3 May 2024

GreenAir News

Reporting on aviation and the environment

Investor consortium in late bid to save cash-strapped SAF technology developer Velocys

The board of directors of Oxford, UK-based Velocys has given its backing to an offer from a consortium of US, UK and Singapore climate-focused investment houses to acquire the company. Without an immediate injection of funds, Velocys is in danger of running out of cash next month and going into insolvency, warned the company. A spin-out from the University of Oxford, Velocys has been developing technology to enable production of drop-in sustainable aviation fuels from a variety of waste materials and is involved in two projects in the UK and US to build commercial-scale SAF production plants. Listed on the London Stock Exchange, Velocys shares have fallen from a high of £5.80 a share during the past year to 0.23 pence, valuing the company at just under £4 million. The consortium, which is offering 0.25 pence per share in cash and, if the bid is successful, a secured bridging loan of £3.5 million and growth capital of up to $40 million (£31.5m), said Velocys was well-positioned to capitalise on “a compelling market opportunity” for the production of SAF.

The consortium, which has set up a company, Madison Bidco, for the purposes of the acquisition, is made up of London-headquartered global private equity firm Lightrock; New-York based global growth investment firm Carbon Direct Capital; GenZero, an investment platform founded last year by Temasek, the global investment company owned by the Singapore government; and Kibo Investments, a Singapore-based private investment office focused on climate technology. Carbon Direct Capital had previously been expected to make a $15 million investment in Velocys but withdrew when the latter failed to secure further investment from other backers by the end of October.

In a market announcement, Philip Holland, the Chair of Velocys, commented: “The Velocys Board and management have spent a great deal of time and effort trying to secure significant long-term funding to grow the business and accelerate the delivery of its technology to clients. However, reflecting Velocys’ material funding requirements, business model and limited revenue together with the continued challenging public market environment, it has not been possible to raise sufficient funds. This has put the business in an extremely challenging position, with a very real prospect of not being able to continue as a going concern when we reach the end of our cash runway in early January.

“Bidco is offering the business a secure platform for future growth, alongside an injection of up to $40 million of growth capital, which is expected to ensure that Velocys has the capital resources needed to deliver against its medium-term strategic plans, including to scale up and grow and work towards its long-stated goal of supporting the decarbonisation of the global aviation sector. Whilst it is very disappointing for the business to need to leave the public markets, Bidco’s offer will enable Velocys to continue operating as a going concern.”

The consortium’s confidence in SAF production is based on what the market announcement describes as a “confluence of regulatory support, demand pull by airlines and increased technology readiness,“ adding “Velocys is well positioned to capitalise on these sector tailwinds, given its patented integrated Fischer-Tropsch reactor and catalysis solution and its pipeline of commercial licensing opportunities.”

Velocys said it has a number of third-party clients to whom it supplies its technology, along with its two biorefinery reference projects, the Bayou Fuels Project in Mississippi that would utilise woody waste to produce sustainable fuels and the Altalto Project in Immingham, north-east England, that would process municipal and commercial solid waste into sustainable fuels.

According to the Velocys website, Bayou Fuels is expected to produce 36 million gallons per year of negative-emission transportation fuels using a combination of biogenic feedstock, biomass power and carbon capture and sequestration. Long-term SAF offtake agreements have been signed with Southwest Airlines (15 years) and IAG/British Airways (10 years). In October 2022, the company announced that when the project entered production, then forecast for 2026, the facility would use renewable energy derived from sustainable biomass power instead of solar power that would double the carbon savings for its aviation customers and the enhanced negative carbon intensity would also increase the credits generated under the US Inflation Reduction Act and the California Low Carbon Fuel Standard, improving the revenue and economic profile of the project.

A year ago, the Altalto project, a collaboration with British Airways to produce 20 million gallons of sustainable fuels annually with net negative carbon emissions, was awarded up to £27 million ($34m) in grant funding, with an initial tranche of £7 million from the UK Department for Transport, along with matched private funding, towards completing the Front-End Engineering Design stage. “Following completion of FEED and a successful final investment decision, construction will commence in 2025 with full commercial operation expected in 2028,” the company announced in May. The UK government has set a target of five SAF production facilities to be under construction in the UK by 2025.

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