ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

Britain's Crown Estate profits fall to £1.2 billion as offshore wind revenues dip

Britain's Crown Estate profits fall to £1.2 billion as offshore wind revenues dip

By Susanna TwidaleThu, June 25, 2026 at 9:03 PM UTC

0

FILE PHOTO: Britain's King Charles attends a London Climate Week reception at St James's Palace, London, Britain, June 24, 2026. Yui Mok/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

By Susanna Twidale

LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) - Britain's Crown Estate, which manages King Charles' public property, reported an annual net operating profit of £1.245 ‌billion ($1.64 billion) on Thursday, down 13% on the previous year, chiefly ‌because revenues from offshore wind leases fell.

The Crown Estate, which comprises tracts of land and most ​of Britain's sea bed, is an independently run, commercial business.

It hands most of its profits to the UK Treasury, then parliament uses a formula based on Crown Estate revenue to determine how much should be allocated to the royal family ‌for official duties, with ⁠a two-year lag.

Most of the £875 million in profits came from option fees from the offshore wind leasing Round 4 which ⁠was held in 2021 when energy majors including Total and BP won lease options to build windfarms.

As the operators pay smaller fees once they start building the ​projects, revenues ​from the wind leases fell significantly from ​the previous year.

NEW OFFSHORE WIND ‌LEASING ROUND

Advertisement

In March the Crown Estate said it will hold another offshore wind leasing round next year.

CEO Dan Labbad said in a briefing with journalists he anticipates option fees for successive leasing rounds, which are set at auction, will be lower than in Round 4.

"We're in a very, very different market ‌environment," he said.

Since 2021, development costs for the ​offshore wind sector have soared and U.S. ​President Donald Trump has sought ​to halt project development and criticised the technology.

Excluding the Round ‌4 fees, operating profits increased 5% to £370 ​million while the ​property portfolio valuation increased to £14.5 billion from £13.4 billion the year before, the results showed.

Last year the Crown Estate was granted powers to keep ​more of the money it ‌generates to invest in new projects. For 2025/2026, the Treasury received £487 ​million, down from around £1.1 billion a year earlier.

($1 = 0.7582 pounds)

(Reporting ​By Susanna Twidale; editing by Barbara Lewis)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Money”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.