Annual Financial Report

RNS Number : 6107R
SSE PLC
15 June 2018
 

Annual Financial Report 2018

 

Following the Preliminary Results announcement on 25 May 2018, SSE plc confirms that it has published its Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 March 2018.

 

The Annual General Meeting (AGM) will be held at the Perth Concert Hall, Mill Street, Perth PH1 5HZ on Thursday, 19 July 2018 at 12.30pm.  The mailing to shareholders of the AGM documentation has commenced, and copies of the Annual Report and Accounts and the Notice of Annual General Meeting for 2018 are available to view on the Company's website: www.sse.com.

 

In accordance with Listing Rule 9.6.1, copies of the Annual Report and Accounts, Notice of Annual General Meeting, and Form of Proxy for 2018 have been submitted to the UK Listing Authority and will shortly be available for inspection via the National Storage Mechanism, which can be accessed at: www.hemscott.com/nsm.do

 

A condensed set of SSE plc's Group financial statements, and information on important events that have occurred during the year and their impact on the financial statements, were included in SSE's Preliminary Results announcement issued on 25 May 2018. That information, together with the information set out in Sections 1 to 3 below, which is extracted from the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts, constitute the material required by Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 6.3.5 to be communicated to the media in unedited full text through a Regulatory Information Service. This material is not a substitute for reading the full 2018 Annual Report and Accounts.  Page numbers and cross-references in the extracted information refer to page numbers and cross-references in the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts. 

 

Section 1. Principal Risks and Uncertainties  

The following information is extracted from pages 28 to 32 of the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Risk Report

Managing SSE's Risks

During 2017/18, the Board sought to continue to mature SSE's Risk Management Framework to further enhance flexibility and decision-making throughout SSE, in support of creating value in a sustainable way. SSE's Strategic Framework is part of the wider System of Internal Control (as described on page 114 of the Directors' Report) and is used to support the setting of objectives for the SSE Group and its businesses.

Renewing our business

Sustainable and risk informed strategic decision making

When setting strategic objectives the Board considers all material influencing factors, including those relating to climate change, technological developments and customer expectations.

 

During the course of the year, the Board made the proposal to merge SSE's household energy supply and services business in Great Britain (now named SSE Energy Services) with npower, the retail business of innogy SE, to form a combined independent retail company. As highlighted by the Chief Executive on page 24, a dedicated project team has been put in place to manage this transaction and the risks associated with it and is reporting on its progress to the Board and Executive Committee on a regular basis. Material changes in the nature and impact of SSE's Group Principal Risks are continuously assessed with mitigating actions implemented wherever necessary. The risk factors directly associated with the transaction will be set out in the Shareholder Circular which will be published on 27 June 2018.

 

The Executive Committee and sub-committees have responsibility for overseeing SSE's Principal Risks. During the third quarter of SSE's financial year, an assessment of each Principal Risk is completed by the assigned oversight committee. This assessment requires committee members to provide commentary on contextual changes to the risks and whether they consider them to have become more or less material during the year. These responses are then consolidated into reports, one for each Principal Risk, which are presented back to the committees along with the results of provisional viability testing and analysis of relevant, current management information and key information relating to interconnecting risks. These reports form the basis for the committees to discuss and confirm risk trend (more, less or equally material), overall effectiveness of the risk control and monitoring environment, and whether any additional actions are required to improve the control environment. The outputs from these 10 committee assessments are then presented to the Executive Committee for full review, with any emerging risks or additional material changes resulting from this being proposed to the Board for approval.

 

Following the 2017/18 annual review process, SSE's 10 existing Group Principal Risks remain unchanged. Important revisions have however been made to the descriptions of each to take account of key developments and corresponding mitigations during the year. Full Principal Risk descriptions can be found overleaf [pages 30 to 32 of the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts].

 

Risk Appetite Statement

No business is risk free and indeed the achievement of SSE's strategic objectives necessarily involves taking risk. SSE will however only accept risk where it is consistent with its core purpose, strategy and values; is well understood and can be effectively managed; and offers commensurate reward.

 

The sectors in which SSE operates are inherently subject to a high degree of political, regulatory and legislative risk. Furthermore, each of SSE's business divisions has differing levels of exposure to additional risks. For example, the Networks business is largely economically regulated and is characterised by relatively stable, inflation-linked cash flows while the Wholesale business benefits from cash flows linked to government-mandated renewables. In fulfilling its core purpose, the Wholesale business is however also exposed to significant energy market and commodity risk in its operational and investment decision making.

 

The key elements of SSE's strategic framework - including the range and nature of the energy businesses and assets within the SSE Group and its financial objective in relation to dividend growth - are fully reflective of its risk appetite. Fundamentally:

 

·   SSE maintains a balanced range of economically regulated and market-based energy businesses and assets ranging from energy production and delivery to the provision of energy and complementary services. These provide a diversified portfolio of business activities whilst keeping the depth of focus on a single sector - energy;

·   SSE has a clear understanding of the risks and opportunities in the Great Britain and Ireland energy markets and these markets therefore continue to provide the Group's geographic focus.

 

In areas where SSE is exposed to risks for which is has little or no appetite, even though it has implemented high standards of control and mitigation, the nature of these risks mean that they cannot be eliminated completely.

 

In determining its appetite for specific risks, the Board is guided by three key principles:

 

1. Risks should be consistent with SSE's core purpose, financial objectives, strategy and values. In particular, safety is SSE's first value and it has no appetite for risks brought on by unsafe actions;

2. Risks should only be accepted where appropriate reward is achievable on the basis of objective evidence and in a manner that is consistent with SSE's purpose, strategy and values; and

3. Risks should be actively controlled and monitored through the appropriate allocation of management and other resources, underpinned by the maintenance of a healthy business culture.

 

The Board has overall responsibility for determining the nature and extent of the risk it is willing to take and for ensuring that risks are managed effectively across the Group.

 

Group Principal Risks

SSE operates in fast moving markets that are subject to a high degree of political, regulatory and legislative intervention. It is therefore essential that SSE's Risk Management Framework is dynamic and flexible, allowing decision makers to focus on material risk information that may have an impact, whether positive or negative, on strategic objectives.

 

The Board and Executive Committee look for as complete a perspective as possible when assessing the Principal Risks that face the Group. This graphic [set out on page 29 of the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts] illustrates SSE's 10 Group Principal Risks positioned on a relative basis against the output of the Principal Risk Self  Assessment process (based on changes in the context and current prevalence of each risk) and potential impact on Group Viability based on critical risks scenarios developed in conjunction with business experts.

 

In addition, Principal Risks that were considered by their oversight committees to have increased in materiality during the year are shown in red, those that have not changed significantly are shown in blue, and those that were deemed to have decreased in materiality are shown in green.

 

Viability Statement

As required within provision C.2.2 of the UK Corporate Governance Code, the Board has assessed the prospects of the Company over the next 3 financial years to the period ending March 2021. The Directors have determined that as this time horizon is consistent with the Group's current capital programme and is within the strategy planning period, a greater degree of confidence over the forecasting assumptions modelled can be established.

 

In making this statement the Directors have considered the resilience of the Group taking into account its current position, the Principal Risks facing the Group and the control measures in place to mitigate each of them. In particular the Directors recognise the significance of the strong balance sheet, and committed lending facilities of £1.5bn which could be drawn down in most circumstances.

 

The Group also has a number of highly attractive and relatively liquid assets - including a regulated asset base which benefits from a strong regulated revenue stream as well as the operational wind portfolio - which provide flexibility of options. This was demonstrated in the successful sale during the 2016/17 financial year of a 16.7% share of Scotia Gas Networks Ltd.

 

To help support this Statement, over the course of the year a suite of severe but plausible scenarios has been developed against each of SSE's Principal Risks. These scenarios are based on relevant real life events that have been observed either in the markets within which the Group operates or related markets globally. Examples include persistently low commodity prices (for Commodity Prices); changes to key government energy policies (for Politics, Regulation & Compliance); and the impact of the loss of key systems (for Cyber Security and Resilience). Analysis relating to reverse stress testing is also incorporated into the assessment.

 

Scenarios that most have the potential to adversely affect SSE's ability to deliver its core purpose to responsibly provide the energy and related services needed now and in the future are stress tested against forecast available financial headroom. In addition to considering these in isolation, the Directors also consider the cumulative impact of different combinations of scenarios, including those that individually have the highest impact and those that are most heavily interconnected with SSE's other Principal Risks. This year, neither regulatory or shareholder approval have yet been received in respect of the proposal to merge SSE's household energy supply and services business in Great Britain (SSE Retail) with the retail business of innogy SE to form a combined independent retail company. As such two assessments have been carried out for the Group - one on the assumption that the approval is received and the other assuming not.

 

On the basis of the analysis undertaken, and on the assumption that the fundamental regulatory and statutory framework of the markets in which the Group operates does not substantively change, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group will be able to continue to meet its liabilities as they fall due in the period to March 2021.

 

Group Principal Risks

 

 

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk associated with the Group's exposure to fluctuations in both the physical volumes and price of key commodities, including electricity, gas, CO2 permits, oil and related foreign exchange values.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Weather associated seasonal fluctuations in demand, supply and generation capabilities - which may or may not be in line with historical trends both in GB and across Europe. Further detail is available on page 33 of the Strategic Report.

·   Fluctuations in foreign exchange markets.

·   Fluctuations in demand.

·   Generation technology advancements.

·   Geopolitical events and domestic political change.

·   Global economic growth.

·   European generation outputs.

·   International and national agreements on climate change.

·   International inflows of fuel.

·   Managing increased market volatility related to current geopolitical events including the impact of, and uncertainty relating to, Brexit.

 

 

·   SSE uses VaR measures to monitor and control exposures. Trading limits are set by the Board and managed through separate Retail and Wholesale Risk Committees.

·   Commodity positions are assessed on a daily basis by a Risk Management team.

·   SSE's Energy Economics team provide commodity price forecasts which are used to inform decisions on trading strategy and asset investment.

·   SSE utilises a number of hedging instruments to minimise exposure to fluctuations in commodity prices and foreign exchange markets, details are available in the Financial Statements section of this Annual Report.

 

Oversight

Wholesale Risk Committee

 

 

Cyber Security and Resilience

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk that key infrastructure, networks or core systems are compromised or are otherwise rendered unavailable.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Software or hardware issues, including telecoms network and connectivity and power supplies.

·   Malicious cyber-attack.

·   Ineffective operational performance, for example, breach of information security rules or poor management of resilience expertise.

·   Employee and contractor understanding and awareness
of information security requirements.

 

·   The global profile, prevalence and sophistication of malicious cyber-attack continues to increase.

·   Changes to reporting regulatory requirements generated by the introduction of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Networks and Information Systems (NIS) Directive.

·   Continuously evolving technological environment.

 

 

·   Key technology and infrastructure risks are incorporated into the design of systems and are regularly appraised with risk mitigation plans recommended.

·   SSE conducts regular internal and third party testing of the security of its IT networks and systems.

·   Further strengthening and embedding of the cyber risk and controls framework which seeks to continue to identify threats and reduce exposures through, for example, improved use of data analytics and further migration from unsupported systems.

·   Significant longer term Security Programme investment and planning which seeks to strengthen the resilience of the systems on which SSE relies.

·   IT Service Assurance works with individual business units to form and agree appropriate service level agreements for business critical IT services.

·   Business continuity plans are in place and are regularly tested and reviewed.

 

Oversight

Information Security and Privacy Committee

Development and Change

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk of failing to recognise and react appropriately to competition, technological advancements and changes in customer expectations.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Fast developing customer needs in relation to efficient, innovative and flexible products and services.

·   Climate change and the necessity to generate the energy required in modern society in a responsible and sustainable way which includes ensuring value is shared with those impacted by SSE's operations.

·   The size, scale and number of change programmes underway, including those relating to regulatory or legislative requirements.

·   Longer term capital investment plans and budgets.

·   Geopolitical events.

·   Governance and decision making frameworks within the Group.

·   The planned SSE Energy Services transaction represents the most significant strategic change to the SSE Group since its creation in 1998.

·   An increasingly flexible energy infrastructure network, including the transition in the Networks business from Distribution Network Operator to Distribution System Operator.

·   Identifying innovations and cost reductions in renewable technologies as research and development continues apace.

 

·   The Board sets the risk appetite of the Group and approves and regularly reviews the Group's commercial strategy, business development initiatives and long term options, ensuring alignment of risk appetite and strategic objectives.

·   The Executive Committee is responsible for ensuring that divisional strategies are consistent and compatible with the overarching Group strategy.

·   A dedicated project team is managing the planned SSE Energy Services transaction process as well as the risks directly associated with it and is reporting to the Board and Executive Committee on a regular basis.

 

Oversight

Executive Committee

 

Energy Affordability

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk that the combination of the cost of providing reliable and sustainable energy and the level of customers' incomes means that energy becomes unaffordable to a significant number of SSE's customers. This risk is directly connected to political interventions and commodity price exposure.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Fluctuations in the cost of fuels.

·   Generation technology changes.

·   Macro economic impacts on household and business incomes.

·   Supply chain cost management.

·   Public policies, including those aimed at reducing carbon emissions and energy consumption.

·   Required investment in the upgrading of the UK energy infrastructure.

·   Continued uncertainty surrounding Brexit and its longer-term economic impact, including on households and businesses.

·   The extension of the price cap previously introduced to pre-payment meter customers to those receiving warm home discount and the announcement of Government plans for the introduction of a time limited cap on all standard variable energy tariffs.

 

·   SSE's Customer Charter sets out the steps it takes to support customers who are having difficulty paying their bills, encouraging early engagement to work together on arrangements that allow payments to be appropriately managed.

·   In March 2018, SSE attained the British Standard for Inclusive Service Provision, which represents the 'gold standard' in recognising and catering for vulnerability.

·   SSE has a series of programmes, partnerships, funds and schemes in place to support vulnerable customers, including identifying and referring customers for benefits entitlement checks.

·   SSE continues to advocate its belief that modernisation of the energy market is best delivered by a cost-effective, privatised system that is properly regulated.

 

Oversight

Retail Risk Committee

Energy Infrastructure Failure

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk of national energy infrastructure failure, whether in respect of assets owned by SSE or those owned by others which SSE relies on, that prevents the Group from meeting its obligations.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Severe adverse weather that causes damage or interrupts energy supply or generation.

·   Appropriate asset management and necessary upgrading works of both generation and network assets.

·   Energy network balancing mechanisms.

·   Government policy regarding the operation of the energy network which relate to security of supply, including the implications of Labour Party proposals for a much greater role for the state in energy provision.

·   Failures in any aspect of the GB national critical infrastructure.

·   Malicious attack on the GB energy infrastructure.

·   Ongoing efficient investment and the associated risks of upgrading networks assets.

·   Continued investment in a diversified range of generation assets.

·   SSE's dedicated Engineering Centre of Excellence reviews and develops plans to ensure the ongoing integrity of its generation assets is maintained.

·   Crisis management and business continuity plans are in place across the Group. These are tested regularly and are designed for the management of, and recovery from, significant energy infrastructure failure events. Where there are material changes in infrastructure (or the management of it) additional plans are developed.

·   SSE continues to be an active participant in national security forums such as the Centre for the Protection of National Infrastructure (CPNI).

 

Oversight

Executive Committee

 

 

Financial Liabilities

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk that funding is not available to meet SSE's financial liabilities, including those relating to its defined benefit pension schemes, as these fall due under both normal and stressed conditions without incurring unacceptable costs or risking damage to its reputation.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Global macro economic changes and subsequent volatility within foreign exchange markets.

·   Fluctuations in interest rates and inflation which influence borrowing costs.

·   Defined benefit pension scheme investment and performance.

·   The impact of fluctuations in gilt yields on the value of defined benefits pension scheme liabilities.

·   Ongoing commitment to maintain credit rating criteria.

·   Ongoing uncertainty and volatility in financial markets due to potential macro economic factors, such as the impact of Brexit.

·   Material reduction in defined benefit pension scheme deficit levels.

·   Issuing of a €600m Green Bond, an innovative approach to financing renewable energy infrastructure investment, achieving a coupon of 0.875%, SSE's lowest ever for a senior bond.

·   The Group approach is to ensure that committed borrowings and facilities are available at all times equal to at least 105% of forecast borrowings over a rolling 6 month period.

·   SSE seeks to maintain a diverse and innovative portfolio of debt to avoid over-reliance on any one market. This allows it to build relationships with, and create competition between, debt providers.

·   Each of SSE's defined benefit pension schemes has a Board of Trustees which acts independently of the Group.

 

Oversight

Tax and Treasury Committee

 

Major Projects Quality

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk that major assets that SSE builds do not meet the quality standards required to support economic lives of typically 15 to 30 years.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Availability of competent contractors.

·   Appropriate contractual arrangements.

·   New or unproven technology.

·   Appropriate and effective budget management.

·   All aspects of supply chain management, including those relating to human rights and labour standards

 

·   The Group continues to manage the challenges associated with large capital projects such as the Caithness-Moray high voltage transmission link and the Beatrice Offshore Windfarm.

·   In 2018, SSE became a signatory to the United Nations Global Compact - the world's leading sustainability initiative. Signatories must align their strategies and operations with ten guiding principles, six of which are around human rights and labour standards.

·   SSE's Large Capital Project Governance Framework ensures that all major capital investment projects for the Group are governed, developed, approved and executed in a consistent and effective manner, with full consideration of best practice project delivery. The manual provides common standards across the Group and incorporates continuous improvement practices.

·   The Large Capital Projects Services function employs dedicated quality and assurance teams who perform in-depth quality reviews.

·   In major projects, SSE generally manages insurance placement by organising owner controlled insurance. This strategy allows it to have greater control and flexibility over the provisions in place. SSE also sees the insurance market as an important source of information on the reliability of technology and uses this to inform the design process of major projects.

·   SSE's strategy supports the transition to a low-carbon electricity system. As part of this, SSE is investing significantly in renewable energy, and is expecting to increase its renewable energy capacity to over 4GW by 2020.

 

Oversight

Group Large Capital Projects Governance Committee

People and Culture

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk that SSE is unable to attract, develop and retain an appropriately skilled, diverse and responsible workforce and leadership team, and maintain a healthy business culture which encourages and supports ethical behaviours and decision making.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Rewarding employee contributions through fair pay and benefits.

·   Recognition of the value and benefit of having an inclusive and diverse workforce.

·   A responsible employer ethos (see page 81 for further detail).

·   Clearly defined roles, responsibilities and accountabilities for all employees.

·   Availability of career development opportunities and appropriate succession planning that recognises potential future skills shortages.

·   Clear personal objectives and communication of the SSESET of values.

·   A focus on ethical business conduct and creating a culture in which employees feel confident to speak up when they suspect wrongdoing.

·   Recognising the value of inclusion, SSE has reviewed its inclusion strategy which will be supported by a refined and more targeted delivery plan.

·   An Employee Communication Forum and a detailed communications plan have been put in place to ensure that all staff impacted by the planned SSE Energy Services transaction can raise questions, issues and concerns.

 

·   SSE has a detailed inclusion and diversity policy and plan which is sponsored by the Executive Committee. This policy ensures that candidates from as wide a talent pool as possible are considered for all relevant vacancies. For more details regarding the progress of these please see the Sustainability Report.

·   Group policies including "Doing the Right Thing, a guide to ethical business conduct", explicitly outline the steps employees should take to ensure their day-to-day actions and decisions are consistent both with SSE's values and ethical business principles. SSE employees can report incidents of wrongdoing through both internal and external mechanisms. SSE uses an independent 'Speak Up' phone line and email service, hosted externally by SafeCall, through which incidents can be reported.

·   The Audit Committee reviews all key accounting judgements made as part of the preparation of the Annual Report and Accounts.

·   SSE's business leaders are required to undertake regular succession planning reviews. At a Group level, SSE continues to develop its approach to the management of talent and strategies to strengthen this.

 

Oversight

Group Governance, Culture and Controls Committee

Politics, Regulation and Compliance

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk from changes in obligations arising from operating in markets which are subject to a high degree of regulatory, legislative and political intervention or uncertainty.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Constitutional uncertainty relating to Brexit.

·   Changes in financial, employment, safety and consumer legislation and regulation and the impact of these changes on business as usual activities.

·   Government intervention into the structure of the energy sector including renationalisation of any aspect of the UK's energy infrastructure.

·   Changes to corporate governance requirements.

·   International and national agreements such as the 2015 Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

·   UK Government's continuing focus on energy supply markets including further potential interventions.

·   UK Government policy evolution in key areas such as carbon price support and the capacity market.

·   SSE continues to focus advocacy efforts on maintaining a long-term collaborative and cooperative UK-EU relationship relating to energy issues.

 

·   The Group has dedicated Corporate Affairs, Regulation, Legal and Compliance departments that provide advice, guidance and assurance to each Division regarding the interpretation of political, regulatory and legislative change. These teams take the lead in engagement with regulators, politicians, officials, and other such stakeholders.

·   The Group has a dedicated project team to manage all aspects of the regulatory and legislative change impacts of Brexit.

·   There is regular engagement with the Board and Executive Committee on political and regulatory developments which may impact SSE's operations or strategy.

·   SSE has a long-term strategy to reduce the carbon intensity of the electricity it generates.

 

Oversight

Group Governance, Culture and Controls Committee

Safety and the Environment

Key developments in 2017/18

Key mitigations

What is the risk?

The risk of harm to people, property or the environment from SSE's operations.

 

Material influencing factors:

·   Clear and appropriately communicated safety processes.

·   Safety culture - "if it isn't safe, we don't do it".

·   Clear, effective and regular communication of all relevant safety updates.

·   Competent employees and contractors.

·   Regular and documented training.

·   Adverse weather.

·   Challenging geographic locations.

·   Appropriate task and asset risk assessment.

·   Introduction of the 50/20 Safety family initiative which targets a 50% reduction in injury rate and 50% of our people active on health by 2020.

·   In 2018, SSE set a new, longer term ambition to 2030 for the carbon intensity of the electricity it generates.

·   Safety is the Group's No 1 value and is overseen by the Group Safety, Health and Environment Committee, supported by the Board's Safety Health and Environment Advisory Committee.

·   Crisis management and business continuity plans are in place across the Group. These are tested regularly and are designed for the management of, and recovery from, significant safety and environmental events.

·   SSE's dedicated Engineering Centre of excellence reviews and develops plans to ensure that the integrity of its assets is maintained.

·   Full environmental impact assessments are carried out for all major projects, to ensure adverse environmental impacts are well understood and minimised.

 

Oversight

Group Safety, Health and Environment Committee

 

 

Section 2. Directors' Responsibility Statement

The following information is extracted from page 140 of the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Statement of directors' responsibilities

 

Statement of directors' responsibilities in respect of the annual report and the financial statements

The directors are responsible for preparing the Annual Report and the Group and parent Company financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

 

Company law requires the directors to prepare Group and parent Company financial statements for each financial year. Under that law they are required to prepare the Group financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union (IFRSs as adopted by the EU) and applicable law and have elected to prepare the parent Company financial statements in accordance with UK accounting standards, including FRS 101 Reduced Disclosure Framework.

 

Under company law the directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Group and parent Company and of their profit or loss for that period. In preparing each of the Group and parent Company financial statements, the directors are required to:

·   select suitable accounting policies and then apply them consistently;

·   make judgements and estimates that are reasonable, relevant, reliable and prudent;

·   for the Group financial statements, state whether they have been prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the EU;

·   for the parent Company financial statements, state whether applicable UK accounting standards have been followed, subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the parent company financial statements;

·   assess the Group and parent Company's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern; and

·   use the going concern basis of accounting unless they either intend to liquidate the Group or the parent Company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

 

The directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the parent Company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the parent Company and enable them to ensure that its financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are responsible for such internal control as they determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and have general responsibility for taking such steps as are reasonably open to them to safeguard the assets of the Group and to prevent and detect fraud and other irregularities.

 

Under applicable law and regulations, the directors are also responsible for preparing a Strategic Report, Directors' Report, Directors' Remuneration Report and Corporate Governance Statement that complies with that law and those regulations.

 

The directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial information included on the company's website. Legislation in the UK governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

 

Responsibility statement of the directors in respect of the annual financial report

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

·   the financial statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the company and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole; and

·   the strategic report includes a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of the issuer and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that they face.

 

We consider the annual report and accounts, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary for shareholders to assess the Group's position and performance, business model and strategy.

 

Alistair Phillips-Davies                                    Gregor Alexander

Chief Executive                                                Finance Director

24 May 2018

 

 

Section 3. Related Party Transactions

The following information is extracted from Accompanying Information A5. on page 217 of the 2018 Annual Report and Accounts.  A condensed version of this extract was published as Note 18 in the Preliminary Results Statement for the year ended 31 March 2018.

 

A5. Related party transactions

The immediate parent and ultimate controlling party of the Group is SSE plc (incorporated in Scotland). Balances and transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries, which are related parties of the Company, have been eliminated on consolidation and are not disclosed in this note. Details of transactions between the Group and other related parties are disclosed below.

 

Trading transactions

The following transactions took place during the year between the Group and entities which are related to the Group but which are not members of the Group. Related parties are defined as those in which the Group has control, joint control or significant influence over.

 

Joint ventures:

2018

Sale of goods and services

£m

2018

Purchase of goods and services

£m

 

2018

Amounts owed from

£m

 

 

2018

Amounts owed to

£m

2017

Sale of goods and services

£m

2017

Purchase of goods and services

£m

 

2017

Amounts owed from

£m

 

2017

Amounts owed to

£m

Seabank Power Ltd

14.4

(155.0)

0.1

16.2

11.0

(134.0)

0.1

17.0

Marchwood Power Ltd

8.5

(132.3)

0.2

10.6

16.8

(144.5)

0.5

12.6

Scotia Gas Networks Ltd

41.4

(144.8)

0.6

14.2

45.5

(158.0)

0.9

0.9

Clyde Windfarm (Scotland) Ltd

4.8

(129.3)

6.5

37.7

5.7

(0.1)

-

11.1

Other Joint Ventures

23.3

(186.2)

17.1

52.3

10.4

-

2.3

-

Associates

-

(34.7)

4.5

-

1.4

(53.4)

3.6

3.9

 

The transactions with Seabank Power Limited and Marchwood Power Limited relate to the contracts for the provision of energy or the tolling of energy under power purchase arrangements. Scotia Gas Networks Limited has operated the gas distribution networks in Scotland and the South of England from 1 June 2005. The Group's gas supply activity incurs gas distribution charges while the Group also provides services to Scotia Gas Networks in the form of a management service agreement for corporate services, stock procurement services and the provision of the capital expenditure on the development of front office management information systems.

 

The amounts outstanding are trading balances, are unsecured and will be settled in cash. No guarantees have been given or received. No provisions have been made for doubtful debts in respect of the amounts owed by related parties. Aggregate capital loans to joint ventures and associates are shown in Note 16.


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