6,815 |
| Total comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,245 | -9,060 | -62,415 | -69,231 | -69,231 | 0 | -69,231 |
| Transaction with non-controlling intrest | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Transfer to other equity | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Equity as at 31.12 2021 | 58,811 | 2,676,075 | 5,639 | 3,152 | -11,602 | -95,885 | -98,696 | 2,636,191 | 0 | 2,636,191 |
| Equity as at 01.01 2022: | 58,811 | 2,676,075 | 5,639 | 3,152 | -11,602 | -95,885 | -98,695 | 2,636,191 | 0 | 2,636,191 |
| Sharecapital increase | 14,008 | 818,840 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 832,848 | 75,872 | 908,720 |
| Share based payments in the year | 0 | 0 | 21,329 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 21,329 | 21,329 | 0 | 21,329 |
| Loss for the period | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 80,397 | 80,397 | 80,397 | 4,617 | 85,014 |
| Other comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 69,400 | 30,870 | 0 | 100,270 | 100,270 | -400 | 99,870 |
| Total comprehensive income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 69,400 | 30,870 | 80,397 | 180,667 | 180,667 | 4,217 | 184,884 |
| Transaction with non-controlling intrest | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -530 | -530 | 530 | 0 |
| Transfer to other equity | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 444 | 444 |
| Equity as at 30.09.2022 (unaudited) | 72,819 | 3,494,915 | 26,968 | 72,552 | 19,268 | -15,488 | 103,301 | 3,670,505 | 81,063 | 3,751,568 |
This operating and financial review should be read together with Section 4 (General information), Section 7 (The business of the Group), Section 9 (Selected financial and other information) and the financial statements, including related notes, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
This operating and financial review contains forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are not historical facts, but are rather based on Cloudberry's current expectations, estimates, assumptions and projections about the Group's industry, business, strategy and future financial results. Actual results could differ materially from the results contemplated by these forward-looking statements because of a number of factors, including those discussed in Section 2 (Risk factors) and Section 4.4 (Cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements) of this Prospectus, as well as other Sections of this Prospectus.
The Company's business model is based on three revenue generating segments and one cost-efficient corporate segment. The revenue generating segments are:
In 2021 the Group reported under these three business segments in accordance with IFRS 8 "Operating Segments" (IFRS 8). Segment financials were from 2021 reported on a proportionate basis. The key differences between the proportionate and the consolidated IFRS financials are that all entities are included with the Group's respective ownership share, meaning:
This is how the internal financial reporting to the Group's chief operating decision maker, defined as the Executive Management team, is prepared. The business segments are determined based on the differences in the nature of their operations. Segment information is accordingly included on this basis in the notes to the Annual Financial Statement. Please see note 4 of Cloudberry's audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 and Section 7 (The business of the Group) for further information regarding the Group's business segments.
The following tables set out the unaudited Group segment reporting for the period from 1 January 2022 to 30 September 2022 and the period from 1 January 2021 to 30 September 2021:
| YTD 2022 Unaudited | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Residual ownership for | |||||||||
| Total | Group | Elimination of equity | fully consolidated | Total | |||||
| NOK 1000 | Production | Development | Operations | Corporate | Proportionate | eliminations | consolidated entities | entities | Consolidated |
| Total revenue | 278,869 | 202,963 | 28,008 | 0 | 509,840 | -213,222 | -185,055 | 30,765 | 142,328 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -99,638 | -17,158 | -22,941 | -44,169 | -183,906 | 15,869 | 70,552 | -26,923 | -124,408 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 99,811 | 0 | 99,811 |
| EBITDA | 179,231 | 185,805 | 5,067 | -44,169 | 325,934 | -197,353 | -14,692 | 3,841 | 117,731 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -27,763 | -180 | -5,217 | -1,737 | -34,898 | 0 | 13,542 | -3,958 | -25,314 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 151,468 | 185,625 | -150 | -45,906 | 291,037 | -197,353 | -1,150 | -117 | 92,417 |
| Net financial items | -892 | -14,863 | -2,235 | 27,929 | 9,938 | 0 | -22,191 | 2,274 | -9,979 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 150,576 | 170,761 | -2,385 | -17,977 | 300,975 | -197,353 | -23,341 | 2,157 | 82,438 |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Total assets | 3,087,034 | 262,208 | 235,842 | 2,195,337 | 5,780,422 | -589,958 | -1,467,137 | 1,076,158 | 4,799,485 |
| Interest bearing debt | 913,523 | 0 | 6,000 | 0 | 919,523 | 0 | -548,760 | 3,976 | 374,739 |
| Cash | -124,100 | 4,999 | 85,611 | 1,832,371 | 1,798,880 | 0 | -135,700 | 189,755 | 1,852,935 |
| NIBD | 1,037,623 | -4,999 | -79,611 | -1,832,371 | -879,357 | 0 | -413,000 | -185,779 | -1,478,136 |
| Residual ownership | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Group | Elimination of equity | for fully consolidated | Total | |||||
| NOK 1000 | Production | Development | Operations | Corporate | Proportionate | eliminations | consolidated entities | entities | Consolidated |
| Total revenue | 41,800 | 4,800 | N/A | 0 | 46,600 | 0 | -27,400 | 0 | 19,200 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -20,800 | -18,200 | N/A | -23,100 | -62,100 | 0 | 12,600 | 0 | -49,500 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 0 | 0 | N/A | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5,900 | 0 | 5,900 |
| EBITDA | 21,000 | -13,400 | N/A | -23,100 | -15,500 | 0 | -8,900 | 0 | -24,400 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -11,600 | -100 | N/A | -800 | -12,500 | 0 | 6,800 | 0 | -5,700 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 9,400 | -13,500 | N/A | -23,900 | -28,000 | 0 | -2,100 | 0 | -30,100 |
| Net financial items | -13,300 | 900 | N/A | -800 | -13,200 | 0 | -200 | 0 | -13,400 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -3,900 | -12,600 | N/A | -24,700 | -41,200 | 0 | -2,300 | 0 | -43,500 |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Total assets | 1,920,963 | 301,000 | N/A | 758,200 | 2,980,163 | 0 | -559,000 | 0 | 2,421,163 |
| Interest bearing debt | 759,530 | 1,500 | N/A | 0 | 761,030 | 0 | -534,000 | 0 | 227,030 |
| Cash | 185,146 | -27,600 | N/A | 755,800 | 913,346 | 0 | -224,000 | 0 | 689,346 |
| NIBD | 574,384 | 29,100 | N/A | -755,800 | -152,316 | 0 | -310,000 | 0 | -462,316 |
The main developments in proportionate segment reporting are the following:
YTD 2021 Unaudited
Total proportionate revenue was NOK 509.8 million for the nine-month period ended 30 September 2022 compared to NOK 46.6 million for the nine-month period ended 30 September 2021. The increase is mainly due to the following segments:
Total proportionate operating expenses were NOK 183.9 million for the nine months ended 30 September 2022 compared with NOK 62.1 million for the nine months ended 30 September 2021. The increase is related to the following segments:
Increased operating expenses of NOK 78.8 million in the Production segment relates mainly to increased production, and primarily related to lease to landowners which is dependent on revenues.
Total proportionate depreciations and amortisations was NOK 34.9 million for the nine months ended 30 September 2022 compared with NOK 12.5 million for the nine months ended 30 September 2021. The increase is related to the following segments:
Total asset proportionate was NOK 5,780.4 million for the nine months ended 30 September 2022 compared with NOK 2,980.2 million for the nine months ended 30 September 2021. The increase is related to the following segments:
Total interest-bearing debt was NOK 919.5 million per 30 September 2022 compared with NOK 761.0 million per 30 September 2021. The increase is related to the following segments:
The following tables sets out the Group segment reporting for the years ended 31 December 2021 (with reconciliation to IFRS), 31 December 2020 (with reconciliation to IFRS), and 2019 (NGAAP).
Please note that the Group did not report on proportionate financials in the segment reporting in 2019 or 2020 annual reporting, consequently these tables have been prepared as comparable figures (unaudited).
FY 2021
| Elimination of | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| equity | |||||||
| Total | Group | consoidated | Total | ||||
| NOK million | Production | Development | Corporate | Proportionate | eliminations | entities | Consolidated |
| Total revenue | 76,700 | 5,800 | 0 | 82,500 | 0 | -41,615 | 40,885 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -34,100 | -35,300 | -37,800 | -107,200 | 0 | 18,419 | -88,781 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 16,370 | 16,370 |
| EBITDA | 42,600 | -29,500 | -37,800 | -24,700 | 0 | -6,826 | -31,526 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -18,030 | -200 | -1,138 | -19,368 | 0 | 9,662 | -9,706 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 24,570 | -29,700 | -38,938 | -44,068 | 0 | 2,836 | -41,232 |
| Net financial items | -7,900 | -3,400 | -2,600 | -13,900 | 0 | -8,321 | -22,221 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 16,670 | -33,100 | -41,538 | -57,968 | 0 | -5,485 | -63,453 |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Total assets | 2,064,930 | 307,590 | 1,442,790 | 3,815,310 | -110,298 | -586,642 | 3,118,370 |
| Interest bearing debt | 826,300 | 0 | 0 | 826,300 | 0 | -522,100 | 304,200 |
| Cash | 10,571 | -58,600 | 1,330,084 | 1,282,055 | 0 | -167,119 | 1,114,936 |
| NIBD | 815,729 | 58,600 | -1,330,084 | -455,755 | 0 | -354,981 | -810,736 |
FY2020
| Elimination of | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| equity | Group | ||||||
| Total | Group | consoidated | consolidated | ||||
| NOK 1000 | Production | Development | Corporate | proportionate | eliminations | entities | financials |
| Total revenue | 5,122 | 93 | 118 | 5,333 | -200 | -1,493 | 3,640 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | -7,084 | -8,395 | -16,355 | -31,834 | 0 | 1,930 | -29,904 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -3,556 | -3,556 |
| EBITDA | -1,962 | -8,302 | -16,237 | -26,501 | -200 | -3,119 | -29,822 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | -4,066 | -203 | -870 | -5,139 | 0 | 1,850 | -3,289 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | -6,028 | -8,505 | -17,107 | -31,640 | -200 | -1,270 | -33,110 |
| Net financial items | -1,826 | -294 | -152 | -2,272 | -139 | 1,270 | -1,141 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -7,854 | -8,799 | -17,259 | -33,912 | -339 | 1 | -34,253 |
| Total assets | 850,781 | 208,347 | 593,940 | 1,653,069 | 46 | -256,254 | 1,396,861 |
| Interest bearing debt | 498,950 | 0 | 0 | 498,950 | 0 | -235,742 | 263,207 |
| Cash | 92,608 | 4,850 | 551,239 | 648,697 | 0 | -43,572 | 605,126 |
| NIBD | 406,342 | -4,850 | -551,239 | -149,747 | 0 | -192,170 | -341,918 |
FY2019
| Elimination of equity |
Group | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOK 1000 | Production | Development | Corporate | Total proportionate |
Group eliminations |
consoidated entities |
consolidated financials |
| Total revenue | 0 | 0 | 279 | 279 | 0 | 0 | 279 |
| Operating expenses ex depreciations and amortisations | 0 | 0 | 0 | -2,885 | 0 | 0 | -2,885 |
| Net income/(loss) from associated companies | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| EBITDA | 0 | 0 | 0 | -2,606 | 0 | 0 | -2,606 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | 0 | 0 | 0 | -7 | 0 | 0 | -7 |
| Operating profit (EBIT) | 0 | 0 | 0 | -2,613 | 0 | 0 | -2,613 |
| Net financial items | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 0 | 0 | 0 | -2,609 | 0 | 0 | -2,609 |
| Total assets | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5,304 | 0 | 0 | 5,304 |
| Interest bearing debt | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Cash | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5,223 | 0 | 0 | 5,223 |
| NIBD | 0 | 0 | 0 | -5,223 | 0 | 0 | -5,223 |
The main developments in proportionate segment reporting are the following:
Revenue
Total proportionate revenue was NOK 82.5 million in 2021 compared to NOK 5.3 million in 2020. The increase is mainly due to the following segments:
The increase from 2019 to 2020 from NOK 0.3 million to NOK 5.3 million is due to increase in the Production segment from the acquisition of the wholly owned power plants Røyrmyra and Finnesetbekken, and the proportionate share of revenues from the 34% owned Forte portfolio acquired in Q4 2020.
Total proportionate operating expenses were NOK 107.3 million in 2021 compared with NOK 31.8 million in 2020. The increase is related to the following segments:
The increase from 2019 to 2020 from NOK 2.9 million to NOK 31.8 million is related to the forming of the Group, see Section 7.7 (History and important events), increased number of employees and M&Aactivities.
Total proportionate depreciations and amortizations was NOK 19.4 million in 2021 compared with NOK 5.1 million in 2020. The increase is related to the following segments:
Production: Increased depreciations related to acquired producing power plants in 2021 (fully owned, as further described in Section 7.3.1 (Transactions completed in 2021), and proportionate share of depreciations and amortisations of producing power plants in the Forte portfolio acquired in fourth quarter 2020.
The increase in proportionate depreciations and amortisations from 2019 to 2020 from NOK 0 million to NOK 5.1 million is related mainly to the following segments:
Total asset proportionate was NOK 3,815.3 million per 31 December 2021 compared with NOK 1,653.1 million per 31 December 2020. The increase is related to the following segments:
The increase from 31 December 2019 to 31 December 2020 from NOK 5.3 million to NOK 1,653.1 million is related to formation of the Group in February 2020, see Section 7.7 (History and important events), capital raisings and investment in the 34% share of the Forte portfolio acquired in fourth quarter 2020.
Total interest-bearing debt was NOK 826.3 million per 31 December 2021 compared with NOK 499.3 million per 31 December 2020. The increase is related to the Production segment and the following:
The increase from 31 December 2019 to 31 December 2020 from NOK 0 million to NOK 499.0 million is related to the formation of the Group in February 2020 and proportionate share of interest-bearing debt in the Forte portfolio (34% ownership) acquired in Q4 2020, see Section 7.7 (History and important events).
The Group's revenue is mainly generated in Norway and Sweden, but some customers in the Operations business are located outside of the Nordic countries.
The following table sets out the Groups consolidated IFRS reported total revenue, disaggregated by segment, geography and timing of revenue recognition on a consolidated basis, as extracted from the Interim Financial Statements for the periods ended 30 September 2022 (IFRS) and 30 September 2021 (IFRS).
| Segment information (Unaudited) | Geographic location where the revenue is generated | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (In NOK 1,000) | Norway | Sweden | Total | ||
| Year to date 30 September 2022 | |||||
| Power Production | 99,627 | 0 | 99,627 | ||
| Project Development | 0 | 97 | 97 | ||
| Operations | 42,533 | 0 | 42,533 | ||
| Corporate | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Total revenue in YTD 2022 (IFRS ) | 142,160 | 97 | 142,257 | ||
| Year to date 30 September 2021 | |||||
| Power Production | 14,433 | 0 | 14,433 | ||
| Project Development | 4,809 | 0 | 4,809 | ||
| Operations | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
| Corporate | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Total revenue in YTD 2021 (IFRS ) | 19,242 | 0 | 19,242 |
Revenue from power production was NOK 99.6 million as of 30 September 2022 compared with NOK 14.4 million as of 30 September 2021. The increase is related to revenue from power production in Norway.
Revenue from project development was NOK 0.1 million as of 30 September 2022 compared with NOK 4.8 million as of 30 September 2021. The decrease is related to non-recurring insurance settlement paid to the Group in 2021 related to the construction of Marker development project which was sold from Scanergy AS in 2019.
Revenue from Operations was NOK 42.5 million as of September 2022, the segment was established in January 2022 and has no comparable figures. Revenue is mainly generated in the Norwegian market.
The Group's revenue is generated in Norway and Sweden. However, for the financial years 2019, 2020 and 2021, 100% of the sales revenue has been generated in Norway, and only in 2021 there was some other income generated in Sweden.
The following table sets out the Groups consolidated IFRS reported total revenue, disaggregated by segment, geography and timing of revenue recognition on a consolidated basis, as extracted from the Annual Financial Statements for the years ended 31 December 2021 (IFRS), 31 December 2020 (IFRS), and 2019 (NGAAP). Please note segment is presented based on consolidated IFRS, not proportionate, so that the figures will be reconciled with the right column in the tables presented in section 10.1.2 above. As the Group was founded in February 2020, the historical figures for 2019 presented in the table is for the Company only. In presenting the geographic information, revenue has been based on the geographic location where the revenue is generated:
| Segment information | Geographic location where the revenue is generated | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (In NOK 1,000) | Norway | Sweden | Total | ||
| Year ended 31 December 2021 | |||||
| Power Production | 35,095 | 0 | 35,095 | ||
| Project Development | 4,963 | 840 | 5,803 | ||
| Corporate | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Total revenue in 2021 (IFRS ) | 40,898 | 840 | 40,898 | ||
| Year ended 31 December 2020 | |||||
| Power Production | 3,430 | 0 | 3,430 | ||
| Project Development | 93 | 0 | 93 | ||
| Corporate | 118 | 0 | 118 | ||
| Total revenue in 2020 (IFRS ) | 3,640 | 0 | 3,640 | ||
| Year ended 31 December 2019 | |||||
| Power Production | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Project Development | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Corporate | 279 | 0 | 279 | ||
| Total revenue in 2019 (NGAAP) | 279 | 0 | 279 |
Revenue from power production was NOK 35.1 million in 2021 (Norway) compared with NOK 3.4 million in 2020 (Norway). The increase is related to revenue from increased power production volumes from the acquisition of producing power plants in 2021, as further described in Section 7.3.1 (Transactions completed in 2021).
Revenue from production increased from NOK 0 in 2019 to NOK 3.4 million in 2020 due to the formation of the Group where the transaction included the producing power plants Røyrmyra and Finnesetbekken.
Revenue from project development was NOK 5.8 million in 2021 which comprise of an insurance settlement in Norway related to the Marker wind project of NOK 5.0 million and NOK 0.8 million other income in Sweden related to the Stenkalles wind project.
The Group's results of operations, financial position and liquidity have been affected in the years under review, and are expected to continue to be affected, by certain principal factors and development relating to its business, including, in particular: power prices, production volumes, operational cost, construction cost, interest and inflation rates, exchange rates, trends within the industry, ability to develop new projects, acquisitions, general economic conditions, tax rates and weather conditions. Power prices and production volumes have to the date of this Prospectus had the most significant impact on the Group's income.
Other than the factors described in this Section 10.1.6 (Key factors affecting the Group's results of operations and financial performance) the Group does not consider any governmental, economic, fiscal, tax, monetary or political policy or factor individually to have had a material effect, directly or indirectly, on its operations in the years under review.
The profitability of the Group's producing power plants depends on the volume and prices of the electricity produced. Volume and price of electricity are at the date of this Prospectus the most significant factors affecting the income from operations. In 2021, 80% of the Group's revenue was from electricity generation, Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin. Although some of the future sale is expected to be based on fixed PPAs, 98% of the Group's sale is currently exposed to price risk related to electricity sold at spot rates.
During 2021, the Group had entered into fixed price contracts for sale of the production of Røyrmyra Vindpark AS and Selselva Kraft AS, which covered the period until the end of 2021 and about 10% of the total production volumes in 2021. The Group have accounted PPAs as own use contracts which are not recognised in the statement of financial position in accordance with IFRS 9 but accounted for as contracts with customers after IFRS 15 (bilateral industry contracts and settled by physical delivery).
The remaining part of the Group's production volume was exposed to fluctuations in the market prices for electricity, Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin. Both Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin constitute a limited part of the Group's revenues. Please see Section 6.5.2 (Price expectations) for further information on power price expectations.
During 2022 the Group has entered into one new fixed agreement (4 GWh) with start date January 2023 and end date December 2027. The Group has also a fixed agreement (8 GWh) in Bøen Kraft with an end date in December 2024. In total the fixed agreements in place will cover about 2-3% of expected aggregated total production volumes going forward, based on the current portfolio. The PPA at Bøen is accounted as a financial instrument with change in fair value over the profit or loss statement, while the financial PPA of ~4 GWh is recognised using hedge accounting with change in fair value recognised over other comprehensive income.
Electricity prices are inter alia dependent on substitute or adjacent commodity prices such as e.g. oil, gas and coal prices, but also dependent on metrological conditions, CO2 pricing and other supply and demand factors going into the clearing of the market price of electricity.
Lower power prices will affect the revenue and liquidity of the Group. If the power prices remain lower than expected for a longer period of time the balance sheet will most likely also be affected (impairment testing and possible write downs).
Production volumes are a sensitive input factor for Cloudberry's revenue and, together with power price, represent the largest factor affecting income from operations. Power price multiplied by production volumes equals revenue. On portfolio level, there have not been any significant deviations in the expected production volumes from the existing power plants. Production volumes have steadily increased over the past years and are expected to increase further in accordance with completion of new plants, see Section 7.2 (Overview of the Group's operations and activities).
Production volumes are highly correlated to precipitation and wind. For hydro power, precipitation is the key input factor for volume of water in the rivers and the total volume of water in the reservoirs. Increased precipitation volumes are directly correlated with increased production volumes. For wind farms, stable and high wind speeds are directly correlated with the production volumes (kWh produced); however, new technology (better and larger turbines & blades) has improved the overall volume output and opened new possibilities and areas with lower wind speeds. Expected production volumes are normally calculated based on historical wind- and hydro data from public sources or third-party research. During 2022 there has been historical low levels of precipitation in the south of Norway and historical high levels of precipitation in the northern areas of Norway.
New hydro power plants in production are highly efficient and require minimum maintenance and repair. Norway has a long tradition within hydro power and was an early adopter of modern technology in order to monitor and control the hydro power stations remotely (reducing operational costs). Hydro turbines located in Nordic rivers have a typical lifetime expectancy of 50 – 100 years due to low wear on the equipment. The opex costs are often also linked to the revenue in order to reduce fixed costs and secure the downside profitability. Operational cost for Cloudberry's hydro power production (excluding landlease) is about EUR 4 per MWh (about 5 - 10% of the expected revenue)
Wind power has higher operational costs due to more moving parts and wear on the equipment. Even though the opex costs vary from project to project depending on agreements with the turbine providers, an opex of EUR 12 per MWh (about 15 - 30% of the expected revenue) is a fair estimate for Cloudberry's wind production. The opex includes tax and tariff fees. On portfolio level, there have not been any significant deviations in the expected opex from the existing power plants. Opex have steadily increased over the last years and are expected to increase further in accordance with completion of new plants.
The costs of commodities are important input factors to Cloudberry's hydro and wind projects. Commodities like steel, cement and copper will impact the cost of turbines, foundations, roads and cables. Increasing prices will make Cloudberry's projects less profitable as long as the power prices are kept constant.
The logistic costs will also affect the total capex of new projects. Several parts and components are produced in Asia and will be affected by shipping rates, supply chain delays and the Covid-19 pandemic. Higher rates and longer lead times will in most cases lead to higher capex in the construction phase. Odal Vind AS has been adversely affected by the pandemic. All 32 wind turbines are at the date of this Prospectus installed, but the final capex is expected to be 5% higher than the initial budget.
The Group's underlying assets will normally be partially loan-financed. An increase in interest rates will lead to higher financing costs, which reduces the Group's profitability. The Company has reduced interest rate risk by fixing the interest rates for 10 – 21 years in certain projects. As a result of this, Cloudberry do not expect any significant change to the Group's expected cash flows from existing projects though long-term interest rates have increased significantly during 2022.
Higher inflation might lead to higher power prices and higher opex and capex costs. Higher power prices will increase Cloudberry's revenue while general cost inflation will drive up prices both on the operations but also the capital expenses in the construction phase. Odal Vind AS has been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic and to a certain extent increased costs as a result of inflation.
Norwegian power companies sell the power through Nord Pool. Trades on Nord Pool are settled in EUR but can immediately be exchanged to NOK. Any fluctuations in exchange rates between NOK, SEK and EUR affect the Group's business, results of operations, cash flows, financial condition and/or prospects. Additionally, the Group has employees and operations in Sweden, which also exposes the Group to currency risk.
In the Group's construction projects, there are often a variety of contracts nominated in EUR and NOK and sometimes also SEK. The Group does currently not have any currency hedging but have deposits in all three currencies to match the liabilities going forward.
A downturn in general economic conditions can potentially affect the Company in several ways.
The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in a general decrease in the activity level in Norway and Sweden and thus reduced demand for power which had a negative impact on the power prices in 2020. On the contrary increased activity in 2021/2022 and the war in Ukraine has resulted an energy crisis in Europe giving historically high-power prices in the southern areas of the Nordics.
A majority of Cloudberry's production segment is sensitive to short-term changes in electricity pricing. In 2021, about 90% of Cloudberry's fully owned produced volumes were affected by short-term fluctuations in energy pricing, while about 10% was fixed on long-term agreements. In our development segment, our projects have low sensitivity to short-term prices and our valuation is based on long-term expectations. Long-term power expectations normally have low volatility, and range between EUR 45 – 55 per MWh (NOK 45 – 55 øre/kWh). Cloudberry uses third party analysis from Volue as part of its strategy for financial modelling and decision making.
The global energy transition is well under way, and Europe, in particular, has set ambitious new targets for climate-neutrality. The region needs to double its share of electricity produced from renewable sources by 2030 to meet stricter emissions-reduction targets. The war in Ukraine might accelerate the transition further as larger parts of Europe are looking to become less dependent on Russian gas. The Nordics, with its rich hydro and wind power opportunities, will be an important part of the solution. Cloudberry has a clear ambition to contribute substantially to this expansion through organic greenfield developments, and by supporting structural changes in the Nordic renewable energy industry. Cloudberry is committed to the renewable energy transition and believe the power prices in Europe will be converging with new interconnectors.
Unexpected success in other areas of renewable energy may however reduce the pressure on the authorities to allow for development of wind parks and hydropower plants. This may affect the Group's future investment opportunities and reduce the second-hand value of its power plants. The same may also hold true for non-renewable or currently unknown energy technologies.
Cloudberry's develop segment holds a portfolio of renewable projects in Sweden and Norway and is responsible for developing the projects with external construction partners.
Cloudberry has an experienced development office in Karlstad, Sweden that has developed 10 projects and more than 300 MW of ready to construct projects. The development team was recently strengthened with a new and dedicated team in Gothenburg. The team focuses on industrial projects and shallowwater projects in the Baltic. The development team has a proven record developing both on and offshore licenses. The team sees several opportunities in both Norway and Sweden. With new and better technology, the team can focus on less impacted areas in order to develop sustainable projects.
The development segment is sensitive to the long-term price expectations of power prices. If the longterm expectations fall, the development projects will most likely be less valuable and therefore more difficult or impossible to finance and realise.
Cloudberry's production segment has been active in the merger & acquisition market during 2020 – 2022. During 2020, low power prices and the Covid-19 pandemic resulted in several short-term opportunities and acquisition targets. For 2021 and the first quarter of 2022 the power prices have been on historical high levels. This has resulted in a highly selective acquisition process where Cloudberry has focused on local opportunities and avoided larger and more structured M&A processes where Cloudberry competes with larger European investors.
Increased focus on renewables and CO2 emissions can lead to increased competition and less available acquisition targets. To mitigate this risk, Cloudberry is focusing on an exclusive development-pipeline of in-house projects. When acquiring an asset Cloudberry seeks to secure the funding immediately, even though the financial liability is not payable immediately. Cloudberry will use its cash balance, debt market, share consideration or new equity to finance acquisitions.
A larger producing portfolio will reduce certain overhead costs and make the Group's operations more cost efficient.
The Company is subject to corporate tax of 22% and 21.8% in Norway and Sweden respectively.
Norwegian wind farms have historically only been subject to ordinary taxation, including property tax where applicable. However, with effect from 1 July 2022, the Norwegian government implemented a production fee on power from wind farms at NOK 0.01/kWh (approx. 1 EUR/MWh). In October 2022 it was proposed that the production fee is increased to NOK 0.02/kWh (approx. 2 EUR/MWh). With respect to land-based wind farms (both existing and new) which are subject to license requirement and hydropower plants with an installed effect of minimum 1 MW, the Norwegian government has proposed to introduce a high price contribution tax levied on energy sold at a price above NOK 0.70/kWh at a rate of 23%, with effect from 1 January 2023. The high price contribution tax is not expected to be deductible in the calculation of corporate income tax or resource rent tax. Further, the Norwegian government has informed that they plan to introduce a resource rent tax and natural resource tax for land-based wind farms (both existing and new) which are subject to license requirement, with effect from 1 January 2023. The Norwegian government's plan is to publish a consultation paper during the autumn of 2022, and for the Parliament to resolve legislation relating to the new taxation during spring 2023.
Weather conditions will impact the volumes produced and the prices obtained in the spot market. Strong and constant wind speeds or large amount of precipitation will normally increase power produced and normally lower the short-term prices. Larger production will increase revenue while lower prices will lower the revenue. Since the neighboring farms normally will experience similar weather conditions, Cloudberry simulate the correlation effect in its financial models.
Weather will also influence the installation and delivery times. High winds (above 10 meter per second) will slow installation time, while snow and difficult driving conditions will delay transport. Frozen rivers can delay testing periods of equipment while roads can be less accessible when snow and ice melts. In most cases delays cause higher capex costs in the construction phase.
The Company has cost of sale of NOK 11.1 million as of 30 September 2022, or 8% of revenue. This was up from NOK 1.4 million as of 30 September 2021. The increase is related to increased power sales volume, and cost of sales related to the Operations business acquired in January 2022.
Salary and personnel expenses is the largest cost element in Cloudberry and was NOK 62.3 million as 30 September 2022, or 44% of revenue, this was up from NOK 17.4 million compared to 30 September 2021. The increase is due to increased number om personnel after the acquisition of Captiva, and also increases costs related to the warrant program and includes a one-time catch-up effect related to changes accounting treatment for accrual of the warrant program granted in 2021, which resulted in an additional cost of NOK 6 million in the period.
Other operating expenses were NOK 50.7 million as of 30 September 2022, or 36% of revenue. This increased from NOK 30.7 million as of 30 September 2021. The largest elements in other operating expenses for the nine months period in 2022 were (i) fees for external advisors, (ii) fall lease to landowners and (iii) operational cost of power plants.
Net income from associated companies was NOK 99.8 million as of 30 September 2022. This was related to Forte Energy Norway AS (34% ownership) and Odal Vind AS (33.4% ownership). The comparable figure for 30 September 2021 was NOK 5.9 million. The increase in net income is due to increased power revenue from production in the associated companies.
Depreciation and amortisation amounted to NOK 25.3 million as of 30 September 2022, up from NOK 5.7 million as of 30 September 2021. Per September 2022, depreciations of producing power plant assets amounted to NOK 15 million, amortisation of right to lease assets to NOK 3 million, and amortisation of intangible assets amounted to NOK 7 million. The increase between 30 September 2022 and 30 September 2021 was mainly due to depreciation and amortisation of acquired producing powerplant assets and intangible assets and excess values related to these acquired in Captiva.
For the figures below, the comparisons are 2021 IFRS figures to 2020 IFRS figures and 2020 IFRS figures to 2019 IFRS figures. There are no adjustments from 2019 NGAAP figures to 2019 IFRS figures. Please refer to table in Section 9.3 (Statement of profit and loss) for the comparison of 2019 IFRS and 2019 NGAAP figures.
The Company had cost of sale of NOK 5.4 million in 2021, or 13% of revenue. This was up from NOK 0.1 million in 2020 (4% of revenue). The increase in 2021 is related to increased power production from the acquisitions of new producing power plants as further described in Section 7.3.1 (Transactions completed in 2021) and write down of project inventory.
In 2020 cost of sale was NOK 0.1 million (4% of revenue) compared with NOK 0.02 million in 2019 (10% of revenue).
Salary and personnel expenses is the largest cost element in Cloudberry and was NOK 28.1 million in 2021, or 69% of revenue. It increased from NOK 17.4 million in 2020 (479% of revenue). The increase is due to growth in number of employees and increased salary, payment to Board of Directors and use of share-based payment.
In 2020 salary and personnel expenses were NOK 17.4 million (479% of revenue) compared with NOK 2.0 million (710% of revenue) in 2019.
Other operating expenses were NOK 55.3 million in 2021, or 135% of revenue. This increased from NOK 12.3 million in 2020 (339% of revenue). The largest elements in other operating expenses for 2021 were (i) costs related to uplisting from Euronext Growth Oslo to Oslo Stock Exchange in June 2021 NOK 4 million, (ii) significant activity within merger and acquisitions and associated financial and legal due diligence costs to third parties NOK 2 million and (iii) project costs of NOK 22 million in relation to finalising the Marker wind project sold from Scanergy AS in 2019.
In 2020 other operating expenses were NOK 12.3 million (339% of revenue) compared with and NOK 0.9 million (314% of revenue) in 2019.
Net income from associated companies and joint ventures was NOK 16.4 in 2021. This was related to Forte Energy Norway AS (34% ownership) and Odal Vind AS (33.4% ownership). The comparable figures for 2020 was NOK -3.6 million (loss).
In 2020 this was NOK -3.6 million (loss) and in 2019 this was NOK 0 million.
Depreciation and amortisation amounted to NOK 9.7 million in 2021, up from NOK 3.3 million in 2020. In 2021, depreciation and amortisation of producing power plant assets amounted to NOK 8.3 million, depreciation and amortisation of equipment to NOK 0.3 million, and depreciation and amortisation of right to use office lease amounted to NOK 1.0 million. The increase between 2020 and 2021 was mainly due to depreciation and amortisation of acquired producing powerplant assets and other equipment.
In 2020 depreciations and amortisations were NOK 3.3 million compared with NOK 0 million in 2019.
Financial income was NOK 51.7 million as of 30 September 2022, up from NOK 1.9 million as of 30 September 2021. The largest element to financial income was exchange difference gain. The increase was mainly related to external currency gain.
Financial expenses were NOK 61.7 million as of 30 September 2022, up from NOK 15.2 million as of 30 September 2021. The largest elements in financial expenses were exchange difference loss and loss related to change in fair value on price purchase contract. The increase was mainly related to exchange difference and fair value change of power price contract.
Financial income was NOK 6.4 million in 2021, up from NOK 1.0 million in 2020. The largest element in financial income was other financial income and exchange differences. The increase was mainly related to income from placements in money market funds.
In 2020 financial income was NOK 1.0 million compared with NOK 0 million in 2019.
Financial expenses were NOK 28.7 million in 2021, up from NOK 2.1 million in 2020. The largest elements in financial expenses were other financial expense and exchange differences of NOK 17.4 million, as well as interest expense of NOK 9.2 million (of which NOK 3.9 million is capitalised). The increase from 2020 was mainly related to increase in long-term and short-term interest-bearing debt related to power producing assets and exchange difference loss of internal borrowings to subsidiaries.
In 2020 financial income was NOK 2.1 million compared with NOK 0 million in 2019.
Non-current assets were NOK 2,652.3 million 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 1,735.2 million 31 December 2021.
The Group had NOK 1,435.0 million in PPE on 30 September 2022, up from NOK 1,009.1 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is mainly related to acquired producing power plants and investments in power plants under construction.
The table below sets out the details of the changes in the PPE from 1 January 2022 to 30 September 2022:
| Power plant | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Producing | under | Right to use - | |||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | power plants | construction | Equipment | lease asset | Total |
| Accumulated cost 1.1.2022 | 818,742 | 254,906 | 2,274 | 6,305 | 1,082,226 |
| Additions from bus.comb. and acqusitions during the year | 288,000 | 0 | 1,000 | 9,179 | 298,179 |
| Additions during the year | 5,000 | 153,000 | 400 | 20,600 | 179,000 |
| Transfer between groups | 99,000 | -99,000 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Transfer from inventory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Cost of disposed assets | -16,500 | 0 | 0 | -5,000 | -21,500 |
| Effects of movement in foreign exchange | 0 | 1,000 | 0 | 0 | 1,000 |
| Accumulated cost at 30.09.2022 | 1,194,242 | 309,906 | 3,674 | 31,084 | 1,538,905 |
| Accumulated depreciations and impairment losses at 1.1.2022 | 70,148 | 0 | 1,053 | 1,902 | 73,103 |
| Accumulated depreciations acquired assets during the year | 13,450 | 0 | 550 | 0 | 14,000 |
| Depreciations for the year | 15,000 | 0 | 346 | 3,000 | 18,346 |
| Impairment losses | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Accomulated depreciations and impairment losses disposed assets | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Effects of movements in foreigs exchange | 0 | 0 | 300 | -2,100 | -1,800 |
| Accumulated depreciations and impairment losses at 30.09.2022 | 98,598 | 0 | 2,249 | 2,802 | 103,649 |
| Carrying amount at end of period | 1,095,644 | 309,906 | 1,425 | 28,282 | 1,435,256 |
| 748,594 | 254,906 | 1,221 | 4,403 | 1,009,123 | |
| Carrying amount beginning of period |
The Group had NOK 124.3 million in goodwill 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 38.2 million on 31 December 2021. The goodwill is mainly derived from acquisition of Captiva in January 2022.
The Group had NOK 903.5 million in investment in associated companies and joint ventures on 30 September 2022, up from NOK 677.4 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is mainly related to Forte Energy Norway AS and Odal Vind AS.
The Group had NOK 92.3 million in financial assets and other non-current assets on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 10.4 million on 31 December 2021. The increase during is mainly related to derivative instruments used for hedging purpose and increase in other long-term receivables.
For the figures below, the comparisons are 31 December 2021 IFRS figures to 31 December 2020 figures, and 31 December 2020 IFRS figures to 31 December 2019 IFRS figures. There are no adjustments from 31 December 2019 NGAAP figures to 31 December 2019 IFRS figures. Please refer to table 9.4 for the comparison of 31 December 2019 IFRS and 31 December 2019 NGAAP figures.
Non-current assets were NOK 1,735 million 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 434.8 million 31 December 2020.
As per 31 December 2020 non-current assets were NOK 434.8 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had NOK 1,009.1 million in PPE on 31 December 2021, up from NOK 58.4 million on 31 December 2020. The increase during 2021 is mainly related to acquired producing power plants and power plants under construction.
As per 31 December 2020 PPE was NOK 58.4 million compared with NOK 0 million on 31 December 2019.
The table below sets out the details of the changes in the PPE from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2021:
| Producing | Power | Right to | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOK 1000 | power plants |
plant under construction |
Equipment | use - lease asset |
Total |
| Accumulated cost 1.1.2021 | 58 476 | 6 008 | 2 144 | 5 149 | 71 778 |
| Additions from business combinations during the year | 746 366 | 47 334 | 405 | 794 105 | |
| Additions during the year | 1903 | 176 425 | 1173 | 751 | 180 252 |
| Transfer between groups | 11 996 | (14 793) | (2 798) | ||
| Transfer from inventory | 43 636 | 43 636 | |||
| Cost of disposed assets | (751) | (751) | |||
| Effects of movement in foreign exchange | (3 704) | (293) | (3 997) | ||
| Accumulated cost at 31.12.2021 | 818 742 | 254 905 | 2 273 | 6 305 | 1082 226 |
| Accumulated depreciations and impairment losses at 1.1.2021 | 10 968 | 1526 | 858 | 13 352 | |
| Accumulated depreciations acquired assets during the year | 50 822 | 50 822 | |||
| Depreciations for the year | 8 358 | 344 | 1044 | 9 746 | |
| Impairment losses | |||||
| Accomulated depreciations and impairment losses disposed assets |
(736) | (736) | |||
| Effects of movements in foreigs exchange | (82) | (82) | |||
| Accumulated depreciations and impairment losses at 31.12.2021 | 70 148 | 1 052 | 1902 | 73 102 | |
| Carrying amount at end of period | 748 594 | 254 905 | 1221 | 4 403 | 1 009 124 |
| Carrying amount beginning of period | 47 508 | 6 008 | 618 | 4 291 | 58 426 |
| Estimated useful life (years) | 25-50 | 5-10 | 5-50 |
The Group had NOK 38.2 million in goodwill 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 36.9 million 31 December 2020. The goodwill is mainly derived from Cloudberry Develop AS' acquisition of Scanergy AS in February 2020 due to large pipeline of project prospects within wind on land and shallow water, the know-how and business connections, the record of accomplishments over the past 10 years for the company acquired, as well as synergies. The remaining increase from 31 December 2020 is related to Selselva power plant acquired in January 2021.
As per 31 December 2020 goodwill was NOK 36.9 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had NOK 677.4 million in investment in associated companies on 31 December 2021, up from 337.1 million on 31 December 2020. The increase during 2021 is mainly related to the remaining payment of equity of Odal Vind AS related to 15% ownership, and payment for increased ownership from 15% per 31 December 2020 to 33.4% in July 2021, further described in Section 7.3.1.5 (Acquisition of additional 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS). The remaining is related to the year's net income from investment in associated companies.
As per 31 December 2020 investment in associated companies was NOK 337.1 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had NOK 10.4 million in financial assets and other non-current assets 31 December 2020, compared to NOK 2.4 million on 31 December 2020. The increase during 2021 related to derivative contracts with applied hedge accounting and amortised borrowing costs.
As per 31 December 2020 financial assets were NOK 2.4 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
Current assets were NOK 2,147.2 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 1,383.2 million on 31 December 2021.
The Group's inventory was NOK 121.7 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 153.6 million 31 December 2021. Inventory consists mainly of development projects with construction permit and construction permit application process. The decrease is mainly related to sale of the Stenkalles project (sale of 50% of Stenkalles Holding AS) which now is classified as a joint venture and accounted with the equity method. Other changes relate to capitalised development costs and acquired development projects in 2022.
The table below specifies the inventory and movement during the nine months period ended 30 September 2022:
| Projects - with | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| construction | Projects - | ||
| NOK 1000 - Unaudited | permit | Backlog | Total |
| Project inventory 01.01.22 | 118,224 | 35,358 | 153,582 |
| Acqusitions during the year | 25,700 | 4,000 | 29,700 |
| Capitalization (salary, borrowing cost, other expenses) | 39,900 | 1,440 | 41,340 |
| Realized | -102,400 | 0 | -102,400 |
| Transfer to PPE | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Write down current year | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Effects of movements in foreigs exchange | -500 | 0 | -500 |
| Project inventory 30.09.22 | 80,924 | 40,798 | 121,722 |
Accounts receivables were NOK 57.1 million on 30 September 2022, up from NOK 12.0 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is related to the working capital items in Captiva which was acquired in January 2022.
Other current assets were NOK 115.5 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 102.7 million on 31 December 2021. Other current assets are mainly related to restricted cash and working capital items in Captiva which was acquired in January 2022.
Cash and cash equivalents were NOK 1,852.9 million on 30 September 2022, up from NOK 1,114.9 million on 31 December 2021. The development in cash and cash equivalents is further described in Section 10.3 (Liquidity and capital ).
For the figures below, the comparisons are 31 December 2021 IFRS figures to 31 December 2020 IFRS figures, and 31 December 2020 IFRS figures to 31 December 2019 IFRS figures. There are no adjustments from 31 December 2019 NGAAP figures to 31 December 2019 IFRS figures. Please refer to table 9.4 for the comparison of 31 December 2019 IFRS and 31 December 2019 NGAAP figures.
Current assets were NOK 1,383.2 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 962.1 million on 31 December 2020.
As per 31 December 2020 current assets were NOK 962.1 million compared with NOK 5.3 million on 31 December 2019.
The Group's inventory was NOK 153.6 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 196.0 million 31 December 2020. Inventory consists of capitalised costs related to development projects and inventory of government grants of Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin. The decrease in 2021 is mainly related to the transfer of Hån Vindpark to property, plant and equipment following a final investment decision made on the project in June 2021. The project is now under construction. Other changes are related to capitalised costs on development projects with construction permit and backlog of NOK 10.7 million and write down on projects that is assessed as not profitable and will not be prioritised inhouse of NOK 3.0 million.
As per 31 December 2020 inventory was NOK 196.0 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The table below specifies the inventory and movement during the year as of 31 December 2021:
| NOK 1000 | Projects - with construction permit |
Projects - Backlog |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Project inventory 01.01.21 | 162 545 | 33 484 | 196 029 |
| Acqusitions during the year | |||
| Capitalization (salary, borrowing cost, other expenses) | 8 724 | 1975 | 10 699 |
| Realized | |||
| Transfer to PPE | (47 050) | (47 050) | |
| Write down current year | (3 010) | (3 010) | |
| Effects of movements in foreigs exchange | (2 992) | (101) | (3 093) |
| Project inventory 31.12.21 | 118 217 | 35 358 | 153 575 |
Accounts receivables were NOK 12.0 million on 31 December 2021, up from NOK 2.8 million on 31 December 2020. The increase during 2021 is related to an increase in activity.
As per 31 December 2020 accounts receivables were NOK 2.8 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
Other current assets were NOK 102.6 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 158.1 million on 31 December 2020. Other current assets are mainly related to restricted cash related to guarantees to suppliers at Odal Vind AS and the municipality at Hån Vindpark.
As per 31 December 2020 other current assets were NOK 158.1 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
Cash and cash equivalents were NOK 1,114.9 on 31 December 2021, up from NOK 605.1 million on 31 December 2020. The development in cash and cash equivalents is further described in Section 10.3 (Liquidity and capital ).
As per 31 December 2020 cash and cash equivalents were NOK 605.1 million compared with NOK 5.2 million 31 December 2019.
Non-current interest-bearing loans and borrowings were NOK 362.7 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 294.1 million on 31 December 2021. The increase mainly relates to debt in acquired companies.
Please see Section 10.4 (Financing arrangements and other commitments) for further information regarding debt facilities.
A reconciliation of the opening balance, movements (cash and non-cash) and closing balance of the long-term debt for the period from 1 January 2022 to 30 September 2022 are presented below:
| NOK 1,000 - Unaudited | In cash flow statement | |
|---|---|---|
| Opening balance long term debt 01.01.2022 | 294,000 | |
| Debt take over in acqusitions | non-cash | 83,400 |
| Repaid existing debt in subsidiaries fo refinancing | cash outflow | -117,600 |
| Drawn from facility with refinancing | cash inflow | 116,400 |
| Down payment principal | cash outflow | -9,500 |
| Change in swap deriavative | non-cash | -2,400 |
| Reclassified principal payment to short term | non-cash | -1,600 |
| Closing balance long term debt 30.09.2022 | 362,700 |
The Group had non-current lease liabilities of NOK 25.4 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 3.4 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is related to new office lease agreement at Bergehus and office lease in Captiva which was acquired in January 2022.
The Group's non-current provisions were NOK 32.9 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 10.7 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is mainly related to asset retirement obligation related to Kafjärden project which was acquired in 2022.
The Group had non-current deferred tax liabilities of NOK 133.5 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 83.1 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is related to deferred tax on excess values recognised in acquisitions.
For the figures below, the comparisons are 31 December 2021 IFRS figures to 31 December 2020 IFRS figures, and 31 December 2020 IFRS figures to 31 December 2019 IFRS figures. There are no adjustments from 31 December 2019 NGAAP figures to 31 December 2019 IFRS figures. Please refer to table 9.4 for the comparison of 31 December 2019 IFRS and 31 December 2019 NGAAP figures
Non-current interest-bearing loans and borrowings were NOK 294.1 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 26.4 million on 31 December 2020. The increase during 2021 relates to the Company's credit facility at SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA which has been increased and further drawn due to the acquisitions of Selselva Kraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS and Nessakraft AS, and also the construction loan related to Skåråna Kraft AS. The amount includes derivative for hedging interest swap of NOK 2.6 million. The remaining debt is related to Åmotsfoss which will be refinanced in 2022 and replaced by the SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA credit facility.
Please see Section 10.4 (Financing arrangements and other commitments) for further information regarding debt facilities.
A reconciliation of the opening balance, movements (cash and non-cash) and closing balance of the long-term debt for the year 2021 are presented below:
| NOK 1000 | In cash flow statement | |
|---|---|---|
| Opening balance long term debt 01.01.21 | 26 440 | |
| Debt take over in acqusitions | non-cash | 331 609 |
| Repaid existing debt in subsidiaries for refinancing | cash outflow | (281 062) |
| Drawn from new facility with refinanced | cash inflow | 186 348 |
| Drawn construction loan | cash inflow | 40 000 |
| Downpayments | cash outflow | (1 584) |
| Change in swap derivative | non cash | 2 442 |
| Reclassified principal payments to short term | non-cash | (10 105) |
| Closing balance long term debt 31.12.21 | 294 087 | |
| Of which: | ||
| Drawn from new facility with refinanced | 186 348 | |
| Drawn construction loan | 40 000 | |
| Proceeds from new term loans 2021 | 226 348 | |
| Repaid existing debt in subsidiaries for refinancing | (281 062) | |
| Downpayments | (1 584) | |
| Total repayment of term loan 2021 | (282 646) |
Debt take over in acquisitions is related to Selselva Kraft AS of NOK 49.3 million, Nessakraft AS of NOK 87.0 million, Bjørgelva Kraft of NOK 24.3 million, Usma Kraft of NOK 94.2 million and Åmotsfoss of NOK 76.8 million.
Proceeds from new facilities is related to Finnesetbekken of NOK 7.3 million, Røyrmyra of NOK 18.6 million, Selselva Kraft of NOK 49.2 million, Nessakraft of NOK 87 million, Bjørgelva Kraft of NOK 24.3 million 4. Drawn construction loan is related to Skåråna Kraft AS.
2. Repaid debt to refinance with new facility in SR Bank relates to Finnesetbekken of NOK 7.5 million, Røyrmyra of NOK 18.7 million, Selselva Kraft of NOK 49.3 million, Nessakraft of NOK 87 million, Bjørgelva Kraft of NOK 24.3 million and Usma Kraft of NOK 94.2 million.
As per 31 December 2020 interest-bearing loans and borrowings were NOK 26.4 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had non-current lease liabilities of NOK 3.4 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 3.2 million on 31 December 2020. The increase in 2021 is related to recognition of right to lease assets in 2021 related to fixed lease agreements on Nessakraft and Selselva. Please note that the fall lease to landowners is mostly variable and dependent on revenue or net income, the future obligation for fall lease is therefore not recognised in the balance sheet.
As per 31 December 2020 lease liabilities long term were NOK 3.2 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group's non-current provisions were NOK 10.8 on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 15.9 million on 31 December 2020. The decrease in 2021 relates mainly to the PPA contract for the power production at Røyrmyra, which is due in first quarter of 2022 and hence has been reclassified to short term.
As per 31 December 2020 provisions were NOK 15.9 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had non-current deferred tax liabilities of NOK 83.1 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 13.7 million on 31 December 2020. The increase in 2021 is related to recognising deferred tax on excess values related to acquisitions.
As per 31 December 2020 deferred tax liabilities were NOK 13.7 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
Interest-bearing short-term debt was NOK 12 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 10.1 million on 31 December 2021. The increase relates to reclassified long term interest-bearing debt.
The Group had current lease liabilities of NOK 4.0 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 1.2 million on 31 December 2021.
Accounts payable and other current liabilities were NOK 150.4 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 38.3 million on 31 December 2021. The increase is related to working capital items in Captiva, which was acquired in January 2022.
The Group's current provisions were NOK 326.5 million on 30 September 2022, compared to NOK 41.3 million on 31 December 2021. The increase relates to working capital items in Captiva which was acquired in January 2022.
Interest-bearing short-term debt was NOK 10.1 million on 31 December 2021, down from NOK 236.8 million on 31 December 2020. The decrease during 2021 relates to the debt in connection with the acquisition of Forte Energy Norway AS in 2020, which was repaid in March 2021, the amount per 31 December 2021 relates to principal payments on non-current interest bearing loans and borrowings.
As per 31 December 2020 interest-bearing short-term debt was NOK 236.8 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had current lease liabilities of NOK 1.1 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 1.1 million on 31 December 2020.
As per 31 December 2020 current lease liabilities were NOK 1.1 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
Accounts payable and other current liabilities were NOK 38.3 million on 31 December 2021, up from NOK 26.2 million on 31 December 2020. The increase during 2021 is related to costs related to the private placement completed in December 2021 and costs for legal advisors related to the acquisition of Captiva Digital Services AS in January 2022.
As per 31 December 2020 accounts payable and other current liabilities were NOK 26.2 million compared with NOK 0.5 million 31 December 2019.
The Group's current provisions were NOK 41.3 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 18.8 million on 31 December 2020. The increase in 2021 relates to accrued costs.
As per 31 December 2020 provisions short term were NOK 18.8 million compared with NOK 0 million 31 December 2019.
The Group had total equity of NOK 3,752 million on 30 September 2022. The Group had total equity of NOK 2,636 million on 31 December 2021, compared to NOK 1,054.7 million on 31 December 2020.
As per 31 December 2020 total equity was NOK 1,054.7 million compared with NOK 4.8 million on 31 December 2019.
The change in equity is set out in detail in Section 9.6 (Selected statement of changes in equity).
As a result of (i) the number of acquisitions within the Group and (ii) the numerous power plants under construction, the Group's production of power has increased significantly from 2021 to 2022 and will continue to increase as plants currently under constructions are completed. Other significant developments are the new tax proposal of the Norwegian government, as further described inter alia in Section 6.7.2 (Overview of legal framework for key activities in Norway), the recent development in power prices, further described in Sections 6.5 (Nordic power prices) and 7.4.3 (Power prices in 2021), and the conditions mentioned in Section 10.10 (Significant changes). In addition, the rising inflation is expected to result in higher capex costs for the Group's project under development and construction. Otherwise, the Group has not experienced, nor does it have any information about significant changes compared to historical trends in production, sales, costs, inventory, market prices for electrical power, Electricity Certificates or Guarantees of Origin, demands, commitments or events that are reasonably likely to have a material effect for the Group's prospects for the current financial year.
Other than mentioned in Section 10.10 (Significant changes), the Group has not experienced any significant changes in its financial performance in the period between 31 December 2021 and date of this Prospectus.
The main source of liquidity for the Group has been the cash flows from financing activities, mainly through issuance of new shares. For year to date per 30 September 2022, cash flows from operations, mainly related to power sales, also represented a material source of liquidity. In 2021, the cash flow from operating activities was NOK -70.7 million. Cash flow from investing activities, which is made up of investment in associated companies and shares in subsidiaries and property plant and equipment (power plants under construction) was NOK -828.9 million. In total, the Group had a net cash flow of NOK 511.7 million in 2021. As of 31 December 2021, the Group had total equity of NOK 2,636 million, corresponding to an equity ratio of 85%, cash and cash equivalents of NOK 1,115 million, and interestbearing debt of NOK 308.8 million (including lease liability).
For year to date per 30 September 2022, the cash flow from operating activities was NOK 152.7 million. Cash flow from investing activities, which is made up of investment in associated companies and shares in subsidiaries and property plant and equipment (power plants under construction) was NOK -197.2 million. In total, the Group had a net cash flow of NOK 739.1 million for year to date per 30 September 2022. As of 30 September 2022, the Group had total equity of NOK 3,752 million, corresponding to an equity ratio of 78%, cash and cash equivalents of NOK 1,853 million, and interest-bearing debt of NOK 375 million (including lease liability).
As of 31 December 2021, the Group had net borrowings related to power plants, producing and under construction, of NOK 304 million, while it was NOK 362 million per 30 September 2022.
In March 2021 the Group secured and signed a term loan facility with SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA of NOK 400 million, and a related revolving credit facility of NOK 300 million. In November 2021, the Group increased the NOK 700 million credit facility to NOK 1 400 million, with a possibility to increase the facility with additional NOK 500 million. The term loan facility has refinanced the two existing term loans related to Røyrmyra and Finnesetbekken. In relation to the acquisition of Selselva Kraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS and Nessakraft AS, the Group has drawn NOK 49.3 million, NOK 24.3 million and NOK 87 million respectively.
For details about the conditions and covenants for these debt facilities see Section 10.4.1 (Borrowings) below.
In June 2021, the Company raised NOK 1,035 million in net proceeds in a private placement. The net proceeds from the private placement are and will be used for i) the construction of the two in-house wind development projects at Hån and Duvhällen (NOK ~470 million), ii) a capital structure adjustment in the Odal windfarm development (NOK ~70 million), and iii) executing on M&A opportunities, accelerated development of project portfolio, working capital requirements and general corporate purposes, such as financing of the Group's operating costs.
In September 2022, the Company raised NOK 766 million in net proceeds in a private placement. The net proceeds from the Private Placement will be used as follows: As communicated in the Company's Q2 report, the Company's total portfolio comprises 324 MW, of which 270 MW has financing. NOK 500 million will be used towards funding the remaining c. 50 MW in the portfolio. NOK 266 million will be used towards optimising and enhancing the capacity of the Company's existing assets and towards M&A, both identified and future opportunities.
Going forward it is expected that liquidity from operating activities will continue to represent a material source of liquidity through increased electricity production, as new power plants are expected to contribute with positive cash flow from operations once production commence. A more detailed description of the timing and status on the new power plants is set out in the table in Section 7.2 (Overview of the Group's operations and activities). The Group's ability to generate continuous cash from operations depends on future operating performance and power prices, which is dependent, to some extent, on general economic, financial, competitive, market regulatory and other factors, many of which are beyond the Group's control, as well as other factors described in Section 2 (Risk factors) of this Prospectus.
The Group reports in NOK and has NOK as its functional currency. However, the associated companies Odal Vind AS and Forte Energy Norway AS reports in EUR and has EUR as its functional currency. The Group currently does not use hedging derivates or other methods to minimise the impact of foreign exchange risks. At the end of 2021, the Group held 85.9% of cash holdings in NOK, 13.7% in EUR, 0.3% in SEK and 0% in other currencies. As of 30 September 2022, the Group held 94.7% of cash holdings in NOK, 1.7% in EUR, 3.6% in SEK and 0% in other currencies.
Cash holdings and access to credit facilities as described above should provide the Group with the needed liquidity to maintain a sound cash balance. The Group believes that these sources of liquidity will be sufficient to meet requirements and commitments in the foreseeable future. However, if the Group is to pursue further growth through M&A activities or develop additional projects in-house, the Group will need to raise additional capital. The Group's actual financing requirements depend on a number of factors, many of which are beyond the control of the Group.
The Group does not have any restrictions on use of capital that can have a material impact on the Group's operations.
The following table presents the Group's historical cash flows extracted from the Company's audited Financial Statements for the years ended 31 December 2021, 31 December 2020, and 31 December 2019 (2019 IFRS is extracted from 2020 comparable statements) and for the Interim Financial Statements for the three and nine months period ended 30 September 2022 and 30 September 2021:
| (In NOK 1,000) | Year ended | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q3 2022 | Q3 2021 | YTD 2022 | YTD 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2019 | |
| 1/7-30/09 | 1/7-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-30/09 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | 1/1-31/12 | |
| IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | IFRS | NGAAP | |
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | ||||
| Cash flows from operating activities | 115,375 - | 60,018 | 152,839 - | 74,257 - | 70,722 - | 4,314 - | 2,906 - | 2,906 |
| Cash flows from investing activities | - 47,732 - |
349,600 - | 197,336 - | 674,800 - | 828,916 - | 354,184 | - | - |
| Cash flows from financing activities | 755,790 | 22,187 | 783,996 | 832,975 | 1,411,316 | 958,355 | 8,000 | 8,000 |
Cash flow from operating activities originate from sale of power, Electricity Certificates, Guarantees of Origin, insurance settlement for development project and management fee services, less cash used in operations. In 2021, 80% of revenues were from sale of power and electricity related products. Cash flow from operating activities also accounts for non-capitalised changes in the balance sheet such as trade receivables and contract assets. The decrease in cash flow from operating activities between 2021 and 2020, is mainly due to reduced profit/(loss) before tax and change in non-current items. The increase in revenue is described in Section 10.1 (Results by operating business segment and geographic area). A more detailed break-down of the cash flow elements can be found in Section 9.5 (Selected statement of cash flow) and in the 2021 annual report, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
In 2022, cash flow from operating activities will include cash flow from the operations segment, which mainly is related to operations of power plants and associated services. Apart from this there has been no material changes in the Group's cash flow from operating activities that deviates from the Group's ordinary course of business.
Cash flow from investing activities mainly cover investments in shares in associated companies as well as purchases of shares in subsidiaries and investment in property, plant and equipment. The change in cash flow from investing activities is mainly due to increased M&A activity in 2021 compared to 2020. Cash flow from investment in property, plant and equipment was NOK -179.5 million in 2021 and was mainly related to investment in the construction projects Skåråna and Hån. Net cash flow from acquisitions of shares in subsidiaries was NOK -318.3 million in 2021 and was related to acquisitions of the fully owned power plants Selselva Kraft, Nessakraft, Bjørgelva Kraft, Usma Kraft and Åmotsfoss Kraft, see Section 7.3.1 (Transactions completed in 2021) for further information. Cash flow from investments in associated companies was NOK -331.8 million in 2021 and was related to a pro-rata equity contribution and purchase of additional shares (going from 15% to 33.4% ownership) in Odal Vind AS.
In 2022, cash flow from investment activities mainly comprise investments in property, plant and equipment and intangibles of NOK 168.4 million, mainly related to Hån and Skåråna and intangible assets in Captiva, proceeds from sale of Jåstadkraft and the Stenkalles project of NOK 62 million, net liquidity outflow from acquisition of shares of NOK 69.9 million (Cativa Group, Tinnkraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Re Energi AS, Enestor AS and Bøen Kraft AS, and investment in associated companies of NOK 31 million related to Odal Vind AS.
Apart from the investments described in 7.3.2 (Transactions completed in 2022) and the cash flows as described in Section 8.1 (Introduction), there are no other material changes in the cash flow from investment activities after 30 September 2022.
Cash flow from financing activities stem from capital raises, borrowings, lease payments and related interest. During 2021, the Group raised NOK 1,646.9 million through capital raises, which mainly explains the increase in cash flows since 2020. During 2021 the Group transferred NOK 152.4 million from an escrow account related to the investment in Odal Vind AS and withdrew NOK 84.8 million related to new restricted cash. The Group repaid borrowings of NOK 282.6 million related to refinancing of long-term debt, and had proceeds of new long-term debt of NOK 226.3 million, and also repaid the short-term loan of NOK 236.7 million from the acquisition of shares in Forte Energy Norway AS. The Group had principal lease payments of NOK 1 million in 2021, and interest payments of NOK 0.2 million. The increase in cash flow from financing activities compared to 2020 is mainly due to capital raisings.
In 2022 per 30 September, cash flow from financing activities mainly comprises net proceeds from share capital increase of NOK 766.1 million, net payment from escrow accounts of NOK 40 million, net proceeds and repayments of term loans of NOK -11.9 million, interest payments of NOK 10.9 million and lease payments (interest and repayment) of NOK 3.3 million.
There are no material changes to the cash flow from financing activities after 30 September 2022 other than repayment of the term loan in Bøen Kraft AS of NOK 32 million as described in Section 8.1 (Introduction).
The Group had two acquisition facilities with SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA related to the acquisition of Røyrmyra and Finnesetbekken of NOK 26.3 million as per 31 December 2020 divided among two term loans, maturing in 2029 and 2036.
In March 2021 the Group signed a term loan facility with SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA of NOK 400 million, and a related revolving credit facility of NOK 300 million. This facility has refinanced the two existing term loans related to Røyrmyra and Finnesetbekken, amounted to NOK 26.4 million, and in April 2021 the Group withdrew NOK 49.3 million from the facility to refinance long term debt related to the acquired Selselva power plant.
In November 2021 the Group increased the NOK 700 million credit facility with SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA to NOK 1,400 million, with a possibility to increase the facility with additional NOK 500 million. Please see further details about the facilities in note 23 in the Group's audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
The total borrowings related to the term loan facility is as per 30 September 2022 NOK 330 million. The remaining debt per 30 September 2022 is primarily NOK 32 million related to Bøen Kraft AS and NOK 10 million from the Operations segment. The debt in Bøen Kraft AS was re-financed with cash in October 2022. The interest rate on the term loan is 3 months NIBOR plus margin of less than 2%.
The bank loan facilities' terms are at a market floating interest rate with a fixed interest rate swap to reduce the interest rate risk.
The following financial covenants apply to the credit facilities:
Subject to that the financial covenants are met, the loan facilities do not contain any restrictions on the ability of Cloudberry's subsidiaries to transfer funds to Cloudberry in the form of cash dividends, loans or advances.
The following collateral apply to the credit facilities:
The Group complied with these covenants as per 30 September 2022. No breach of the covenants has occurred between 30 September 2022 and the date of this Prospectus, and Cloudberry is at the date of this Prospectus not aware of any circumstances which may result in a breach of the covenants.
The Group also has certain other contractual cash obligations and other commitments.
The Group rents its offices as well as ground lease to landowners. The lease agreements are of varying lengths. Further details regarding the total lease obligations and the maturity analysis are found in Section 10.4.3 (Overview of consolidated contractual obligations) below.
Further, Cloudberry Develop AS has made a provision for resell obligation to prior owners of development projects. The resell obligation is contingent on project realisation which requires a final investment decision. The final investment decision for the projects will trigger an agreed payment obligation which will fall due at that point. The resell obligation is to four former owners related to the Stenkalles Vind project. The total resell provision amounts to NOK 9.1 million and is not interest bearing. Note that the amounts are nominated in SEK and hence subject to currency fluctuations.
Provision for asset retirement costs is recognised when the Group has an obligation to dismantle and remove a hydro or wind power plant and to restore the site where it is located after a concession period or lease period is over.
A provision for asset retirement obligation related to Røyrmyra wind farm is recognised in the consolidated Group accounts. The estimated cost for retirement is based on expected cost at the expiry of the concession, this is based on an estimate of today's cost and adjusted for future expected inflation and discounted with the Groups estimated long-term borrowing cost. The expected settlement date is at the end of the concession period, end of 2040. The provision for the asset retirement obligation amounts to NOK 0.9 million per 31 December 2021.
As per 30 September 2022 the Group has made a provision for asset retirement obligation related to the Kafjärden project, which was acquired in 2022, see Section 7.3.2.4 (Acquisition of the Kafjärden project), of NOK 11.3 million. As per 30 September 2022 the total provision for asset retirement amounts to NOK 12.2 million.
Asset retirement obligations have not been made for the Group's current hydro plants. The concessions for the hydro power plants do not have an expiry date, and the useful life of the equipment is estimated to be longer than the lease periods. It is currently assessed that because the power plants would continue to be revenue generating power producing plants, after the end of the lease periods, it is assumed that either the landowners (if the exercise their option to acquire the equipment), or the Group (which have the right to prolong the lease period if option to acquire the equipment is not exercised) will continue the use of the plants and therefore not decommission the equipment. The lease expiry dates are between 40-60 years and the assessment will be updated over the useful life of the power plants and may change so that an asset retirement obligation will be made later, when material.
The Group's subsidiary, Røyrmyra Vindpark AS entered into a fixed price contract related to the sale of electricity, Electricity Certificates and Guarantees of Origin related to the production from the Røyrmyra power plant. The original term of the contracts was until 2030. The parties agreed to terminate the contract with effect from 31 December 2021. Upon expiry of the contract, Røyrmyra Vindpark AS shall pay the counterparty a one-time compensation fee of NOK 4.6 million, the obligation is classified as current provision as per 31 December 2021. As per 30 September 2022 the provision amounts to NOK 4.6 million.
Cloudberry has signed sale and purchase agreement to acquire power plants which commits the Company. As per the date of this Prospectus it is related to one construction project, Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, further described in Section 10.5.3 (Acquisitions) under the heading "Acquisitions expected to be completed after the date of this Prospectus". The contingent obligation related to these are further described in Section 8.5 (Contingent and indirect indebtedness).
The table below sets out the Group's consolidated contractual obligations and commitments, extracted from the Company's audited Financial Statements for the years ended 31 December 2021, as of 31 December 2021 and the Interim Financial Statements for the nine months period ended 30 September 2022:
| Outstanding amount as of |
Outstanding amount as of |
||
|---|---|---|---|
| (In NOK 1,000) | |||
| 31 December 2021 | 30.sep.22 | ||
| Senior facilities | |||
| Principal | 304,192 | 362,739 | |
| Interests | 159,493 | 168,075 | |
| Amortization | |||
| Total senior facilities | 463,686 | 530,814 | |
| Lease facilities | |||
| Principal | 5,795 | 29,367 | |
| Interests | 359 | 5,600 | |
| Total lease facilities | 6,154 | 34,967 | |
| Other commitments | |||
| Principal | 10,753 | 32,919 | |
| Interests | 867 | 867 | |
| Total other commitments | 11,620 | 33,786 | |
| Total | 481,459 | 599,567 |
The unaudited maturity profile in the table below shows contractual maturities of the main borrowings of the Group as of the date of this Prospectus including estimated interest and principal payments, for the periods indicated.
| Debt repayment schedule | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (In NOK 1,000) | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | 2026- | Total |
| Senior facilities | ||||||
| Principal | 12,955 | 12,955 | 12,955 | 12,955 | 310,919 | 362,739 |
| Interests floating | 3,627 | 14,510 | 13,991 | 13,473 | 164,787 | 210,389 |
| Interests swap | -907 | -3,627 | -3,498 | -3,368 | -30,914 | -42,314 |
| Total senior facilities | 15,676 | 23,837 | 23,449 | 23,060 | 444,793 | 530,814 |
| Lease facilities | ||||||
| Principal | 934 | 4,979 | 5,692 | 5,830 | 11,932 | 29,367 |
| Interests | 332 | 1,099 | 943 | 753 | 2,473 | 5,600 |
| Total lease facilities | 1,266 | 6,078 | 6,635 | 6,583 | 14,405 | 34,967 |
| Other commitments | ||||||
| Principal | 0 | 9,108 | 0 | 697 | 23,114 | 32,919 |
| Interests | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 729 | 867 |
| Total other commitments | 33 | 9,142 | 35 | 733 | 23,843 | 33,786 |
| Total | 16,975 | 39,057 | 30,119 | 30,376 | 483,041 | 599,567 |
Cloudberry has a conservative approach to cash management. The Group invests in money market funds to secure that the Company has cash available to fund future cash needs. The money market funds are highly liquid (open ended funds with no holding requirements) and are considered low risk. The funds have low interest rate risk, low credit risk (above BBB+ rating) and strong diversification. The funds are listed in NOK, have low annual management fees and are classified as UCITS funds (subject to a harmonised regulatory framework from the European Commission). Cloudberry's investments in money market funds are classified as cash equivalents while Cloudberry's deposits in the Nordic saving banks are classified as cash.
To plan the Group's liquidity and funding need, the management reports to the board a three year forward rolling cash flow projection. The projection is updated minimum each quarter and monitors the Group's on-going/future projects and funding plans.
Within the Production and Corporate segment, the companies have a cash-pool arrangement with SR-Bank to allow for internal control and efficiency with regard to the liquidity of the Group. The Group's operational segment and the Swedish subsidiaries are funded through intra-group loans or equity contributions.
The Group's investments are mainly in the form of (i) acquisitions of power producing hydropower plants or wind farms or (ii) hydropower plants or on-/offshore wind farms under development or construction, or capital expenditures in property, plant and equipment, (iii) greenfield development of hydro or on- and offshore wind projects in the Nordics and (iv) add-on investments in order to optimise and scale Captiva and the operations segment.
In 2021, the Group made investments of NOK 829.6 million. This was related to the acquisitions described in Section 10.5.3 (Acquisitions).
In 2020 the Group made investments of NOK 600 million (of which NOK 351 million was payable in cash, the remaining was settled with shares). This was related to acquisitions completed in 2020.
In 2019 the Group did not make any investments (NOK 0 million).
So far in 2022 the Group has made investments of NOK 460 million which has been payable partly in cash and partly by issuance of new shares in the Company. This is related to acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS of which NOK 50.5 million was paid in cash and the remaining part of the purchase price was settled by issuance of 3,484,041 new shares in the Company, see Section 7.3.2.1 (Acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS), acquisition of 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS of NOK 27.7 million, see Section 7.3.2.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS, acquisition of 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB of SEK 14 million, see Section 7.3.2.3 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB), acquisition of the Kafjärden project of SEK 3 million, see Section 7.3.2.4 (Acquisition of the Kafjärden project), acquisition of Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS of NOK 5.7 million, see Section 7.3.2.5 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS), acquisition of 100% of the shares of RE Energi AS of NOK 0.1 million, see Section 7.3.2.6 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of RE Energi AS), acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS of NOK NOK 101.7 million , of which NOK 16.2 million was settled through issuance of 935,020 new shares in the Company, see Section 7.3.2.7 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS), increased ownership in Enestor AS, see Section 7.3.2.8 (Increase of ownership from 25.01% to 51% in Enestor AS), and investments in Hån of SEK 134.4 and NOK 16.7 million, investment in Skåråna Kraft AS of NOK 10.7 million, and project investment of NOK 35 million related to Stenkalles, Kafjärden and Munkhyttan.
In February 2022 the Company signed a share purchase agreement to acquire Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, a hydro power plant project under construction. When construction of the hydro power plant is finished and after a commissioning period of approx. 1-3 months, the Company will acquire the power plant at an enterprise value estimated to be NOK 124 million. For further information, see Sections 7.3.3.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS) and 8.5 (Contingent and indirect indebtedness).
In June 2021, the Group made a final investment decision related to Hån windfarm. The project is now under construction, as per the date of this Prospectus the remaining contractual capital expenditure amounts to NOK 10 million. Please see note 17 of Cloudberry's audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021.
Both these investments are anticipated to be funded with existing available cash.
The Group has had an active M&A strategy and driven growth through a combination of organic growth and acquisitions. The Group has completed the following acquisitions during 2022 and in the years ended 31 December 2021, 31 December 2020, and 31 December 2019:
Acquisitions completed in 2019
The Company did not complete any acquisitions in 2019.
Acquisitions completed in 2020
Cloudberry Production AS (formerly known as CB Nordic Renewable & Infrastructure Fund I AS)
The Company acquired 100% of the shares in Cloudberry Production AS in February 2020 at a price of approximately NOK 83.5 million. The purchase price has been fully paid. At the time of the acquisition, Cloudberry Production AS had purchased the two producing power plants Røyrmyra (wind) and Finnesetbekken (hydro).
The Company acquired 100% of the shares in Cloudberry Develop AS in February 2020 at a price of approximately NOK 132.8 million. The purchase price has been fully paid.
The Company acquired 34% of the shares in Forte Energy Norway AS in December 2020 at a price of NOK 238 million. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Develop AS acquired 100% of the shares in Skogvind AS in November 2020 at a price of NOK 5.4 million. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Stenkalles Holding AS Cloudberry Develop AS acquired 100% of the shares in Stenkalles Holding AS in September 2020 at a price of NOK 34.2 million. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 15% of the shares in Odal Vind AS (formerly Odal Vindkraftverk AS) in December 2020 at a price of NOK 103 million, with an option to acquire further 18.4% of the shares in the company. The project is currently under construction. Cloudberry Production AS has during Q1 2021 paid in the remaining equity commitment of NOK 91 million (15% ownership). The project has secured debt and is fully financed.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS in January 2021 at a price of NOK 65.0 million. The power plant is in operation. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS in February 2021 at a price of NOK 23.7 million. The two power plants are expected to commence production during the first quarter of 2022. The purchase price included a hold back amount of NOK 6 million, which due to cost overrun will not be paid, hence the purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Nessakraft AS in June 2021 at a price of NOK 79.0 million. The power plant is in operation. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bjørgelva Kraft AS in June 2021 at a price of NOK 10.8 million. The power plant is in operation. The purchase price has been fully paid.
In July 2021, Cloudberry Production AS exercised its option to increase its ownership in Odal Vind AS with additional 18.4% for a purchase price of NOK 239.7 million. The wind farm is under construction. The purchase price has been fully paid.
In March 2022 Odal Vind AS requested additional equity payment from the owners, the Company's share was NOK 32 million. The requested equity is less than 5% of the total capex of the project. The payment has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS in August 2021 at a price of NOK 82.9 million. The power plant is in operation. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS in December 2021 at a purchase price of NOK 91.4 million. The power plant is in operation. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry acquired 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS in January 2022 at a preliminary purchase price of NOK 101 million. The preliminary purchase price has been settled by (i) a cash payment of NOK 50.5 million and (ii) the issuance of 3,484,041 new shares in the Company. The purchase price is subject to adjustment after audited completion accounts, which will be a cash settlement. This has not been settled as of the date of this Prospectus.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS in February 2022 at a purchase price of NOK 27.7 million. The power plant is in operation. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Utveckling II AB acquired 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB at a purchase price of SEK 20 million. SEK 14 million was paid at closing and the remaining SEK 6 million will be paid when the project reaches commercial operations date.
Oxenstierna Vind AB acquired the Kafjärden project in March 2022 at a fixed purchase price of SEK 3 million. An additional purchase price will depend on the final outcome of the on-going development of the project (projected 20 – 40 MW, expected 32 MW (90 GWh)) and is also linked to a final investment decision in Cloudberry. If the outcome of the development process results in a 20 MW project, the additional purchase price will be SEK 14 million. If the project reaches its full potential the additional purchase price will be SEK 49 million. The historic investment by previous owners in the project is estimated to SEK 118 million.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of RE Energi AS at a purchase price of NOK 0.1 million. The purchase price has been fully paid.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares in Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS in March 2022 at a purchase price of NOK 5.6 million. NOK 1.6 million of the purchase price has been paid to an escrow amount as security for potential price adjustments and will be released subject to achievement of agreed milestones. The power plant is in operation.
Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS in June 2022. Bøen Kraft AS at a purchase price of NOK 101.7 million. NOK 16.2 million of the purchase price was settled through issuance of 935,020 new shares in the Company at a subscription price of NOK 17.32 per share, and the remaining purchase price has been fully paid. The two power plants are in operation.
Captiva Asset Management AS entered into an agreement to acquire up to 51% of the shares of Enestor AS. Captiva Asset Management AS completed the initial purchase of 25.01% of the shares in June 2021 and increased its ownership in Enestor AS from 25.01% to 51% in June 2022
The purchase of the additional 25.99% of the shares in Enestor AS was completed on 30 June 2022 for a purchase price of NOK 4.65 million.
In February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares in Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS. The transaction is expected to be completed during H1 2024, one the power plant is completed and after a commissioning period. The purchase price is estimated to NOK 124 million, adjusted for net debt at completion.
Cloudberry holds significant ownership interest in three associated companies:
There are no other material investments.
The matrix on the following page provides an overview of Cloudberry's risks and opportunities affecting the Groups tangible assets.
| Like | Financial | Time | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TCFD | Risk | lihood 1 | impact 2 | horizon 3 Description | Risk mitigation | Opportunity | ||
| Opportunities and Risks Physical |
Acute | Extreme winds | High | Low | Long | Exacerbated wear-and-tear of wind turbines (i.e., increased service and maintenance/ repair costs). Higher risks/costs during construction (e.g., wind days and delayed construction). Temporary stop in production causes loss in production time, due to extreme winds. |
Cloudberry has emergency plans on-site on all our producing assets. A contingency plan including the climate risk topics is being established. The company uses certified and well-proven technology, aims for long service contracts with solid counterparts, and ensures that agreements with contractors have substantial buffers on weather-exposed operations. |
Finding solutions for how future wind turbines (or upgrades of older wind turbines) can maximize production based on increased wind strength. It also opens for the opportunity to build wind parks in less sensitive areas. |
| Extreme rainfall | High | Low | Long | Damage and production loss to hydropower stations (higher insurance premiums), as well as lost revenue from flow over the dams. |
The technical standard and capacity of our dams and pipelines are designed to withstand flooding. Cloudberry has emergency plans on-site on all its producing assets. |
More likely to get permits for adding regulation dams to our assets for flood prevention. An opportunity to increase the company's production capacity and be able to take full advantage and be more efficient to produce more power. Overall, increased precipitation might increase revenue for the company. |
||
| Chronic | Changing weather patterns |
High | Medium | Long | Changes in average temperatures will impact the climate of Norway and Sweden, where Cloudberry's operations are located. Overall warmer climate with increased temperatures, can lead to increased rainfall, increased wind, and longer periods of drought. Such climate changes may affect and disrupt Cloudberry's energy production. Possible scenarios are flooding at hydro plants resulting in less production, severe winds exceeding a wind turbine s capacity<br>which stops producing, or droughts<br>leading to low water level forcing the<br>company to reduce or even fully stop<br>the electricity production. | Position the company to<br>cope with scenarios from<br>changes in weather<br>patterns by preparation<br>such as investments in<br>technical capabilities and<br>organizational alignment.<br>With the Captiva portal the<br>company has access to a<br>live overview on<br>production, operational<br>status, and the weather<br>situation where all assets<br>are located. Cloudberrysmitigation strategy for changing weather patterns is also reflected in Cloudberry's portfolio developments, being positioned with a portfolio consisting of hydro-, wind and potentially sun power development and production. |
Wind farms will get more hours of production due to increased wind, and the production at hydro plants will increase with more rainfall, and fewer water frozen days in the rivers and lakes due to warmer temperatures. Furthermore, with a warmer climate, comes snow melting to a larger degree than normal, and hydropower plants that previously have been water frozen during winters might be able to produce power during the winter season. |
1 The likelihood is based on provisional internal assessment and will be further developed through senario analysis in the years to come
2 Financial impact: Low < 25 mill, Medium 25-100 mill, High > 100 mill
3 Time horizon: Short: 0-3 years, Medium: 3-10 years, Long: more than 10 years
The Group does not have any material off-balance sheet arrangements.
Please note the Group has investments in the associated companies Forte Energy Norway AS (34% ownership) and Odal Vind AS (33.4% ownership) which are equity accounted in the statement of financial position. The Groups share of debt in these associated companies are as follows:
The Group's related parties include the Company and its subsidiaries, as well as members of the Board of Directors, members of Management and their related parties. Related parties also include companies in which the individuals mentioned in this paragraph have significant influence.
Related party transactions have been made on terms equivalent to those that prevail in arm's length transactions and are made only if such terms can be substantiated.
During the periods covered by the historical financial information included in this Prospectus and up to the date of this Prospectus, the following transactions were carried out with related parties:
| In NOK 1,000 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Related Party | Relation for Cloudberry |
Nature of transaction | YTD 2022 (30 Sep) |
2021 | 2020 | 2019 |
| Bergehus Holding AS | Board member and indirect Shareholder |
Office lease | 2 503 | 1 278 | 970 | 84 |
| Captiva Financial Services AS | Chairperson and indirect Shareholder |
Accounting fee | - | 124 | 328 | - |
| CCPartners AS | Chairperson | Consultant agreement | - | 692 | 1 154 | - |
| Captiva Energi AS | Chairperson and indirect Shareholder |
Acquisition of Skåråna Kraft AS |
- | - | 80 000 | - |
| ScanVind 2 AS | Chairperson | Acquisition of Scanvind 2 AS |
- | - | 34 250 | - |
| Cb4 Green Invest AS | Board members and indirect Shareholders |
Acquisition of Skogvind AS |
- | - | 5 435 | - |
| Forte Energy Norway AS | Associated company |
Management fee revenue | 2 700 | 2 600 | 310 | - |
| Captiva Asset Management AS | Chairperson and indirect Shareholder |
Project consultancy and operational platform asset management |
- | 4 896 | - | - |
All transactions were on arm's length basis and done in the ordinary course of business.
In addition, the Group has paid remuneration to the members of management and the members of the Board of Directors, as disclosed in Section 12.2 (Management).
In addition, the following related party agreements have been entered into in the period between 31 December 2021 and the date of this Prospectus:
Acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS: For information about the transaction, please see Section 7.3.2.1 (Acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS). Cloudberry's chairperson, Frank J. Berg, through CCPartner AS and related party Mothe Invest AS, held a minority interest of 33% in CCP AS, which was the seller of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS.
The Board of Directors ensures that any material transaction between the Company and Shareholders, a Shareholder's parent company, members of the Board of Directors, executive personnel or close associates of any such parties will be entered into on arm's length terms. The Board of Directors has adopted rules of procedures for the Board of Directors which inter alia includes guidelines for notification by members of the Board of Directors and executive management if they have any material direct or indirect interest in any transaction entered into by the Company.
Balances and transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries have been eliminated on consolidation and are eliminated in the consolidated accounts presented in this Prospectus.
The Group has not received any grants during the latest three financial years. However, the project TYDE.science (owned by Broentech Solutions AS, a subsidiary in the Captiva Group) has in 2022 been preliminary awarded a NOK 5 million grant by the Research Council of Norway (Nw.: Forskningsrådet). The grant will be distributed over a 3-year period and payments are subject to the progress of the project and subsequent approvals by the Research Council of Norway. The project aims to develop new digital tools for increasing renewable energy production from unregulated hydro plants together with both academic and industrial resources in Norway.
No other grants have been given, neither has any member of the Group submitted, or are expecting to submit, any applications for other governmental grants from 31 December 2021 until the date of this Prospectus.
The preparation of the financial statements according to IFRS requires management to make judgments, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Actual results may differ from these estimates. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimates are revised and in any future periods affected.
Estimates and judgments are evaluated on a regularly basis and are based on historical experiences and other factors that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. The Company makes estimates and assumptions concerning the future. The resulting accounting estimates will, by definition, seldom equal the actual outcome. For further information please see note 3 Key accounting estimates and judgements in the Group's audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
There has been no significant change in the Group's financial position which has occurred since the end of the last financial period for which financial statements has been published to the date of this Prospectus.
During 2021 and 2022 the Group has completed or entered into certain transactions which, some which are regarded as transactions that constitute significant gross changes or significant commitments. The transactions are further described in Section 7.3 (Recent M&A Activities) and listed below.
Certain of the transactions represent "significant gross changes", as defined in Article 1(e) of Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/980 of 14 March 2019, supplementing the EU Prospectus Regulation. According to these rules, the Company shall provide a description of how the transaction may have affected its assets and liabilities and earnings, had the transaction been undertaken at the commencement of the period being reported on or at the date reported. The pro forma shall be presented as set out in Annex 20 of Regulation (EU) 2019/980, include the information indicated therein and shall be accompanied by a report prepared by an independent auditor.
All transactions listed below are included in the pro forma condensed financial information, attached as Appendix B-1 to this Prospectus, in accordance with Annex 20 to Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/980.
The following acquisitions were completed in 2021:
The following acquisitions have been completed in 2022:
The following sales transactions have been completed in 2022:
The following transaction has been agreed (share-purchase agreement signed) in 2022, but is not expected to be completed until 2024:
For the following acquisitions, which were completed at various dates during 2021 (the "2021 Acquisitions"), the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information includes profit and loss information for the period from 1 January 2021 until their respective acquisition dates. As these transactions are already fully reflected in the Company's consolidated statement of financial position as of 31 December 2021, no adjustments were required in the pro forma statement of financial position:
On 13 January 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 65 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 13 January 2021, Selselva Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.1.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS).
On 24 February 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS. The purchase price was originally NOK 23.7 million, of which 17 million was settled in cash. The remaining 6 million was subject to adjustment and would be reduced if the project had cost overruns. As per 31 December 2021, there have been cost overruns estimated to NOK 6 million, and hence there will be no further payments to the seller. Upon completion of the acquisition on 24 February 2021, Skåråna Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.1.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS).
On 30 June 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Nessakraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 79.0 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 30 June 2021, Nessakraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and the Company started to consolidate Nessakraft AS into the Group. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.1.3 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Nessakraft AS).
On 30 June 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bjørgelva Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 10.8 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 30 June 2021, Bjørgelva Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see 7.3.1.4 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bjørgelva Kraft AS).
On 5 July 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired additional 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS for a total purchase price of NOK 239.7 million. The acquisition increased Cloudberry Production AS' ownership in Odal Vind AS from 15% to 33.4%. Odal Vind AS is accounted for as an associated company and the equity method is applied from the acquisition date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.1.5 (Acquisition of additional 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS).
On 20 August 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 82.9 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 20 August 2021, Usma Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see 7.3.1.6 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS).
On 1 December 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 91.4 million. Upon completion of the acquisition 1 December 2021, Åmotsfoss Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see 7.3.1.7 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS).
The acquisitions of Selselva Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS and Usma Kraft AS have been accounted as business combinations and the accounting principles in IFRS 3 have been applied. For further information about these acquisitions, the purchase price considerations and the purchase price allocation, please refer to note 5 Business combinations and other transactions of the Company's Annual Financial Statements for 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
The acquisitions of Skåråna Kraft AS and Åmotsfoss Kraft AS were accounted as asset acquisitions. For further information about the acquisition and the purchase price considerations please refer to note 5 Business combinations and other transactions of the Annual Financial Statements for 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
The investment of shares in Odal Vind AS is classified as an associated company and the equity method is applied in the Group accounts, for further information about the acquisition and accounting please refer to note 20 Investment in associated companies of the Annual Financial Statements, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
For the following acquisitions, which were completed at various dates during 2022 (the "2022 Acquisitions"), the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information includes profit and loss information for the period from 1 January 2021 until 31 December 2021.
On 7 January 2022, the Company acquired 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS, for a total purchase price of NOK 101 million (total enterprise value NOK 160 million). Upon completion of the transaction, Captiva Digital Services AS became a subsidiary of the Company and was consolidated in the Cloudberry Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see 7.3.2.1 (Acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS). The subsidiaries and other ownership interests owned by Captiva Digital Services AS at the date of completion were:
On 1 February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 27.7 million. Upon completion of the acquisition 1 February 2022, Tinnkraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.2.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS).
On 3 February 2022, Cloudberry Utveckling II AB acquired 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB for a total purchase price of SEK 20 million. SEK 14 million was paid at closing and the remaining SEK 6 million is contingent and will be paid when the project reaches commercial operations date. Upon completion of the acquisition 3 February 2022, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.2.3 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB).
On 18 March 2022, Oxenstierna Vind AB acquired the Kafjärden project. A cash payment of SEK 3 million was paid at completion. An additional purchase price will depend on the final outcome of the on-going development of the project (projected 20 – 40 MW) and is also linked to a final investment decision in Cloudberry. If the outcome of the development process results in a 20 MW project, the additional purchase price will be SEK 14 million. If the project reaches its full potential the additional purchase price will be SEK 49 million. The additional purchase price is contingent and is not a part of the pro forma acquisition cost. For further details of the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.2.4 (Acquisition of the Kafjärden project).
On 30 March 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS. A cash payment of NOK 4.0 million was paid at completion. An amount of NOK 1.6 million was contributed to an escrow account. Upon completion of the acquisition 30 March 2022, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.2.5 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS).
In February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS made a proposal to all shareholders of RE Energi AS regarding the purchase of minimum 68% of the shares in the company. At the date of this Prospectus 100% of the shares have been acquired at a purchase price of NOK 1 per share, corresponding to NOK 0.1 million. The purchase price will be subject to future adjustments conditional upon the development and construction of a hydro power plant located in Gloppen municipality in Vestland, Norway. For further details of the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.2.6 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of RE Energi AS).
In June 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS. A cash payment of NOK 85.5 million was paid at completion. NOK 16.2 million of the purchase price was settled by issuance of 935,020 new shares in the Company at a subscription price of NOK 17.32 per shares. For further details of the business acquired, please see Section 7.3.2.7 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS).
In June 2022, Captiva Asset Management AS acquired 25.99% of the shares of Enestor AS. A cash payment of NOK 4.65 million was paid at completion. The acquisition increased Captiva Asset Management AS' ownership in Enestor AS from 25.01% to 51%. Enestor AS was prior to the acquisition accounted for as an associated company using the equity method, while from the date of the transaction Enestor AS is a subsidiary and consolidated in the Group accounts. For further details, please see Section 7.3.2.8 (Increase of ownership from 25.01% to 51% in Enestor AS).
The acquisitions of Captiva Digital Services AS, Tinnkraft AS, Enestor AS and Bøen Kraft AS have been accounted as business combinations and the accounting principles in IFRS 3 have been applied. For further information about these acquisitions, the purchase price considerations, and the purchase price allocation, please refer to note 29 "Subsequent events" of the Company's Annual Financial Statements for 2021, and the Company's Interim Financial Statements for second quarter and first half of 2022, both incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 and Section 11.6 (Preliminary purchase price allocations).
The acquisition of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, the Kafjärden project, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and RE Energi AS were accounted as asset acquisitions. For further information about the acquisitions and the purchase price considerations please refer to note 29 "Subsequent events" of the Company's Annual Financial Statements for 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 and Section 11.6 (Preliminary purchase price allocations).
For the following sales transactions, which were completed at various dates during 2022 (the "2022 Sales Transactions"), the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information excludes profit and loss information for the period from 1 January 2021 until 31 December 2021.
On 30 June Captiva Energi AS sold 100% of the shares in Jåstadkraft AS. The sales price was NOK 21 million, and the Group recorded a gain of NOK 3.5 million in second quarter 2022, this is not adjusted as a pro forma adjustment for 2021 as it does not have a continuing impact on the Group figures. Jåstadkraft AS was deconsolidated as of 30 June 2022. For further details, please see Section 7.3.2.9 (Sale of 100% of the shares of Jåstadkraft AS).
On 19 September Cloudberry Develop AS completed the sale of 50% of the shares in Stenkalles Holding AS. Stenkalles Holding AS owns 100% of the shares in Rewind Vänern AB which again owns 100% of the shares in Stenkalles Vind AB. The three companies represent the Stenkalles development project. The sales price was based on the Group development cost and the gain/loss is preliminary estimated to be NOK 0 million. The sales price is subject to adjustment dependent on the final CAPEX of the Stenkalles project. Stenkalles Holding AS was deconsolidated and the 50% ownership is classified as a joint venture as per 30 September 2022. For further details of the transaction, please see Section 7.3.2.10 (Sale of 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS).
The effect of all transactions, with the exception of the acquisition of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS which had an insignificant balance sheet as of 31 December 2021 and is expected to be completed in 2024, are reflected as of 30 September 2022 in the Interim Financial Statements. Hence, the pro forma information disclosed in this chapter does not include a pro forma statement of financial position.
On 1 February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS entered a share purchase agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS (established 15 June 2021). The purchase price is estimated to NOK 124 million, adjusted for net debt at completion. The transaction is expected to be completed in H1 2024 once the construction of the power plant has been completed and after a commissioning period. For further details about the business to be acquired, please see Section 7.3.3.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS). At the date of the agreement NOK 12.4 million was transferred to an escrow account and is restricted cash for the Group.
The acquisition of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS is a single power plant under construction and does not represent a business, hence, the acquisition will be accounted for as an asset acquisition.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been prepared by the Company for illustrative purposes only to show how the 2021 Acquisitions, 2022 Acquisitions and 2022 Sales transactions might have affected the Company's consolidated statement of profit and loss for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 as if the acquisitions and sales transactions had occurred on 1 January 2021.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is based on certain management assumptions and adjustments made to illustrate what the financial results of the Group might have been, had the Company completed the transactions at an earlier point of time.
Although the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is based on estimates and assumptions based on current circumstances believed to be reasonable, actual results could materially differ from those presented herein. There is a greater degree of uncertainty associated with pro forma condensed financial information than with historical financial information. Because of its nature, the Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Financial Information included herein addresses a hypothetical situation, and therefore does not represent the Company's consolidated actual financial results of operations for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 and is not representative of the results of operations and financial position of any future periods. The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is prepared for illustrative purposes only. It does not purport to present what the Company's consolidated results of operations would have been had the acquisitions been completed on 1 January 2021.
It should be noted that greater uncertainty is associated with unaudited pro forma condensed financial information than actual historical financial information. Prospective investors are cautioned against placing undue reliance on this unaudited pro forma condensed financial information.
The assumptions underlying the pro forma adjustments applied to the historical are described in the notes to the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information. Neither these adjustments nor the resulting Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Financial have been audited in accordance with Norwegian or any other general accepted auditing standards.
The IFRS accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is consistent with those followed in the preparation of the Company's consolidated Annual Financial Statements for the financial year ended 31 December 2021.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been compiled based on and derived from the Company's consolidated Annual Financial Statements as of and for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 and unaudited financial information for Selselva Kraft AS, Skåråna Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Odal Vind AS, Usma Kraft AS and Åmotsfoss Kraft AS for the period from 1 January to the respective acquisition dates, and the audited consolidated financial statements of Captiva Digital Services AS for 1 January 2022 to 31 January 2022 with comparable figures for 2021 incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 to this Prospectus, and the audited financial statements for Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and Bøen Kraft AS, and unaudited financial information for Tinnkraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Kafjärden project and RE Energi AS. The historical information of the acquired entities was prepared in accordance with local GAAP, except for Odal Vind AS which was prepared in accordance with IFRS.
For the purpose of preparing the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information, the Company has assessed differences between local GAAP and IFRS in order for the financial information of the acquired entities to comply with the Company's accounting policies (IFRS). For the Captiva group, Tinnkraft AS, and Bøen Kraft AS such IFRS differences were identified and adjustments were made, please see the pro forma condensed financial information and supporting notes for details. For Selselva Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Odal Vind AS, Usma Kraft AS, Åmotsfoss Kraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Øvre Kvemma Kraft AS, Kafjärden project, RE Energi AS, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and Enestor AS, no such IFRS differences for the periods 1 January 2021 to the relevant acquisition dates or alternatively 31 December 2021, were identified.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been prepared under the assumption of going concern.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been compiled to comply with the requirements of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act by reference to the EU Prospectus Regulation regarding information contained in prospectuses as well as the format, incorporation by reference and publication of such prospectuses and dissemination of advertisements. The pro forma information is not in compliance with SEC Regulation S-X, and had the securities been registered under the U.S. Securities Act, this unaudited pro forma condensed financial information, including the report by the auditor, would have been amended and/or removed from the Prospectus.
With respect to the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information included in this Prospectus, Ernst & Young AS applied assurance procedures in accordance with ISAE 3420 "Assurance Engagement to Report Compilation of Pro Forma Financial Information Included in a Prospectus" in order to express an opinion as to whether the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been properly compiled on the basis stated, and that such basis is consistent with the accounting policies of the Group. Ernst & Young AS has issued an independent assurance report of the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information included as Appendix B-2 to this Prospectus. There are no qualifications or emphasis of matter to this assurance report.
The table below sets out the unaudited pro forma condensed profit and loss statement for the Group for the financial year ended 31 December 2021, as if the 2021 Acquisitions and the 2022 Acquisitions and 2022 Sales Transaction had taken place on 1 January 2021.
| Unavdited | Unavdited Unavdited Unavdited Unavdited Unavdited | Unavdited | Unavdited | Unavdited | Unaudited Unaudited | Unzudited | Unzudited | Un audit ed | Unaudited | Unzudited | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | Selselva Kraft AS |
Skåråna Kraft Nessakraft ని వి |
ત્વે જ | Bjørgelva Kraft AS |
ને ટે | Odal Vind Usma Kraft તે જે |
Amo tsfoss Kraft AS |
Captiva Group " |
Tinnkraft AS Kraftverk AS Vindkraft AB project | Ovre K. vemma |
Munkhytt an Kafjärden- | Ramsliana Kraftverk AS |
ને ટે | RE Energi Bøen Kraft AS |
Entities acq. and sold by Captiva and Stenkalles |
Adjustments NGA AP/IFRS |
Pro forma a djustments/ s imm ations |
Pro Forma Condensed Financial |
||
| (1.1-31.12) | (1.1-12.1) | (1.1-23.2) | (1.1-29.6) | (1.1-29.6) | (1.1-4.7) {1.1-19.8} (1.1-30.11) | (1.1-31.12) | (1.1-31.12) (15.6-31.12) (1.5-31.12) (1.1-31.12) (1.1-31.12) | () - 上一篇: 31.12) |
(1.1-31.12) | Holding AS 8 | Information | |||||||||
| NOK 1000) | (IFRS) | (NGAAP) | NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | ||||||||||||
| Sales revenue | 35,152 | 121 | 3,541 0 |
351 | 5,470 | 1,871 | 31,555 | 3,647 | () | 0 ಲ |
ੇ | ి | 10,528 | 17,491 | -2,867 | -2.451 | 104.409 | |||
| Other income | 5,746 | () | 0 | -9,865 | 0 | ﻢ | () | 12 | 0 | -454 | ਵੇ | -4,560 | ||||||||
| Total revenue | 40,898 | 121 | 3,541 0 |
351 | 5,470 | 1,871 | 21,691 | 3,647 | ਹੈ | ਉ ਹੈ |
ਉ | 12 | 10,528 | 17,037 | -2,867 | -2,451 | 99,849 | |||
| Cost of goods sold | -5,447 | 0 | -121 0 |
-62 | -886 | -125 | -2.099 | 0 | 0 | 0 0 |
0 | 0 | 0 | -1,874 | 0 | -230 | -13,844 | |||
| Salary and personnel expenses | -28,106 | 0 | 0 0 |
0 | 0 | 0 | -19,458 | 0 | 0 | 0 0 |
0 | -250 | 0 | -13,012 | 0 | 0 | -60,827 | |||
| Other operating expenses | -55,332 | -19 | -1,094 - İ |
-402 | -1,749 | -1.821 | -10.653 | -1,296 | ਹੈ | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2.740 | -6,921 | -2,196 | 4,231 | છેરે I | -79,142 | ||
| Operating expenses | -88,885 | -19 | -1,215 -1 |
464 | ಲಿ | -2.636 | -1.946 | -35,210 | -1,296 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2.990 | -6,921 | -17,082 | 4,231 | 721 | -153,813 | |
| Nat income/(loss) from ass. comp. and IV | 16,373 | � | હે ಿ |
ે | -435 | 0 | () | 0 | ੇ ਹੋ | () | ಲ 0 |
లి | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 188 . | 17,126 | |||
| EBITDA | -31 614 | 102 | 2 .326 -1 |
-112 | -435 | 2.834 | -75 | -13.519 | 2.351 | 0 | -12 | ਉ | -87 | -2.978 | 3.607 | -45 | 1.364 | -542 | -36,839 | |
| Depreciation and amortizations | -9,746 | -38 | -396 e |
-153 | -2,030 | -122 | -2,701 | -400 | ਹੈ | O 0 |
ਹੈ | 0 | - ਨੇ ਦੇ ਤੇ ਤੇ | -116 | - ୧ପରି | -21,075 | -38,338 | |||
| Operating profit (EBII) | -41 ,360 | રેને | 1,930 -1 |
-265 | -435 | 804 | -197 | -16.221 | 1,951 | ಕ | -12 | છે | -87 | -2,978 | 2,655 | -161 | 755 | -21,617 | -75.176 | |
| Financial incoma | 6,420 | હે | 29 0 |
0 | 5,931 | 4 | 0 | 0 0 |
0 | 0 | 17 | -3,023 | 0 | 0 | 9379 | |||||
| Financial expenses | -28 706 | 0 | -883 0 |
-314 | -1.451 | -4 ] | -2,280 | -339 | () | 0 0 |
() | 0 | -1,143 | 1439 | -6,761 | 287 | -40,190 | |||
| Profit (loss) before tax | -63,647 | 64 | 1,076 - 1 |
-579 | -435 | -644 | -238 | -12,569 | 1,616 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2,978 | 1,528 | -1,745 | -6,005 | -21,330 | -105,987 | |
| Încome tax expense | રેખવે | () | -236 0 |
127 | 0 | 353 | -356 | 0 | ਹੈ | () | -336 | -277 | 28 € | 4,619 | 4.534 | |||||
| Profit/(loss) after tax | -63 ,038 | ર્ન્ડ | 840 - I |
-452 | -435 | -644 | -238 | -12,217 | 1,261 | -12 ಲಿ |
ਉ | -87 | -2,978 | 1.192 | -2,022 | -5.977 | -16,711 | -101,454 |
A: Unaudited Profit and Loss for Captiva Group (1.1-31.12) represent the comparable figures for 2021 presented in the audited consolidated financial statements for Captiva Digital Services AS for the period 1 January 2022 to 31 January 2022, included as Schedule 1
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stenkalles Holding | ||||||
| Broentech AS | Fjord Energi AS | Enestor AS | Jåstadkraft AS | AS 1 | Entities acq. and | |
| (1.1-31.12) | (1.1-31.05) | (1.1-31.12) | (1.6-31.12) | (1.1-31.12) | sold by Captiva, and | |
| ( NOK 1000 ) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | Stenkalles Holding AS |
| Sales revenues | 5,167 | 459 | 13,040 | -1,175 | 0 | 17,491 |
| Other income | 0 | 0 | 387 | 0 | -841 | -454 |
| Total revenue | 5,167 | 459 | 13,427 | -1,175 | -841 | 17,037 |
| Cost of goods sold | 0 | 0 | -1,924 | 50 | 0 | -1,874 |
| Salary and personnel expenses | -3,890 | -729 | -8,393 | 0 | 0 | -13,012 |
| Other operating expenses | -860 | -136 | -1,739 | 360 | 179 | -2,196 |
| O perating expenses | -4,750 | -865 | -12,056 | 410 | 179 | -17,082 |
| Net income from associated companies and joint | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| EBITDA | 417 | -406 | 1,371 | -765 | -662 | -45 |
| Depreciations and amortisations | -141 | -2 | -48 | 75 | 0 | -116 |
| O perating profit (EBIT) | 276 | -408 | 1,323 | -690 | -662 | -161 |
| Financial income | 4 | 0 | 12 | 0 | -3,039 | -3,023 |
| Financial expense | -46 | -16 | 0 | 339 | 1,162 | 1,439 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 234 | -424 | 1,335 | -351 | -2,539 | -1,745 |
| Income tax expense | 0 | 0 | -294 | 17 | 0 | -277 |
| Profit/(loss) after tax | 234 | -424 | 1,041 | -334 | -2,539 | -2,022 |
1: Stenkalles Holding AS including subsidiaries
The historical financial information above relates to two minor acquisitions made in 2021 by Captiva Group and three transactions concluded in 2022 as also further described in the notes:
This adjustment, leading to a decrease in sales revenue of NOK 2.867 million is related to:
IFRS 9 adjustment related to financial power price agreement in Bøen Kraft AS where the settlement for power price difference is presented as other operating cost, while according to IFRS the cost is related to the sales price and adjusts the sales revenue for produced volume. Se further IFRS 4 adjustment – Financial expense.
This adjustment, leading to a decrease in other operating expenses of NOK 4.231 million is related to:
This adjustment, leading to an increase in depreciations of total NOK 0.609 million is related to:
This adjustment, leading to an increase in financial expenses of total NOK 6.761 million relates to:
items. Goodwill shall according to IFRS not be depreciated, but tested annually for impairment, hence the depreciation cost allocated to financial expense is adjusted in the pro forma condensed financial information.
This adjustment, leading to a reduction of tax expense of NOK 0.028 million is related to reduced tax expense due to the net effect of IFRS 16 adjustments on profit before tax of Captiva Group and Tinnkraft AS of NOK 0.025 million and NOK 0.004 million respectively. See IFRS adjustment 2 to 3 earlier in this Section.
The table gives a summary per entity of the pro forma adjustments 1-7 described below:
| adjustments and | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pro Forma adjustment ( NOK m illion ) | Captiva Group | Tinnkraft AS | Bøen Kraft AS Cloudberry Group | elim. | |
| 1. Sales revenues | -2 386 | 2 936 | -2 451 | ||
| 2. Cost of goods sold | -0 150 | -0 080 | -0 230 | ||
| 3. Other operating expenses | 0.150 | 0.080 | 0.722 | 0.951 | |
| 4. Net income from associated companies and joint ventures | -0 081 | 1 269 | 1.188 | ||
| 5. Depreciations and amortisations | 0.085 | -21.159 | -21.075 | ||
| 6. Financial expense | 0 287 | 0.287 | |||
| 7. Income tax expense | -0 018 | 4 637 | 4 619 | ||
| I otal | -5113 | 0 000 | 0 000 | -11 595 | -16_711 |
This adjustment, leading to a decrease in sales revenues of total NOK 2.451 million is related to:
This adjustment, leading to an increase of cost of goods sold of NOK 0.230 million is related to:
Increased of NOK 0.150 million to align the accounting principles of Tinnkraft AS to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group, grid cost is classified as cost of goods sold, while in the company accounts of Tinnkraft it is classified as other operating expenses. Hence the grid cost of NOK 0.150 million is classified as cost of goods sold instead of other operating expenses as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
Increased of NOK 0.080 million to align the accounting principles of Bøen Kraft AS to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group, grid cost is classified as cost of goods sold, while in the company accounts of Bøen Kraft AS it is classified as other operating expenses. Hence the grid cost of NOK 0.080 million is classified as cost of goods sold instead of other operating expenses as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
This adjustment, leading to a decrease of total NOK 0.951 million in other operating expenses relates to:
This adjustment leading to an increase of total NOK 1.188 million in net income from associated companies and joint venture is related to:
Reduction of NOK 0.287 million in reclassification of net income from associated companies to align the accounting principles of Captiva Group to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group, net income from associated companies is classified as net income from associated companies, while in the Captiva group accounts net income from associated companies is classified as financial income or expense. Hence, net income from associated companies in Captiva Group is reclassified as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
This adjustment leading to an increase of total NOK 21.075 million in depreciations and amortisations is related to:
Reference is made to Section 11.6 (Preliminary purchase price ) for the purchase price allocation related to the acquisitions.
This adjustment, leading to a reduction of NOK 0.287 million in financial expenses is related to reclassification of net income from associated companies to align the accounting principles of Captiva Group to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group net income from associated companies is classified as net income in associated companies, while in the Captiva group accounts this is classified as financial income or expense. Hence, net income from associated companies in Captiva is reclassified as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
This adjustment, leading to a reduced tax expense of total NOK 4.619 million is related to:
All the pro forma adjustments 1 to 10 have continuing impact, except pro forma adjustment 5 of NOK 0.299 million, NOK 0.186 million and NOK 0.378 million, which relates to transaction costs of the Tinnkraft acquisition, the Bøen Kraft acquisition and the sale of Stenkalles, that do not have any continuing impact.
Please see the table below for the preliminary purchase price allocations which have been prepared and have been used as a basis for the unaudited pro forma condensed information:
| NOK 1000 | Captiva Group | Tinnkraft AS | Bøen Kraft AS | Enestor AS* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acquisition date | 07.01.2022 | 01.02.2022 | 09.06.2022 | 01.06.2022 |
| Voting rights/shareholding acquired through the acquisition | 60 % | 100 % | 100 % | 26 % |
| Total voting rights after the acqusition | 60 % | 100 % | 100 % | 51 % |
| Non controlling interests | 40 % | 0 % | 0 % | 49 % |
| Consideration | ||||
| Cash | 50,519 | 27,655 | 85,464 | 4,650 |
| Shares | 50,519 | 0 | 16,195 | 0 |
| Total acquisition cost | 101,037 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Book value of net assets (se table below) | 36,060 | 4,575 | -10,750 | 3,799 |
| Identification of excess value. attributable to: | ||||
| Intangible assets | 66,564 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Property, plant and equipment | 641 | 29,590 | 144,114 | 0 |
| Inventory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other | 2,282 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Gross excess value | 69,487 | 29,590 | 144,114 | 0 |
| Deferred tax on excess value | -15,067 | -6,510 | -31,705 | 0 |
| Net excess value | 54,420 | 23,080 | 112,409 | 0 |
| Fair value of net acquired assets excluding goodwill Of which |
90,480 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 3,799 |
| Non controlling interest | 36,192 | 0 | 0 | 1,862 |
| Controlling interests | 54,288 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 1,937 |
| Total acquisition cost (controlling interest) | 101,037 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Fair value of net aquired assets ex goodwill (controlling interest) | 54,288 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 701 |
| Goodwill (controlling interest) | 46,750 | 0 | 0 | 3,949 |
| Goodwill (non controlling interest) | 31,166 | 0 | 0 | 3,637 |
| Goodwill (100%) | 77,916 | 0 | 0 | 7,585 |
| Total non controlling interest | 67,358 | 0 | 0 | 5,499 |
| Book value net aquired assets | ||||
| NOK 1000 | Captiva Group | Tinnkraft AS | Bøen Kraft AS | Enestor AS* |
| Deferred tax asset | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Intangible assets | 27,477 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Property, plants and equipment | 16,482 | 13,422 | 32,289 | 386 |
| Goodwill | 1,338 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other non-current assets | 3,077 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Financial non-current assets | 5,628 | 0 | 1,662 | 0 |
| Inventory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other current assets | 29,642 | 0 | 3,139 | 2,821 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 160,688 | 1,666 | 11,165 | 3,290 |
| Acquired assets | 244,332 | 15,087 | 48,256 | 6,497 |
| Interest bearing debt, long term | 20,264 | 10,000 | 32,746 | 0 |
| Other non current liabilities | 10 | 0 | 18,000 | 0 |
| Current liabilities | 184,732 | 513 | 7,918 | 0 |
| Deferred tax liability | 3,265 | 0 | 342 | 0 |
| Other liabilities Net asset value aquired assets |
0 36,060 |
0 4,575 |
0 -10,750 |
2,698 3,799 |
| Total acquisition cost | 101,037 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Non cash consideration | 50,519 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Cash consideration | 50,519 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Cash in acquired company | -160,688 | -1,666 | -11,165 | -3,290 |
*Ownership through Captiva Group
Net cash outflow at acquisition (inflow) -110,169 25,989 90,494 1,360
Please note that according to IFRS 3 the estimation of fair value and goodwill may be adjusted up to 12 months after the takeover date if new information has emerged about the facts and circumstances that existed at the time of takeover. The Group makes use of the opportunity to adjust the initial purchase price allocation if necessary.
The General Meeting exercises the supreme authority in the Company. All Shareholders of the Company are entitled to attend and vote at the General Meeting and may propose resolutions to be included in the agenda for the General Meeting.
The overall management of the Company is vested by the Board of Directors and the Management. In accordance with Norwegian law, the Board of Directors is responsible for, among other things, supervising the general and day-to-day management of the Company's business ensuring proper organisation, preparing plans and budgets for its activities ensuring that the Company's activities, accounts and assets management are subject to adequate controls and undertaking investigations necessary to perform its duties.
The Board of Directors has four sub-committees; a nomination committee, see Section 12.8 (Nomination committee), an audit committee, see Section 12.9 (Audit committee), a compensation committee, see Section 12.10 (Compensation committee) and an ESG committee, see Section 12.11 (ESG committee).
The Management is responsible for the day-to-day management of the Company's operations in accordance with Norwegian law and instructions set out by the Board of Directors. Among other responsibilities, the Company's chief executive officer (the "CEO"), is responsible for keeping the Company's accounts in accordance with Norwegian legislation and regulations and for managing the Company's assets in a responsible manner. In addition, the CEO must according to Norwegian law brief the Board of Directors about the Company's activities, financial position and operating results at a minimum of one time per month.
The Articles of Association provide that the Board of Directors shall consist of between three to eight board members, elected by the Shareholders. The names, positions, current term of office of the Board Members as the date of this Prospectus are set out in the table below, in addition to the number of Shares and options held by each Board Member.
All Board Members are independent of the Management and material business contacts, however, the CEO regularly attends the Board of Director's meetings. Frank Jarle Berg, Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum, Petter Winther Borg, Liv Eiklo Lønnum, Stefanie Witte, Henrik Joelsson and Nicolai Nordstrand are independent of the Company's larger Shareholders (Shareholders holding more than 10% of the Shares). No member of the Management serves on the Board of Directors.
The Company's registered business address, Frøyas gate 15, 0273 Oslo, serves as business address for the members of the Board of Directors in relation to their directorship in the Company
The names and positions of the members of the Board of Directors as of 7 December 2022 are set out in the table below:
| Name | Function | Served since | Term expires | Shares | Options |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frank J. Berg | Chairperson | 2020 | 2023 | 3,209,8051 | - |
| Petter W. Borg | Board Member | 2019 | 2023 | 2,003,5032 | - |
| Benedicte H. Fossum | Board Member | 2020 | 2023 | 100,1033 | - |
| Liv E. Lønnum | Board Member | 2020 | 2023 | 7,765 | - |
| Stefanie Witte | Board Member | 2022 | 2023 | - | - |
| Henrik Joelsson | Board Member | 2022 | 2023 | - | - |
| Nicolai Nordstrand | Board Member | 2022 | 2023 | 31,264 | - |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Frank J. Berg holds 7,765 Shares privately and 3,202,040 Shares via CCPartner AS. | |||||
| 2. Petter W. Borg holds 7,765 Shares privately and 1,995,738 Shares via Caddie Invest AS and Kewa Invest AS. |
Set out below are brief biographies of the Board Members, including their managerial expertise and experience, in addition to an indication of any significant principal activities performed by them outside of the Company and names of companies and partnerships of which a member of the Management is or has been a member of the administrative, management or supervisory bodies or partner the previous five years (not including directorships and executive management positions in subsidiaries of the Company).
Frank Jarle Berg has more than 30 years of experience from the energy and utility industry whereas the last 15 years in the Nordic renewables. He has previously been a partner in Arthur Andersen and the law firm Selmer with special responsibilities for renewables, infrastructure and sustainability. Frank serves as chairperson and member of the boards in a number of companies, including Salten Kraftsamband AS. Frank Jarle Berg is chairperson of the Board and leader of the audit committee in Cloudberry. Frank Jarle Berg holds a Master in Accounting & Auditing from the Norwegian School of Economics (NHH) and a PED from IMD, Lausanne. Frank Jarle Berg is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | CCP AS (chairperson) |
| Salten Kraftsamband AS (board member) | |
| CCPartner AS (CEO and chairperson) | |
| SCP Hydro AS (CEO) | |
| Måge Naturkraft AS (chairperson) | |
| Hydronor AS (chairperson) | |
| Proxima Hydrotech AS (chairperson) | |
| Kulu Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Captiva Eiendom Holding AS (chairperson) | |
| CCP Invest 1 AS (chairperson) | |
| Jordalen Kraftlag AS (chairperson) | |
| Voldsetelva Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Ryddøla Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Grønlielva Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Vikaåne Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Husstøl Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| BDK Bolig AS (chairperson) | |
| Døvik Kraft AS (chairperson) | |
| Scanvind 1 AS (chairperson) | |
| Dikeveien 18 AS (chairperson) | |
| CCBolig AS (chairperson) | |
| SKS Produksjon AS (board member) | |
| Kjensli Utvikling AS (CEO and chairperson) | |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Proxima Scandinavia AS (board member) |
| years | Aventron Norway AS (board member) |
| Nordic Wind Power DA (board member) | |
| SCP Hydro AS (chairperson) | |
| Markåni Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Sirdal Kraft AS (chairperson) | |
| Steindal Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Todøla Kraftverk AS (chairperson) | |
| Madland Kraft AS (board member) | |
| Boge Kraft AS (board member) |
Petter Winther Borg has more than 35 years of experience within investment banking and asset management. He is the former CEO of Pareto Asset Management, a position he held for 18 years. Petter W. Borg is the chairperson of House of Maverix AS. In addition, he is member of the board of directors of Attivo AS, Ferd Holding AS, Grieg Investor AS, and Nordic Aquafarms Group AS. Petter Winther Borg is the leader of the compensation committee in Cloudberry. Petter Winther Borg holds a degree in Economics from Handelsakademiet. He is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Attivo AS (board member) |
| House of Maverix AS (chairperson) | |
| Ferd Holding AS (board member) | |
| Grieg Investor AS (board member) | |
| Nordic Aquafarms Group AS (board member) | |
| Caddie Eiendom AS (chairperson) | |
| Caddie Invest AS (chairperson) | |
| Solfonn AS (board member) | |
| Langfonn AS (board member) | |
| Picolo AS (chairperson) | |
| AS Fosil (board member) | |
| The Factory Angels II AS (board member) | |
| Nordic Aquafarms Europe AS (board member) | |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Attivo AS (chairperson) |
| years | Pareto Asset Management AS (CEO) |
| Krafthuset AS (chairperson) | |
| Pareto AS (board member) | |
| Astrup Fearnley Asset Management AS (CEO) |
Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum has extensive board experience, with core competence within aquaculture and life science and investment through family offices. She is educated as a veterinarian from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, and maintains a special interest in sustainability, combining the biological and economical perspectives. Currently she is the chair of the board at Smartfish AS, board member and CEO of Foinco AS, board member in Salmotrace AS and in familyowned investment companies. Prior to becoming a professional board member, she has diverse managerial experience within regulatory, R&D, M&A and strategic development. Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum was one of the founders of Pharmaq AS and has also worked for the Norwegian Medicines Agency Control Authority. Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum is a member of the audit committee in Cloudberry. Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Smartfish AS (board member) |
| Mittas AS (chairperson and CEO) | |
| Mittholding AS (chairperson and CEO) | |
| Foinco AS (board member and CEO) | |
| Salmotrace AS (board member) | |
| Hector Invest AS (board member) | |
| Credo Invest Nr 8 (board member) | |
| Allierogruppen AS (board member) | |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Katinas AS (board member) |
| years | Veterinærmedisinsk oppdragssenter AS (board member) |
| Cabi Holding AS (board member) | |
| Abisco AS (chairperson) | |
| Patogen Holding AS (board member) | |
Liv Lønnum is currently working as managing director, leading the parliament administration and the political advisory group for the Progressive Party, (Nw.: Fremskrittpartiets) at Stortinget. She has been a State Secretary/Deputy Minister at the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy and political adviser to the Progressive Party's members in the Standing Committee on Energy and the Environment. Liv Lønnum has considerable experience of both business and politics in Norway. She holds a Bachelor in economic and administration from Norwegian School of Management and York University in Toronto, Canada. Liv Lønnum previously worked at Storebrand ASA, Compass Group and Hammer & Hanborg. Liv is a member of the compensation committee in Cloudberry. Liv Lønnum is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | N/A |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five years |
Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum and Energy (Secretary of State) Compass Group and Hammer & Hanborg (senior consultant) |
Stefanie Witte is a Director for Chrome OS, consumer with responsibility for Google's operating system in the German speaking countries, the Nordics and Poland. Over the last eleven years she has had leading positions in Google, like Head of marketing for Android, Google's own hardware and advertising products. Prior to joining Google, Witte worked six years in Novartis as business developer and head of strategic marketing after three years as a consultant in McKinsey. Stefanie is represented at the board of several tech companies in Norway and Germany. At Cloudberry, she is also a member of the remuneration committee. Stefanie holds a M.A HSG Finance, Accounting and Controlling from the University of St. Gallen. She is a German citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Arminia AS (chairperson) Mynea Group GmbH (board member) Meltwater N.V. (board member) |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five years |
Kezzler AS (board member) Ecoonline Topco AS (board member) EcoOnline AS (board member) EcoOnline Holding AS (board member) |
Henrik Joelsson has more than 25 years of experience within strategic business development and investments. He heads his own consultancy firm and has formerly worked 13 years as an investment director at the listed investment firm Ratos AB, where he was responsible for the Norwegian business. Furthermore, Joelsson has more than 9 years of experience as a strategic consultant at Bain & Company. Joelsson has broad board experience and has been an active investor, board member and consultant within the energy sector, with a specific focus on renewables. He is currently a board member of Goava Sales Intelligence AB. Joelsson holds a Master of Science in Business Administration and Economics from Stockholm School of Economics and a Master in Business Administration and Management (MBA) from INSEAD in France. Henrik Joelsson is a Swedish citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Goava Sales Intelligence AB (board member) |
| HJ Business Development AB (board member) | |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Fugen Sweden AB (board member) |
| years |
Nicolai Nordstrand is an investment director at Havfonn AS, the family office at the Bergesen family. He has worked at Havfonn AS for seven years and works with strategy, business development and financing. He has more than 10 years of experience with corporate finance from PwC in Oslo and London and Sparebank 1 Markets. Nordstrand holds a Master of Science in Financial Economics from BI Norwegian Business School. Nicolai Nordstrand is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Sameiet Ullevålsveien 67 (chairperson) |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Agrinos AS (board member) |
| years |
The Company's executive Management team consists of six individuals. The names of the members of the Management and their respective positions, in addition to their holding of Shares and options in the Company as of 7 December 2022, are presented in the table below. The Company's registered business address, Frøyas gate 15, 0273 Oslo, serves as business address for the members of the Management in relation to their positions with the Company:
| Name | Position | Employed since | Shares | Options / Warrants |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anders J. Lenborg | Chief Executive Officer | September 2017 | 1,363,5461 | 3,395,000 |
| Christian A. Helland | Chief Value Officer (CFO) | October 2019 | 452,7582 | 2,550,000 |
| Jon Gunnar Solli | Chief Operating Officer | August 2018 | 613,7233 | 1,150,000 |
| Stig J. Østebrøt | Chief Technology Officer | January 2022 | 25,000 | - |
| Charlotte Bergquist | Chief Development Officer | January 2022 | - | 600,000 |
| Ingrid Bjørdal | Chief Compliance & | September 2022 | 40,000 | - |
| Organisation Officer |
Anders J. Lenborg holds Shares via Lenco AS.
Christian A. Helland holds Shares via Amandus Invest AS.
Jon Gunnar Solli holds Shares via Lotmar Invest AS.
Please refer to Section 12.3.3 (Equity incentive plan) for more information about the warrants.
Set out below are brief biographies of the members of the Management, including their managerial expertise and experience, in addition to an indication of any significant principal activities performed by them outside of the Company and names of companies and partnerships of which a member of the Management is or has been a member of the administrative, management or supervisory bodies or partner the previous five years.
Anders Jørgen Lenborg is co-founder and CEO of Cloudberry. He specialises in acquisitions, commercial contracts and regulatory issues related to renewable energy projects and is an experienced lawyer within infrastructure and renewable energy acquisitions in the Nordics. Anders Jørgen Lenborg has previously been the Head of Energy Sector Group in DLA Piper Norway where he was a partner. He holds a law degree from University of Oslo and a postgraduate diploma from King's College in London. Anders Jørgen Lenborg is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Lenco AS (chairperson and CEO) |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five years |
CB4 Green Invest AS (CEO) Advokat Anders Lenborg AS (CEO) Protector Forsikring ASA (board member) |
As Chief Value Officer, Christian is responsible for the finances of the company. He has 13 years of experience within private equity and portfolio management in Pareto Asset Management AS. Since 2008, he was acting as lead investor for renewable wind-investments in Northern Europe and hydroand wind development in Norway and Sweden. Christian holds a Master in Systems Engineering from Cornell University, a Master in Business Economics from University of California SB, and a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from University of California, SB. Christian A. Helland is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |
|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Amandus Invest AS (CEO and chairperson) |
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five years |
Pareto Asset Management AS (partner & portfolio manager) |
Jon Gunnar Solli is one of the founders of Cloudberry and is responsible for day-to-day operations of the Cloudberry portfolio. He is a former CFO and investment manager with more than 20 years of experience from the asset management industry. Jon Gunnar Solli was previously a CFO/CIO at the Norwegian Church Endowment (Nw.: Opplysningsvesenets Fond), Nordea Asset Management, SpareBank 1 Livsforsikring, and Storebrand. He holds a Master in Accounting & Auditing from Norwegian School of Economics (NHH) and is a state authorised public accountant. Jon Gunnar Solli is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Lotmar Invest AS (CEO) | |||
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five years |
Norwegian Church Endowment (CIO/CFO) Clemens Eiendom AS (board member) Clemens Kraft AS (board member) Clemens Kraft Holding AS (board member) Clemens Kraftverk AS (board member) Clemens Kraft Drift AS (deputy chairperson) Kirkepartner AS (board member) |
Stig has been the CEO of the Captiva Group for the last 10 years and responsible for Cloudberry's operations segment from 2022. He is a former analyst from Ernst & Young. Stig has an executive MBA from Norwegian School of Economics and a Master degree from BI Norwegian Business School.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | CCP AS (CEO and board member) | ||
| S.J.Ø Invest AS (CEO and chairperson) | |||
| Fjord Energi AS (chairperson) | |||
| Captiva Eiendom Oslo AS (chairperson) | |||
| Captiva Eiendom Holding AS (board member) | |||
| Scanvind 1 AS (board member) | |||
| Kulu Kraftverk AS (board member) | |||
| Vikaåne Kraftverk AS (board member) | |||
| Ryddøla Kraftverk AS (board member) | |||
| Døvik Kraft AS (board member) | |||
| Voldsetelva Kraftverk AS (board member) | |||
| Grønlielva Kraftverk AS (board member) | |||
| Måge Naturkraft AS (board member) | |||
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Proxima Scandinavia AS (board member) | ||
| years | Svensk Handelseiendom (chairperson) | ||
| Stølsdalselva Kraftverk AS (chairperson) |
Charlotte is from 2022 responsible for the Development segment with a special emphasis on Cloudberry's shallow-water and offshore portfolio. She is a former developer for wpd Offshore, vice chairperson at the Swedish TSO, Svenska Kraftnet, chairperson of Power Circle and the founder of Kraftkvinnorna. Charlotte has a Master of Business Administration from Gothenburg School of Economics and Commercial Law.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Viveca Hansson Gidlund Forvaltning AB (board member) |
||
| Byrknalten AB (board member) | |||
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Svenska Kraftnät (vice chairperson) | ||
| years | PAC2 AB (CEO and board member) | ||
| Råbena AB (CEO and board member) | |||
| Marknadsföreningens i Göteborg Serviceaktiebolag | |||
| (board member) | |||
| Trinda Energy AB (CEO and board member) | |||
| SeaTwirl AB (board member) | |||
| Power Circle AB (chairperson and board member) |
Ingrid Bjørdal started in Cloudberry in September 2022 as Chief Compliance and Organisation Officer which includes responsibility for compliance, ESG, organisation and HR in the Group. Bjørdal has 20 years of experience from sustainability, HSE, compliance, HR and organisational development from the recycling and circular economy industry. She was SVP of Sustainability, Compliance and Organisation for six years in the Norsk Gjenvinning Group and has held the position as General Manager of two subsidiaries in the Norsk Gjenvinning Group. She holds a Master of Science in HR and Organisation from King's College in London and an Executive MBA from BI Norwegian Business School. Bjørdal is a Norwegian citizen.
| Directorships and senior management positions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Current directorships and senior management positions | Hovinbyen Sirkulære Oslo (board member) | ||
| AB Media AS (board member) | |||
| Stiftelsen Bygdø Monolitten (deputy boad member) | |||
| Previous directorships and senior management positions last five | Midt-Norge Massemottak AS (CEO) | ||
| years | Holmen Massemottak AS (CEO) | ||
| 146 |
Solli Massemottak AS (CEO) Kopstad Massemottak AS (CEO) Hauka Deponi AS (CEO) Asak Massemottak AS (CEO) Borge Massemottak AS (CEO) Norsk Gjenvinning M3 AS (CEO) NG Secure AS (CEO)
At the annual General Meeting held on 28 April 2022, it was resolved that the chairperson of the Board of Directors shall receive NOK 575,000 per year and that the other Board Members shall receive NOK 287,500 per year as remuneration in their capacity as members of the Board of Directors. The remuneration of the Board of Directors is based on a recommendation by the nomination committee, which will propose the remuneration for the Board Members for 2023 at the Company's annual general meeting in April 2023.
The General Meeting has further adopted a share purchase programme for the members of the Board of Directors, see Section 12.3.4 (Share purchase program for Board Members).
In accordance with a recommendation by the nomination committee, the Board Members who participate in the Company's audit committee, compensation committee, ESG committee or nomination committee receive separate compensation for this per year. The table below shows the remuneration received in 2022:
| (NOK 1 000) | Audit committee | Compensation committee |
ESG committee | Nomination committee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chairperson | 70 | 42,5 | 42,5 | 42,5 |
| Board members | 45 | 32 | 32 | 32 |
The total remuneration paid to the management for the year ended 31 December 2021 was NOK 18 million (for their management positions in the Company). The following table sets forth the remuneration paid to the members of the Management for the year ended 31 December 2021:
| NOK 1000 | Anders Lenborg (CEO) |
Christian Helland (CVO) |
Suna Alkan (CSO) |
Jon Gunnar Solli (COO) |
Tor Arne Pedersen (CDO) |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salary | 2 700 | 2 100 | 1640 | 1850 | 1850 | 10 140 |
| Bonus | 1 350 | 700 | 400 | 600 | 150 | 3 200 |
| Pension costs | 83 | 77 | 87 | 87 | 334 | |
| Share based payment | 1729 | 1259 | 355 | ല്ലേഴ | 401 | 4 330 |
| Total reportable benefits paid 2021 | 5 862 | 4 136 | 2 482 | 3 036 | 2 488 | 18 004 |
On 21 March 2020, the General Meeting of the Company adopted an equity incentive plan for the Group, inviting managers and key employees of the Group to participate. The equity incentive plan may cover up to 5% of the issued shares in the Company from time to time. Allocations are proposed by the Board and subject to Shareholder approval. The exercise price for the warrants is determined by the Board of Directors in its reasonable discretion based on fair market value of the Shares on the date the Board of Directors propose allocation of warrants under the program. The determined exercise price is subject to approval by the General Meeting in relation to issuance of the warrants. The duration of the warrants is five years from the date of the General Meeting which resolves to issue the warrants. The vesting period is one year from the grant date.
As of the same date, the General Meeting of the Company passed a resolution allowing the Company to issue up to 1,900,000 warrants each giving a right to subscribe for one new share at the nominal amount of NOK 0.25 in the Company. Only members of the Management were invited to subscribe for these warrants. 775,000 warrants (equal to 2% of the issued shares in the Company at the time), each giving the holder the right to subscribe for one new share in the Company at a subscription price of NOK 11.10, were issued.
On 9 September 2020, the General Meeting of the Company passed a resolution allowing the Company to issue up 1,425,000 warrants each giving a right to subscribe for one new share at the nominal amount of NOK 0.25 in the Company to a subscription price of NOK 12.20 per share. Only members of the Management were invited to subscribe for the warrants, all of which were issued.
Further, on 17 June 2021, the General Meeting passed a resolution allowing the Company to issue up to 5,500,000 new warrants each giving a right to subscribe for one new share at the nominal amount of NOK 0.25 to a subscription price of NOK 12.50 per share.
Finally, on 28 April 2022, the General Meeting passed a resolution allowing the Company to issue up to 3,000,000 new warrants each giving a right to subscribe for one new share at the nominal amount of NOK 0.25 to a subscription price of NOK 17.40 per share.
As of the date of this Prospectus, the equity incentive plan covers approximately 3.7% of the issued Shares in the Company. Please refer to Section 12.2.1 (Composition of the Group's Management) above for details on the number of warrants allocated to each member of the Management at the date of this Prospectus.
At the extraordinary General Meeting held on 17 June 2021, it was resolved to establish a share purchase program for the members of the Board of Directors in the Company. The program is adopted in accordance with a proposal from the nomination committee and shall ensure a close alignment of the interests of the Board of Directors and the Company's Shareholders.
Pursuant to the share purchase program, Board Members shall invest 30% of the fixed gross remuneration (prior to tax) per year in the Company's Shares until the value of the Shares of each individual member amounts to at least two years of board remuneration. When this threshold has been achieved, the members of the Board of Directors shall be offered to use up to 30% of the gross board remuneration (prior to tax) to acquire shares in the Company. Shares acquired pursuant to this program will be subject to a three-year lock-up period and will be offered at a subscription price which is 15% below the prevailing market price. The program is personal for each Board Member and the ownership of the shares in the Company must maintain under the control of the Board Member at all times.
Except for the CEO, who has relinquished his right to employment protection against severance pay for 12 months after the termination period of 6 months, no employee, including other members of the Management, has entered into employment agreements which provide for any special benefits upon termination. None of the members of the Board of Directors have service contracts with the Company and no members of the Board of Directors will be entitled to any benefits upon termination of office.
The table below set out the development of full-time equivalents for the last three financial year ended 31 December 2021 and as of 30 September 2022 (on a consolidated basis):
| 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of employees | 61 | 14 | 10 | 8 |
Eight new employees have been hired since 31 December 2021 and two employees have left the company during 2022.
The Company has offices in Oslo, Norway (headquarter), in Karlstad/Eskilstuna, Sweden and in Gothenburg, Sweden. As of the date of this Prospectus, 9 of the employees are located in Oslo, 8 in Karlstad/Eskilstuna and 3 employees in Gothenburg.
The Captiva Group has a total of 41 employees in Norway where 18 are located in Oslo, 10 in Lillestrøm, 7 in Horten, 3 in Porsgrunn and 3 in Bern.
The Group has an established pension scheme that is classified as a defined contribution plan. For the financial year ended 31 December 2021, the Group recognised an expense of total NOK 1.1 million (compared to NOK 0.6 million for the financial year ended 31 December 2020).
For more information about the Group's pension and retirement benefits, see note 13 to the Annual Financial Statements for the financial year ended 31 December 2021, incorporated by reference in Section 20.3.
The Company has adopted and implemented a corporate governance regime which complies with NUES, issued by the Norwegian Corporate Governance Board. This includes disclosure and transparency in all business to provide shareholders with precise and accurate information concerning all aspects regarding Cloudberry.
Neither the Board of Directors nor the Company's General Meeting have adopted any resolutions which are to be deemed to have a material impact on the Group's corporate governance regime.
According to the Company's Articles of Association, the Company shall have a nomination committee. The nomination committee comprises of three members elected by the General Meeting of the Company. Morten S. Bergesen is elected as the chairperson of the nomination committee. Joakim Gjersøe and Henrik Lund are elected as members of the nomination committee.
The committee is responsible for recommending candidates for election of members and chairperson of the Board of Directors, and remuneration to the members of the Board. In its work, the nomination committee shall follow the Norwegian Code of Practice for Corporate Governance.
The Company has established an audit committee consisting of Frank Jarle Berg (chairperson), Nicolai Nordstrand and Henrik Joelsson. The committee performs tasks related to financial reporting, the annual accounts and internal control. The composition of the committee fulfils the requirements in the Public Companies Act.
The Company has established a compensation committee consisting of three members, Petter Winther Borg, Stefanie Witte and Liv Eiklo Lønnum. The committee, which is a subcommittee of the Board of Directors, recommends, oversees and approves compensation and remuneration of the Company's executive Management, and other matters concerning the Management. The compensation committee shall propose guidelines related to the compensation, which shall be adopted by the Board of Directors.
In February 2021, the Company established an ESG committee. The committee shall consist of two board members in total. The committee's mandate is to guide and support the Company's work, anchor its commitment and ensure high standards on both strategic and operational levels within environmental, social and governance aspects in accordance with the Company's ESG guidelines and legal framework.
At the date of this Prospectus, the committee consists of Petter W. Borg and Benedicte H. Fossum.
Nicolai Nordstrand was a member of the board of Agrinos AS which was declared bankrupt in July 2020. Otherwise, no Board Member or member of the Management has, or have had, as applicable, during the last five years preceding the date of the Prospectus:
Certain members of the Board of Directors and the Management have a financial interests in the Company through their shareholdings and as holder of warrants, as further described in Section 12.1 (The Board of Directors) and Section 12.2 (Management). In addition, members of the Board of Directors and the Management may be board members or managers of other companies and hold shares in other companies, and in the event any such company enters into business relationships with the Company, the members of the Board of Directors and Management may have a conflict of interest, which is managed by the person concerned not being involved in the handling of the matter on behalf of the Company. For information regarding certain transactions with related parties and between the Company and members of the Board of Directors or the Management, see Section 10.7 (Related party transactions).
Except as set out above there are currently no actual or potential conflicts of interest between the Company and the private interests or other duties of any of the members of the Board of Directors and the Management, including any family relationships between such persons.
As of the date of this Prospectus, the share capital of the Company is NOK 72,824,976.25, divided among 291,299,905 shares each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25. All of the Shares have been created under the Public Companies Act and are validly issued and fully paid.
The Company has one class of shares, and accordingly there are no differences in the voting rights among the Shares. The Shares are freely transferable, meaning that a transfer of Shares is not subject to the consent of the Board of Directors or rights of first refusal. Pursuant to the Articles, the Company's shares shall be registered in the VPS.
Reference is made to Section 13.3 (Authorisation to issue additional shares) for information about the authorisations granted to the Board of Directors the increase the share capital of the Company and Section 12.3 (Remuneration and benefits) for information regarding the warrants issued as part of the Company's equity incentive program.
Other than set out below, there have not been any share capital changes in the Company, neither share capital increases by way of contribution in kind or cash nor share capital decrease, for the period covered by the Annual Financial Statements until the date of this Prospectus.
| Date of | Type of change | Change in | New share | Nominal | New number of | Subscription |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| registration | share capital | capital | value | total issued | price per share | |
| (NOK) | (NOK) | shares | (NOK) | |||
| 24.11.2017 | Incorporation | 0 | 30,000 | 1 | 30,000 | 1 |
| 23.02.2018 | Increase by contribution in cash |
470,000 | 500,000 | 1 | 500,000 | 1 |
| 07.06.2018 | Increase by contribution in cash |
500,000 | 1,000,000 | 1 | 1,000,000 | 1 |
| 21.01.2019 | Decrease for coverage of loss |
-750,000 | 250,000 | 0.25 | 1,000,000 | N/A |
| 21.01.2019 | Increase by contribution in cash |
500,000 | 750,000 | 0.25 | 3,000,000 | 0.25 |
| 04.03.2019 | Increase by contribution in cash |
86,375 | 836,375 | 0.25 | 3,345,500 | 10 |
| 04.03.2019 | Increase by conversion of debt |
13,625 | 850,000 | 0.25 | 3,400,000 | 10 |
| 30.09.2019 | Increase by contribution in cash |
100,000 | 950,000 | 0.25 | 3,800,000 | 10 |
| 10.03.2020 | Increase by contribution in kind (share swap) |
5,034,652.25 | 5,984,652.25 | 0.25 | 23,938,609 | 10.7419 |
| 26.03.2020 | Increase by contribution in cash |
3,564,189 | 9,548,841.25 | 0.25 | 38,195,365 | 11.10 |
| 26.03.2020 | Increase by conversion of debt |
71,283.25 | 9,620,124.50 | 0.25 | 38,480,498 | 11.10 |
| 20.08.2020 | Increase by contribution in cash |
4,166,666.75 | 13,786,791.25 | 0.25 | 55,147,165 | 12 |
| 29.09.2020 | Increase by contribution in kind |
545,119 | 14,331,910.25 | 0.25 | 57,327,641 | 12.50 |
| Date of registration |
Type of change | Change in share capital |
New share capital (NOK) |
Nominal value (NOK) |
New number of total issued shares |
Subscription price per share (NOK) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 04.12.2020 | Increase by contribution in kind |
29,662 | 14,361,572.25 | 0.25 | 57,446,289 | 12.01 |
| 22.12.2020 | Increase by contribution in cash |
11,904,761.75 | 26,266,334 | 0.25 | 105,065,336 | 10.50 |
| 18.06.2021 | Increase by contribution in cash |
21,500,000 | 47,766,334 | 0.25 | 191,065,336 | 12.50 |
| 08.07.2021 | Increase by contribution in cash |
700,000 | 48,466,334 | 0.25 | 193,865,336 | 12.50 |
| 16.12.2021 | Increase by contribution in cash |
10,334,827.50 | 58,811,161.50 | 0.25 | 235,244,646 | 14.50 |
| 12.01.2022 | Increase by contribution in kind |
3,484,041 | 59,682,171.75 | 0.25 | 238,728,687 | 14.50 |
| 29.06.2022 | Increase by contribution in kind |
233,755 | 59,915,926.75 | 0.25 | 239,663,707 | 17.32 |
| 22.09.2022 | Increase by contribution in cash |
12,903,225.75 | 72,819,152.50 | 0.25 | 291,276,610 | 15.50 |
| 24.10.2022 | Increase by contribution in cash |
5,823.75 | 72,824,976.25 | 0.25 | 291,299,905 | 10.625 |
As of 7 December 2022, the Company had 2,912 Shareholders on record in the VPS. The 20 largest Shareholders as of the same date are set out in the table below.
| # | Shareholder | Number of Shares | Percent of share |
|---|---|---|---|
| capital | |||
| 1 | Ferd AS | 33,919,686 | 11.64% |
| 2 | Joh Johansson Eiendom AS | 29,512,098 | 10.13% |
| 3 | Havfonn AS | 24,761,554 | 8.50% |
| 4 | HSBC Trinkaus & Burkhardt AG | 16,935,000 | 5.81% |
| 5 | Snefonn AS | 16,203,725 | 5.56% |
| 6 | The Northern Trust Comp., London | 15,881,595 | 5.45% |
| 7 | CACEIS Bank | 12,669,673 | 4.35% |
| 8 | State Street Bank and Trust Comp | 9,578,902 | 3.29% |
| 9 | Clearstream Banking S.A. | 7,330,173 | 2.52% |
| 10 | Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB | 6,450,000 | 2.21% |
| 11 | Danske Invest Norge Vekst | 6,317,098 | 2.17% |
| 12 | Awilco AS | 5,832,256 | 2.00% |
| 13 | Verdipapirfondet Alfred Berg Gamba | 5,658,324 | 1.94% |
| 14 | Citibank Europe plc | 5,000,000 | 1.72% |
| 15 | Gjensidige Forsikring ASA | 4,023,469 | 1.38% |
| 16 | Verdipapirfondet Storebrand Norge | 3,969,511 | 1.36% |
| 17 | MP Pensjon PK | 3,496,230 | 1.20% |
| 18 | CCP AS | 3,484,041 | 1.20% |
| 19 | CCpartner AS | 3,202,040 | 1.10% |
| 20 | Verdipapirfondet KLP Aksjenorge | 2,426,887 | 0.83% |
| Total top 20 | 216,652,262 | 74.37% | |
| Others | 74,647,643 | 25,63% |
| Total | 291,299,905 | 100.00% |
|---|---|---|
As of 7 December 2022, no Shareholders other than Ferd AS, Joh Johansson Eiendom AS, Havfonn AS, HSBC Trinkaus & Burkhardt AG, The Northern Trust Comp., London and Snefonn AS hold more than 5% of the issued Shares. As of the same date, the Company does not hold any treasury shares.
The following shareholders hold more than 5% of the issued Shares:
| Shareholder | Number of Shares | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Ferd AS | 33,919,686 | 11.64% |
| Joh Johannson Eiendom AS | 29,512,098 | 10.13% |
| Havfonn AS | 24,761,554 | 8.50% |
| HSBC Trinkaus & Burkhardt AG | 16,935,000 | 5.81% |
| Snefonn AS | 16,203,725 | 5.56% |
| The Northern Trust Comp., London | 15,881,595 | 5.45% |
To the extent known to the Company, there are no persons or entities that, directly or indirectly, jointly or severally, exercise or could exercise control over the Company. The Company is not aware of any arrangements the operation of which may at a subsequent date result in a change of control of the Company.
The Shares have not been subject to any public takeover bids during the current or last financial year.
As of the date of this Prospectus, the General Meeting has granted the Board of Directors the following authorisations to increase the share capital:
| Date granted | Date of expiry | Potential share capital increase (NOK) |
Amount utilised (NOK) |
Purpose of the authorisation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 28.04.2022 | 30.06.2023 | 14,920,542.94 | 13,136,980.75 | To ensure flexibility to finance potential acquisitions or otherwise strengthen the Company's equity. |
| 28.04.2022 | 30.06.2023 | 100,000 | 5,823.75 | The authorisation is reserved to the share purchase programme for Board Members. |
The board authorisations allow the Board of Directors to deviate from the Shareholders' right to subscribe for a proportionate share of any share issue (i.e. if the authorisation is utilised in a private placement).
As the Company is in a growth phase the Board of Directors will generally propose that the General Meeting grants the Board of Directors an authorisation to increase the share capital with up to 25% of the share capital. Such authorisations will be reserved for the use in relation to financing of strategic growth opportunities and will only be valid until the earliest of (i) the next annual General Meeting or (ii) 30 June the next year.
Except for the warrants described in Section 12.3 (Remuneration and benefits) neither the Company nor any member of the Group has issued any options, warrants, convertible loans or other instruments that would entitle a holder of any such instrument to subscribe for any shares in the Company or a member of the Group.
The Company has one class of shares in issue and all Shares provide equal rights in the Company, including the rights to any dividends. Each of the Company's shares carries one vote. The rights attached to the Shares are further described in Section 14.3 (The Articles of Association) and Section 15 (Norwegian corporate law).
The following information is a summary of certain corporate information and material information relating to the shares and share capital of the Company and certain other shareholder matters, including summary of certain provisions of the Company's Articles of Association and applicable Norwegian law in effect as of the date of this Prospectus. The summary does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by the Company's Articles of Association, included as Appendix A in this Prospectus, and applicable laws.
The Company's registered name is Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA, while its commercial name is Cloudberry Clean Energy. The Company is a public limited liability company organised and existing under the laws of Norway pursuant to the Public Companies Act. The Company's registered office is in the municipality of Oslo, Norway. The Company was incorporated in Norway on 10 November 2017 as a private limited liability company and transformed to a public limited company following the annual General Meeting held on 28 April 2021. The Company's organisation number in the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises is 919 967 072 and its Legal Entity Identifier ("LEI") code is 549300VUALPJQLAH7B56.
The Shares are registered in book-entry form with the VPS under ISIN NO0010876642. The Company's register of Shareholders in the VPS is administrated by the VPS Registrar, Sparebank 1 SR-Bank ASA, Christen Tranes gate 35, 4007.
The Company's registered office is located at Frøyas gate 15, 0273 Oslo, Norway. The Company's telephone number is +47 91 30 29 07 and its e-mail is [email protected]. The Company's website can be found at www.cloudberry.no. The content of www.cloudberry.no is not incorporated by reference to, nor otherwise forms part of, this Prospectus.
The Company is the parent company of CB Develop, CB Production and Captiva Digital Services AS. The following table sets out brief information about all significant members of the Group at the date of this Prospectus:
| Company name | Business reg. no. |
Registered office |
Activity | Ownership held by | Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cloudberry Clean | 919 967 072 | Oslo, Norway | Holding | See Section 13.2 | N/A |
| Energy ASA | company | ||||
| Cloudberry | 919 806 958 | Oslo, Norway | Holding | Cloudberry Clean | 100% |
| Production AS | company | Energy ASA | |||
| Røyrmyra Vindpark | 814 484 602 | Oslo, Norway | Producing wind | Cloudberry | 100% |
| AS | farm | Production AS | |||
| Finnesetbekken | 993 351 326 | Oslo, Norway | Producing hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| Kraftverk AS | plant | Production AS | |||
| Odal Vind AS | 926 706 829 | Nes, Norway | Wind farm under | Cloudberry | 33.4% |
| construction | Production AS | ||||
| Selselva Kraft AS | 995 897 695 | Sunnfjord, | Producing hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| Norway | plant | Production AS | |||
| Skåråna Kraft AS | 923 591 028 | Oslo, Norway | Hydro plants | Cloudberry | 100% |
| under construction |
Production AS | ||||
| Forte Energy Norway | 924 566 892 | Oslo, Norway | Producing hydro | Cloudberry Clean | 34% |
| AS | plants | Energy ASA | |||
| Nessakraft AS | 914 720 222 | Oslo, Norway | Producing hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| plant | Production AS |
| Company name | Business reg. no. |
Registered office |
Activity | Ownership held by | Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bjørgelva Kraft AS | 921 094 868 | Oslo, Norway | Producing hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| plant | Production AS | ||||
| Åmotsfoss Kraft AS | 921 657 145 | Oslo, Norway | Producing hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| plant | Production AS | ||||
| Ramsliåna Kraftverk | 916 657 676 | Oslo, Norway | Hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| AS | development | Production AS | |||
| Usma Kraft AS | 995 839 865 | Oslo. Norway | Producing hydro | Cloudberry | 100% |
| plant | Production AS | ||||
| RE Energi AS | 996 223 647 | Oslo, Norway | Hydro project | Cloudberry | 100% |
| Production AS | |||||
| Tinnkraft AS | 990 930 716 | Oslo, Norway | Hydro power | Cloudberry | 100% |
| plant | Production AS | ||||
| Bøen Kraft AS | 988 376 582 | Oslo, Norway | Hydro power | Cloudberry | 100% |
| plant | Production AS | ||||
| CB Production AB | 559387-6732 | Gothenburg, | Holding | Cloudberry | 100% |
| Sweden | company | Production AS | |||
| Cloudberry Develop | 992 889 713 | Oslo, Norway | Holding | Cloudberry Clean | 100% |
| AS | company | Energy ASA | |||
| Skogvind AS | 921 965 141 | Oslo, Norway | Development of | Cloudberry Develop | 100% |
| small-scale wind | AS | ||||
| projects | |||||
| Rewind Offshore AB | 556784-5978 | Karlstad, | Development | Cloudberry Develop | 100% |
| Sweden | AS | ||||
| Cloudberry Wind AB | 556795-5074 | Karlstad, | Development | Cloudberry Develop | 100% |
| Sweden | AS | ||||
| Cloudberry Offshore | 556710-7403 | Karlstad, | Development | Cloudberry Develop | 100% |
| Wind AB | Sweden | AS | |||
| Cloudberry | 556710-7403 | Karlstad, | Holding | Cloudberry Develop | 100% |
| Utveckling II AB | Sweden | company | AS | ||
| Hån Vindpark AB | 556957-5797 | Karlstad, | Wind-farm | CB Production AB | 100% |
| Sweden | project | ||||
| Hån 22 KV AS | 923 096 035 | Oslo, Norway | Hån Vindpark AB | 100% | |
| Duvhällen Vindpark | 559045-9367 | Karlstad, | Wind-farm | Cloudberry | 100% |
| AB | Sweden | project | Utveckling II AB | ||
| Oxenstierna Vind AB | 559348-5724 | Karlstad, | Wind -farm | Cloudberry | 100% |
| Sweden | project | Utveckling II AB | |||
| Munkhyttan | 559082-8025 | Vara, Sweden | Wind-farm | Oxenstierna Vind | 100% |
| Vindkraft AB | project | AB | |||
| Cloudberry | 556758-6614 | Karlstad, | Development | Cloudberry Develop | 100% |
| Utveckling AB | Sweden | AS | |||
| Cloudberry Projekt | 556882-4600 | Karlstad, | Development | Cloudberry | 100% |
| AB | Sweden | Utveckling AB | |||
| Kånna Vindpark AB | 556958-5689 | Karlstad, | Wind project | Cloudberry Projekt | 100% |
| Sweden | development | AB | |||
| Ljunga Vindpark AB | 556959-7114 | Karlstad, | Wind project | Cloudberry Projekt | 100% |
| Sweden | development | AB | |||
| Stenkalles Holding | 914 540 836 | Oslo, Norway | Offshore Wind | Cloudberry Develop | 50% |
| AS | project | AS | |||
| Rewind Vanern AB | 556836-5265 | Karlstad, | Offshore Wind | Stenkalles Holding | 100% |
| Sweden | Project | AS | |||
| Stenkalles Wind AB | 559306-7076 | Karlstad, | Offshore Wind | Rewind Vänern AB | 100% |
| Sweden | project | ||||
| Captiva Digital | 927 900 904 | Oslo, Norway | Development | Cloudberry Clean | 60% |
| Services AS | and operation of | Energy ASA | |||
| hydro power | |||||
| plants | |||||
| Captiva Asset | 991 840 192 | Oslo, Norway | Management | Captiva Digital | 100% |
| Management AS | services | Services AS | |||
| Captiva Financial | 921 064 241 | Oslo, Norway | Accounting | Captiva Asset | 100% |
| Services AS | services | Management AS | |||
| Enestor AS | 914 849 349 | Eidskog, | Technical | Captiva Asset | 51% |
| Norway | advisor | Management | |||
| Company name | Business reg. no. |
Registered office |
Activity | Ownership held by | Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Captiva Digital | 923 590 900 | Oslo, Norway | Digital services | Captiva Digital | 100% |
| Solutions AS | Services AS | ||||
| Kraftanmelding AS | 995 764 555 | Skien, Norway | Power trade | Captiva Digital | 50.5% |
| technology | Solutions AS | ||||
| Fjord Energi AS | 892 732 752 | Gloppen, | Power trade | Kraftanmelding AS | 100% |
| Norway | technology | ||||
| Broentech Solutions | 914 079 845 | Horten, Norway | Software | Captiva Digital | 56% |
| AS | development | Solutions AS | |||
| Captiva Energi AS | 913 469 442 | Oslo, Norway | Development | Captiva Digital | 100% |
| projects | Services AS |
* The Company has agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS at the date of this Prospectus.
The following chart sets out the Group's legal structure as of the date of this Prospectus (ownership of 100% unless otherwise is stated):

As of the date of this Prospectus, the Company is of the opinion that its holdings in the entities specified above are likely to have a significant effect on the assessment of its own assets and liabilities, financial condition or profits and losses.
Further, CB Production has entered into share purchase agreements regarding all outstanding shares in the following companies:
| Company name | Business reg. | Registered office | Activity | Ownership will be | Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| no. | held by | ||||
| Øvre Kvemma | 927 640 104 | Oslo, Norway | Asset under | Cloudberry Production | 100% |
| Kraftverk AS | construction | AS |
For further details, see Section 7.3.3.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS).
The Articles are enclosed in Appendix A to the Prospectus. Below is a summary of the provisions of the Articles last updated on 24 October 2022.
Pursuant to section 3 of the Articles the purpose of the Company is, as the parent company in the Group, to engage in investment activities in the energy sector, including developing and operating the production of renewable energy and activities naturally connected with this.
Pursuant to section 4 of the Articles the share capital of the Company is NOK 72,824,976.25 divided among 291,299,905 shares each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25. The Shares are registered with a central securities depository (VPS).
The Company's has no share classes and thus the shares carry equal rights.
The Articles do not provide for any restrictions on the transfer of Shares.
Pursuant to section 5 of the Articles, the Company's Boards of Directors shall consist of a minimum of three and a maximum of eight Shareholder elected members.
The right to sign on behalf of the Company is pursuant to section 6 of the Articles held by the CEO and the chairperson of the Board of Directors acting jointly or by two members of the Board of Directors acting jointly.
Pursuant to section 7 of the Articles, the Shareholders of the Company who wish to participate in a General Meeting must notify the Company by the time specified in the notice. The deadline cannot be earlier than 5 days prior the date of the General Meeting.
If documents regarding matters to be considered by the General Meeting are made available for the Shareholders on the Company's web page, the requirements in the Public Companies Act prescribing that documents must be sent by mail to the Shareholders shall not apply. On the internet site such documents are only sent to Shareholders if so required by the Shareholder. This applies also to documents that pursuant to the Public Companies Act or the Articles of Association shall be included in or attached to the notice of the General Meeting.
Shareholders may give their vote ahead of the General Meeting, both in writing or by use of electronic device, if provided for in the notice with detailed instructions.
The General Meeting shall approve the annual accounts and decide on dividends, as well as other matters required to be dealt with by the General Meeting in accordance with law or the Articles of Association.
Pursuant to section 8 of the Articles, the Company shall have a nomination committee, elected by the General Meeting.
Certain aspects of Norwegian corporate law, which are considered important for potential investors are set out below. The following high-level introduction is not an exhausting list of corporate aspects to consider. Investors are thus advised to consult their own legal advisors concerning the overall consequences of their ownership of Shares.
Through the General Meeting, Shareholders exercise the supreme authority in a Norwegian company. The annual General Meeting must be held within six months from the end of each financial year, meaning at latest on 30 June for companies which have a financial year which follows the calendar year. Norwegian law requires that written notice of annual General Meetings setting forth the time of, the venue for and the agenda of the meeting is sent to all Shareholders with a known address no later than 21 days before the annual General Meeting of a Norwegian public limited liability company listed on a stock exchange or a regulated market shall be held, unless the articles of association stipulate a longer deadline, which is not currently the case for the Company.
A Shareholder may vote at the General Meeting either in person or by proxy appointed by their own discretion. Pursuant to the Norwegian Securities Trading Act, a proxy voting form shall be attached to the notice of the General Meeting in a Norwegian public limited liability company listed on a stock exchange or a regulated market, unless such form has been made available to the shareholders on the issuer's website and the notice to the General Meeting includes all information the shareholders need to access the proxy voting form, including the relevant internet address.
All of the Company's Shareholders who are registered in the register of Shareholders maintained with the VPS at least five business days before the date of the General Meeting, or who have otherwise reported and documented ownership to Shares, are entitled to participate at General Meetings. The Company's Articles of Association do however include a provision requiring shareholders to submit an attendance form by a deadline which shall be no less than five days prior to the General Meeting.
Apart from the annual General Meetings, extraordinary General Meetings of Shareholders may be held if the Board of Directors considers it necessary. An extraordinary General Meeting of Shareholders must also be convened if, in order to discuss a specified matter, the auditor or Shareholders representing at least 5% of the share capital demands this in writing. The requirements for notice and admission to the annual General Meeting also apply to extraordinary General Meetings. However, the annual General Meeting of a Norwegian public limited liability company may with a majority of at least two-thirds of the aggregate number of votes cast as well as at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at a General Meeting resolve that extraordinary General Meetings may be convened with a 14 days' notice period until the next annual General Meeting, provided that the Company has procedures in place allowing Shareholders to vote electronically. This has currently not been resolved by the Company's General Meeting.
Each of the Company's Shares carries one vote. In general, decisions that Shareholders are entitled to make under Norwegian law or the Articles of Association may be made by a simple majority of the votes cast. In the case of elections or appointments, the person(s) who receive(s) the greatest number of votes cast are elected. However, as required under Norwegian law, certain decisions, including resolutions to waive preferential rights to subscribe in connection with any share issue in the Company, to approve a merger or demerger of the Company, to amend the Articles of Association, to authorise an increase or reduction of the share capital, to authorise an issuance of convertible loans or warrants by the Company or to authorise the Board of Directors to purchase Shares and hold them as treasury shares or to dissolve the Company, must receive at least two-thirds of the aggregate number of votes cast as well as at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at the General Meeting. Norwegian law further requires that certain decisions, which have the effect of substantially altering the rights and preferences of any shares or class of shares, receive the approval by the holders of such shares or class of shares as well as the majority required for amending the Articles of Association.
Decisions that (i) would reduce the rights of some or all of the Company's Shareholders in respect of dividend payments or other rights to assets or (ii) restrict the transferability of the Shares, require at least 90% of the share capital represented at the General Meeting in question vote in favour of the resolution, as well as the majority required for amending the Articles of Association. Certain types of changes in the rights of Shareholders require the consent of all Shareholders affected thereby as well as the majority required for amending the Articles of Association.
In general, only a Shareholder registered in the VPS is entitled to vote for such shares. Beneficial owners of shares that are registered in the name of a nominee are generally not entitled to vote under Norwegian law, nor is any person who is designated in the VPS register as the holder of such shares as nominees. Investors should note that there are varying opinions as to the interpretation of the right to vote on nominee registered shares. In the Company's view, a nominee may not meet or vote for shares registered on a nominee account. A Shareholder must, in order to be eligible to register, meet and vote for such shares at the General Meeting, transfer the shares from such nominee account to an account in the Shareholder's name. Such registration must appear from a transcript from the VPS at the latest the fifth trading day prior to the General Meeting.
There are no quorum requirements that apply to the general meetings of Norwegian public limited liability companies.
If the Company issues any new shares, including bonus share issues, the Company's Articles of Association must be amended, which requires the same votes as other amendments to the Articles of Association. In addition, under Norwegian law, the Company's Shareholders have a preferential right to subscribe for new shares issued by the Company. Preferential rights may be derogated from by resolution in a General Meeting passed by the same vote required to amend the Articles of Association. A derogation of the Shareholders' preferential rights in respect of bonus issues requires the approval of all outstanding Shares.
The General Meeting may, by the same vote as is required for amending the Articles of Association, authorise the Board of Directors to issue new Shares, and to derogate from the preferential rights of Shareholders in connection with such issuances. Such authorisation may be effective for a maximum of two years, and the nominal value of the Shares to be issued may not exceed 50% of the registered nominal share capital when the authorisation is registered with the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises.
Under Norwegian law, the Company may increase its share capital by a bonus share issue, subject to approval by the Company's Shareholders, by transfer from the Company's distributable equity or from the Company's share premium reserve and thus the share capital increase does not require any payment of a subscription price by the Shareholders. Any bonus issues may be affected either by issuing new shares to the Company's existing Shareholders or by increasing the nominal value of the Company's outstanding Shares.
Issuance of new Shares to Shareholders who are citizens or residents of the United States upon the exercise of preferential rights may require the Company to file a registration statement in the United States under United States securities laws. Should the Company in such a situation decide not to file a registration statement, the Company's U.S. Shareholders may not be able to exercise their preferential rights. If a U.S. Shareholder is ineligible to participate in a rights offering, such Shareholder would not receive the rights at all and the rights would be sold on the Shareholder's behalf by the Company. Shareholders in other jurisdictions outside Norway may be similarly affected if the rights and the new shares being offered have not been registered with, or approved by, the relevant authorities in such jurisdiction. To the extent that the Company's Shareholders are not able to exercise their rights to subscribe for new shares, their proportional interests in the Company will be reduced.
Norwegian law sets forth a number of protections for minority Shareholders of the Company, including but not limited to those described in this paragraph and the description of General Meetings as set out above. Any of the Company's Shareholders may petition Norwegian courts to have a decision of the Board of Directors or the Company's Shareholders made at the General Meeting declared invalid on the grounds that it unreasonably favours certain shareholders or third parties to the detriment of other shareholders or the Company itself. The Company's Shareholders may also petition the courts to dissolve the Company as a result of such decisions to the extent particularly strong reasons are considered by the court to make necessary dissolution of the Company.
Minority Shareholders holding 5% or more of the Company's share capital have a right to demand in writing that the Board of Directors convene an extraordinary General Meeting to discuss or resolve specific matters. In addition, any of the Company's Shareholders may in writing demand that the Company place an item on the agenda for any General Meeting as long as the Company is notified in time for such item to be included in the notice of the meeting. If the notice has been issued when such a written demand is presented, a renewed notice must be issued if the deadline for issuing notice of the General Meeting has not expired.
The share capital of the Company may be reduced by reducing the nominal value of the Shares or by cancelling Shares. Such a decision requires the approval of at least two-thirds of the aggregate number of votes cast and at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at a General Meeting. Redemption of individual Shares requires the consent of the holders of the Shares to be redeemed.
The Company may purchase its own Shares provided that the Board of Directors has been granted an authorisation to do so by the General Meeting with the approval of at least two-thirds of the aggregate number of votes cast and at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at the meeting. The aggregate nominal value of treasury shares so acquired, and held by the Company must not exceed 10% of the Company's share capital, and treasury shares may only be acquired if the Company's distributable equity, according to the latest adopted balance sheet, exceeds the consideration to be paid for the shares. The authorisation by the General Meeting of the Company cannot be granted for a period exceeding 24 months.
A decision of the Company's Shareholders to merge with another company or to demerge requires a resolution by the General Meeting of the Shareholders passed by at least two-thirds of the aggregate votes cast and at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at the meeting. A merger plan, or demerger plan signed by the Board of Directors along with certain other required documentation, would have to be sent to all the Company's Shareholders, or if the Articles of Association stipulate that, made available to the Shareholders on the Company's website, at least one month prior to the General Meeting to pass upon the matter.
Members of the Board of Directors owe a fiduciary duty to the Company and its Shareholders. Such fiduciary duty requires that the Board Members act in the best interests of the Company when exercising their functions and exercise a general duty of loyalty and care towards the Company. Their principal task is to safeguard the interests of the Company.
Members of the Board of Directors may each be held liable for any damage they negligently or wilfully cause the Company. Norwegian law permits the General Meeting to discharge any such person from liability, but such discharge is only binding for the Company if substantially correct and complete information was provided at the General Meeting, which resolved to discharge liability. If a resolution to discharge the Board Members from liability or not to pursue claims against such a person has been passed by a General Meeting with a smaller majority than that required to amend the Articles of Association (i.e. at least two-thirds of the aggregate number of votes cast as well as at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at the General Meeting), Shareholders representing more than 10% of the share capital or, if there are more than 100 shareholders, more than 10% of the Shareholders may pursue the claim on the Company's behalf and in its name. The cost of any such action is not the Company's responsibility but can be recovered from any proceeds the Company receives as a result of the action. If the decision to discharge any of the Board Members from liability or not to pursue claims against the Board Members is made by such a majority as is necessary to amend the Articles of Association, the minority Shareholders of the Company cannot pursue such claim in the Company's name.
Neither Norwegian law nor the Articles of Association contains any provision concerning indemnification by the Company of the Board of Directors. The Company is permitted to purchase insurance for its Board Members against certain liabilities that they may incur in their capacity as such.
Under Norwegian law, the Company may be wound-up by a resolution of the Company's Shareholders at the General Meeting passed by at least two-thirds of the aggregate votes cast and at least two-thirds of the share capital represented at the meeting. In the event of liquidation, the Shares rank equally in the event of a return on capital.
The Company is not aware of any shareholders' agreements related to the Shares which are in force at the date of this Prospectus.
Set out below is a summary of certain aspects of securities trading in Norway and the possible implications of owning tradable securities on the Oslo Stock Exchange. The summary is based on the rules and regulations in Norway at the date of this Prospectus, which may be subject to changes occurring after such date. Investors who wish to clarify aspects of securities trading in Norway should consult with and rely upon their own advisors.
Oslo Stock Exchange was established in 1819 and offers the only regulated markets for securities trading in Norway. Oslo Børs ASA is wholly owned by Euronext Nordics Holding AS. Euronext owns regulated markets across Europe, including Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin, Lisbon, London, Oslo and Paris.
Oslo Børs ASA complies with the European code of conduct commitments on service unbundling and accounting separation. Euronext Nordic Holding AS also owns VPS – now Euronext Securities Oslo.
The market value of shares listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange, including the Shares, may fluctuate significantly, which could cause investors to lose a significant part of their investment. The market value could fluctuate significantly in response to a number of factors beyond the respective issuer's control, including variations in operating results, adverse business developments, changes in financial estimates and investment recommendations or ratings by securities analysts, announcements by the respective issuer or its competitors of new projects, significant contracts, acquisitions or strategic relationships, publicity about the issuer, its projects or its competitors, lawsuits against the issuer, unforeseen liabilities, changes in management, changes to the regulatory environment in which the issuer operates or general market conditions.
Furthermore, issuances of shares or other securities may dilute the holdings of shareholders and could materially affect the price of the Shares. Any issuer, including the Company, may in the future decide to offer additional shares or other securities to finance new capital-intensive projects, in connection with unanticipated liabilities or expenses or for any other purposes, including for refinancing purposes. There are no assurances that any of the issuers on the Oslo Stock Exchange will not decide to conduct further offerings of securities in the future. Depending on the structure of any future offering, certain existing shareholders may not have the ability to purchase additional equity securities. If a listed company raises additional funds by an issuance of additional equity securities, the holdings and voting interests of existing shareholders could be diluted, and thereby affect share price.
Trading of equities on the Oslo Stock Exchange is carried out in the electronic trading system Optiq®, which is the electronic trading system of Euronext.
Official trading on the Oslo Stock Exchange takes place between 09:00 hours (CET/CEST) and 16:20 hours (CET/CEST) each trading day, with pre-trade period between 07:15 hours (CET) and 09:00 hours (CET/CEST), closing auction from 16:20 hours (CET/CEST) to 16:25 hours (CET/CEST) and a trading at last period from 16:25 hours (CET/CEST) to 16:30 hours (CET/CEST).
The settlement period for trading on the Oslo Stock Exchange is two trading days (T+2). This means that securities will be settled on the investor's account in the VPS two trading days after the transaction was made, and that the seller will receive payment after two trading days.
Investment services in Norway may only be provided by Norwegian investment firms holding a license under the Norwegian Securities Trading Act, branches of investment firms from an EEA member state or investment firms from outside the EEA that have been licensed to operate in Norway. Investment firms in an EEA member state may also provide cross-border investment services into Norway.
It is possible for investment firms to undertake market-making activities in shares listed in Norway if they have a license to this effect under the Norwegian Securities Trading Act, or in the case of investment firms in an EEA member state, a license to carry out market-making activities in their home jurisdiction. Such market-making activities will be governed by the regulations of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act relating to brokers' trading for their own account. However, such market-making activities do not as such require notification to the NFSA or the Oslo Stock Exchange except for the general obligation of investment firms that are members of the Oslo Stock Exchange to report all trades in stock exchange listed securities.
Under Norwegian law, the Oslo Stock Exchange is required to perform a number of surveillance and control functions. The Surveillance and Corporate Control unit of the Oslo Stock Exchange monitors all market activity on a continuous basis. Market surveillance systems are largely automated, promptly warning department personnel of abnormal market developments.
The NFSA controls the issuance of securities in both the equity and bond markets in Norway and evaluates whether the issuance documentation contains the required information and whether it would otherwise be unlawful to carry out the issuance.
Pursuant to Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council on market abuse (market abuse regulation) ("MAR"), which has been implemented into Norwegian law, a company that is listed on a Norwegian regulated market, or has applied for listing on such market, must promptly release any inside information directly concerning the company (i.e. precise information about financial instruments, the issuer thereof or other matters which are likely to have a significant effect on the price of the relevant financial instruments or related financial instruments, and which are not publicly available or commonly known in the market). A company may, however, delay the release of such information in order not to prejudice its legitimate interests, provided that it is able to ensure the confidentiality of the information and that the delayed release would not be likely to mislead the public. The Oslo Stock Exchange and the NFSA may levy fines on companies violating these requirements.
The Company's principal share register is operated through the VPS. The VPS is the Norwegian paperless centralised securities register. It is a computerised book-keeping system in which the ownership of, and all transactions relating to, Norwegian listed shares must be recorded.
All transactions relating to securities registered with the VPS are made through computerised book entries. No physical share certificates are, or may be, issued. The VPS confirms each entry by sending a transcript to the registered shareholder irrespective of any beneficial ownership. To give effect to such entries, the individual shareholder must establish a share account with a Norwegian account agent. Norwegian banks, Norges Bank (being, the Central Bank of Norway), authorised securities brokers in Norway and Norwegian branches of credit institutions established within the EEA are allowed to act as account agents.
As a matter of Norwegian law, the entry of a transaction in the VPS is prima facie evidence in determining the legal rights of parties as against the issuing company or any third party claiming an interest in the given security. A transferee or assignee of shares may not exercise the rights of a shareholder with respect to such shares unless such transferee or assignee has registered such shareholding or has reported and shown evidence of such share acquisition, and the acquisition is not prevented by law, the relevant company's articles of association or otherwise.
The VPS is liable for any loss suffered as a result of faulty registration or an amendment to, or deletion of, rights in respect of registered securities unless the error is caused by matters outside the VPS' control which the VPS could not reasonably be expected to avoid or overcome the consequences of. Damages payable by the VPS may, however, be reduced in the event of contributory negligence by the aggrieved party.
The VPS must provide information to the NFSA on an ongoing basis, as well as any information that the NFSA requests. Further, Norwegian tax authorities may require certain information from the VPS regarding any individual's holdings of securities, including information about dividends and interest payments.
Under Norwegian law, shares are registered in the name of the beneficial owner of the shares. Beneficial owners of the Shares that are registered in a nominee account (such as through brokers, dealers or other third parties) may not be able to vote for such Shares unless their ownership is re-registered in their names with the VPS prior to any General Meeting. As a general rule, there are no arrangements for nominee registration and Norwegian shareholders are not allowed to register their shares in the VPS through a nominee. However, foreign shareholders may register their shares in the VPS in the name of a nominee (bank or other nominee) approved by the NFSA. An approved and registered nominee has a duty to provide information on demand about beneficial shareholders to the company and to the Norwegian authorities. In case of registration by nominees, the registration in the VPS must show that the registered owner is a nominee. A registered nominee has the right to receive dividends and other distributions, but cannot vote in General Meetings on behalf of the beneficial owners. There is no assurance that beneficial owners of the Shares will receive the notice of any General Meeting in time to instruct their nominees to either effect a re-registration of their Shares or otherwise vote for their Shares in the manner desired by such beneficial owners.
See Section 15.1.2 (Voting rights and amendments of the Articles of Association) for more information of nominee accounts.
Foreign investors may trade shares listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange through any broker that is a member of the Oslo Stock Exchange, whether Norwegian or foreign.
Foreign investors should note that the rights of holders of shares of companies incorporated in Norway are governed by Norwegian law and by the respective company's articles of association. These rights may differ from the rights of the shareholders in other jurisdictions. In particular, Norwegian law limits the circumstances under which shareholders of Norwegian companies may bring derivative actions. For instance, under Norwegian law, any action brought by a company in respect of wrongful acts committed against such company will be prioritised over actions brought by shareholders claiming compensation in respect of such acts. In addition, it may be difficult to prevail in a claim against the company under, or to enforce liabilities predicated upon, securities laws in other jurisdictions. See Section 15.1.1 (Certain aspects of Norwegian corporate law) for more information.
If a person's, entity's or consolidated group's proportion of the total issued shares and/or rights to shares in a company listed on a regulated market in Norway (with Norway as its home state, which will be the case for the Company) reaches, exceeds or falls below the respective thresholds of 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 1/3, 50%, 2/3 or 90% of the share capital or the voting rights of that company, the person, entity or group in question has an obligation under the Norwegian Securities Trading Act to notify the Oslo Stock Exchange and the issuer immediately. The same applies if the disclosure thresholds are passed due to other circumstances, such as a change in the Company's share capital.
According to MAR, which has been implemented into Norwegian law, subscription for, purchase, sale or exchange of financial instruments that are listed, or subject to the application for listing, on a Norwegian regulated market, or incitement to such dispositions, must not be undertaken by anyone who has inside information, as defined in MAR article 7. The same applies to the entry into, purchase, sale or exchange of options or futures/forward contracts or equivalent rights whose value is connected to such financial instruments or incitement to such dispositions.
The Norwegian Securities Trading Act requires any person, entity or consolidated group that becomes the owner of shares representing more than one-third (or more than 40% or 50%) of the voting rights of a company listed on a Norwegian regulated market (with the exception of certain foreign companies) to, within four weeks, make an unconditional general offer for the purchase of the remaining shares in that company. A mandatory offer obligation may also be triggered where a party acquires the right to become the owner of shares that, together with the party's own shareholding, represent more than onethird of the voting rights in the company and the Oslo Stock Exchange decides that this is regarded as an effective acquisition of the shares in question.
The mandatory offer obligation ceases to apply if the person, entity or consolidated group sells the portion of the shares that exceeds the relevant threshold within four weeks of the date on which the mandatory offer obligation was triggered.
When a mandatory offer obligation is triggered, the person subject to the obligation is required to immediately notify the Oslo Stock Exchange and the company in question accordingly. The notification is required to state whether an offer will be made to acquire the remaining shares in the company or whether a sale will take place. As a rule, a notification to the effect that an offer will be made cannot be retracted. The offer and the offer document required are subject to approval by the Oslo Stock Exchange before the offer is submitted to the shareholders or made public.
The offer price per share must be at least as high as the highest price paid or agreed by the offeror for the shares in the six month period prior to the date the threshold was exceeded. If the acquirer acquires or agrees to acquire additional shares at a higher price prior to the expiration of the mandatory offer period, the acquirer is obliged to restate its offer at such higher price. A mandatory offer must be in cash or contain a cash alternative at least equivalent to any other consideration offered.
In case of failure to make a mandatory offer or to sell the portion of the shares that exceeds the relevant threshold within four weeks, the Oslo Stock Exchange may force the acquirer to sell the shares exceeding the threshold by public auction. Moreover, a shareholder who fails to make an offer may not, as long as the mandatory offer obligation remains in force, exercise rights in the company, such as voting in a general meeting, without the consent of a majority of the remaining shareholders. The shareholder may, however, exercise his/her/its rights to dividends and pre-emption rights in the event of a share capital increase. If the shareholder neglects his/her/its duty to make a mandatory offer, the Oslo Stock Exchange may impose a cumulative daily fine that runs until the circumstance has been rectified.
Any person, entity or consolidated group that owns shares representing more than one-third of the votes in a company listed on a Norwegian regulated market (with the exception of certain foreign companies) is obliged to make an offer to purchase the remaining shares of the company (repeated offer obligation) if the person, entity or consolidated group through acquisition becomes the owner of shares representing 40%, or more of the votes in the company. The same applies correspondingly if the person, entity or consolidated group through acquisition becomes the owner of shares representing 50% or more of the votes in the company. The mandatory offer obligation ceases to apply if the person, entity or consolidated group sells the portion of the shares which exceeds the relevant threshold within four weeks of the date on which the mandatory offer obligation was triggered.
Any person, entity or consolidated group that has passed any of the above mentioned thresholds in such a way as not to trigger the mandatory bid obligation, and has therefore not previously made an offer for the remaining shares in the company in accordance with the mandatory offer rules is, as a main rule, obliged to make a mandatory offer in the event of a subsequent acquisition of shares in the company.
Pursuant to the Public Companies Act and the Norwegian Securities Trading Act, a shareholder who, directly or through subsidiaries, acquires shares representing 90% or more of the total number of issued shares in a Norwegian public limited liability company, as well as 90% or more of the total voting rights, has a right, and each remaining minority shareholder of the company has a right to require such majority shareholder, to effect a compulsory acquisition for cash of the shares not already owned by such majority shareholder. Through such compulsory acquisition the majority shareholder becomes the owner of the remaining shares with immediate effect.
If a shareholder acquires shares representing more than 90% of the total number of issued shares, as well as more than 90% of the total voting rights, through a voluntary offer in accordance with the Securities Trading Act, a compulsory acquisition can, subject to the following conditions, be carried out without such shareholder being obliged to make a mandatory offer: (i) the compulsory acquisition is commenced no later than four weeks after the acquisition of shares through the voluntary offer, (ii) the price offered per share is equal to or higher than what the offer price would have been in a mandatory offer, and (iii) the settlement is guaranteed by a financial institution authorised to provide such guarantees in Norway.
A majority shareholder who effects a compulsory acquisition is required to offer the minority shareholders a specific price per share, the determination of which is at the discretion of the majority shareholder. However, where the offeror, after making a mandatory or voluntary offer, has acquired more than 90% of the voting shares of a company and a corresponding proportion of the votes that can be cast at the general meeting, and the offeror pursuant to Section 4-25 of the Public Companies Act completes a compulsory acquisition of the remaining shares within three months after the expiry of the offer period, it follows from the Norwegian Securities Trading Act that the redemption price shall be determined on the basis of the offer price for the mandatory/voluntary offer unless specific reasons indicate another price.
Should any minority shareholder not accept the offered price, such minority shareholder may, within a specified deadline of not less than two months, request that the price be set by a Norwegian court. The cost of such court procedure will, as a general rule, be the responsibility of the majority shareholder, and the relevant court will have full discretion in determining the consideration to be paid to the minority shareholder as a result of the compulsory acquisition.
Absent a request for a Norwegian court to set the price or any other objection to the price being offered, the minority shareholders would be deemed to have accepted the offered price after the expiry of the specified deadline.
There are currently no foreign exchange control restrictions in Norway that would potentially restrict the payment of dividends to a shareholder outside Norway, and there are currently no restrictions that would affect the right of shareholders of a company that has its shares registered with the VPS who are not residents in Norway to dispose of their shares and receive the proceeds from a disposal outside Norway. There is no maximum transferable amount either to or from Norway, although transferring banks are required to submit reports on foreign currency exchange transactions into and out of Norway into a central data register maintained by the Norwegian customs and excise authorities. The Norwegian police, tax authorities, customs and excise authorities, the National Insurance Administration and the NFSA have electronic access to the data in this register.
Set out below is a summary of certain tax matters related to an investment in the Company. The following summary does not purport to be a comprehensive description of all the tax considerations that may be relevant to a decision to purchase, own or dispose of the Shares. The tax legislation in the Company's jurisdiction of incorporation and the tax legislation in the jurisdictions in which the Shareholders are resident for tax purposes may have an impact on the income received from Shares in the Company. Investors are advised to consult their own tax advisors concerning the overall tax consequences of their ownership of Shares.
This Section 17.1 describes certain tax rules in Norway applicable to Shareholders who are resident in Norway for tax purposes ("Norwegian Shareholders") and to Shareholders who are not resident in Norway for tax purposes ("Foreign Shareholders"). The statements herein regarding taxation are based on the laws in force in Norway as of the date of this Prospectus and are subject to any changes in law occurring after such date. Such changes could possibly be made on a retrospective basis.
Please note that for the purpose of the summary below, a reference to a Norwegian or non-Norwegian shareholder refers to the tax residency rather than the nationality of the Shareholder.
Dividends received by Shareholders who are individuals resident in Norway for tax purposes ("Norwegian Individual Shareholders") are taxable as ordinary income for such Shareholders at an effective rate of 35.2% (the nominal rate is 22% but the taxable income is multiplied with a factor of 1.6) to the extent the dividend exceeds a tax-free allowance. It has been proposed that the effective tax rate on dividends for Norwegian Individual Shareholders is increased to 37.84% with retroactive effect from 6 October 2022.
The allowance is calculated on a share-by-share basis. The allowance for each share is equal to the cost price of the share multiplied by a determined risk-free interest rate based on the effective rate on treasury bills (Nw.: statskasseveksler) with three months' maturity plus 0.5 percentage points, after tax. The allowance is calculated for each calendar year, and it is allocated solely to Norwegian Individual Shareholders holding shares at the expiration of the relevant income year.
Dividends received by Shareholders that are limited liability companies (and certain similar entities) resident in Norway for tax purposes ("Norwegian Corporate Shareholders") are effectively taxed at a rate of 0.66% (3% of dividend income from such shares is included in the calculation of ordinary income for Norwegian Corporate Shareholders and subject to tax at a flat rate of currently 22%).
Dividends paid from a Norwegian limited liability company to Foreign Shareholders are subject to Norwegian withholding tax at a rate of 25% unless the recipient qualifies for a reduced rate according to an applicable tax treaty or other specific regulations. The Shareholder's country of residence may give credit for the Norwegian withholding tax imposed on the dividend.
If a Foreign Shareholder is carrying on business activities in Norway and the Shares are effectively connected with such activities, the Foreign Shareholder should be subject to the same taxation of dividend as a Norwegian Shareholder, as described above.
Foreign Shareholders that are corporate Shareholders (i.e. limited liability companies and similar entities) ("Foreign Corporate Shareholders") tax resident within the EEA are exempt from Norwegian withholding tax pursuant to the Norwegian participation exemption method provided that the Foreign Corporate Shareholder is genuinely established and carries out genuine economic activities within the EEA.
Dividends paid to Foreign Shareholders that are individual Shareholders (i.e. other shareholders than Foreign Corporate Shareholders) ("Foreign Individual Shareholders") are as the main rule subject to Norwegian withholding tax at a rate of 25%, unless a lower rate has been agreed in an applicable tax treaty. If the individual Shareholder is tax resident within the EEA, the Shareholder may apply to the tax authorities for a refund of an amount corresponding to the calculated tax-free allowance on each individual share. However, the deduction for the tax-free allowance does not apply in the event that the withholding tax rate, pursuant to an applicable tax treaty, leads to a lower taxation on the dividends than the withholding tax rate of 25% less the tax-free allowance.
In accordance with the present administrative system in Norway, a distributing company will generally deduct withholding tax at the applicable rate when dividends are paid directly to an eligible Foreign Shareholder, based on information registered with the VPS. Foreign Corporate and Individual Shareholders must document their entitlement to a reduced withholding tax rate by (i) obtaining a certificate of residence issued by the tax authorities in the Shareholder's country of residence, confirming that the Shareholder is tax resident in that state and (ii) providing a confirmation from the Shareholder that the Shareholder is the beneficial owner of the dividend. In addition, Foreign Corporate Shareholders must also present either (i) an approved withholding tax refund application or (ii) an approval from the Norwegian tax authorities confirming that the recipient is entitled to a reduced withholding tax rate or a withholding tax exemption. Foreign Corporate Shareholders claiming exemption under the Norwegian participation exemption must also provide a self-declaration form. Such documentation must be provided to either the nominee or the account operator (VPS). Dividends paid to Foreign Shareholders in respect of nominee registered shares are not eligible for reduced treaty withholding tax rate at the time of payment unless the nominee, by agreeing to provide certain information regarding beneficial owner, has obtained approval for reduced treaty withholding tax rate from the Norwegian tax authorities. The withholding obligation lies with the company distributing the dividends and the Company assumes this obligation.
Foreign Individual and Corporate Shareholders who have suffered a higher withholding tax than set out in an applicable tax treaty may apply to the Norwegian tax authorities for a refund of the excess withholding tax deducted. The same apply to Foreign Corporate Shareholders that have suffered withholding tax although qualifying for the Norwegian participation exemption.
Foreign Shareholders should consult their own advisers regarding the availability of treaty benefits in respect of dividend payments.
Sale, non-proportionate redemption, or other disposals of shares is considered as realisation for Norwegian tax purposes. A capital gain or loss derived by a Norwegian Individual Shareholder through realisation of shares is taxable or tax deductible in Norway. Such capital gain or loss is included in or deducted from the Shareholder's ordinary income in the year of disposal and taxable at an effective rate of 35.2% (the nominal rate is 22% but the taxable income or deductible loss is multiplied with a factor of 1.6). It has been proposed that the effective tax rate on capital gains on shares for Norwegian Individual Shareholders is increased to 37.84% with retroactive effect from 6 October 2022.
The gain is subject to tax and the loss is tax deductible irrespective of the duration of the ownership and the number of shares disposed of.
The taxable gain/deductible loss is calculated per share, as the difference between the consideration for the share and the Norwegian Individual Shareholder's cost price of the share, including any costs incurred in relation to the acquisition or realisation of the share. From this capital gain, Norwegian Individual Shareholders are entitled to deduct any unused tax-free allowance, cf. above. Any unused tax-free allowance may only be deducted in order to reduce a taxable gain, and cannot increase or produce a deductible loss, i.e. any unused tax-free allowance exceeding the capital gain upon the realisation of a share should be annulled.
If the Norwegian Individual Shareholder owns shares acquired at different points in time, the shares that were acquired first should be regarded as the first to be disposed of, on a first-in first-out basis.
Norwegian Corporate Shareholders are exempt from tax on capital gains derived from the realisation of shares qualifying for participation exemption, including shares in the Company. Losses upon the realisation and costs incurred in connection with the purchase and realisation of such shares are not deductible for tax purpose.
Gains from realisation of Shares by Foreign Shareholders should not be subject to tax in Norway unless the Foreign Shareholders are holding the Shares in connection with business activities carried out or managed from Norway. Such taxation may be limited according to an applicable tax treaty or other specific regulations.
The value of Shares is taken into account for net wealth tax purposes in Norway. The marginal net wealth tax rate is currently up to 1.1% of the value assessed. The value for assessment purposes for is 75% of the listed value of the Shares as of 1 January of the tax assessment year (i.e. the year following the income year).
Norwegian limited liability companies and similar entities are exempted from net wealth tax.
Foreign Shareholders are not subject to Norwegian net wealth tax with respect to the Shares, unless the Shareholder is an individual, and the shareholding is effectively connected with a business which the Shareholder takes part in or carries out in Norway. Such taxation may be limited according to an applicable tax treaty.
No VAT, stamp or similar duties are currently imposed in Norway on the transfer or issuance of shares.
On 22 September 2022, the Company announced the completion of the Private Placement, comprising a total of 51,612,903 new Shares, at a subscription price of NOK 15.50 per new Share (the "Private Placement Shares"), raising gross proceeds to the Company of approximately NOK 800 million. Costs, fees and expenses in relation to the Private Placement amounted to approximately NOK 36 million. Hence, the total net proceeds from the Private Placement were NOK 764 million.
The subscription price in the Private Placement was determined by the Board of Directors after consultation with the Managers and was fixed at NOK 15.50 per Share.
The minimum subscription and allocation amount in the Private Placement was set to the NOK equivalent of EUR 100,000, provided, however, that the Company reserved the right to allocate an amount below EUR 100,000 to the extent applicable exemptions from the prospectus requirement pursuant to the Norwegian Securities Trading Act and ancillary regulations, or similar legislation in other jurisdictions, were available.
The Private Placement Shares were placed by Carnegie AS and Pareto Securities AS as Joint Global Coordinators and Joint Bookrunners and Jefferies GmbH as Joint Bookrunner to selected investors in the application period after close of market on 22 September 2022. The Board of Directors resolved to issue the Private Placement Shares on 22 September 2022. The completion of the Private Placement implies a deviation from the existing shareholders' pre-emptive rights to subscribe for and be allocated new Shares.
Cloudberry has an ambitious growth strategy. The reason for the Private Placement was to finance acquisition and construction related costs and investments for the Company's in-house projects, and to pursue and realise additional attractive organic and inorganic growth opportunities, in accordance with the Company's strategic plans.
The net proceeds from the Private Placement will be used as follows:
On 28 April 2022, the General Meeting resolved to grant the Board of Directors the following authorization to increase the Company's share capital (office translation):
The authorisation was partly utilized by the Board of Directors by issuance of 935,020 shares, each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25, in a Board meeting held on 24 June 2022.
Pursuant to and in accordance with the abovementioned authorization, the Board of Directors made the following resolution to increase the Company's share capital by NOK 12,903,225.75 by issuance of 51,612,903 Shares allocated in the Private Placement on 22 September 2022 (office translation):
"The company's share capital is NOK 72,819,152.50 divided among 291,276,610 shares, each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25. The company's shares shall be registered with Verdipapirsentralen (VPS).
The transferee of a share cannot exercise rights that pertain to a shareholder unless the transaction is registered in VPS or the transferee has reported and proved the transaction. A shareholder is only entitled to participate and vote in the General Meeting when the acquisition of shares is registered in VPS, no later than five business days prior to the date of the General Meeting."
The share capital increase related to the Private Placement Shares was registered with the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises on 29 September 2022. The Private Placement Shares have been created under the Public Companies Act.
The Private Placement Shares are registered in book-entry form with the VPS.
46,973,755 of the Private Placement Shares (equal to approximately 19.99% of the share capital outstanding prior to completion of the Private Placement) was settled on a delivery-versus-payment basis with existing and unencumbered shares in the Company that are already listed and tradeable on the Oslo Stock Exchange, pursuant to a share lending agreement. The remaining 4,639,148 of the Private Placement Shares were issued in a separate tranche of Shares issued at a separate restricted ISIN which will not be listed on Oslo Stock Exchange until publication of this Prospectus.
The 4,639,148 Shares issued on a separate ISIN will be transferred to the ordinary ISIN of the Company's shares and will be tradeable on Oslo Børs under the trading symbol "CLOUD" upon publication of this Prospectus.
The Private Placement Shares carries full Shareholders' rights in the Company on an equal basis as any other Shares in the Company, including the right to any dividends, see Section 5 (Dividends and dividend policy) from 29 September 2022, which was the date the share capital increase related to the Private Placement Shares was registered with the Norwegian Register of Business Enterprises.
For a description of rights attached to the Shares in the Company, see Section 13 (Description of share capital).
The net asset value per existing Share as of 31 December 2021 was approximately NOK 11.21 per share. The offering price in the Private Placement was NOK 15.50 per share.
The percentage of immediate dilution resulting from the Private Placement for the Company's shareholders who did not participate in the Private Placement was approximately 17.7%.
| Prior to Private Placement | After Private Placement | |
|---|---|---|
| Shares outstanding | 239,663,707 | 291,276,610 |
| Dilutive effect | - | 17.7% |
The Managers or their affiliates have provided from time to time, and may provide in the future, financial advisory, investment and commercial banking services, as well as financing, to the Company and its affiliates in the ordinary course of business, for which they may have received and may continue to receive customary fees and commissions. The Manager, their employees and any affiliate may currently own Shares in the Company. The Manager do not intend to disclose the extent of any such investments or transactions otherwise than in accordance with any legal or regulatory obligation to do so. The Managers received a fee of NOK 33.6 million in connection with the Private Placement.
Beyond the above-mentioned, the Company is not aware of any interest, including conflicting ones, of any natural or legal persons involved in the Private Placement.
Certain major shareholders and members of the Company's board of directors and executive management were allocated shares in the Private Placement. The following is an overview over primary insiders that was allocated shares in the Private Placement, at the same terms as other investors:
The Shares may, in certain jurisdictions, be subject to restrictions on transferability and resale and may not be transferred or resold except as permitted under applicable securities laws and regulations. Investors should be aware that they may be required to bear the financial risks of this investment for an indefinite period of time. Any failure to comply with these restrictions may constitute a violation of the securities laws of any such jurisdiction.
Receipt of this Prospectus shall not constitute an offer for Shares and this Prospectus is for information only and should not be copied or redistributed. Accordingly, if an existing Shareholder receives a copy of this Prospectus, such Shareholder should not distribute or send the same, or transfer the Shares to any person or in or into any jurisdiction where to do so would or might contravene with local securities laws or regulations. If an existing Shareholder forwards this Prospectus into any such territories (whether under a contractual or legal obligation or otherwise), such Shareholder should direct the recipient's attention to the contents of this Section 19 (Transfer Restrictions).
The Shares may not be offered, sold, resold, transferred or delivered, directly or indirectly, in or into, any jurisdiction in which it would not be permissible to offer the Shares and this Prospectus shall not be accessed by any person in any jurisdiction in which it would not be permissible to offer the Shares.
Neither the Company nor its representatives, are making any representation to any purchaser of Shares regarding the legality of an investment in the Shares by such purchaser under the laws applicable to such offeree or purchaser.
The information set out in this Section 19 (Transfer Restrictions) is intended as a general guide only. Any potential purchaser of Shares should obtain independent professional advice with regard to any transfer restrictions that apply to such purchaser.
The Shares have not been, and will not be, registered under the U.S. Securities Act, or with any securities regulatory authority of any state or jurisdiction of the United States or under the securities laws or with any securities regulatory authority of any state or other jurisdiction of the United States. Accordingly, the Shares may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration under the U.S. Securities Act.
No public offering of the Shares will be made in the United States.
In any EEA Member State, this Prospectus and any other material in relation to the securities described herein is only addressed to and is only directed at qualified investors in that Member State within the meaning of Article 2(e) of the EU Prospectus Regulation, i.e., only to investors who can receive the offer without an approved prospectus in such EEA Member State.
This Prospectus and any other material in relation to the securities described herein is only being distributed to, and is only directed at persons in the United Kingdom who are qualified investors who (i) are investment professionals falling within Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (as amended) (the Order) or (ii) are persons falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order (high net worth companies, unincorporated associations, etc.) (all such persons together being referred to as Relevant Persons).
These materials are directed only at Relevant Persons and must not be acted on or relied on by persons who are not Relevant Persons. Any investment or investment activity to which this announcement relates is available only to Relevant Persons and will be engaged in only with Relevant Persons. Persons distributing this communication must satisfy themselves that it is lawful to do so.
The Company's independent auditor is Ernst & Young AS (business registration number 976 389 387, and registered business address at Dronning Eufemias gate 6A, 0191 Oslo, Norway). Ernst & Young AS is a member of the Norwegian Institute of Public Accountants (Nw.: Den Norske Revisorforeningen). Ernst & Young AS has been the Company's independent auditor since June 2020.
The Annual Financial Statements for 2020 and 2021 has been audited by Ernst & Young AS. Ernst & Young AS has also provided an assurance report on the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information included in Appendix B-2. Ernst & Young AS has not audited, reviewed or produced any other report on any other information in this Prospectus.
In the period between February 2018 and June 2020, the Company's independent auditor was BDO AS (business registration number 993 606 650, and registered business address at Munkedamsveien 45A, 0250 Oslo, Norway). BDO AS is a member of the Norwegian Institute of Public Accountants (Nw.: Den Norske Revisorforeningen).
BDO AS has audited the Annual Financial Statements for 2019. BDO AS has not audited, reviewed or produced any report on any other information in this Prospectus.
The reason for the change of the auditor in 2020 was to get the same auditor in all companies within the Group. The Company did not have an auditor prior to February 2018.
Carnegie AS (business registration number 936 310 974, and registered business address at Aker Brygge, Fjordalléen 16, 0250 Oslo, Norway), Pareto Securities AS (business registration number 956 632 374, and registered business address at Dronning Mauds gate 3, 0250 Oslo, Norway) and Jefferies GmbH (a company registered under the laws of Germany whose registered address is Bockenheimer Landstraße 24, 60323 Frankfurt am Main, Germany) acted as Joint Global Coordinators and Joint Bookrunners in relation to the Private Placement.
Advokatfirma DLA Piper Norway DA (business registration number 982 216 060, and registered business address at Bryggegata 6, 0250 Oslo, Norway) is acting as legal counsel to the Company in connection with the Private Placements.
Advokatfirmaet Grette (business registration number 820 203 542 and registered business address at Filipstad Brygge 2, 0250 Oslo, Norway) acted as legal counsel to the Managers in connection with the Private Placement.
| Section in this Prospectus | Reference | Reference document and web address |
|---|---|---|
| 4.3.1 | Audited annual reports | Annual report 2019: |
| 7.9.3 | (Cloudberry Clean | https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/Cloudberry-Annual-report |
| 9.1 and 9.2 | Energy ASA) | 2019.pdf |
| 10.3.4, 10.4.1 and 10.9 | ||
| 11.1 and 11.3 | Annual report 2020: | |
| 12.6 | https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/Cloudberry-Clean-Energy | |
| AS-Annual-report-2020.pdf | ||
| Annual report 2021: |
| https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/Cloudberry-Annual-report 2021.pdf |
||
|---|---|---|
| 4.3.1. 9.1 |
Quarterly report Q3 2022 |
https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/Cloudberry-Clean-Energy Q3-2022-report.pdf |
| 11.1.3 | Quarterly report Q2 2022 |
https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/pdf/Cloudberry-Q2-2022- report-revised-with-RS.pdf |
| 11.3 11.5.1 |
Captiva Digital Services AS' audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 |
https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/220603-Cloudberry-Clean Energy-ASA-Prospectus.pdf (page 184 – 192) |
| 11.3 | Selselva Kraft AS' audited financial statements for the years ended 31 December 2020 and 2019 |
https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/220603-Cloudberry-Clean Energy-ASA-Prospectus.pdf (page 233 – 274) |
| 11.3 | Usma Kraft AS' audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2020 and 2019 |
https://www.cloudberry.no/assets/220603-Cloudberry-Clean Energy-ASA-Prospectus.pdf (page 275 – 317) |
Copies of the following documents will be available for inspection at the Company's offices at Frøyas gate 15, 0273 Oslo, Norway, during normal business hours from Monday to Friday each week (except public holidays) for a period of twelve months from the date of this Prospectus:
The documents, except the Company's certificate of incorporation, are also available at the Company's website cloudberry.no. The content of cloudberry.no is not incorporated by reference into, or otherwise form part of, this Prospectus.
| 2021 Acquisitions | Means the acquisitions of 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS, Skåråna Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Usma Kraft AS and Åmotsfoss Kraft AS, and the acquisition of 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS. |
|
|---|---|---|
| 2022 Acquisitions | Means the acquisitions of 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and RE Energi AS, the acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS, the acquisition of the Kafjärden project and the acquisition of Bøen Kraft AS. |
|
| 2022 Sales Transactions | Means the sale of 100% of the shares of Jåstadkraft AS and the sale of 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS. |
|
| Annual Financial Statements |
Audited financial statements for Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA as of and for the years ended 31 December 2021, 2020 and 2019. |
|
| APMs | Alternative performance measures as defined by the European Securities Markets Authority in the ESMA Guidelines on Alternative Performance Measures 2015/1057. |
|
| Articles of Association or Articles |
Articles of Association of the Company as of 7 January 2022 attached hereto as Appendix A. |
|
| Board Member(s) | Member(s) of the Board of Directors. | |
| Board of Directors | The board of directors of the Company. | |
| Captiva Group | Captiva Digital Services AS (reg.no. 927 900 904) and its subsidiaries. | |
| CB Develop | Cloudberry Develop AS, one of the Company's subsidiaries. | |
| CB Production | Cloudberry Production AS, one of the Company's subsidiaries. | |
| CEO | Chief Executive Officer (Nw.: daglig leder). | |
| Cloudberry | Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA. | |
| Company | Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA. | |
| EEA | European Economic Area. | |
| Electricity Certificates | An electronic document issued by the state that one megawatt hour (MWh) of electricity has been generated from renewable sources in accordance with the legislation. |
|
| ESG | Environmental, social and governance. | |
| ESMA | The European Securities and Markets Authority. | |
| EU ETS | The European Union's Emission Trading System. |
| EU Prospectus Regulation |
Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 June 2017 on the prospectus to be published when securities are offered to the public or admitted to trading on a regulated market. |
|---|---|
| Foreign Corporate Shareholders |
Non-Resident Shareholders that are corporate shareholders (i.e. limited liability companies and similar entities). |
| Foreign Individual Shareholders |
Non-Resident Shareholders that are individual shareholders (i.e. other shareholders than Foreign Corporate Shareholders). |
| Foreign Shareholders | Shareholders who are not resident in Norway for tax purposes. |
| Guarantees of Origin | An electronic document proving to a final customer that the corresponding 1 MWh of electrical energy was produced from renewable sources. |
| General Meeting | The general meeting of the Company. |
| Group | The Company and its subsidiaries. |
| IEA | International Energy Agency |
| IFRS | International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union. |
| Interim Financial Statements |
The Group's consolidated interim financial statements for the nine months' period ended 30 September 2022 with comparative figures for the nine months' period ended 30 September 2021. |
| LCOE | Levelised cost of energy is a measure of the average cost of electricity generation for a generating plant over its lifetime. |
| LEI | Legal entity identifier. |
| Listing | The listing on Oslo Stock Exchange of 4,639,148 new Shares on Oslo Stock Exchange. |
| Management | The members of the Group's executive management, being Anders Jørgen Lenborg, Jon Gunnar Solli, Christian Amandus Helland, Charlotte Bergquist, Stig J. Østebrøt and Ingrid Bjørdal. |
| Managers | Pareto Securities AS and Carnegie AS as Joint Gloobal Coordinators and Joint Bookrunners, together with Jefferies GmbH as Joint Bookrunner in the Private Placement. |
| MAR | Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council on market abuse (market abuse regulation). |
| NFSA | The Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway. |
| NGAAP | Norwegian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. |
| NIBOR | Norwegian Interbank Offered Rate. |
| NOK | Norwegian Kroner, the lawful currency of Norway. |
| Norwegian Accounting Act |
The Norwegian Accounting Act of 17 July 1998 no. 56 (Nw.: regnskapsloven). |
|---|---|
| Norwegian Corporate Shareholders |
Shareholders who are limited liability companies (and certain similar entities) domiciled in Norway for tax purposes. |
| Norwegian Energy Act | The Norwegian Energy Act of 29 June 1990 no. 50 (Nw.: energiloven). |
| Norwegian Individual Shareholders |
Norwegian Shareholders other than Norwegian Corporate Shareholders. |
| Norwegian Securities Trading Act |
The Norwegian Securities Trading Act of 28 June 2007 no. 75 (Nw.: verdipapirhandelloven). |
| Norwegian Waterfall Rights Act |
Norwegian Waterfall Rights Act of 14 December 1917 no. 16 (Nw.: vannfallsrettighetsloven). |
| Norwegian Shareholders | Shareholders who are resident in Norway for tax purposes. |
| NUES | Means the Norwegian Code of Practice for Corporate Governance adopted by the Norwegian Corporate Governance Board. |
| NVE | The Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate. |
| Oslo Stock Exchange | Oslo Børs ASA, or, as the context may require, Oslo Børs, a Norwegian regulated market operated by Oslo Børs ASA. |
| PPAs | Power purchase agreements. |
| Private Placement | The NOK 800 million private placement announced by the Company on 22 September 2022 pursuant to which it was issued new Shares in the Company. |
| Private Placement Shares |
The 51,612,903 new Shares issued in relation to the Private Placement to be listed on Oslo Stock Exchange. |
| Prospectus | This Prospectus dated 14 December 2022. |
| Public Companies Act | The Norwegian Public Limited Liability Companies Act of 13 June 1997 no. 45, as amended from time to time. |
| Relevant Member State | Each Member State of the European Economic Area which has implemented the EU Prospectus Regulation. |
| Share(s) | The shares of the Company, each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25. |
| Shareholders | Holders of the Shares. |
| Transparency Act | The Norwegian Transparency Act of 18 June 2021 no. 99, as amended from time to time. |
| TSOs | Transmission system operators. |
| U.S. | The United States of America. |
| U.S. Securities Act | the U.S. Securities Act of 1933. |
|---|---|
| VPS | The Norwegian Central Securities Registry. |
| VPS Registrar | SpareBank 1 SR-Bank ASA. |
***
Appendix A
Articles of Association of Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA
(vedtatt 24. oktober 2022)
Selskapets navn er Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA. Selskapet er et allmennaksjeselskap.
Selskapets forretningskontor skal være i Oslo kommune.
Selskapets virksomhet er som morselskap i konsern å drive investeringsvirksomhet i energisektoren, herunder utvikle og drive produksjon av fornybar energi og virksomhet som naturlig er forbundet med dette.
Selskapets aksjekapital er NOK 72 824 976,25 fordelt på 291 299 905 aksjer, hver pålydende NOK 0,25. Aksjene skal være registrert i Verdipapirsentralen (VPS).
Erververen av en aksje kan ikke utøve de rettigheter som tilkommer en aksjeeier med mindre transaksjonen er innført i Verdipapirsentralen eller erververen har anmeldt og godtgjort transaksjonen. En aksjeeier har kun rett til å delta og stemme i generalforsamlingen når aksjeervervet er innført i Verdipapirsentralen, senest den femte virkedagen før generalforsamlingsdagen.
Selskapets styre skal ha tre til åtte aksjonærvalgte medlemmer.
Selskapet forpliktes ved underskrift av enten daglig
(adopted 24 October 2022)
The name of the company is Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA. The company is a public limited liability company.
The company's registered address shall be in the county of Oslo.
The company's purpose as the parent company of a group is to engage in investment activities in the energy sector, including developing and operating the production of renewable energy and activities naturally connected with this.
The company's share capital is NOK 72,824,976.25 divided among 291,299,905 shares, each with a nominal value of NOK 0.25. The company's shares shall be registered with Verdipapirsentralen (VPS).
The transferee of a share cannot exercise rights that pertain to a shareholder unless the transaction is registered in VPS or the transferee has reported and proved the transaction. A shareholder is only entitled to participate and vote in the General Meeting when the acquisition of shares is registered in VPS, no later than five business days prior to the date of the General Meeting.
The company's Board of Directors shall consist of three to eight shareholder elected members.
The company is committed by the signatures of
leder og styreleder i fellesskap eller to styremedlemmer i fellesskap.
Aksjeeiere som ønsker å delta i generalforsamlingen må melde dette til selskapet innen den frist som angis i innkallingen. Fristen må ikke utløpe tidligere enn 5 dager før generalforsamlingsdagen.
Når dokumenter som gjelder saker som skal behandles i generalforsamlingen er gjort tilgjengelige for aksjonærene på selskapets internettsider, gjelder ikke allmennaksjelovens krav om at dokumentene skal sendes per post til aksjonærene. Dette gjelder også dokumenter som etter allmennaksjeloven eller vedtektene skal inntas i eller vedlegges innkallingen til generalforsamlingen. En aksjonær kan likevel kreve å få tilsendt dokumenter som gjelder saker som skal behandles i generalforsamlingen.
Styret kan beslutte at aksjeeiere kan avgi skriftlig forhåndsstemme i saker som skal behandles i generalforsamlingen. Slike stemmer kan også avgis ved bruk av elektronisk kommunikasjon. Adgangen til å avgi forhåndsstemme er betinget av at det foreligger en betryggende metode for autentisering av avsender. Styret avgjør om det foreligger en slik metode i forkant av den enkelte generalforsamling. Styret kan fastsette nærmere retningslinjer for avgivelse og håndtering av skriftlige forhåndsstemmer. Det skal fremgå av innkallingen til generalforsamlingen om det er gitt adgang til forhåndsstemming, og hvilke retningslinjer som eventuelt er fastsatt for slik stemmegivning.
Ordinær generalforsamling avholdes hvert år innen utgangen av juni måned. Den ordinære generalforsamlingen skal:
either the general manager and chairperson of the Board jointly, or by two board members acting jointly.
Shareholders who wish to participate in the General Meeting must notify the company by the time specified in the notice. The deadline cannot be earlier than 5 days prior the date of the General Meeting.
If documents regarding matters to be considered by the General Meeting are made available for the shareholders on the company's web page, the requirements in the Norwegian Public Limited Liability Companies Act prescribing that documents must be sent by mail to the shareholders shall not apply. This is applicable also to such documents which, according to the Norwegian Public Limited Liability Companies or the Articles of Association, must be included or attached to the notice of the General Meeting. Notwithstanding, a shareholder may demand to receive in printed form documents related to matters which are to be considered by the General Meeting.
The Board may resolve that shareholders may cast their votes in writing prior to the company's General Meetings. Such votes can also be cast by use of electronic communication. The permission to cast an advance vote requires the presence of an adequate method for authenticating the sender. The Board of Directors determines whether an adequate method is present prior to each General Meeting. The Board of Directors may adopt more detailed guidelines for advance voting. It must be stated in the notice of each General Meeting whether advance voting is permitted and which guidelines, if any, are resolved for such voting.
The annual General Meeting shall be held every year by the end of the month of June. The agenda of the annual General Meeting shall include:
approval of the annual accounts and annual report, including any distribution of dividends; and
behandle andre saker som etter lov eller vedtekter hører under generalforsamlingen.
Selskapet skal ha en valgkomité bestående av en leder og to medlemmer valgt av aksjonærene på generalforsamling. Valgperioden er to år med mindre generalforsamlingen har fastsatt en kortere periode. Medlemmene av valgkomitéen kan gjenvelges. Et flertall av medlemmene av valgkomitéen skal være uavhengige av styret samt selskapets ledelse. Daglig leder og øvrige medlemmer av selskapets ledelse kan ikke være medlemmer av valgkomitéen. Styrets leder og daglig leder skal gis anledning til å delta på minst ett møte i valgkomitéen årlig.
Valgkomiteen skal fremme forslag til generalforsamlingen vedrørende valg av styrets leder og aksjonærvalgte medlemmer, samt godtgjørelse til medlemmene av styret. Valgkomitéen skal begrunne sine forslag.
Valgkomitéen skal i sitt arbeid følge Norsk anbefaling for eierstyring og selskapsledelse.
Generalforsamlingen kan fastsette ytterligere retningslinjer for valgkomitéens arbeid.
The company shall have a nomination committee consisting of a chairperson and two members which shall be elected by the shareholders at the General Meeting. The nomination committee shall be elected for a period of two years, unless the General Meeting resolves a shorter period. The members of the nomination committee may be re-elected. A majority of the members in the nomination committee shall be independent of the Board of Directors and the management of the company. The general manager and other members of the company's management cannot be members of the nomination committee. The chairperson of the Board of Directors and the general manager shall be given the opportunity to attend at least one meeting of the nomination committee annually.
The nomination committee shall submit its recommendations to the General Meeting regarding election of the chairperson and shareholder elected members to the Board, as well as remuneration to the members of the Board of Directors. The nomination committee shall give reasons for its proposals.
The nomination committee shall comply with the Norwegian Code of Practice for Corporate Governance in its work.
The General Meeting may resolve further guidelines for the nomination committee's work
Appendix B-1
Unaudited pro forma condensed financial information
Appendix B-1
Unaudited pro forma condensed financial information Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA
FY 2021
31 December 2021
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group (1.1-31.12) |
Selselva Kraft AS (1.1-12.1) |
Skåråna Kraft AS (1.1-23.2) |
Nessakraft AS |
Bjørgelva Kraft AS (1.1-29.6) (1.1-29.6) |
Odal Vind AS |
Usma Kraft AS (1.1-4.7) (1.1-19.8) (1.1-30.11) |
Åmotsfoss Kraft AS |
Captiva Group A (1.1-31.12) |
Tinnkraft AS | Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS |
Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB (1.1-31.12) (15.6-31.12) (1.5-31.12) (1.1-31.12) (1.1-31.12) |
Kafjärden project |
Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS |
RE Energi AS (1.1- 31.12) |
Bøen Kraft AS (1.1-31.12) |
Entities acq. and sold by Captiva, and Stenkalles Holding AS B |
Adjustments NGAAP/IFRS |
Pro forma adjustments/ eliminations |
Pro Forma Condensed Financial Information |
|
| (NOK 1000) | (IFRS) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) (NGAAP) | |||||||||
| Sales revenue Other income |
35,152 5,746 |
121 0 |
0 0 |
3,541 0 |
351 0 |
5,470 0 |
1,871 0 |
31,555 -9,865 |
3,647 0 |
0 0 |
0 0 |
0 0 |
0 0 |
0 12 |
10,528 0 |
17,491 -454 |
-2,867 1 0 |
-2,451 1 0 |
104,409 -4,560 |
|
| Total revenue | 40,898 | 121 | 0 | 3,541 | 351 | 5,470 | 1,871 | 21,691 | 3,647 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 10,528 | 17,037 | -2,867 | -2,451 | 99,849 | |
| Cost of goods sold | -5,447 | 0 | 0 | -121 | -62 | -886 | -125 | -5,099 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -1,874 | 0 | -230 2 | -13,844 | |
| Salary and personnel expenses Other operating expenses |
-28,106 -55,332 |
0 -19 |
0 -1 |
0 -1,094 |
0 -402 |
0 -1,749 |
0 -1,821 |
-19,458 -10,653 |
0 -1,296 |
0 0 |
0 -12 |
0 0 |
0 -87 |
-250 -2,740 |
0 -6,921 |
-13,012 -2,196 |
0 4,231 2 |
0 951 3 |
-60,827 -79,142 |
|
| O perating expenses | -88,885 | -19 | -1 | -1,215 | -464 | 0 | -2,636 | -1,946 | -35,210 | -1,296 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2,990 | -6,921 | -17,082 | 4,231 | 721 | -153,813 |
| Net income/(loss) from ass. comp. and JV | 16,373 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -435 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1,188 4 | 17,126 | |
| EBITDA | -31,614 | 102 | -1 | 2,326 | -112 | -435 | 2,834 | -75 | -13,519 | 2,351 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2,978 | 3,607 | -45 | 1,364 | -542 | -36,839 |
| Depreciation and amortizations | -9,746 | -38 | 0 | -396 | -153 | -2,030 | -122 | -2,701 | -400 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -953 | -116 | -609 3 | -21,075 5 | -38,338 | |
| O perating profit (EBIT) | -41,360 | 64 | -1 | 1,930 | -265 | -435 | 804 | -197 | -16,221 | 1,951 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2,978 | 2,655 | -161 | 755 | -21,617 | -75,176 |
| Financial income | 6,420 | 0 | 0 | 29 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 5,931 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 17 | -3,023 | 0 | 0 | 9,379 | |
| Financial expenses | -28,706 | 0 | 0 | -883 | -314 | -1,451 | -41 | -2,280 | -339 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -1,143 | 1,439 | -6,761 4 | 287 6 | -40,190 | |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | -63,647 | 64 | -1 | 1,076 | -579 | -435 | -644 | -238 | -12,569 | 1,616 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2,978 | 1,528 | -1,745 | -6,005 | -21,330 | -105,987 |
| Income tax expense | 609 | 0 | 0 | -236 | 127 | 0 | 0 | 353 | -356 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | -336 | -277 | 28 5 | 4,619 7 | 4,534 | |
| Profit/(loss) after tax | -63,038 | 64 | -1 | 840 | -452 | -435 | -644 | -238 | -12,217 | 1,261 | 0 | -12 | 0 | -87 | -2,978 | 1,192 | -2,022 | -5,977 | -16,711 | -101,454 |
A: Unaudited Profit and Loss for Captiva Group (1.1-31.12) represent the comparable figures for 2021 presented in the audited consolidated financial statements for Captiva Digital Services AS for the period 1 January 2022 to 31 January 2022, included as Schedule 1.
| Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | Unaudited | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stenkalles Holding | ||||||
| Broentech AS | Fjord Energi AS | Enestor AS | Jåstadkraft AS | AS 1 | Entities acq. and | |
| (1.1-31.12) | (1.1-31.05) | (1.1-31.12) | (1.6-31.12) | (1.1-31.12) | sold by Captiva, and | |
| ( NOK 1000 ) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | (NGAAP) | Stenkalles Holding AS |
| Sales revenues | 5,167 | 459 | 13,040 | -1,175 | 0 | 17,491 |
| Other income | 0 | 0 | 387 | 0 | -841 | -454 |
| Total revenue | 5,167 | 459 | 13,427 | -1,175 | -841 | 17,037 |
| Cost of goods sold | 0 | 0 | -1,924 | 50 | 0 | -1,874 |
| Salary and personnel expenses | -3,890 | -729 | -8,393 | 0 | 0 | -13,012 |
| Other operating expenses | -860 | -136 | -1,739 | 360 | 179 | -2,196 |
| O perating expenses | -4,750 | -865 | -12,056 | 410 | 179 | -17,082 |
| Net income from associated companies and joint | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| EBITDA | 417 | -406 | 1,371 | -765 | -662 | -45 |
| Depreciations and amortisations | -141 | -2 | -48 | 75 | 0 | -116 |
| O perating profit (EBIT) | 276 | -408 | 1,323 | -690 | -662 | -161 |
| Financial income | 4 | 0 | 12 | 0 | -3,039 | -3,023 |
| Financial expense | -46 | -16 | 0 | 339 | 1,162 | 1,439 |
| Profit/(loss) before tax | 234 | -424 | 1,335 | -351 | -2,539 | -1,745 |
| Income tax expense | 0 | 0 | -294 | 17 | 0 | -277 |
| Profit/(loss) after tax | 234 | -424 | 1,041 | -334 | -2,539 | -2,022 |
1 : Stenkalles Holding AS including subsidiaries
The historical financial information above relates to two minor acquisitions made in 2021 by Captiva Group and three transactions concluded in 2022 as also further described in the notes:
The IFRS accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is consistent with those followed in the preparation of the Company's consolidated Annual Financial Statements for the financial year ended 31 December 2021.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been compiled based on and derived from the Company's consolidated Annual Financial Statements as of and for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 to the prospectus and unaudited financial information for Selselva Kraft AS, Skåråna Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Odal Vind AS, Usma Kraft AS and Åmotsfoss Kraft AS for the period from 1 January to the respective acquisition dates, and the audited consolidated financial statements of Captiva Digital Services AS for 1 January 2022 to 31 January 2022 with comparable figures for 2021 incorporated by reference in Section 20.3 to this Prospectus, and the audited financial statements for Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and Bøen Kraft AS, and unaudited financial information for Tinnkraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Kafjärden project and RE Energi AS. The historical information of the acquired entities was prepared in accordance with local GAAP, except for Odal Vind AS which was prepared in accordance with IFRS.
For the purpose of preparing the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information, the Company has assessed differences between local GAAP and IFRS in order for the financial information of the acquired entities to comply with the Company's accounting policies (IFRS). For the Captiva group, Tinnkraft AS, and Bøen Kraft AS such IFRS differences were identified and adjustments were made, please see the pro forma condensed financial information and supporting notes for details. For Selselva Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS, Odal Vind AS, Usma Kraft AS, Åmotsfoss Kraft AS, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, Øvre Kvemma Kraft AS, Kafjärden project, RE Energi AS, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and Enestor AS, no such IFRS differences for the periods 1 January 2021 until the relevant acquisition dates or alternatively 31 December 2021, were identified.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been prepared under the assumption of going concern.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been compiled to comply with the requirements of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act by reference to the EU Prospectus Regulation regarding information contained in prospectuses as well as the format, incorporation by reference and publication of such prospectuses and dissemination of advertisements. The pro forma information is not in compliance with SEC Regulation S-X, and had the securities been registered under the U.S. Securities Act, this unaudited pro forma condensed financial information, including the report by the auditor, would have been amended and/or removed from the Prospectus.
During 2021 and 2022 the Group has completed or entered into certain transactions which, some which are regarded as transactions that constitute significant gross changes or significant commitments. The transactions are further described in Section 7.3 (Recent M&A Activities) in the Prospectus and listed below.
Certain of the transactions represent "significant gross changes", as defined in Article 1€ of Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/980 of 14 March 2019, supplementing the EU Prospectus Regulation. According to these rules, the Company shall provide a description of how the transaction may have affected its assets and liabilities and earnings, had the transaction been undertaken at the commencement of the period being reported on or at the date reported. The pro forma shall be presented as set out in Annex 20 of Regulation (EU) 2019/980, include the information indicated therein and shall be accompanied by a report prepared by an independent auditor.
All transactions listed below are included in the pro forma condensed financial information presented above, in accordance with Annex 20 to Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/980.
The following acquisitions were completed in 2021:
The following acquisitions have been completed in 2022:
The following sales transactions have been completed in 2022:
The following transaction has been agreed in 2022, but is not expected to be completed until 2024:
These transactions are reflected in the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information as set out above.
For the following acquisitions, which were completed at various dates during 2021 (the "2021 Acquisitions"), the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information includes profit and loss information for the period from 1 January 2021 until their respective acquisition dates. As these transactions are already fully reflected in the Company's consolidated statement of financial position as of 31 December 2021, no adjustments were required in the pro forma statement of financial position:
On 13 January 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 65 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 13 January 2021, Selselva Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Selselva Kraft AS).
On 24 February 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS. The purchase price was originally NOK 23.7 million, of which 17 million was settled in cash. The remaining 6 million was subject to adjustment and would be reduced if the project had cost overruns. As per 31 December 2021, there have been cost overruns estimated to NOK 6 million, and hence there will be no further payments to the seller. Upon completion of the acquisition on 24 February 2021, Skåråna Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Skåråna Kraft AS).
On 30 June 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Nessakraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 79.0 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 30 June 2021, Nessakraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and the Company started to consolidate Nessakraft AS into the Group. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.3 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Nessakraft AS).
On 30 June 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bjørgelva Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 10.8 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 30 June 2021, Bjørgelva Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.4 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bjørgelva Kraft AS).
On 5 July 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired additional 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS for a total purchase price of NOK 239.7 million. The acquisition increased Cloudberry Production'AS' ownership in Odal Vind AS from 15% to 33.4%. Odal Vind AS is accounted for as an associated company and the equity method is applied from the acquisition date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.5 (Acquisition of additional 18.4% of the shares of Odal Vind AS).
On 20 August 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 82.9 million. Upon completion of the acquisition on 20 August 2021, Usma Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.6 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Usma Kraft AS).
On 1 December 2021, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 91.4 million. Upon completion of the acquisition 1 December 2021, Åmotsfoss Kraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.1.7 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Åmotsfoss Kraft AS.
The acquisitions of Selselva Kraft AS, Nessakraft AS, Bjørgelva Kraft AS and Usma Kraft AS have been accounted as business combinations and the accounting principles in IFRS 3 have been applied. For further information about these acquisitions, the purchase price considerations and the purchase price allocation, please refer to note 5 Business combinations and other transactions of the Company's Annual Financial Statements for 2021, incorporated by reference in Prospectus Section 20.3.
The acquisitions of Skåråna Kraft AS and Åmotsfoss Kraft AS were accounted as asset acquisitions. For further information about the acquisition and the purchase price considerations please refer to note 5 Business combinations and other transactions of the Annual Financial Statements for 2021, incorporated by reference in Prospectus Section 20.3.
The investment of shares in Odal Vind AS is classified as an associated company and the equity method is applied in the Group accounts, for further information about the acquisition and accounting please refer to note 20 Investment in associated companies of the Annual Financial Statements, incorporated by reference in Prospectus Section 20.3.
For the following acquisitions, which were completed at various dates during 2022 (the "2022 Acquisitions"), the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information includes profit and loss information for the period from 1 January 2021 until 31 December 2021.
On 7 January 2022, the Company acquired 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS, for a total purchase price of NOK 101 million (total enterprise value NOK 160 million). Upon completion of the transaction, Captiva Digital Services AS became a subsidiary of the Company and was consolidated in the Cloudberry Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.1 (Acquisition of 60% of the shares of Captiva Digital Services AS). The subsidiaries and other ownership interests owned by Captiva Digital Services AS at the date of completion were:
i. Captiva Asset Management AS, which owns:
On 1 February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS for a total purchase price of NOK 27.7 million. Upon completion of the acquisition 1 February 2022, Tinnkraft AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.2 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Tinnkraft AS).
On 3 February 2022, Cloudberry Utveckling II AB acquired 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB for a total purchase price of SEK 20 million. SEK 14 million was paid at closing and the remaining SEK 6 million is contingent and will be paid when the project reaches commercial operations date. Upon completion of the acquisition 3 February 2022, Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.3 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB).
On 18 March 2022, Oxenstierna Vind AB acquired the Kafjärden project. A cash payment of SEK 3 million was paid at completion. An additional purchase price will depend on the final outcome of the on-going development of the project (projected 20 – 40 MW) and is also linked to a final investment decision in Cloudberry. If the outcome of the development process results in a 20 MW project, the additional purchase price will be SEK 14 million. If the project reaches its full potential the additional purchase price will be SEK 49 million. The additional purchase price is contingent and is not a part of the pro forma acquisition cost. For further details of the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.4 (Acquisition of the Kafjärden project).
On 30 March 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS. A cash payment of NOK 4.0 million was paid at completion. An amount of NOK 1.6 million was contributed to an escrow account. Upon completion of the acquisition 30 March 2022, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Cloudberry Production AS and was consolidated in the Group accounts from that date. For further details about the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.5 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS).
In February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS made a proposal to all shareholders of RE Energi AS regarding the purchase of minimum 68% of the shares in the company. At the date of this Prospectus 100% of the shares have been acquired at a purchase price of NOK 1 per share, corresponding to NOK 0.1 million. The purchase price will be subject to future adjustments conditional upon the development and construction of a hydro power plant located in Gloppen municipality in Vestland, Norway. For further details of the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.6 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of RE Energi AS ).
In June 2022, Cloudberry Production AS acquired 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS. A cash payment of NOK 85.5 million was paid at completion. NOK 16.2 million of the purchase price was settled by issuance of 935,020 new shares in the Company at a subscription price of NOK 17.32 per shares. For further details of the business acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.7 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Bøen Kraft AS).
In June 2022, Captiva Asset Management AS acquired 25.99% of the shares of Enestor AS. A cash payment of NOK 4.65 million was paid at completion. The acquisition increased Captiva Asset Management AS' ownership in Enestor AS from 25.01% to 51%. Enestor AS was prior to the acquisition accounted for as an associated company using the equity method, while from the date of the transaction on 1 June 2022, Enestor AS is a subsidiary and consolidated in the Group accounts. For further details, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.8 (Increase of ownership from 25.01% to 51% in Enestor AS).
The acquisitions of Captiva Digital Services AS, Tinnkraft AS, Enestor AS and Bøen Kraft AS have been accounted as business combinations and the accounting principles in IFRS 3 have been applied. For further information about these acquisitions, the purchase price considerations, and the purchase price allocation, please refer to note 29 "Subsequent events" of the Company's Annual Financial Statements for 2021, and the Company's Interim Financial Statements for second quarter and first half of 2022, both incorporated by reference in Prospectus Section 20.3, and the purchase price allocation presented below.
The acquisition of Munkhyttan Vindkraft AB, the Kafjärden project, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and RE Energi AS were accounted as asset acquisitions. For further information about the acquisitions and the purchase price considerations please refer to note 29 "Subsequent events" of the Company's Annual Financial Statements for 2021, incorporated by reference in Prospectus Section 20.3.
For the following sales transactions, which were completed at various dates during 2022 (the "2022 sales transactions"), the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information excludes profit and loss information for the period from 1 January 2021 until 31 December 2021.
On 30 June Captiva Energi AS sold 100% of the shares in Jåstadkraft AS. The sales price was NOK 21 million, and the Group recorded a gain of NOK 3.5 million in second quarter 2022, this is not adjusted as a pro forma adjustment for 2021 as it does not have a continuing impact on the Group figures. Jåstadkraft AS was deconsolidated as of 30 June 2022. For further details, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.2.8 (Sale of 100% of the shares of Jåstadkraft AS).
On 19 September Cloudberry Develop AS completed the sale of 50% of the shares in Stenkalles Holding AS. Stenkalles Holding AS owns 100% of the shares in Rewind Vänern AB which again owns 100% of the shares in Stenkalles Vind AB. The three companies represent the Stenkalles development project. The sales price was based on the Group development cost and the gain/loss is preliminary estimated to be NOK 0 million. The sales price is subject to adjustment dependent on the final CAPEX of the Stenkalles project. Stenkalles Holding AS was deconsolidated and the 50% ownership is classified as a joint venture as per 30 September 2022. For further details of the transaction, please see Section 7.3.2.10 (Sale of 50% of the shares of Stenkalles Holding AS.
The effect of all transactions, with the exception of the acquisition of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS which had an insignificant balance sheet as of 31 December 2021 and is expected to be completed in 2024, are reflected as of 30 September 2022 in the Interim Financial Statements. Hence, the pro forma information disclosed in this chapter does not include a pro forma statement of financial position.
On 1 February 2022, Cloudberry Production AS entered into an agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS (established 15 June 2021). The purchase price is estimated to NOK 124 million, adjusted for net debt at completion. The transaction is expected to be completed in H1 2024 once the construction of the power plant has been completed and after a commissioning period. For further details about the business to be acquired, please see Prospectus Section 7.3.3.1 (Acquisition of 100% of the shares of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS). At the date of the agreement NOK 12.4 million was transferred to an escrow account and is restricted cash for the Group.
The acquisition of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS will be accounted for as an asset acquisition.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information has been prepared by the Company for illustrative purposes only to show how the 2021 Acquisitions, 2022 Acquisitions and 2022 Sales transactions might have affected the Company's consolidated statement of profit and loss for the financial year ended 31 December 2021, as if the acquisitions and sales transactions had occurred on 1 January 2021.
The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is based on certain management assumptions and adjustments made to illustrate what the financial results of the Group might have been, had the Company completed the transactions at an earlier point of time.
Although the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is based on estimates and assumptions based on current circumstances believed to be reasonable, actual results could materially differ from those presented herein. There is a greater degree of uncertainty associated with pro forma condensed financial information than with historical financial information. Because of its nature, the Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Financial Information included herein addresses a hypothetical situation, and therefore does not represent the Company's consolidated actual financial results of operations for the financial year ended 31 December 2021 and is not representative of the results of operations and financial position of any future periods. The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information is prepared for illustrative purposes only. It does not purport to present what the Company's consolidated results of operations would have been had the acquisitions been completed on 1 January 2021.
It should be noted that greater uncertainty is associated with unaudited pro forma condensed financial information than actual historical financial information. Prospective investors are cautioned against placing undue reliance on this unaudited pro forma condensed financial information.
The assumptions underlying the pro forma adjustments applied to the historical are described in the notes to the unaudited pro forma condensed financial information. Neither these adjustments nor the resulting Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Financial have been audited in accordance with Norwegian or any other general accepted auditing standards.
This adjustment, leading to a decrease in sales revenue of NOK 2.867 million is related to:
• IFRS 9 adjustment related to financial power price agreement in Bøen Kraft AS where the settlement for power price difference is presented as other operating cost, while according to IFRS the cost is related to the sales price and adjusts the sales revenue for produced volume. Se further IFRS 4 adjustment – Financial expense.
This adjustment, leading to a decrease in other operating expenses of NOK 4.231 million is related to:
This adjustment, leading to an increase in depreciations of total NOK 0.609 million is related to:
This adjustment, leading to an increase in financial expenses of total NOK 6.761 million relates to:
hence the depreciation cost allocated to financial expense is adjusted in the pro forma condensed financial information.
This adjustment, leading to a reduction of tax expense of NOK 0.028 million is related to reduced tax expense due to the net effect of IFRS 16 adjustments on profit before tax of Captiva Group and Tinnkraft AS of NOK 0.025 million and NOK 0.004 million respectively. See IFRS adjustment 2 to 3 earlier in this Section.
The table gives a summary per entity of the pro forma adjustments 1-7 described below:
| Total pro forma adjustments and |
|||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pro Forma adjustment ( NOK million ) | Captiva Group | Tinnkraft AS | Bøen Kraft AS | Cloudberry Group | elim. |
| 1. Sales revenues | -5.386 | 2.936 | -2.451 | ||
| 2. Cost of goods sold | -0.150 | -0.080 | -0.230 | ||
| 3. Other operating expenses | 0.150 | 0.080 | 0.722 | 0.951 | |
| 4. Net income from associated companies and joint ventures | -0.081 | 1.269 | 1.188 | ||
| 5. Depreciations and amortisations | 0.085 | -21.159 | -21.075 | ||
| 6. Financial expense | 0.287 | 0.287 | |||
| 7. Income tax expense | -0.018 | 4.637 | 4.619 | ||
| Total | -5.113 | 0.000 | 0.000 | -11.595 | -16.711 |
This adjustment, leading to a decrease in sales revenues of total NOK 2.451 million is related to:
This adjustment, leading to an increase of cost of goods sold of NOK 0.230 million is related to:
• Increased of NOK 0.150 million to align the accounting principles of Tinnkraft AS to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group, grid cost is classified as cost of goods sold, while in the company accounts of Tinnkraft it is classified as other operating expenses. Hence the grid cost of NOK 0.150 million is classified as cost of goods sold instead of other operating expenses as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
• Increased of NOK 0.080 million to align the accounting principles of Bøen Kraft AS to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group, grid cost is classified as cost of goods sold, while in the company accounts of Bøen Kraft AS it is classified as other operating expenses. Hence the grid cost of NOK 0.080 million is classified as cost of goods sold instead of other operating expenses as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
This adjustment, leading to a decrease of total NOK 0.951 million in other operating expenses relates to:
This adjustment leading to an increase of total NOK 1.188 million in net income from associated companies and joint venture is related to:
This adjustment leading to an increase of total NOK 21.075 million in depreciations and amortisations is related to:
Reference is made to the preliminary purchase price allocation below.
This adjustment, leading to a reduction of NOK 0.287 million in financial expenses is related to reclassification of net income from associated companies to align the accounting principles of Captiva Group to the accounting principles of the Group. In the Group net income from associated companies is classified as net income in associated companies, while in the Captiva group accounts this is classified as financial income or expense. Hence, net income from associated companies in Captiva is reclassified as a pro forma adjustment to align the accounting principles to the principles of the Group.
This adjustment, leading to a reduced tax expense of total NOK 4.619 million is related to:
Åmotsfoss Kraft AS of NOK 0.494 million, Captiva Group of NOK 2.932 million, Tinnkraft AS of NOK 0.108 million and Bøen Kraft AS of NOK 0.755 million.
All the pro forma adjustments 1 to 7 have continuing impact, except pro forma adjustment 5 of NOK 0.299 million, NOK 0.186 million and NOK 0.378 million, which relates to transaction costs of the Tinnkraft acquisition, the Bøen Kraft acquisition and the sale of Stenkalles, that do not have any continuing impact.
Please see the table below for the preliminary purchase price allocations which have been prepared and have been used as a basis for the unaudited pro forma condensed information:
Alloaction of purchase price
| NOK 1000 | Captiva Group | Tinnkraft AS | Bøen Kraft AS | Enestor AS* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acquisition date | 07.01.2022 | 01.02.2022 | 09.06.2022 | 01.06.2022 |
| Voting rights/shareholding acquired through the acquisition | 60 % | 100 % | 100 % | 26 % |
| Total voting rights after the acqusition | 60 % | 100 % | 100 % | 51 % |
| Non controlling interests | 40 % | 0 % | 0 % | 49 % |
| Consideration | ||||
| Cash | 50,519 | 27,655 | 85,464 | 4,650 |
| Shares | 50,519 | 0 | 16,195 | 0 |
| Total acquisition cost | 101,037 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Book value of net assets (se table below) | 36,060 | 4,575 | -10,750 | 3,799 |
| Identification of excess value. attributable to: | ||||
| Intangible assets | 66,564 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Property, plant and equipment | 641 | 29,590 | 144,114 | 0 |
| Inventory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other | 2,282 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Gross excess value | 69,487 | 29,590 | 144,114 | 0 |
| Deferred tax on excess value | -15,067 | -6,510 | -31,705 | 0 |
| Net excess value | 54,420 | 23,080 | 112,409 | 0 |
| Fair value of net acquired assets excluding goodwill | 90,480 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 3,799 |
| Of which | ||||
| Non controlling interest | 36,192 | 0 | 0 | 1,862 |
| Controlling interests | 54,288 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 1,937 |
| Total acquisition cost (controlling interest) | 101,037 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Fair value of net aquired assets ex goodwill (controlling interest) | 54,288 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 701 |
| Goodwill (controlling interest) | 46,750 | 0 | 0 | 3,949 |
| Goodwill (non controlling interest) | 31,166 | 0 | 0 | 3,637 |
| Goodwill (100%) | 77,916 | 0 | 0 | 7,585 |
| Total non controlling interest | 67,358 | 0 | 0 | 5,499 |
| Book value net aquired assets | ||||
| NOK 1000 | Captiva Group | Tinnkraft AS | Bøen Kraft AS | Enestor AS* |
| Deferred tax asset | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Intangible assets | 27,477 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Property, plants and equipment | 16,482 | 13,422 | 32,289 | 386 |
| Goodwill | 1,338 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other non-current assets | 3,077 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Financial non-current assets | 5,628 | 0 | 1,662 | 0 |
| Inventory | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other current assets | 29,642 | 0 | 3,139 | 2,821 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 160,688 | 1,666 | 11,165 | 3,290 |
| Acquired assets | 244,332 | 15,087 | 48,256 | 6,497 |
| Interest bearing debt, long term | 20,264 | 10,000 | 32,746 | 0 |
| Other non current liabilities | 10 | 0 | 18,000 | 0 |
| Current liabilities | 184,732 | 513 | 7,918 | 0 |
| Deferred tax liability | 3,265 | 0 | 342 | 0 |
| Other liabilities | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,698 |
| Net asset value aquired assets | 36,060 | 4,575 | -10,750 | 3,799 |
| Total acquisition cost | 101,037 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Non cash consideration | 50,519 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Cash consideration | 50,519 | 27,655 | 101,659 | 4,650 |
| Cash in acquired company | -160,688 | -1,666 | -11,165 | -3,290 |
| Net cash outflow at acquisition (inflow) | -110,169 | 25,989 | 90,494 | 1,360 |
*Ownership through Captiva Group
Frank Jarle Berg
Chairperson
Benedicte Heidenreich Fossum Board Member
Stefanie Witte Board Member
Henrik Joelsson Board Member
Liv Eiklo Lønnum Board Member
Petter Winther Borg Board Member
Nicolai Nordstrand Board Member
Captiva Digital Services AS Org.nr: 927 900 904
Perioderegnskap konsern per 31.01.2022
Revisjonsberetning
| Captiva Digital Services AS | Captiva Digital Services AS konsern | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 01.01 .- 31.01.2022 Beløp i NOK | Note | 01.01 .- 31.01.2022 | 2021 | ||
| DRIFTSINNTEKTER | |||||
| Salgsinntekt | 16 | 3 249 662 | 31 555 380 | ||
| Annen driftsinntekt | 17 | -9 864 606 | |||
| Sum driftsinntekter | 3 249 662 | 21 690 774 | |||
| DRIFTSKOSTNADER | |||||
| Varekostnad | 561 461 | 5 098 702 | |||
| Lønnskostnad | 3, 4, 15 | 2 208 845 | 19 457 955 | ||
| Avskrivninger | 5 | 751 045 | 2 509 854 | ||
| Annen driftskostnad | 3, 11, 15 | 1 046 813 | 10 653 490 | ||
| Sum driftskostnader | 4 568 164 | 37 911 327 | |||
| DRIFTSRESULTAT | -1 318 502 | -16 220 553 | |||
| FINANSINNTEKTER OG FINANSKOSTNADER | |||||
| Inntekt på investering i tilknyttet selskap | 8 | -163 907 | -287 484 | ||
| Renteinntekt | 11, 15 | ||||
| Annen finansinntekt | 580 448 | 5 930 928 | |||
| Sum finansinntekter | 416 547 | 5 643 444 | |||
| Rentekostnad | 11, 15 | ||||
| Annen finanskostnad | -180 724 | 1 992 370 | |||
| Sum finanskostnader | -180 724 | 1 992 370 | |||
| Netto finanskostnad | 597 264 | 3 651 074 | |||
| RESULTAT FØR SKATTEKOSTNAD | -721 238 | =12 569 479 | |||
| Skattekostnad | 14 | 36 028 | 352 628 | ||
| ARSRESULTAT | -685 210 | =12 216 850 | |||
| Overføringer og disponeringer | |||||
| Utbytte | |||||
| Overføringer annen egenkapital | -685 210 | -12 216 851 | |||
| Majoritetens andel av årsresultatet | -699 733 | -12 131 191 | |||
| Minoritetens andel av årsresultatet | 14 523 | -85 660 |
| Captiva Digital Services AS | Captiva Digital Services AS konsern | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.12.2021 | 31.01.2022 Beløp i NOK | Note | 31.01.2022 | 31.12.2021 | |
| ANLEGGSMIDLER | |||||
| Immaterielle eiendeler | 5 | 27 839 181 | 27 477 055 | ||
| Lisenser, forskning og utvikling Goodwill |
5 | 1 300 566 | 1 337 511 | ||
| Sum immaterielle eiendeler | 29 139 747 | 28 814 566 | |||
| Varige driftsmidler Tomter, bygninger og annen fast eiendom |
5 | 15 076 978 | 15 111 286 | ||
| Driftsløsøre, inventar, verktøy o.l | 5 | 1 353 983 | 1 370 993 | ||
| Sum varige driftsmidler | 16 430 961 | 16 482 280 | |||
| 8 769 770 | Finansielle anleggsmidler 8 769 770 Investeringer i datterselskap |
6 | -0 | -0 | |
| Investeringer i tilknyttet selskap | 8 | 5 464 127 | 5 628 034 | ||
| Investering i aksjer og andeler | 9 | 588 900 | 3 039 911 | ||
| Andre langsiktige fordringer | 31 354 | 37 315 | |||
| 8 769 770 | 8 769 770 Sum finansielle anleggsmidler | 6 084 381 | 8 705 259 | ||
| 8 769 770 | 8 769 770 Sum anleggsmidler | 51 655 090 | 54 002 105 | ||
| OMLØPSMIDLER | |||||
| Fordringer | |||||
| Kundefordringer | 7 910 183 | 9 188 387 | |||
| Andre fordringer | 48 752 260 | 20 453 150 | |||
| Sum fordringer | 56 662 444 | 29 641 537 | |||
| 39 930 | 39 930 Bankinnskudd, kontanter og lignende | 7 | 177 688 462 | 160 687 901 | |
| 39 930 | 39 930 | Sum omløpsmidler | 234 350 906 | 190 329 438 | |
| 8 809 700 | 8 809 700 SUM EIENDELER | 286 005 996 | 244 331 543 |
| Captiva Digital Services AS | Captiva Digital Services AS konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.12.2021 | 31.01.2022 Beløp i NOK | Note | 31.01.2022 | 31.12.2021 |
| EGENKAPITAL | ||||
| Innskutt egenkapital | ||||
| 30 000 | 60 000 Aksjekapital | 2. 13 | 60 000 | 30 000 |
| 9 930 39 930 |
8 749 700 Overkursfond 8 809 700 Sum innskutt egenkapital |
13 | 8 749 700 8 809 700 |
9 930 39 930 |
| Opptjent egenkapital | ||||
| 8 769 770 | Annen egenkapital | 13 | 22 925 036 | 32 394 539 |
| 8 769 770 | Sum opptjent egenkapital | 22,925 036 | 32 394 539 | |
| Minoritetsinteresser | 13 | 3 639 591 | 3 625 069 | |
| 8 809 700 | 8 809 700 Sum egenkapital | 35 374 328 | 36 059 538 | |
| GJELD | ||||
| Avsetning for forpliktelser | ||||
| Utsatt skatt | 14 | 3 229 366 | 3 265 395 | |
| Sum avsetning for forpliktelser | 3-229 366 | 3 265 395 | ||
| Annen langsiktig gjeld | 20 000 000 | 20 263 734 | ||
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjoner | 12 | 10 000 | 10 000 | |
| Øvrig langsiktig gjeld Sum annen langsiktig gjeld |
20 010 000 | 20 273 734 | ||
| Kortsiktig gjeld | ||||
| Leverandørgjeld | 7 967 392 | 11 783 628 | ||
| Betalbar skatt | 14 | |||
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 1 521 891 | 1 691 088 | ||
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | 217 903 016 | 171 258 155 | ||
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | 227 392 299 | 184 732 871 | ||
| Sum gjeld | 250 631 666 | 208 272 000 | ||
| 8 809 700 | 8 809 700 SUM EGENKAPITAL OG GJELD | 286 005 994 | 244 331 537 |
Styreleder
Frank Jarle Berg
Oslo fredag 8. april 2022
Stig J. Østebrøt Styremedlem
Anders Lenborg Styremedlem
Captiva Digital Services AS konsern
| 31.01.2022 Beløp i NOK | Note | 31.01.2022 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kontantstrømmer fra operasjonelle aktiviteter | |||
| Resultat før skattekostnad | -685 210 | ||
| Resultandel tilknyttet selskap | 163 907 | ||
| Betalte skatter | |||
| Avskrivninger | 751 045 | ||
| - Endring i varer, kundefordringer og leverandørgjeld | -2 538 033 | ||
| Endring i andre tidsavgrensningsposter | 17 617 412 | ||
| Netto kontantstrøm fra operasjonelle aktiviteter | 15 309 121 | ||
| Kontantstrømmer fra investeringsaktiviteter | |||
| Investering i datterselskap | |||
| Salg av datterselskap | 3 031 402 | ||
| Investeringer i aksjer og tilkyttede selskap | |||
| Kjøp av varige driftsmidler | -1 076 226 | ||
| Netto kontantstrøm fra investeringsaktiviteter | 1 955 176 | ||
| Kontantstrømmer fra finansieringsaktiviteter | |||
| Netto opptak/avdrag rentebærende gjeld | -263 734 | ||
| Utbetalt utbytte | |||
| Netto kontantstrøm fra finansieringsaktiviteter | -263 734 | ||
| 17 000 562 | |||
| Netto endring i likvider i året 39 930 Kontanter og bankinnskudd pr. 01.01 |
160 687 907 | ||
| 39 930 Kontanter og bankinnskudd pr. 31.12 | 177 688 462 | ||
| 7 | |||
| Herav bundne skattetrekksmidler | 1 028 699 | ||
| Herav bundet depositumskonto eSett | 7 | 30 963 730 |
Den høye kontantbeholdningen per 31.01.2022 må ses i sammenheng med høy kortsiktig gjeld i Kraftanmelding AS per 31.01.2022 på 193 MNOK
Årsregnskapet er satt opp i samsvar med regnskapslovens bestemmelser og god regnskapsskikk.
Konsemregnskapet omfatter morselskapet Capital Services AS, datterselskaper og selskaper som Captiva Digital Services AS har bestemmende innflytelse over. Bestemmende innflytelse oppnås normalt når konsemet eier mer enn 50% av aksjene i selskapet, og konsernet er i stand til å utøve faktisk kontroll over selskapet. Minoritetsinteresser inngår i konsernegnskapet er utarbeidet som om konsernet var en økonomisk enhet. Transaksjoner og mellom selskapene i konsernet er eliminert. Konsernregnskapet er utarbeidet etter ensartede prinsipper, ved at datterselskapet følger de samme regnskapsprinsipper som morselskapet. Datterselskap som inngår i konsernet fremgår av note 6.
Oppkjøpsmetoden benyttes ved regnskapsføring av virksomhetssammenslutninger. Selskaper som er kjøpt eller solgt i løpet av året inkluderes i konsernregnskapet fra det tidspunktet kontroll oppnås og inntil kontroll opphører.
Tilknyttede selskaper er enheter hvor konsernet har betydelig (men ikke bestemmende) innflytelse, over den finansielle og operasjonelle styringen (normalt ved eierandel på mellom 20 %). Konsernegnskapet inkluderer konsernets andel av resullat fra tilknyttede selskaper regnskapsført etter egenkapitalmetoden fra det tidspunktet betydelig innflytelse oppnås og inntil slik innflytelse opphører.
Når konsernets tapsandel overstiger i et tilknyttet selskap, reduseres konsernets balanseførte verdi til null og ytterligere tap regnskapsføres ikke med mindre konsernet har en forpliktelse til å dekke dette tapet.
Konsernet er etablert 07.01.2022. Konsernregnskapet for januar 2022 viser konsernregnstall for 01.01.2022-31.12.2022 og sammenlignbare tall for 2021 forutsatt at konsernet var etablert 01.01.2021.
Datterselskaper og tilknyttede selskaper vurderes etter kostmetoden i selskapsregnskapet. Investeringen er vurdert til anskaffelsest for aksjene med mindre nedskrivning har vært nødvendig. Det er foretatt nedskrivning til virkelig verdi når verdifall skyldes årsaker som ikke kan antas å være forbigående og det må anses nødvendig etter god regnskapsskikk. Nedskrivninger er reversert når grunnlaget for nedskrivning ikke lenger er til stede.
Utbytte og andre utdelinger er inntektsført samme år som det er avsatt i datterselskapet. Overstiger utbytte andel av tilbakeholdt resullat etter kjøpet, representerer den overskytende del tilbakebetaling av investert kapital, og utdelingene er fratrukket investeringens verdi i balansen.
Inntektsføring ved salg av varer skjer på leveringstidsføres i tåkt med utførelsen. Leieinntekter inntekter inntektsøres etter avtalemessig opptjening. Innteksføring ved salg av strøm i datterselskapet Kraftanmelding AS er presentert netto, brutto salg av strøm på Nord pool minus varekjøp strøm til kraftselskapene. Se nærmere presentasjon av brutto salg og varekjøp i note 16 - salgsinntekter.
Omløpsmidler og kortsiktig gjeld omfatter poster som forfaller til betaling innen ett år etter balansedagen, samt poster som knytter seg til varekretsløpet. Øvrige poster er klassifisert som anleggsmiddel/langsiktig gjeld.
Omløpsmidler vurderes til laveste av anskaffelseskost og virkelig gjeld balanseføres til nominelt beløp på etableringstidspunktet.
Anleggsmidler vurderes til anskaffelseskost, men nedskrives til virkelig verdifall som ikke forventes å være forbigående. Anleggsmidler med begrenset økonomisk levetid avskrives planmessig. Langsiktig gjeld balanseføres til nominelt beløp på etableringstidspunktet.
Kundefordringer og andre fordringer er oppført i balansen til pålydende etter fradrag for avsetning til forventet tap. Avselning til tap gjøres på grunnlag av individuelle vurderingene. I tillegg gjøres det for øvrige kundefordringer en uspesifisert avselning for å dekke antatt tap.
Varige driftsmidler balanseføres og avskrives over driftsmidlets forventede økonomiske levelid. Direkte vedlikehold av driftsmidler kostnadsføres løpende under diftskostnader, mens påkoshinger tillegges driftsmidlets kostpris og avskrives i takt med driftsmidlet. Dersom gjenvinnbart beløp av diftsmiddelet er lavere enn balanseført verdi foretas nedskrivning til gjenvinnbart beløp. Gjenvinnbart beløp er det høyeste av netto salgsverdi i bruk. Verdi i bruk er nåverdien av de fremtidige kontantstrømmene som eiendelen vil generere. Kjøpt goodwill avskrives over 5 år.
Skattekostnaden i resultatregnskapet omfatter både periodens betalbare skatt. Utsatt skatt. Utsatt skatt er beregnet med 22 % på grunnlag av de midlertidige forskjeller som eksisterer mellom regnskapsmessige verdier, samt ligningsmessig underskudd til fremføring ved utgangen av regnskapsåret. Skattereduserende midlertidige forskjeller som reverserer eller kan reversere i samme periode er utlignet og nettoført. Netto utsatt skattefordel balanseføres i den grad det er samnsynlig at denne kan bli nyttegjort. Ved beregning av utsatt skalt på merverdier i forbindelse med oppkjøpte selskap er en skattesats på 10 % benyttet.
Kontantstrømoppstillingen er utarbeidet etter den indirekte metode. Kontanter og kontanter, bankinnskudd, herunder bundhe bankinnskudd og andre kortsiktige, likvide plasseringer. Viser ikke sammenlignbare tall for 2021.
Ledelsen har brukt estimaler og forutselninger som har påvirket resullatregnskapet og gjeld, samt usikre eiendeler og forpliktelser på balansedagen under utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet i henhold til god regnskapsskikk.
Note
Konsemet er etablert 7.01.2022. Sammenlignbare tall for konsernet forutsatt at konsernet var etablert fra 01.01.2021.
| Aksjonær | Antall aksjer | Pälydende | Aksjekapital | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ordinære aksjer | 1 000 | 30 | 30 000 | |
| Sum | 1 000 | 30 | 30 000 | |
| Ordinære | ||||
| Aksjonær | Styremedlem | aksjer | Eierandel | Stemme-andel |
| Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA | 600 | 60.0 % | 60,0 % | |
| Captiva Capital Partner AS | 400 | 40.0 % | 40.0 % | |
| Sum | 1 000 | 100,0 % | 100,0 % |
3 Lønnskostnader, antall ansatte, lån til ansatte og godtgjørelse til revisor Note Note
| Morselskap | Konsern | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | Lønnskostnader | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |
| Lønninger | 2 302 884 | 18 051 216 | |||
| Arbeidsgiveravgift | 420 394 | 2 647 554 | |||
| - | Pensjonskostnader | 99 305 | 977 270 | ||
| - | Andre ytelser/innleid personell | 34 407 | 287 042 | ||
| Aktiverte lønnskostnader | -648 144 | -2 505 126 | |||
| Sum | 2 208 846 | 19 457 956 |
Gjennomsnittlig antall årsverk
16,7
| Daglig leder/styre- | ||
|---|---|---|
| Ytelser til ledende personer - morselskap og konsern | Styreleder Styremedlem | medlem |
| Lønn | 210 267 | |
| Pensjonsutgifter | 7 373 | |
| Andre ytelser | 1 439 | |
| Sum | 219 078 |
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 Godtgjørelse til revisor | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |
| Revisjon eks. mva. | 224 840 | |||
| Andre tienester eks. mva. | 41 250 | |||
| Sum | D | 266 090 |
Selskapet og konsernet er pliktig til å ha tjenestepensjonsordning etter lov om obligatorisk tjenestepensjon. Selskapets pensjonsordninger tilfredsstiller kravene i denne lov. Selskapet og konsernet har i 2022 ikke utbetalt honorar til styret utover normal lønn.
| l omter, | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| bygninger og | Driftsløsøre, | |||
| annen fast | Maskiner og | inventar, | ||
| Varige driftsmidler konsern | eiendom | anlegg | verktøy o.l. | Sum konsern |
| Anskaffelseskost pr. 01.01 | 17 584 594 | 1 334 054 | 1 074 741 | 19 993 389 |
| Tilganger | 109 638 | 109 638 | ||
| Avganger | ||||
| Anskaffelseskost pr. 31.01.2022 | 17 584 594 | 1 334 054 | 1 184 379 | 20 103 028 |
| Akkumulerte avskrivninger pr. 31.01. | 2 506 931 | 372 150 | 792 986 | 3 672 066 |
| Balanseført pr. 31.01.2021 | 15 077 663 | 961 904 | 391 393 | 16 430 961 |
| Arets avskrivninger | 33 622 | 2 379 | 15 317 | 51 318 |
| Avskrivningsplan Økonomisk levetid (år) |
Lineær 25-50 |
Lineær 5-10 |
| Forskning og | Andre | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| lmmaterielle eiendeler konsern | Goodwill | Lisenser | utvikling | rettigheter Sum konsern | |
| Anskaffelseskost pr. 01.01 | 2 216 670 | 9 533 755 | 14 430 140 | 5 041 931 | 31 222 497 |
| Tilganger | 642 615 | 382 293 | 0 | 1 024 908 | |
| Avganger | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Anskaffelseskost pr. 31.01.2022 | 2 216 670 | 10 176 370 | 14 812 433 | 5 041 931 | 32 247 405 |
| Akkumulerte avskrivninger pr. 31.01 | 916 104 | 1 696 624 | 388 003 | 106.926 | 3 107 657 |
| Balanseført pr. 31.01.2022 | 1 300 566 | 8 479 746 | 14 424 430 | 4 935 005 | 29 139 748 |
| Arets avskrivninger | 36 945 | 265 153 | 290 703 | 106 926 | 699 727 |
| Avskrivningsplan Økonomisk levetid (år) |
Lineær 5 |
Ingen 5 |
Lineær 5-10 |
Lineær 3-5 |
| Anskaffet | Eierandel og | Resultat | Bokført | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selskap | ar | Kontor | stemmeandel Bokført verdi | 31.01.2022 | egenkapital | |
| Captiva Asset Management AS | 2009 | Oslo | 100.0 % | 6 915 736 | -942 513 | 2 215 267 |
| Captiva Energi AS | 2016 | Oslo | 100.0 % | 1 814 034 | 602 535 | 31 003 520 |
| Captiva Digital Solutions AS | 2021 | Oslo | 100.0 % | 40 000 | -297 193 | -422 147 |
| 8769770 | -637 171 | 32 796 640 |
I konsernet inngår i tillegg følgende datterdatterselskap:
| Anskaffet | Eierandel og | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selskap | ar | Kontor | stemmeandel Bokført verdi Arsresultat | Sum egenkapital | ||
| Captiva Financial Services AS | 2018 | Oslo | 100 % | 40 000 | 200 757 | 234 813 |
| Kraftanmelding AS | 2019 | Oslo | 51 % | 3 000 000 | -26 079 | 2 620 112 |
| Fjord Energi AS | 2021 | Oslo | 51 % | 1 794 689 | -130 770 | 480 829 |
| Broentech Solutions AS | 2021 | Oslo | 51 % | 9 330 897 | 55 717 | 4 807 625 |
| Jåstadkraft AS | 2021 | Oslo | 51 % | 2 600 283 | 180 923 | -2 794 819 |
| 16 765 869 | 280 548 | 5 348 560 |
| Morselskap | Konsern | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 Bundne midler | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | ||
| Skattetrekksmidler/depositum | 1 028 699 | 1 321 142 | |||
| Depositumskonto eSett, sikkerhet for oppgjør Nord Pool | 30 963 730 | 60 270 248 | |||
| 31 992 429 | 61 591 390 |
Morselskap
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | Balanseført verdi | 31.01.2022 | 2021 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proxima HydroTech AS, 33 % eierandel | 1 863 362 | 1 979 432 | ||
| Enestor AS, 25 % eierandel | 3 592 765 | 3 640 602 | ||
| Captiva SPV 1903 AS, 20 % eierandel | 8 000 | 8 000 | ||
| 5 456 127 | 5 620 034 | |||
| Investering etter egenkapitalmetoden Proxima HydroTech AS: | ||||
| Eierandel | 33 % | |||
| Kostpris | 900 000 | |||
| Andel egenkapital 31.12.2016 | 900 000 | |||
| Resultatandel 2017 | 78 639 | |||
| Resultatandel 2018 | 225 268 | |||
| Resultatandel 2019 | -48 175 | |||
| Resultatandel 2020 | 305 561 | |||
| Kjøp 2021 | 600 000 | |||
| Resultatandel 2021 før kjøp | -536 556 | |||
| Gevinst ved utvanning fra 45 % til 33 % | -515 078 | |||
| Korrigering resultatandel 2020 | 69 774 | |||
| Resultatandel 01.01.2022-31.01.2022 | -116 070 | |||
| Andel egenkapital 31.01.2022 | 1 863 362 | |||
| Investering etter egenkapitalmetoden Enestor AS: | ||||
| Eierandel | 25 % | |||
| Kostpris | 3 871 670 | |||
| Andel egenkapital 30.06.2021 | 715 367 | |||
| Goodwill | 3 156 303 | |||
| Resultatandel 2021 | -231 068 | |||
| Resultatandel 01.01.2022-31.01.2022 | -47 837 | |||
| Andel egenkapital 31.01.2022 | 3 592 765 | |||
| Investering etter egenkapitalmetoden Captiva SPV 1903 AS: | ||||
| Eierandel | 20 % | |||
| licidi in the first of the first of the formation of the formation of the formation of the formation of the formation of the formation of the formation of the formation of th | |
|---|---|
| Kostpris | 40 000 |
| Salg 2021 | -32 000 |
| Andel egenkapital 31.01.2022 | 8 000 |
| Morselskap | 31.01.2022 Balanseført verdi Eierandel |
Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |||
| 1 | Hydronor AS | 11.8 % | 578 900 | 578 900 | |
| Nordfjordbrua AS | 0.2 % | 10 000 | 10 000 | ||
| 588 900 | 5 640 194 |
| Morselskap | ||
|---|---|---|
| Mellomværender | 31.01.2022 | |
| Lån til foretak i samme konsern | ||
| Kundefordringer | ||
| Øvrig langsiktig gjeld | ||
| Leverandørgjeld | 0 | |
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | ||
| Sum |
| Transaksjoner | Morselskap | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |||
| Driftsinntekter |
| Driftskostnader | STATISTICS AND IN CONSULT OF CLAIM OF CHEARTH OF CHEARTH OF CHEARTH AND THE FOR | |
|---|---|---|
| Finansinntekter | - - | - |
| Finanskostnader | ||
| Sum |
Gjeld, pant og garantier
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | Gjeld | 31.01.2022 | 2021 |
| Langsiktig gjeld til kredittinstitusjoner | 20 000 000 | 20 263 734 | ||
| - | Kortsiktig gjeld til kredittinstitusjoner | |||
| = | Sum | 20 000 000 | 20 263 734 | |
| 31.01.2022 | Pant | 2021 | ||
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | |||
| Varige driftsmidler | ||||
| Driftsmidler | 272 901 | 283 942 | ||
| Andre fordringer | 3 248 631 | 4 506 259 | ||
| Kundefordringer | 7 590 457 | 4 828 017 | ||
Gjeld til kreditinstitusjoner i Captiva Energi AS er pansatt i driftsmidler og fordringer i Capiva Asset Management AS. I tillegg er gjelden sikret med aksjer i Captiva Energi AS med bokført verdi på 1.814.034 NOK samt aksjer i Jåstadkraft AS med bokført verdi på 2.600.283 NOK
| Langsiktig gjeld med forfall senerer enn 5 år | 31.01.2022 |
|---|---|
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjoner | 20 000 000 |
| Annen | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morselskap | Aksjekapital | Overkurs | egenkapital | Sum |
| Egenkapital pr. 01.01 | 30 000 | 3 000 | 8 776 700 | 8 809 700 |
| Arsresultat | ||||
| Kapitalforhøyelse | 30 000 | 8 746 700 | -8 776 700 | |
| Egenkapital pr. 31.01.2022 | 60 000 | 8 749 700 | E | 8 809 700 |
| Annen | Minoritets- | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Konsern | Aksjekapital | Overkurs | egenkapital | interesse | Sum |
| Egenkapital pr. 01.01 | 30 000 | 3 000 | 32 401 469 | 3 625 069 | 36 059 538 |
| Arsresultat | - | -699 733 | 14 523 | -685 210 | |
| Avsatt utbytte | |||||
| Kapitalforhøvelse | 30 000 | 8 746 700 | -8 776 700 | ||
| Egenkapital pr. 31.01.2022 | 60 000 | 8 749 700 | 22 925 036 | 3 639 591 | 35 374 327 |
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.101.2022 | Arets skattekostnad | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | ||
| Betalbar skatt | ||||||
| Endring utsatt skatt | 36 028 | 352 628 | ||||
| Sum | 36 028 | 352 628 |
| Morselskap | ||
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2022 | Skattepliktig resultat |
| Resultat før skattekostnad | ||
| Tilbakeføring av inntektsført utbytte | ||
| Resultatført konsernbidrag | ||
| Endring i midlertidige forskjeller | ||
| Benyttet fremførbart underskudd |
| Mottatt konsernbidrag | ||
|---|---|---|
| Ytet konsembidrag | ||
| Sum | ||
| - Betalbar skatt i balansen 22% |
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | Midlertidige forskjeller | 31.01.2022 | 2021 |
| - | Imaterielle eiendeler og varige driftsmidler | -55 626 | -55 626 | |
| Fordringer | ||||
| Merverdi varige driftsmidler | 16 115 436 | 16 279 205 | ||
| Fremførtbart underskudd | -9 900 791 | -9 603 665 | ||
| - | Sum | 6 159 019 | 6 619 914 | |
| Forskjeller som ikke inngår i utsatt skatt-/skattefordel | 8519922 | 8 222 796 | ||
| = | Sum | 14 678 941 | 14 842 710 | |
| 23 % | 22 % Skattesats | 22% | 22 % | |
| Utsatt skattefordel | -316 030 | =316 030 | ||
| Skattesats | 22% | 22 % | ||
| Utsatt skatt merverdier | 3 545 396 | 3 581 425 | ||
| Utsatt skatt | 3 229 367 | 3 265 396 | ||
Ved beregning av utsatt skatt på merverdier er det benyttet en skattesats på 22%.
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.12.2022 | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |
| - | Ytelse til daglig leder og styremedlemmer | 219 078 | 5 553 614 | |
| - | Kjøp av tjenester | |||
| - | Renteinntekter | |||
| - | Rentekostnader |
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |
| Brutto salg strøm Nord Pool | 186 158 620 | 1 075 925 436 | ||
| Varekost/kjøp strøm fra kraftselskap | 185 790 197 | 1 070 039 830 | ||
| Netto salg av strøm | 368 423 | 5 885 606 | ||
| Salg av strøm | 255 943 | 1 175 141 | ||
| Salg av tjenester | 2 625 295 | 24 494 634 | ||
| 0 | 0 Sum inntekter | 3 249 662 | 31 555 381 | |
| 0 Salg Norge | 3 249 662 | 31 555 380 | ||
| 0 Salg Sverige | ||||
| 0 | 0 Sum inntekter | 3 249 662 | 31 555 380 |
| Morselskap | Konsern | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 31.01.2022 | 31.01.2022 | 2021 | |
| 0 Salg varer/projsjekt | 0 | -10 157 618 | ||
| 0 Andre inntekter | 0 | 293 012 | ||
| 0 Sum inntekter | -9 864 606 |

Statsautoriserte revisorer Ernst & Young AS
Dr Hanstensgate 13, 3044 Drammen Postboks 560, Brakerøya, 3002 Drammen Foretaksregisteret: NO 976 389 387 MVA Tlf: +47 24 00 24 00
www.ey.no Medlemmer av Den norske Revisorforening
Til styret i Captiva Digital Services AS
Vi har revidert perioderegnskapet for Captiva Digital Services AS som består av selskapsregnskap og VI har revideregnskapet for Saptira Digital Obl 11. Står av blanse per 31. januar 2022.
konsernregnskap. Selskapsregnskapet og konsernregnskapet det ser denne datoen og ot konserhregnskap. Selskapsregnskaper og konsermograpperioden avsluttet per denne datoen og noter till
resultatregnskap og kontantstrømopstilling for regnskapsperioden avslutt resultatlegnskap og Kontantoti ørnoppotinnig av viktige regnskapsprinsipper.
Etter vår mening oppfyller perioderegnskapet gjeldende lovkrav og gir et rettvisende bilde av selskapets Etter var mening opplyller penoderegnskapet gjordende forskelser og kontantstrømmer for
og konsernets finansielle stilling per 31. januar 2022 og av deres resultater og kont og konsernets linansielle Stilling per of : Januar i samsvar med regnskapslovens regler og god regnskapsskikk i Norge.
Vi har gjennomført revisjonen i samsvar med International Standards on Auditing (NSA-ene). Våre Vi har gjennomført revisonen i Samsvar med internationalisner er ensons og også er ogs oppgaver og plikter i nemnod til disse standarden og bestil og konsernet i samsvar med med med med plikter ved revisjonen av penoderegnskaper. V or at at et Ethics for Professional
kravene i relevante lover og forskrifter i Norge og International Code of Ethics for Profes kravene i relevante lover og filter i Norge og international Ethics Standards Accountants (inkluder internasjonale uavnenigenoverige etiske forpliktelser i samsvar med Board for Accountants (IESBA-reglene), og vi har overnerat stilstrekkelig og hensiktsmessig som grunnlag for vår konklusjon.
Ledelsen er ansvarlig for å utarbeide perioderegnskapet og for at det gir et rettivisende bilde i samsvarlig for slik intern Ledelsen er ansvariig for a utarbeide penodereikki i Norge. Ledelsen er også ansvarlig for slik intern med regnskapslovens regler og god regnskapsetarker i revignskap som ikke inneholder vesentlig
kontroll som den finner nødvendig for å kunne utarbeide et årsregnskap som ikke feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller feil.
Ved utarbeidelsen av perioderegnskapet må ledelsen ta standpunkt til selskapets og konsernets evne till
er fil Ved utarbeidelsen av penodelegnskapet mar loa soon ta til drift. Forutsetningen om forsatt drift skalt drift skalt drift å avvikle selskanet fortsatt dritt og opplyse om ionnold av betydning for fortsaen enten har til hensikt å avvikle selskapet,
legges til grunn for perioderegnskapet med mindre ledelsen enten ha legges in grunn for penbace, eller ikke har noe annet realistisk alternativ.
Vårt mål er å oppnå betryggende sikkerhet for at perioderegnskapet som helhet ikke inneholder vesentlige som inneholder Vårt mål er a oppna betryggende sikkentet for at period, og å evisjonsberetning som inneholder
feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller før ingen naranti for a felinformasjon, verken som lølge av misligheter ener ingen garanti for at en revisjon
vår konklusjon. Betryggende sikkerhet er en høy grad av sikkerhet, men ingen grant kan var konklusjon. Betryggende sikkenlet er en høy fråe till førmasjon Feilinformasjon kan skyldes
utført i samsvar med ISA-ene, alltid vil avdekke vesentlig føller somlet med utført i samsvar med iSA-ene, alltid vir avdektig vomtig romlet med rimelighet kan
misligheter eller feil og er å anse som vesentlig dersom den enkeltvise eller samlet med r mlsligheler eller fell og er at anles oom vossing av er er etar på grunnlag av perioderegnskapet.

Som del av en revisjon i samsvar med ISA-ene, utøver vi profesjonelt skjønn og utviser profesjonell skepsis gjennom hele revisjonen. I tillegg:
Vi kommuniserer med styret blant annet om det planlagte omfanget av og tidspunktet for Vi kommuniserer med styret blant annet om det planlagte omfangeler vesentlige svakheter i den interne kontrollen som vi avdekker gjennom revisjonen.
Drammen, 8. april 2022 ERNST & YOUNG AS
Bjørn Baklid statsautorisert revisor
Appendix B-2
Independent auditor's assurance report on the compilation of unaudited pro forma condensed financial information

Statsautoriserte revisorer Ernst & Young AS
Dronning Eufemias gate 6A, NO-0191 Oslo Postboks 1156 Sentrum, NO-0107 Oslo
Foretaksregisteret: NO 976 389 387 MVA Tlf: +47 24 00 24 00
www.ey.no Medlemmer av Den norske revisorforening
To the Board of Directors of Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA
We have completed our assurance engagement to report on the compilation of pro forma financial information of Cloudberry Clean Energy ASA (the "Company") by the Board of Directors and Management of the Company. The unaudited pro forma condensed financial information consists of the unaudited condensed pro forma profit and loss statement for the year ended 31 December 2021, and related notes which was approved by the Board of Directors on 10 November 2022 for inclusion in the prospectus to be issued by the Company in connection with the listing of 4,639,148 shares (the "Prospectus"). The applicable criteria on the basis of which the Board of Directors and Management have compiled the pro forma financial information are specified in Annex 20 to Commission delegated Regulation (EU) no. 2019/980 supplementing the EU Prospectus Regulation as incorporated in Norwegian law through section 7-1 of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act and described in notes to the pro forma financial information (the "applicable criteria"). The historical financial information of the entities acquired and sold during 2021 and 2022 from 1 January 2021 to their respective transaction dates used in the compilation of the Pro Forma Financial Information is unaudited and accordingly we do not accept any responsibility for that information. The historical information of Øvre Kvemma Kraftverk AS, Ramsliåna Kraftverk AS and Bøen AS for the year ended 31 December 2021 are audited by another auditor, and accordingly we do not accept responsibility for that information.
The pro forma financial information has been compiled by the Board of Directors and Management of the Company to illustrate the impact of the 2021 Acquisitions, the 2022 Acquisitions and the 2022 Sales Transactions (the "Transactions") on the Company's unaudited pro forma condensed profit and loss statement for the year ended 31 December 2021 as if the Transactions had taken place at 1 January 2021. As part of this process, information about the Company's and the acquired and sold entity's financial performance has been extracted by the Board of Directors and Management from the Company's and the acquired and the sold entity's financial statements and accounting records. The auditor's report on the Company's financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 has been incorporated by reference in section 20.3 of the prospectus.
The Board of Director's and Management's Responsibility for the Pro Forma Financial Information The Board of Directors and Management are responsible for compiling the pro forma financial information on the basis of the applicable criteria.

We have complied with the independence and other ethical requirement of the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants issued by the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants, which is founded on fundamental principles of integrity, objectivity, professional competence and due care, confidentiality and professional behavior.
The firm applies International Standard on Quality Control 1, Quality Control for Firms that Perform Audits and Reviews of Financial Statements, and Other Assurance and Related Services Engagements and accordingly maintains a comprehensive system of quality control including documented policies and procedures regarding compliance with ethical requirements, professional standards and applicable legal and regulatory requirements.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion, as required by Regulation (EU) no. 2019/980 about whether the pro forma financial information has been compiled by Board of Directors and Management of the Company on the basis of the applicable criteria.
We conducted our engagement in accordance with International Standard on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 3420, Assurance Engagements to Report on the Compilation of Pro Forma Financial Information Included in a Prospectus, issued by the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board. This standard requires that the practitioner plan and perform procedures to obtain reasonable assurance about whether Board of Directors and Management of the Company have compiled the pro forma financial information on the basis of the applicable criteria and whether this basis is consistent with the accounting policies of the Company. Our work primarily consisted of comparing the unadjusted financial information with the source documents as described in section 11 of the Prospectus, considering the evidence supporting the adjustments and discussing the Pro Forma Financial Information with Management of the Company.
The aforementioned opinion does not require an audit of historical unadjusted financial information, the adjustments to conform the accounting policies of the acquired entities to the accounting policies of the Company, or the assumptions summarized in notes to the pro forma financial information. For purposes of this engagement, we are not responsible for updating or reissuing any reports or opinions on any historical financial information used in compiling the pro forma financial information, nor have we, in the course of this engagement, performed an audit or review of the financial information used in compiling the pro forma financial information.
The purpose of pro forma financial information included in a prospectus is solely to illustrate the impact of the event or transaction on unadjusted financial information of the Company as if the event or transaction occurred or had been undertaken at an earlier date selected for purposes of the illustration. Because of its nature, the Pro Forma Financial Information addresses a hypothetical situation and, therefore, does not represent the Company's actual financial position or performance. Accordingly, we do not provide any assurance that the actual outcome of the event or transaction for the year ended 31 December 2021 would have been as presented.
A reasonable assurance engagement to report on whether the pro forma financial information has been compiled on the basis stated involves performing procedures to assess whether the

applicable criteria used by Board of Directors and Management of the Company in the compilation of the pro forma financial information provide a reasonable basis for presenting the significant effects directly attributable to the event or transaction, and to obtain sufficient appropriate evidence about whether:
The procedures selected depend on the practitioner's judgment, having regard to the practitioner's understanding of the nature of the company, the event or transaction in respect of which the pro forma financial information has been compiled, and other relevant engagement circumstances. The engagement also involves evaluating the overall presentation of the pro forma financial information.
We believe that the evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.
In our opinion:
This report is issued for the sole purpose of the listing of shares on Oslo Stock Exchange as set out in the Prospectus to be approved by the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway. Our work has not been carried out in accordance with auditing, assurance or other standards and practices generally accepted in the United States and accordingly should not be relied upon as if it had been carried out in accordance with those standards and practices. Therefore, this report is not appropriate in other jurisdictions and should not be used or relied upon for any purpose other than the listing and issuance of shares described above. We accept no duty or responsibility to and deny any liability to any party in respect of any use of, or reliance upon, this report in connection with any type of transaction, including the sale of securities other than the listing of the shares on Oslo Stock Exchange and other regulated markets in the European Union or European Economic Area, as set out in the Prospectus to be approved by the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway.
Oslo, 11 November 2022 ERNST & YOUNG AS
The report is signed electronically
Asbjørn Ler State Authorized Public Accountant (Norway)
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Appendix C
Bøen Kraft AS' audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2019, 2020, and 2021

| Enheten | |
|---|---|
| Organisasjonsnummer: | 988 376 582 |
| Organisasjonsform: | Aksjeselskap |
| Foretaksnavn: | BØEN KRAFT AS |
| Forretningsadresse: | Frøyas gate 15 |
| 0273 OSLO | |
| Regnskapsår | |
| Arsregnskapets periode: | 01.01.2021 - 31.12.2021 |
| Konsern | |
| Morselskap i konsern: | Nei |
| Regnskapsregler | |
| Regler for små foretak benyttet: | Ja |
| Benyttet ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet til selskapet: | Regnskapslovens alminnelige regler |
| Årsregnskapet fastsatt av kompetent organ | |
| Bekreftet av representant for selskapet: | Kirsti Nereng |
| Dato for fastsettelse av årsregnskapet: | 25.02.2022 |
År 2021: Årsregnskapet er elektronisk innlevert År 2020: Tall er hentet fra elektronisk innlevert årsregnskap fra 2021
Det er ikke krav til at årsregnskapet m.v. som sendes til Regnskapsregisteret er undertegnet. Kontrollen på at dette er utført ligger hos revisor/enhetens øverste organ. Sikkerheten ivaretas ved at innsender har rolle/rettighet for innsending av årsregnskapet via Altinn, og ved at det bekreftes at årsregnskapet er fastsatt av kompetent organ.
Brønnøysundregistrene, 02.11.2022
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2021 | 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|
| RESULTATIREKNESKAP | |||
| Inntekter | |||
| Salgsinntekt | 10 528 394 | 2 710 485 | |
| Anna driftsinntekt | 24 752 | ||
| Sum inntekter | 10 528 394 | 2 735 237 | |
| Kostnader | |||
| Avskrivninger | 3 | 952 600 | 952 600 |
| Annen driftskostnad | 2 | 3 843 709 | 1 161 321 |
| Sum kostnader | 4 796 309 | 2 113 921 | |
| Driftsresultat | 5 732 085 | 621 316 | |
| Finansinntekter og finanskostnader | |||
| Anna renteinntekt | 16 725 | 35 767 | |
| Sum finansinntekter | 16 725 | 35 767 | |
| Annan rentekostnad | 1 142 975 | 1 183 975 | |
| Annen finanskostnad | 3 078 109 | ||
| Sum finanskostnader | 4 221 084 | 1 183 975 | |
| Netto finans | -4 204 359 | -1 148 208 | |
| Ordinært resultat før skattekostnad | 1 527 726 | -526 892 | |
| Skattekostnad | 7 | 336 099 | -181 015 |
| Ordinært resultat etter skattekostnad | 1 191 627 | -344 977 | |
| Årsresultat | 1 191 627 | -344 977 | |
| Overføringar og disponeringar | |||
| Avsatt fra/til annen egenkapital | 1 191 627 | -344 977 | |
| Sum overføringar og disponeringar | 1 191 627 | -344 977 |
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2021 | 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|
| BALANSE - EIGEDELAR | |||
| Anleggsmiddel | |||
| Immaterielle eigedelar | |||
| Varige driftsmiddel | |||
| Kraftverk Bøen I | 3 | 10 143 000 | 10 479 400 |
| Kraftverk Bøen II | 3 | 22 603 200 | 23 180 700 |
| Sum varige driftsmiddel | 32 746 200 | 33 660 100 | |
| Finansielle anleggsmiddel | |||
| Andre langsiktige fordringer | 3 | 1 681 300 | 1 720 000 |
| Sum finansielle anleggsmiddel | 1 681 300 | 1 720 000 | |
| Sum anleggsmiddel | 34 427 500 | 35 380 100 | |
| Omløpsmiddel | |||
| Varer | |||
| Krav | |||
| Kundefordringer | র্ব | 1 994 036 | 307 503 |
| Andre fordringer | 101 213 | ||
| Sum krav | 1 994 036 | 408 716 | |
| Bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande | |||
| Bankinnskudd | 5 458 490 | 1 059 949 | |
| Sum bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande | 5 458 490 | 1 059 949 | |
| Sum omløpsmiddel | 7 452 526 | 1 468 665 | |
| SUM EIGEDELAR | 41 880 026 | 36 848 765 |
Eigenkapital Innskoten eigenkapital
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2021 | 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aksjekapital | റ | 150 000 | 150 000 |
| Sum innskoten eigenkapital | 150 000 | 150 000 | |
| Opptent eigenkapital | |||
| Annen egenkapital | 2 627 127 | 1 435 500 | |
| Sum opptent eigenkapital | 2 627 127 | 1 435 500 | |
| Sum eigenkapital | 6 | 2 777 127 | 1 585 500 |
| Gjeld | |||
| Langsiktig gjeld | |||
| Utsett skatt | 7 | 342 259 | 357 822 |
| Sum avsetjingar for plikter | 342 259 | 357 822 | |
| Anna langsiktig gjeld | |||
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjonar | 8 | 33 076 920 | 34 400 000 |
| Sum anna langsiktig gjeld | 33 076 920 | 34 400 000 | |
| Sum langsiktig gjeld | 33 419 179 | 34 757 822 | |
| Kortsiktig gjeld | |||
| Leverandørgjeld | 1 157 930 | 372 587 | |
| Betalbar skatt | 7 | 351 662 | 0 |
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 1 133 529 | 42 027 | |
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | 3 040 599 | 90 830 | |
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | 5 683 720 | 505 444 | |
| Sum gjeld | 39 102 899 | 35 263 266 | |
| SUM EIGENKAPITAL OG GIELD | 41 880 026 | 36 848 766 |
| ARSREGNSKAP FOR REGNSKAPSARET 2021 - GENERELL INFORMASJON | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journalnummer : | 2022 169587 |
|---|---|
| Enheten Organisasjonsnummer: Organisasjonsform: Foretaksnavn : Forretningsadresse: |
988 376 582 Aksjeselskap BØEN KRAFT AS Østre vei 26B 1397 NESØYA |
| Regnskapsår Arsregnskapets periode: |
01.01.2021 - 31.12.2021 |
| Konsern Morselskap i konsern: |
Nei |
| Regnskapsregler Regler for små foretak benyttet: Benyttet ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet til selskapet: |
Ja Regnskapslovens alminnelige regler |
Bekreftet av representant for selskapet : Kirsti Nere
Dato for fastsettelse av årsregnskapet: 25.02.2022 Kirsti Nereng
År 2021: Årsregnskap er elektronisk innlevert. År 2020: Tall er hentet fra elektronisk innlevert årsregnskap fra 2021.
Det er ikke krav til at årsregnskapet m.v. som sendes til Regnskapsregisteret er undertegnet. Kontrollen på at dette er utført ligger hos revisor/enhetens øverste organ. Sikkerheten ivaretas ved at innsender har rolle/rettighet for innsending av årsregnskapet via Altinn, og ved at det bekreftes at årsregnskapet er fastsatt av kompetent organ.
Brønnøysundregistrene, 31.03.2022
Brønnøysundregistrene Postadresse: Postboks 900, 8910 Brønnøysund
Telefon: 75 00 75 00 E-post: [email protected] Internett: www.brreg.no
Organisasjonsnummer: 974 760 673
Organisasjonsnr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2021 | 2020 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RESULTATREKNESKAP | ||||||
| Inntekter | ||||||
| Salgsinntekt | 10 528 394 | 2 710 485 | ||||
| Anna driftsinntekt | 24 752 | |||||
| Sum inntekter | 10 528 394 | 2 735 237 | ||||
| Kostnader | ||||||
| Avskrivninger | 3 | 952 | 600 | 952 600 | ||
| Annen driftskostnad | 2 | 3 843 | 709 | 1 161 321 | ||
| Sum kostnader | 4 796 309 | 2 113 921 | ||||
| Driftsresultat | 5 732 085 | 621 316 | ||||
| Finansinntekter og | ||||||
| finanskostnader | ||||||
| Anna renteinntekt | 16 725 | 35 767 | ||||
| Sum finansinntekter | 16 725 | 35 767 | ||||
| Annan rentekostnad | 1 142 975 | 1 183 975 | ||||
| Annen finanskostnad | ო | 078 109 | ||||
| Sum finanskostnader | 4 221 084 | 1 183 975 | ||||
| Netto finans | -4 204 359 | -1 148 208 | ||||
| Ordinært resultat før | ||||||
| skattekostnad | 1 527 726 | -526 892 | ||||
| Skattekostnad | 7 | 336 099 | -181 915 |
|||
| Ordinært resultat etter | ||||||
| s kattekostnad | 1 191 627 | -344 977 | ||||
| Årsresultat | 1 191 627 | -344 977 | ||||
| Overføringar og | ||||||
| disponeringar | ||||||
| Avsatt fra/til annen | ||||||
| egenkapital | 1 191 627 | -344 977 | ||||
| Sum overføringar og | ||||||
| disponeringar | 1 191 627 | -344 977 |
Utskriftsdato 31.03.2022 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 1 av 3
Organisasjonsnr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2021 | 2020 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BALANSE - EIGEDELAR | |||||||
| Anleggsmiddel Immaterielle eigedelar |
|||||||
| Varige driftsmiddel | |||||||
| Kraftverk Bøen I | 3 | 10 | 143 | 000 | 10 | 479 400 | |
| Kraftverk Bøen II | 3 | 22 | 603 | 200 | 23 | 180 | 700 |
| Sum varige driftsmiddel | 32 746 | 200 | 33 | 660 100 | |||
| Finansielle anleggsmiddel Andre langsiktige |
|||||||
| fordringer | 3 | ਜ | 681 300 | 1 720 000 | |||
| Sum finansielle | |||||||
| anleggsmiddel | न | 681 | 300 | त | 720 | 000 | |
| Sum anleggsmiddel | 34 427 | 500 | 35 | 380 100 | |||
| Omløpsmiddel Varer |
|||||||
| Krav | |||||||
| Kundefordringer | ಕ | ਜ | 994 | 036 | 307 503 | ||
| Andre fordringer | 101 | 213 | |||||
| Sum krav | ਜ | 994 036 | 408 716 | ||||
| Bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande |
|||||||
| Bankinnskudd | ம | 458 | 490 | 1 059 | 9 4 9 | ||
| Sum bankinnskot, | |||||||
| kontantar og liknande | เก | 458 490 | 1 059 949 | ||||
| Sum omløpsmiddel | 7 | 452 | 526 | 1 468 665 | |||
| SUM EIGEDELAR | 41 880 026 | 36 848 765 | |||||
| BALANSE - EIGENKAPITAL OG GJELD |
|||||||
| Eigenkapital | |||||||
| Innskoten eigenkapital | |||||||
| Aksjekapital | 5 | 150 | 000 | 150 000 | |||
| Sum innskoten eigenkapital | 150 | 000 | 150 | 000 | |||
| Opptent eigenkapital | |||||||
| Annen egenkapital | ನ | 627 | 127 | 1 | 435 | 500 | |
| Sum opptent eigenkapital | ર્ભ | 627 | 127 | ಗ | 435 | 500 | |
| Sum eigenkapital | б | 2 | 777 127 | 1 585 500 | |||
Utskriftsdato 31.03.2022 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 2 av 3
| Gjeld | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Utsett skatt | 7 | 342 259 | 357 | 822 | |||
| Sum avsetjingar for plikter | 342 259 | 357 822 | |||||
| Anna langsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Gjeld til | |||||||
| kredittinstitusjonar | 8 | 33 076 | 920 | 34 400 000 | |||
| Sum anna langsiktig gjeld | 33 076 920 | 34 400 000 | |||||
| Sum langsiktig gjeld | 33 419 179 | 34 | 757 822 | ||||
| Kortsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Leverandørqjeld | 1 157 930 | 372 587 | |||||
| Betalbar skatt | 7 | 351 662 | O | ||||
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 1 133 529 | 42 027 | |||||
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | ო | 040 599 | 90 | 830 | |||
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | uq | 683 720 | 505 444 | ||||
| Sum gjeld | 39 102 899 | 35 263 266 | |||||
| SUM EIGENKAPITAL OG GJELD | 41 880 026 | 36 848 766 |
Utskriftsdato 31.03.2022 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 3 av 3
Organisasjonsnr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS NOTEOPPLYSNINGER - SELSKAP - alle poster oppgitt i hele tall Note 1 Reknes kapsprins ipp Årsregnskapet er utarbeidet i samsvar med regnskapsloven og god regnskapsskikk for små foretak. Forutsetning om fortsatt drift er lagt til grunn for årsregnskapet. Note 2 Tal på årsverk i rekneskapsåret 0.00 _ Sum Beløp Note న Varige driftsmiddel og immaterielle eigedelar Anskaffingskost 01.01. Varige driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 42163173.00 Tilganq i året Varige driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 0.00 _Avgang i året Varige driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 0.00 _Anskaffingskost 31.12. Varige driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 42173173.00 Samla av-/nedskriv. Variqe driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 7735673.00 _Balanseført verdi 31.12. Varige driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 34427500.00 Årets av-/nedskriv. Varige driftsmiddel Immaterielle eiged. 952600.00 Anskaffingskost - balanseførte lånekostnader, eigentilvirka anleggsmiddel
Goodwill spesifisert for kvar enkelt verksemdkjøp
Avskrivingsplan for goodwill som er lenger enn fem år - begrunning
Meir om varige driftsmiddel/immaterielle eigedelar
Konsernreknes kap
Morselskapet sitt namn
Forretningskontor for morselskapet
Grunn til at dotterselskap ikkje er tatt med i konsolideringa
_Samla beløp - tilknytt selskap Fjorårets
_Samla beløp - føretak i samme konsern Fjorårets
_Samla beløp - føretak i samme konsern Fjorårets
_Samla beløp - felles kontrollert verksemd Fjorårets
_Pantstillingar
Beløp
_Behaldning av eigne aksjar Tal på aksjar Pålydande Andel av aksjek.
Note
8
Gjeld
Gjeld som forfell til betaling meir enn fem år etter rekneskapsåret sin slutt
26461520.00
Gjeld som er sikra ved pant eller liknande sikkerheit i eigedelar
33076920.00
Balanseført verdi av dei pantsatte eigedelar
32838088.00
Summen av garantiplikter som ikkje er rekneskapsført
Garantiplikter som er sikra ved pant
Meir om gjeld
STATSAUTORISERT REVISOR Erik Christoffersen
SLEPENDVEIEN 48 1341 SLEPENDEN TLF. 57 80 90 80 ORG.NR. 980 906 965 E-POST: ERIK.CHRISTOFFERSEN (DECHAS.NO
Til generalforsamlingen i Bøen Kraft AS
UAVHENGIG REVISORS BERETNING Uttalelse om revisjonen av årsregnskapet
Vi har revidert selskapet Bøen Kraft AS' årsregnskap som viser et overskudd på kr 1 191 627. Årsregnskapet består av balanse per 31. desember 2021, resultatregnskap for regnskapsåret avsluttet per denne datoen og noter til årsregnskapet, herunder et sammendrag av viktige regnskapsprinsipper.
Vi har gjennomført revisjonen i samsvar med de internasjonale revisjonsstandardene International Standards on Auditing (ISA-ene). Våre oppgaver og plikter i henhold til disse standardene er beskrevet nedenfor under Revisors oppgaver og plikter ved revisjonen av årsregnskapet. Vi er uavhengige av selskapet slik det kreves i lov, forskrift og International Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (inkludert internasjonale uavhengjghetsstandarder) utstedt av the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA-reglene), og har overholdt våre øvrige etiske forpliktelser i samsvar med disse kravene. Innhentet revisjonsbevis er etter var vurdering tilstrekkelig og hensiktsmessig som grunnlag for vår konklusion.
Styret (ledelsen) er ansvarlig for å utarbeide årsregnskapet og for at det gir et rettvisende bilde i samsvar med regnskapslovens regler og god regnskapsskikk i Norge. Ledelsen er også ansvarlig for slik intern kontroll som den finner nødvendig for å kunne utarbeide et årsregnskap som ikke inneholder vesentlig feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil.
Ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet må ledelsen ta standpunkt til selskapets evne til fortsatt drift og opplyse om forhold av betydning for fortsatt drift. Forutsetningen om fortsatt drift skal legges til grunn for årsregnskapet så lenge det ikke er sannsynlig at virksomheten vil bli avviklet.
Vårt mål er å oppnå betryggende sikkerhet for at årsregnskapet som helhet ikke inneholder vesentlig feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil, og å avgi en revisjonsberetning som inneholder vår konklusjon. Betryggende sikkerhet er en høy grad av sikkerhet, men ingen garanti for at en revisjon utført i samsvar med ISA-ene, alltid vil avdekke vesentlig feilinformasjon som eksisterer. Feilinformasjon kan oppstå som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil. Feilinformasjon blir vurdert som vesentlig dersom den enkeltvis eller samlet med rimelighet kan forventes å påvirke økonomiske beslutninger som brukerne foretar basert på årsregnskapet.
For revisors oppgaver og plikter se: https://revisorforeningen.no/om-revisjonsberetning-revisors-oppgaver-og-plikter/
SLEPENDEN, 16. februar 2022 Echas Revisjon AS
Cole ( Kanth
Erik Christoffersen Statsautorisert revisor
MEDLEM AV DEN NORSKE REVISORFORENING

| Enheten | |
|---|---|
| Organisasjonsnummer: | 988 376 582 |
| Organisasjonsform: | Aksjeselskap |
| Foretaksnavn: | BØEN KRAFT AS |
| Forretningsadresse: | Frøyas gate 15 |
| 0273 OSLO | |
| Regnskapsăr | |
| Årsregnskapets periode: | 01.01.2020 - 31.12.2020 |
| Konsern | |
| Morselskap i konsern: | Nei |
| Regnskapsregler | |
| Regler for små foretak benyttet: | Ja |
| Benyttet ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet til selskapet: | Regnskapslovens alminnelige regler |
| Årsregnskapet fastsatt av kompetent organ | |
| Bekreftet av representant for selskapet: | Kirsti Nereng |
| Dato for fastsettelse av årsregnskapet: | 05.03.2021 |
År 2020: Årsregnskapet er elektronisk innlevert År 2019: Tall er hentet fra elektronisk innlevert årsregnskap fra 2020
Det er ikke krav til at årsregnskapet m.v. som sendes til Regnskapsregisteret er undertegnet. Kontrollen på at dette er utført ligger hos revisor/enhetens øverste organ. Sikkerheten ivaretas ved at innsender har rolle/rettighet for innsending av årsregnskapet via Altinn, og ved at det bekreftes at årsregnskapet er fastsatt av kompetent organ.
Brønnøysundregistrene, 02.11.2022
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2020 | 2019 |
|---|---|---|---|
| RESULTATREKNESKAP | |||
| Inntekter | |||
| Salsinntekter | 2 710 485 | 6 993 552 | |
| Annen inntekt | 24 752 | ||
| Sum inntekter | 2 735 237 | 6 993 552 | |
| Kostnader | |||
| Avskrivninger | 3 | 952 600 | 952 600 |
| Annen driftskostnad | 2 | 1 161 321 | 1 829 941 |
| Sum kostnader | 2 113 921 | 2 782 541 | |
| Driftsresultat | 621 316 | 4 211 011 | |
| Finansinntekter og finanskostnader | |||
| Anna renteinntekt | 35 767 | 75 823 | |
| Sum finansinntekter | 35 767 | 75 823 | |
| Annan rentekostnad | 1 183 975 | 1 274 843 | |
| Sum finanskostnader | 1 183 975 | 1 274 843 | |
| Netto finans | -1 148 208 | -1 199 020 | |
| Ordinært resultat før skattekostnad | -526 892 | 3 011 991 | |
| Skattekostnad | 7 | -181 915 | 732 020 |
| Ordinært resultat etter skattekostnad | -344 977 | 2 279 971 | |
| Ărsresultat | -344 977 | 2 279 971 | |
| Overføringar og disponeringar | |||
| Ordinært utbytte | 1 500 000 | ||
| Overføring til/frå annan eigenkapital | -344 977 | 779 971 | |
| Sum overføringar og disponeringar | -344 977 | 2 279 971 |
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2020 | 2019 |
|---|---|---|---|
| BALANSE - EIGEDELAR | |||
| Anleggsmiddel | |||
| Immaterielle eigedelar | |||
| Varige driftsmiddel | |||
| Kraftverk Bøen I | 3 | 10 479 400 | 10 815 800 |
| Kraftverk Bøen II | 3 | 23 180 700 | 23 758 200 |
| Sum varige driftsmiddel | 33 660 100 | 34 574 000 | |
| Finansielle anleggsmiddel | |||
| Andre langsiktige fordringer | 3 | 1 720 000 | 1 758 700 |
| Sum finansielle anleggsmiddel | 1 720 000 | 1 758 700 | |
| Sum anleggsmiddel | 35 380 100 | 36 332 700 | |
| Omløpsmiddel | |||
| Varer | |||
| Krav | |||
| Kundefordringer | 307 503 | 969 304 | |
| Andre fordringer | 101 213 | ||
| Sum krav | 408 716 | 969 304 | |
| Bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande | |||
| Bankinnskudd | 1 059 949 | 4 512 330 | |
| Sum bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande | 1 059 949 | 4 512 330 | |
| Sum omløpsmiddel | 1 468 665 | 5 481 634 | |
| SUM EIGEDELAR | 36 848 765 | 41 814 334 |
Eigenkapital Innskoten eigenkapital
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2020 | 2019 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aksjekapital | ર | 150 000 | 150 000 |
| Sum innskoten eigenkapital | 150 000 | 150 000 | |
| Opptent eigenkapital | |||
| Annen egenkapital | 1 435 500 | 1 780 477 | |
| Sum opptent eigenkapital | 1 435 500 | 1 780 477 | |
| Sum eigenkapital | 6 | 1 585 500 | 1 930 477 |
| Gjeld | |||
| Langsiktig gjeld | |||
| Utsett skatt | 7 | 357 822 | 438 524 |
| Sum avsetjingar for plikter | 357 822 | 438 524 | |
| Anna langsiktig gjeld | |||
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjonar | 8 | 34 400 000 | 35 788 210 |
| Sum anna langsiktig gjeld | 34 400 000 | 35 788 210 | |
| Sum langsiktig gjeld | 34 757 822 | 36 226 734 | |
| Kortsiktig gjeld | |||
| Leverandørgjeld | 372 587 | 516 034 | |
| Betalbar skatt | 7 | 679 783 | |
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 42 027 | 92 390 | |
| Utbytte | 1 500 000 | ||
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | 90 830 | 868 916 | |
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | 505 444 | 3 657 123 | |
| Sum gjeld | 35 263 266 | 39 883 857 | |
| SUM EIGENKAPITAL OG GJELD | 36 848 766 | 41 814 334 |
| ARSREGNSKAP FOR REGNSKAPSARET 2020 - GENERELL INFORMASJON | |
|---|---|
| Journalnummer: | 2021 237137 |
|---|---|
| Enheten Orqanisasjonsnummer: Organisasjonsform: Foretaksnavn : Forretningsadresse: |
988 376 582 Aksjeselskap BØEN KRAFT AS Østre vei 26B 1397 NESØYA |
| Regnskapsår Arsregnskapets periode: |
01.01.2020 - 31.12.2020 |
| Konsern Morselskap i konsern: |
Ne i |
| Regnskapsregler Regler for små foretak benyttet: Benyttet ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet til selskapet: |
Ja Regnskapslovens alminnelige regler |
Bekreftet av representant for selskapet : Kirsti Nere
Dato for fastsettelse av årsregnskapet: 05.03.2021 Kirsti Nereng
År 2020: Årsregnskap er elektronisk innlevert. År 2019: Tall er hentet fra elektronisk innlevert årsregnskap fra 2020.
Det er ikke krav til at årsregnskapet m.v. som sendes til Regnskapsregisteret er undertegnet. Kontrollen på at dette er utført ligger hos revisor/enhetens øverste organ. Sikkerheten ivaretas ved at innsender har rolle/rettighet for innsending av årsregnskapet via Altinn, og ved at det bekreftes at årsregnskapet er fastsatt av kompetent organ.
Brønnøysundregistrene, 22.05.2021
Brønnøysundregistrene Postadresse: Postboks 900, 8910 Brønnøysund
Telefon: 75 00 75 00 E-post: [email protected] Internett: www.brreg.no
Organisasjonsnummer: 974 760 673
Organisasjonsnr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2020 | 2019 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RESULTATREKNESKAP | |||||
| Inntekter | |||||
| Salsinntekter | 2 710 485 | 6 993 552 | |||
| Annen inntekt | 24 | 752 | |||
| Sum inntekter | 2 735 237 | 6 993 552 | |||
| Kostnader | |||||
| Avskrivninger | 3 | 952 600 | 952 600 | ||
| Annen driftskostnad | 2 | 1 161 | 321 | 1 829 941 | |
| Sum kostnader | ଧ | 113 921 | 2 782 541 | ||
| Driftsresultat | 621 316 | 4 211 011 | |||
| Finansinntekter og | |||||
| finanskostnader | |||||
| Anna renteinntekt | 35 | 767 | 75 823 | ||
| Sum finansinntekter | 35 767 | 75 823 | |||
| Annan rentekostnad | 1 183 975 | 1 274 843 | |||
| Sum finanskostnader | ਜ | 183 975 | 1 274 843 | ||
| Netto finans | -1 148 208 | -1 199 020 | |||
| Ordinært resultat før | |||||
| s kattekos tnad | -526 | 892 | 3 011 991 | ||
| Skattekostnad | 7 | -181 | ਰੇ 15 | 732 020 | |
| Ordinært resultat etter | |||||
| s kattekostnad | -344 977 | 2 279 971 | |||
| Årsresultat | -344 977 | 2 279 971 | |||
| Overføringar og | |||||
| disponeringar | |||||
| Ordinært utbytte | 1 500 000 | ||||
| Overføring til/frå annan | |||||
| eigenkapital | -344 977 | 779 971 | |||
| Sum overføringar og | |||||
| disponeringar | -344 977 | 2 279 971 |
Utskriftsdato 22.05.2021 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 1 av 3
Organisasjonsnr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2020 | 2019 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BALANSE - EIGEDELAR | |||||||
| Anleggsmiddel Immaterielle eigedelar |
|||||||
| Varige driftsmiddel | |||||||
| Kraftverk Bøen I | 3 | 10 | 479 | 400 | 10 | 815 | 800 |
| Kraftverk Bøen II | 3 | 23 | 180 | 700 | 23 | 758 | 200 |
| Sum varige driftsmiddel | 33 | ୧୧୦ | 100 | 34 | 574 | 000 | |
| Finansielle anleggsmiddel Andre langsiktige |
|||||||
| fordringer | 3 | 1 720 000 | 1 758 700 | ||||
| Sum finansielle anleggsmiddel |
1 720 | 000 | 1 758 700 | ||||
| Sum anleggsmiddel | 35 380 | 100 | 36 | 332 700 | |||
| Omløpsmiddel Varer |
|||||||
| Krav | |||||||
| Kundefordringer | 307 | 503 | 969 304 | ||||
| Andre fordringer | 101 | 213 | |||||
| Sum krav | 408 | 716 | 969 304 | ||||
| Bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande |
|||||||
| Bankinnskudd | 1 059 | 9 4 9 | 4 512 330 | ||||
| Sum bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande |
न | 059 | ਹੈ ਕੇ ਉ | 4 512 330 | |||
| Sum omløpsmiddel | 1 468 | ୧୧୮ | 5 | 481 | 634 | ||
| SUM EIGEDELAR | 36 848 | 765 | 41 814 334 | ||||
| BALANSE - ETGENKAPITAL OG GJELD |
|||||||
| Eigenkapital | |||||||
| Innskoten eigenkapital | |||||||
| Aksjekapital | 5 | 150 | 000 | 150 000 | |||
| Sum innskoten eigenkapital | 150 | 000 | 150 | 000 | |||
| Opptent eigenkapital | |||||||
| Annen egenkapital | - | 435 | 500 | 1 | 780 | 477 | |
| Sum opptent eigenkapital | ਜ | 4 3 5 | 500 | ત | 780 | 477 | |
| Sum eigenkapital | ഉ | 1 585 500 | 1 930 477 |
Utskriftsdato 22.05.2021 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 2 av 3
| Gjeld | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Utsett skatt | 7 | 357 | 822 | 438 524 | |||
| Sum avsetjingar for plikter | 357 | 822 | 438 524 | ||||
| Anna langsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Gjeld til | |||||||
| kredittinstitusjonar | 8 | 34 400 000 | 35 | 788 210 | |||
| Sum anna langsiktig gjeld | 34 400 000 | 35 788 210 | |||||
| Sum langsiktig gjeld | 34 757 | 822 | 36 226 734 | ||||
| Kortsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Leverandørgjeld | 372 | 587 | 516 | 034 | |||
| Betalbar skatt | 7 | 679 | 783 | ||||
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 42 | 027 | 92 | 390 | |||
| Utbytte | 1 500 000 | ||||||
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | 90 | 830 | 868 | 916 | |||
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | 505 | 4 4 4 | 3 657 123 | ||||
| Sum gjeld | 35 | 263 266 | 39 | 883 857 | |||
| SUM EIGENKAPITAL OG GJELD | 36 848 766 | ব 1 | 814 334 |
Utskriftsdato 22.05.2021 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 3 av 3
Organisasjonsnr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
NOTEOPPLYSNINGER - SELSKAP
Note 1
Reknes kapsprins ipp
Årsregnskapet er satt opp etter regnskapsloven. Regnskapsreglene for små foretak er fulgt.
| Aksjeklasse | Ant. aksjar | Pålydande | Bokførd verdi |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ordinære aksjer | 150000.00 | 1.00 | 150000.00 |
| Aksjeeiqare - fritekst | Antall | Eiqarpart | Aksieklasse |
| BNVannkraft AS |
75000.00 | 50.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Leif Morten Gilje | 22500.00 | 15.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Kambo Enerqi AS | 22500.00 | 15.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| KHV Holding AS | 22500.00 | 15.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Vidar Øvrevik AS | 7500.00 | 5.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Sum | Sum antall | Sum eigarnart |
Styremedlemmene eier indirekte aksjene gjennom sine aksjeselskaper.
150000.00
100.00%
Note
2
Lønn og ytingar
Note
2
Ytingar til leiande personer
Er det gitt ytingar til leiande person: Nei
Ytingar til dagleg leiar
_Ytingar
Lønn Pensj.plikt Andre godtgj.

Note
2
Nødvendig administrasjon og tilsyn med kraftstasjonene utføres av selskapets tillitsvalgte og faktureres for medgått tid gjennom de respektives selskaper.
| Revision | Arets | Fiorårets |
|---|---|---|
| 31940.00 | 28720.00 | |
| Andre tenester | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 13200 - 00 | 11287.00 | |
| Sum qodtqjersle til revisor | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 45140.00 | 40007.00 | |
2
Antall årsverk i regnskapsåret
Verksemda har hatt følgjende tal på årsverk: 0.00
Lån og sikkerheitsstilling til leiande personar
Er det gitt lån eller sikkerheitsstilling til leiande personar: Nei
Note 7
| Betalbar skatt | Arets | Fiorårets |
|---|---|---|
| -101213.00 | 679783.00 | |
| Endringer i utsett skattefordel | Arets | Fiorårets |
| -80702 - 00 | 52237.00 | |
| Skattekostnad ordinært resultat | Arets | Fiorårets |
-181915.00
-101213.00 679783.00
732020.00
| Skattepliktig inntekt | ||
|---|---|---|
| Ordinært resultat før skatt | Arets | Fjorårets |
| -526893.00 | 3011991.00 | |
| Permanente forskjellar | Arets | Fjorårets |
| 15375.00 | ||
| Endring i mellombelse forskjellar | Arets | Fjorårets |
| 66831.00 | 62555.00 | |
| Skattepliktiq inntekt | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 460061.00 | 3089921.00 | |
| Betalbar skatt i balansen | ||
| Betalbar skatt på årets resultat | Årets | Fiorårets |
| -101213.00 | 679783.00 | |
| Sum betalbar skatt i balansen | årets | Fiorårets |
| Anleqqsmiddel | Startdato | Sluttdato | Endring |
|---|---|---|---|
| 234594.00 | -93538.00 | 28131.00 | |
| Andre forskjellar | Startdato | Sluttdato | Endring |
| 1758700 . 00 | 1720000.00 | 38700.00 | |
| Sum mellombelse forski. | Startdato | Sluttdato | Endring |
| 1993294 . 00 | 1626462.00 | 366832.00 | |
| Utsett skattefordel 31.12. Startdato | Sluttdato | Endring | |
| 438524.00 | 357822.00 | 80702 . 00 |
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjonar | Arets | Fiorårets |
|---|---|---|
| 34400000.00 35788210.00 | ||
| Sum qield | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 34400000.00 35788210.00 | ||
| Bal.ført verdi, eiged.pants.for eiga qjeld Árets | Fiorårets |
35687603.00 37302004.00
Selskapets langsiktige gjeld har en avtalt løpetid på 5 år.
Restgjeld om 2 år er beregnet til 32 millioner. Selskapet har ingen
bundne bankkonti.
Note
3
Varige driftsmiddel/anleggsmiddel
Driftslausøyre, inventar o.l. er forkortet til: "Drift/inv"
Maskiner og anlegg er forkortet til: "Mask/anl"
Tomter, bygninger og anna fast eigedom er forkortet til: "T/B/AFE"
_Anskaff. kost 01.01. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum
40269073.0
0
_Anskaff. kost 31.12. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum
40269073.0
0
Akk.av-/nedskr.01.01. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum
5695073.00
Akk.av-/nedskr.31.12. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum
6608973.00
_Bal.ført verdi 31.12. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum
33660100.0
o
_Årets av-/nedskriv. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum
913900.00
_Økonomisk levetid Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE
20-66 år
Det er i tillegg kostnadsført anleggsbidrag med 38 700
Note
୧
Eigenkapital
Aksjekapital er forkortet til: "Aksjekap"
Anna innskoten eigenkapital er forkortet til: "A.innsk.EK"
_Eigenkap. 31.12. førre år Aksjekap
Overkurs
150000.00
_Eigenkapital 01.01.
| 150000.00 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Eiqenkapital 31.12. | Aksjekap 150000.00 |
Overkurs | A. innsk. EK |
| Eigenkapital | |||
| Opptent eigenkapitaler forkortet til: "Opptj.EK" | |||
| Eiqenkapital 31.12. førre å Opptj.EK Udekt tap Sum | 1780477.00 | ||
| Eigenkapital 01.01. | 1780477.00 | Udekt tap Sum | |
| Årsresultat | Opptj.EK -344977.00 |
Udekt tap Sum | |
| Eiqenkapital 31.12. | Opptj.EK 1435500 . 00 |
Udekt tap Sum |
STATSAUTORISERT REVISOR ERIK CHRISTOFFERSEN
5 гесьгоссии 48 13d" Scheenes 7 * 37 80 00 50 ORDAR. BBU 900 955 PHPOTT ERIK.CHRISTOFFEBRENGENZECHAS.NO
UAVHENGIG REVISORS BERETNING Til generalforsamlingen i Bøen Kraft A5
Vi har revidert selskapet Bøen Kraft AS' årsregnskap som viser et underskudd på kr 344 977. Årsregnskapet består av balanse per 31. desember 2020, resultatregnskap for regnskapsåret avsluttet per denne datoen og noter till årsregnskapet, herunder et sammendrag av viktige regnskapsprinsipper.
Etter vår mening er det medfølgende årsregnskapet avgitt i samsvar med lov og forskrifter og gir et rettvisende bilde av selskapets linansielle stilling per 31. desember 2020, og av dets resultater for regnskapsåret avsluttet per denne datoen i samsvar med regnskapsløvens regler og god regnskapsskikk i Norge.
Vi har gjennomført revisjonen i samsvar med lov, forskrift og god revisjonsskikk i Norge, herunder de internasjonale revisjonsstandardene (ISA-ene). Våre oppgaver og plikter i henhold til disse standardiene er beskrevet i Revisors oppgaver og pilkter ved revisjon av årsregnskapet. Vi er uavhengige av selskapet slik det kreves i lov og forskrift, og har overholdt våre øvrige eliske forpliktelser i samsvar med disse kravene. Etter var oppfatning er innhentet revisjonsbevis tilstrekkelig og hensiktsmessig som grunnlag for var konklusjon.
Styret (ledelsen) er ansvarlig for å utarbeide årsregnskapet i samsvar med lov og forskrifter, herunder for at det gir et rettvisende bilde i samsvar med regnskapslovens regler og god regnskapsskikk i Norge. Ledelsen er også ansvarlig for slik intern kontroll som den finner nødvendig for å kunne utarbeide et årsregnskap som lkke inneholder vesentlig feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil.
Ved utarbeidelsen av ärsregnskapet må ledelsen ta standpunkt til selskapets evne til fortsatt drift og opplyse om forhold av betydning for fortsatt drift. Forutsetningen om fortsatt drift skal legges til grunn for årsregnskapet så lenge det ikke er sannsynlig at virksomheten vil bli avviklet.
MEDLEN AV DEN NORSKE REVISORFORENING
Revisors oppgaver og plikter ved revisjonen av årsregnskapet
Vårt mål er å oppnå betryggende sikkerhet for at årsregnskapet som helhet ikke inneholder vesentlig feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil, og å avgi en revisjonsberetning som inneholder vår konklusjon. Betryggende sikkerhet er en høy grad av sikkerhet, men ingen garanti for at en revisjon utført i samsvar med lov, forskrift og god revisjonsskikk i Norge, herunder ISA-ene, alltid vil avdekke vesentlig feilinformasjon som eksisterer. Feilinformasjon kan oppstå som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil. Feilinformasjon blir vurdert som vesentlig dersom den enkeltvis eller samlet med rimelighet kan forventes å påvirke økonomiske beslutninger som brukerne foretar basert på årsregnskapet.
For videre beskrivelse av revisors oppgaver og plikter vises det til https://sevisorforeningen.no/revisionsberetninges
Basert på vår revisjon av årsregnskapet som beskrevet ovenfor, og kontrollhandlinger vi har funnet nødvendig i henhold til internasjonal standard for attestasjonsoppdrag (ISAE) 3000 «Attestasjonsoppdrag som ikke er revisjon eller forenklet revisorkontroll av historisk finansiell informasjon», mener vi at ledelsen har oppfylt sin plikt till å sørge for ordentlig og oversiktlig registrering og dokumentasjon av selskapets regnskapsopplysninger i samsvar med løv og god bokføringsskikk i Norge.
Slependen, 25. februar 2021 Echas Revisjon AS
Erik Christofferser Statsautorisert revisor
MEDLEM AV DEN NORSKE REVISORFÖRENING

| Enheten | |
|---|---|
| Organisasjonsnummer: | 988 376 582 |
| Organisasjonsform: | Aksjeselskap |
| Foretaksnavn: | BØEN KRAFT AS |
| Forretningsadresse: | Frøyas gate 15 |
| 0273 OSLO | |
| Regnskapsăr | |
| Arsregnskapets periode: | 01.01.2019 - 31.12.2019 |
| Konsern | |
| Morselskap i konsern: | Nei |
| Regnskapsregler | |
| Regler for små foretak benyttet: | Ja |
| Benyttet ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet til selskapet: | Regnskapslovens alminnelige regler |
| Årsregnskapet fastsatt av kompetent organ | |
| Bekreftet av representant for selskapet: | Kirsti Nereng |
| Dato for fastsettelse av årsregnskapet: | 27.05.2020 |
År 2019: Årsregnskapet er elektronisk innlevert År 2018: Tall er hentet fra elektronisk innlevert årsregnskap fra 2019
Det er ikke krav til at årsregnskapet m.v. som sendes til Regnskapsregisteret er undertegnet. Kontrollen på at dette er utført ligger hos revisor/enhetens øverste organ. Sikkerheten ivaretas ved at innsender har rolle/rettighet for innsending av årsregnskapet via Altinn, og ved at det bekreftes at årsregnskapet er fastsatt av kompetent organ.
Brønnøysundregistrene, 02.11.2022
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2019 | 2018 |
|---|---|---|---|
| RESULTATIREKNESKAP | |||
| Inntekter | |||
| Salgsinntekt | 6 993 552 | 8 073 081 | |
| Sum inntekter | 6 993 552 | 8 073 081 | |
| Kostnader | |||
| Avskrivning av driftsmidler | 3 | 952 600 | 952 600 |
| Annen driftskostnad | 2 | 1 829 941 | 2 147 227 |
| Sum kostnader | 2 782 541 | 3 099 827 | |
| Driftsresultat | 4 211 011 | 4 973 254 | |
| Finansinntekter og finanskostnader | |||
| Anna renteinntekt | 75 823 | 40 547 | |
| Sum finansinntekter | 75 823 | 40 547 | |
| Annan rentekostnad | 1 274 843 | 1 326 144 | |
| Sum finanskostnader | 1 274 843 | 1 326 144 | |
| Netto finans | -1 199 020 | -1 285 597 | |
| Ordinært resultat før skattekostnad | 3 011 991 | 3 687 657 | |
| Skattekostnad | 7 | 732 020 | 830 630 |
| Ordinært resultat etter skattekostnad | 2 279 971 | 2 857 027 | |
| Årsresultat | 2 279 971 | 2 857 027 | |
| Overføringar og disponeringar | |||
| Ordinært utbytte | 1 500 000 | 2 750 000 | |
| Avsatt til annen egenkapital | 779 971 | 107 027 | |
| Sum overføringar og disponeringar | 2 279 971 | 2 857 027 |
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2019 | 2018 |
|---|---|---|---|
| BALANSE - EIGEDELAR | |||
| Anleggsmiddel | |||
| Immaterielle eigedelar | |||
| Varige driftsmiddel | |||
| Kraftverk Bøen I | 3 | 10 815 800 | 11 152 200 |
| Kraftverk Bøen II | 3 | 23 758 200 | 24 335 700 |
| Sum varige driftsmiddel | 34 574 000 | 35 487 900 | |
| Finansielle anleggsmiddel | |||
| Andre langsiktige fordringer | 3 | 1 758 700 | 1 797 400 |
| Sum finansielle anleggsmiddel | 1 758 700 | 1 797 400 | |
| Sum anleggsmiddel | 36 332 700 | 37 285 300 | |
| Omløpsmiddel | |||
| Varer | |||
| Krav | |||
| Kundefordringer | 969 304 | 763 006 | |
| Sum krav | 969 304 | 763 006 | |
| Bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande | |||
| Bankinnskudd | 4 512 330 | 6 181 571 | |
| Sum bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande | 4 512 330 | 6 181 571 | |
| Sum omløpsmiddel | 5 481 634 | 6 944 577 | |
| SUM EIGEDELAR | 41 814 334 | 44 229 877 | |
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2019 | 2018 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sum innskoten eigenkapital | 150 000 | 150 000 | |
| Opptent eigenkapital | |||
| Annen egenkapital | 1 780 477 | 1 000 506 | |
| Sum opptent eigenkapital | 1 780 477 | 1 000 506 | |
| Sum eigenkapital | 6 | 1 930 477 | 1 150 506 |
| Gjeld | |||
| Langsiktig gjeld | |||
| Utsett skatt | 7 | 438 524 | 386 387 |
| Sum avsetjingar for plikter | 438 524 | 386 387 | |
| Anna langsiktig gjeld | |||
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjonar | 8 | 35 788 210 | 37 226 653 |
| Sum anna langsiktig gjeld | 35 788 210 | 37 226 653 | |
| Sum langsiktig gjeld | 36 226 734 | 37 613 040 | |
| Kortsiktig gjeld | |||
| Leverandørgjeld | 516 034 | 522 668 | |
| Betalbar skatt | 7 | 679 783 | 861 281 |
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 92 390 | 95 782 | |
| Utbytte | 1 500 000 | 2 750 000 | |
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | 868 916 | 1 236 400 | |
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | 3 657 123 | 5 466 431 | |
| Sum gjeld | 39 883 857 | 43 079 471 | |
| SUM EIGENKAPITAL OG GIELD | 41 814 334 | 44 229 977 |
| ARSREGNSKAP FOR REGNSKAPSARET 2019 - GENERELL INFORMASJON | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journalnummer : | 2020 452714 |
|---|---|
| Enheten Organisasjonsnummer : Organisasjonsform : Foretaksnavn : Forretningsadresse : |
988 376 582 Aksjeselskap BØEN KRAFT AS Østre vei 26B 1397 NESØYA |
| Regnskapsar Arsreqnskapets periode: |
01.01.2019 - 31.12.2019 |
| Konsern Morselskap i konsern: |
Nei |
| Regnekapsregler Regler for små foretak benyttet: Benyttet ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet til selskapet : |
Ja Regnskapslovens alminnelige regler |
Bekreftet av representant for selskapet : Kirsti Nere Kirsti Nereng
år 2019: Årsregnskap er elektronisk innlevert. år 2018: Tall er hentet fra elektronisk innlevert årsregnskap fra 2019.
Det er ikke krav til at årsregnskapet m.v. som sendes til Regnskapsregisteret er undertegnet. Kontrollen på at dette er utført ligger hos revisor/enhetens øverste organ. Sikkerheten ivaretas ved at innsender har rolle/rettighet for innsending av årsregnskapet via Altinn, og ved at det bekreftes at årsregnskapet er fastsatt av kompetent organ.
Brønnøysundregistrene, 18.06.2020
Brønnøysundregistrene Postadresse: Postboks 900, 8910 Brønnøysund Telefoner. Opplysningstelefonen 75 00 75 00 Administrasjonen 75 00 75 09 Telefaks 75 00 75 05 E-post: [email protected] Internett: www.brreg.no
Organisasjonsnummer: 974 760 673
Organisasjonenr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2019 | 2018 |
|---|---|---|---|
| RESULTATREKNESKAP | |||
| Inntekter | |||
| Salgsinntekt | ് | 993 552 |
8 073 081 |
| Sum inntekter | 6 | 993 552 | 073 081 0 |
| Kostnader | |||
| Avskrivning av driftsmidler 3 | 600 952 |
952 600 | |
| Annen driftskostnad | 2 | 1 829 941 |
2 147 227 |
| Sum kostnader | 2 782 541 | 3 099 827 | |
| Driftsresultat | 4 211 011 | 4 973 254 | |
| Finansinntekter og | |||
| finanskostnader | |||
| Anna renteinntekt | 75 823 | 40 547 | |
| Sum finansinntekter | 75 823 | 40 547 | |
| Annan rentekostnad | 1 274 843 | 1 326 144 | |
| Sum finanskostnader | 1 274 843 | 1 326 144 | |
| Netto finans | -1 199 020 | -1 285 597 | |
| Ordinært resultat før | |||
| skattekostnad | 3 011 991 |
3 687 657 | |
| Skattekostnad | 7 | 732 020 |
830 630 |
| Ordinært resultat etter | |||
| ekattekostnad | 2 279 971 | 2 857 027 | |
| Åreresultat | 2 279 971 | 2 857 027 | |
| Overføringar og | |||
| disponeringar | |||
| Ordinært utbytte | 1 500 000 | 2 750 000 | |
| Avsatt til annen | |||
| eqenkapital | 779 971 |
107 027 | |
| Sum overføringar og | |||
| disponeringar | 2 279 971 | 2 857 027 |
Utskriftsdato 18.06.2020 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 1 av 3
Organisasjonenr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
| Beløp i: NOK | Note | 2019 | 2018 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BALANSE - EIGEDELAR | |||||||
| Anleggemiddel Immaterielle eigedelar |
|||||||
| Varige driftømiddel Kraftverk Bøen I Kraftverk Bøen II Sum varige driftømiddel |
3 3 |
10 23 ਤੇ ਕੇ |
815 758 574 |
800 200 000 |
11 24 35 |
152 335 487 |
200 700 900 |
| Finansielle anleggemiddel Andre langsiktige fordringer |
3 | 1 | 758 700 | 1 797 400 | |||
| Sum finansielle anleqqemiddel |
1 | 758 700 | 1 797 400 | ||||
| Sum anleggemiddel | 36 | 332 | 700 | 37 | 285 300 | ||
| Omløpsmiddel Varer |
|||||||
| Krav Kundefordringer Sum krav |
ਰੇ ਦੇ ਹੋ 969 |
304 304 |
763 763 |
006 006 |
|||
| Bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande Bankinnskudd |
ব | 512 | 330 | e | 181 571 | ||
| Sum bankinnskot, kontantar og liknande |
ব | 512 330 | 6 | 181 571 | |||
| Sum omløpømiddel | 5 481 634 | 6 | 944 577 | ||||
| SUM EIGEDELAR | 41 814 334 | 44 229 877 | |||||
| BALANSE - EIGENKAPITAL OG GJELD |
|||||||
| Eigenkapital Innskoten eigenkapital Aksjekapital Sum innskoten eigenkapital |
5 | 150 150 |
000 000 |
150 | 000 150 000 |
||
| Opptent eigenkapital Annen egenkapital Sum opptent eigenkapital |
1 - |
780 780 |
477 477 |
1 n |
000 000 |
506 506 |
|
| Sum eigenkapital | 6 | 1 930 477 | 1 150 506 |
Utskriftsdato 18.06.2020 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 2 av 3
| Gjeld | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Utsett skatt | 7 | 438 | 524 | 386 387 | |||
| Sum avsetjingar for plikter Anna langsiktig gjeld Gjeld til |
438 | 524 | 386 387 | ||||
| kredittinstitusjonar | 8 | 35 788 | 210 | 37 | 226 653 | ||
| Sum anna langsiktig gjeld | 35 788 210 | 37 226 653 | |||||
| Sum langsiktig gjeld | 36 | 226 734 | 37 | 613 040 | |||
| Kortsiktig gjeld | |||||||
| Leverandørgjeld | 516 | 034 | 522 | 668 | |||
| Betalbar skatt | 7 | 679 783 | 861 581 | ||||
| Skyldig offentlige avgifter | 92 | 390 | 95 782 | ||||
| Utbytte | - | 500 000 | 2 | 750 000 | |||
| Annen kortsiktig gjeld | 868 | 916 | 1 236 400 | ||||
| Sum kortsiktig gjeld | 3 657 123 | 5 | 466 431 | ||||
| Sum gjeld | 3 d | 883 | 857 | 43 | 079 471 | ||
| SUM EIGENKAPITAL OG GJELD | 41 | 814 334 | 44 | 229 977 |
Utskriftsdato 18.06.2020 Organisasjonsnr 988 376 582
Side 3 av 3
Organisasjonenr: 988 376 582 BØEN KRAFT AS
NOTEOPPLYSNINGER - SELSKAP
Note 1
Rekneskapsprinsipp
Årsregnskapet er satt opp etter regnskapsloven. Regnskapsreglene for små foretak er fulgt. Forutsetning om fortsatt drift er lagt til grunn for årsregnskapet.
Tal på aksjar og aksjeeigarar
| Aksjeklasse | Ant. aksjar | Pålydande | Bokførd verdi |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ordinære aksjer | 150000.00 | 1.00 | 150000.00 |
| Aksjeeiqare - fritekst | Antall | Eiqarpart | Aksieklasse |
| BNVannkraft ਸੰਤ |
75000.00 | 50.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Leif Morten Gilje | 22500.00 | 15.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Kambo Energi AS | 22500 00 | 15.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Holding AS KHV |
22500.00 | 15.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Vidar Øvrevik AS | 7500.00 | 5.00% | Ordinære aksjer |
| Sum | Sum antall | Sum eiqarpart |
150000.00 100 . 00%
Styremedlemmene eier indirekte aksjene gjennom sine aksjeselskaper.
Ytingar til leiande personer Er det gitt ytingar til leiande person: Nei
Ytingar
Lønn Pensj.plikt Andre godtaj.
Note
2
| Revision | Arets | Fiorårets |
|---|---|---|
| 28720.00 | 36913.00 | |
| Andre tenester | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 11287.00 | 13125.00 | |
| Sum qodtqjersle til revisor | Arets | Fjorårets |
| 40007.00 | 50038.00 |
Beløpene er eksklusive merverdiavgift.
Antall årsverk i regnøkapøåret
Verksemda har hatt følgjende tal på årsverk: 0.00
Lån og sikkerheitøstilling til leiande personar
Er det gitt lån eller sikkerheitsstilling til leiande personar: Nei
Resultatført økatt på ordinært resultat
| Betalbar skatt | Årets | Fjorårets |
|---|---|---|
| 679783.00 | 861581.00 | |
| Endringer i utsett skattefordel | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 52237.00 | -30950.00 | |
| Skattepliktig inntekt | ||
| Ordinært resultat før skatt | Arets | Fjorårets |
| 3011991.00 | 3687657.00 | |
| Permanente forskjellar | Arets | Fiorårets |
| 15375.00 | 123.00 | |
| Endring i mellombelse forskjellar | Årets | Fjorårets |
| 62555.00 | 58226.00 | |
| Betalbar skatt i balansen | ||
| Betalbar skatt på årets resultat | Årets | Fjorårets |
679783.00 861581.00
Note 7
Mellombeløe forskjellar - utøett økatt/økattefordel
| Anleqqsmiddel | Startdato | Sluttdato | Endring |
|---|---|---|---|
| -41551.00 | 234594.00 | ||
| Andre forskjellar | Startdato | Sluttdato | Endring |
| 1797400.00 | 1758700.00 |
Note റ്റ
Gjeld
Avsetting for pliktar er forkortet til: "Ave.plikt"
Anna langsiktig gjeld er forkortet til: "A.L.gjeld"
Kortøiktig gjeld er forkortet til: "K. gjeld"
_Gjeld forfell etter > 5 år Avs.plikt A.L.gjeld K. aield 33000000.00
Bal.ført verdi.pants.eiged. Avs.plikt A.L.gjeld K. gield 37302004.00
Selskapets langsiktige gjeld har en avtalt gjenværende løpetid på 2 år med en låneprofil på totalt 30 år. Restgjeld om to år er beregnet til 33 millioner.
Note 8
Pantstillingar og garantiar m.v.
| Gjeld til kredittinstitusjonar | Arets | Fjorårets |
|---|---|---|
| 35788210.00 | 37226653.00 | |
| Bal.ført verdi,eiqed.pants.for eiga qjeld Arets | Fiorårets | |
| 37302004 . 00 | 38048306.00 | |
| Note 3 |
||
| Varige driftømiddel/anleqqemiddel |
Driftølausøyre, inventar o.l. er forkortet til: "Drift/inv"
| Maskiner og anlegg er forkortet til: "Maek/anl" | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomter, bygninger og anna fast eigedom er forkortet til: "T/B/AFE" | |||||
| Anskaff. kost 01.01. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum | |||||
| 40269073.0 | |||||
| O | |||||
| Tilqanq i året | |||||
| 0.00 | |||||
| Avqanq i året Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum | 0.00 | ||||
| Akk.av-/nedskr.01.01. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum | |||||
| 4781173.00 | |||||
| Akk.av-/nedskr.31.12. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum | |||||
| 5694073.00 | |||||
| Årets av-/nedskriv. Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE Sum | 913900.00 | ||||
| Økonomisk levetid Drift/inv Mask/anl T/B/AFE | |||||
| 20-66 år | |||||
| Anleggsbidrag er avskrevet med 38 700 i 2019 | |||||
| Note | |||||
| ട് | |||||
| Eigenkapital | |||||
| Akøjekapital er forkortet til: "Aksjekap" | |||||
| Anna innskoten eigenkapital er forkortet til: "A.innek.EK" | |||||
| Eigenkap. 31.12. førre år Aksjekap Overkurs A.innsk.EK | 150000.00 | ||||
| Eigenkapital | |||||
| Opptent eigenkapitaler forkortet til: "Opptj.EK" | |||||
| Eiqenkapital 31.12. førre å Opptj.EK Udekt tap Sum | 100506.00 | ||||
| Årsresultat | Opptj.EK | Udekt tap Sum | |||
| 2279971.00 | |||||
| Avs.utbytte/forv.utb. (IFRS) Oppt.EK Udekt tap Sum | |||||
| -1500000.00 |
STATSAUTORISERT REVISOR Frik Christoffreersen
SI EPENDVEIEN 48 ERRY CLEGENDEN Tir. 67 80 90 80 ORG.NR. 930 906 965 E-POST: ERIK.CHRISTOFFERSEN(@ECHAS.NO
Til generalforsamlingen i Bøen Kraft AS
Vi har revidert selskapet Bøen Kraft AS' årsregnskap som viser et overskudd på kr 2 279 971. Årsregnskapet består av balanse per 31. desember 2019, resultatregnskap for regnskapsåret avsluttet per denne datoen og noter til årsregnskapet, herunder et sammendrag av viktige regnskapsprinsipper.
Etter vår mening er det medfølgende årsregnskapet avgitt i samsvar med lov og forskrifter og gir et rettvisende bilde av selskapets finansielle stilling per 31. desember 2019, og av dets resultater for regnskapsåret avsluttet per denne datoen i samsvar med regnskapslovens regler og god regnskapsskikk i Norge.
Vi har gjennomført revisjonen i samsvar med lov, forskrift og god revisjonsskikk i Norge, herunder de internasjonale revisjonsstandardene (ISA-ene). Våre oppgaver og plikter i henhold til disse standardene er beskrevet i Revisors oppgaver og plikter ved revision av årsreanskapet. Vi er uavhengige av selskapet slik det kreves i lov og forskrift, og har overholdt våre øvrige etiske forpliktelser i samsvar med disse kravene. Etter vår oppfatning er innhentet revisjonsbevis tilstrekkelig og hensiktsmessig som grunnlag for vår konklusjon.
Styret (ledelsen) er ansvarlig for å utarbeide årsregnskapet i samsvar med lov og forskrifter, herunder for at det gir et rettvisende bilde i samsvar med regnskapslovens regler og god regnskapsskikk i Norge. Ledelsen er også ansvarlig for slik intern kontroll som den finner nødvendig for å kunne utarbeide et årsregnskap som ikke inneholder vesentlig feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil.
Ved utarbeidelsen av årsregnskapet må ledelsen ta standpunkt til selskapets evne til fortsatt drift og opplyse om forhold av betydning for fortsatt drift. Forutsetningen om fortsatt drift skal legges til grunn for årsregnskapet så lenge det ikke er sannsynlig at virksomheten vil bli avviklet.
Medlem av Den norske Revisorforening
Vårt mål er å oppnå betryggende sikkerhet for at årsregnskapet som helhet ikke inneholder vesentlig feilinformasjon, verken som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil, og å avgi en revisjonsberetning som inneholder vår konklusjon. Betryggende sikkerhet er en høy grad av sikkerhet, men ingen garanti for at en revisjon utført i samsvar med lov, forskrift og god revisjonsskikk i Norge, herunder ISA-ene, alltid vil avdekke vesentlig feilinformasjon som eksisterer. Feilinformasjon kan oppstå som følge av misligheter eller utilsiktede feil. Feilinformasjon blir vurdert som vesentlig dersom den enkeltvis eller samlet med rimelighet kan forventes å påvirke økonomiske beslutninger som brukerne foretar basert på årsregnskapet.
For videre beskrivelse av revisors oppgaver og plikter vises det til https://revisorforeningen.no/revisjonsberetninger
Basert på vår revisjon av årsregnskapet som beskrevet ovenfor, og kontrollhandlinger vi har funnet nødvendig i henhold til internasjonal standard for attestasjonsoppdrag (ISAE) 3000 «Attestasjonsoppdrag som ikke er revisjon eller forenklet revisorkontroll av historisk finansiell informasjon», mener vi at ledelsen har oppfylt sin plikt til å sørge for ordentlig og oversiktlig registrering og dokumentasjon av selskapets regnskapsopplysninger i samsvar med lov og god bokføringsskikk i Norge.
Slependen, 27. mai 2020 Echas Revisjon AS
Erik Christoffersen statsautorisert revisor
Medlem av Den norske Revisorforening
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