Corcel PLC
("Corcel" or the "Company")
Final Audited
Results
for the Year Ended 30 June
2024
16 December 2024
The Company's Annual Report and
Financial Statements for 2024, extracts from which are set out
below, will be published and sent out to the Company's shareholders
shortly and will be available on the Company's website at
www.corcelplc.com.
Chairman's Statement
Dear Shareholders,
I am pleased to present Corcel
Plc's Annual Report and Accounts for the financial year ending 30
June 2024. Our activities this year have set the path for a true
transformation of Corcel, characterised by strategic realignment,
commercial and operational milestones, and a strengthened
commitment to delivering significant sustainable value for our
stakeholders.
Strategic and Operational Progress
In July 2023, with the acquisition
of 90% of Atlas Petroleum Exploration Worldwide Ltd ("APEX"), we
embarked on a strategic pivot, focusing our efforts on high-impact
onshore oil and gas assets in Angola's Kwanza Basin, namely:
operated Block KON-16 and non-operated blocks KON-11 and KON-12.
The operator of KON-11, Angola's national oil company, Sonangol
Pesquisa e Produção, S.A. ("Sonangol"), drilled two wells (TO-13
and TO-14) in the Tobias field during Q3 and Q4 of 2023. Both wells
had oil shows, indicating the presence of hydrocarbons in the
field. Detailed work is currently being undertaken to assess the
results and address the mechanical and performance issues, faced
during the testing of these two wells.
In our operated block KON-16, we
initiated Geological and Geophysical "G&G" studies and
conducted an Enhanced Full Tensor Gradiometry Survey ("eFTG"),
which was successfully acquired post year-end reporting during Q3,
2024, with processing ongoing. The eFTG is expected to provide
highly accurate geophysical representations of critical information
for developing a detailed exploration programme, comprising of a 2D
seismic acquisition programme and an exploration well to establish
the shallow post-salt and deep pre-salt prospectivity of
KON-16.
In April 2024, to recalibrate the
strategic direction, Mr. Scott Gilbert (a co-founder of APEX) was
appointed as interim CEO, bringing to the Company extensive
experience, operating in Brazil and in Angola, complementing the
experience of Ms. Geraldine Geraldo, Executive Director (also a
co-founder of APEX). In July 2024, post year end reporting, Scott
was appointed as permanent CEO and an Executive Director to the
Board. The newly formed management team delivered the following key
milestones:
o Increased our equity in KON-16 from 31.5% to 49.5%,
underscoring our confidence in what we believe to be one of the
most exciting blocks in the onshore Kwanza Basin with not only a
post-salt potential, but a significant pre-salt potential as well
(September 2024);
o Delivered critical G&G progress, including the completion
of the eFTG survey for developing prospectivity in KON-16 (Q2-Q3
2024);
o Signed a collaboration agreement with a Brazilian oil field
services company, which has resulted in our entry into the country
through the option agreement (with minimal dilution to
shareholders) for the acquisition of gas production from the Irai
field, onshore Brazil. Our collaboration has enhanced our
operational capacity in Brazil, and we are presently reviewing
several promising production acquisition opportunities in the
region (July 2024);
o Strengthened the technical and operational team with the
appointment of Chief Operating Officer, Richard Lane (November
2024);
o Secured new strategic investors with extensive experience in
oil and gas in both Angola and Brazil (September 2024);
o Completed a full review and analysis of the mining portfolio,
paving the way for operations to recommence in 2025 (Q3
2024).
Corcel is now firmly established
as an energy company with three verticals, which intend to deliver
a) significant upside through our Angola exploration assets, b)
revenue from production through our entry into the Irai field and
other potential acquisitions in Onshore Brazil, and c) continued
exposure to rare earth and battery metals from our historical
assets, which are very much at the forefront of energy transition
and global electrification trends.
Financial Discipline and Fundraising
Financial resilience remains a
cornerstone of our approach. In May 2024, we successfully raised
£399,750 through equity issuances, reflecting continued investor
confidence in our vision. These funds have been deployed
strategically to advance our work programs in Angola, evaluate
opportunities in Brazil, and support ongoing operational
needs.
Prior to year end reporting, in
June 2024, we raised a further £500,000 from strategic investors,
again, reflecting investor confidence in the Company and the
management team. These modest raises were completed with the
intention of minimising dilution to shareholders, yet enabled the
Company to deliver on several of its newly set strategic
objectives.
In September 2024, the Company
completed a fundraising of £1,220,000, which included the
participation of several supportive long-term oil and gas
investors.
We report during the period
that the Group incurred a loss of £3.03
million (2023: loss of 1.26 million), primarily due to increases in
administrative expenses £2.57 million (2023: £1.44 million),
related to the expansion of the business and asset portfolio, and
the impairment of £0.22 million to the Company's Canegrass project
in Australia (2023: £nil). Project costs during the year held
flat at £0.14 million (2023: £0.11 million) and finance costs fell
to £0.13 million (2023: £0.45 million) reflecting the Company's
transition to less expensive sources of
capital.
Governance and Leadership
This year, we undertook a
governance refresh to better align with our evolving strategic
priorities. I was honoured to assume the role of Non-Executive
Chairman. The Company is supported by a talented Board and an
excellent leadership team with deep expertise across oil and gas,
finance and international markets. Together, we are committed to
ensuring robust governance as a foundation for existing operations
and our growth ambitions.
Outlook and Future Plans
The upcoming year is poised to be
one of great importance for Corcel.
Our key priorities for 2024-2025
include:
o Advancing the exploration program on KON-16;
o Building on our first acquisition, expanding our footprint in
Brazil through strategic acquisitions targeting near-term
production;
o Strengthening partnerships and working closely with the
Operator in Angola to maximize the value of KON-11 and
KON-12;
o Maximising value potential from our Battery Metals and Rare
Earth assets;
o Upholding financial prudence and operational efficiency to
sustain progress.
We remain steadfast in our
commitment to building a balanced portfolio of energy assets,
combining near-term production with long-term exploration upside,
while delivering sustainable value for our shareholders.
On behalf of the Board, I extend
my deepest gratitude to our shareholders for their unwavering
support, to our employees for their dedication, and to our partners
for their collaboration. Together, we are forging a resilient and
dynamic Corcel, poised to thrive in an evolving energy
landscape.
Yours sincerely,
Pradeep Kabra
Independent Non-Executive Chairman
Corcel Plc
CEO's Statement
Dear Shareholders,
I am delighted to provide the
following statement, which underscores a year where we have laid
the foundation for an ambitious transformation of our Company,
emerging as a dynamic and resilient player in the energy sector.
Our journey is characterised by a clear strategic vision, decisive
actions, and an unwavering commitment to unlocking the immense
potential of our asset portfolio across Angola, Brazil, and beyond,
by investing and maturing our three verticals:
o Exploration:
high-impact oil and gas post-salt and pre-salt
exploration from the onshore Kwanza Basin in Angola;
o Production:
low-risk production from oil and gas fields
onshore Brazil for near-term revenue generation;
o Energy
Transition: through the development
of our Battery Metals asset portfolio.
Operational Achievements and Strategic
Momentum
2024 has been a pivotal year for
Corcel. The acquisition of a 90% interest in APEX in June 2023
marked the beginning of a new chapter, enabling the business to
pivot our focus toward high-impact, high-potential oil and gas
assets in Angola's Kwanza Basin. In KON-16, our operated block, we
made significant progress, including the completion of the Enhanced
Full Tensor Gradiometry ("eFTG") survey-an instrumental step in
refining our exploration plans.
Additionally, our increased equity
in KON-16, as disclosed in the Chairman's Statement, underscores
our confidence in this asset's transformative potential,
particularly its pre-salt prospectivity. These advancements
represent more than technical milestones; they signal Corcel's
readiness to lead in unlocking the untapped value in Angola's
onshore energy landscape.
Beyond Angola, we entered Brazil
with a strategic collaboration, signing an option agreement to
acquire gas production from the Irai field transaction (post
year-end). This entry not only diversifies our portfolio but also
establishes a beachhead for additional opportunities in a key
market with significant near-term production potential.
Financial Resilience and Strategic
Investment
The financial discipline, we have
exercised, has been instrumental in achieving key operational
objectives, while minimising shareholder dilution. With successful
fundraisings, strategic partnerships, and a shift toward
cost-effective capital, we have ensured Corcel's financial
robustness even as we scale our ambitions.
The Company's loss during the
period reflects necessary investments in our people, processes, and
portfolio. These expenditures, while initiated under previous
management, are not merely costs but strategic steps toward
Corcel's future-a future rooted in operational excellence,
technical innovation, and long-term value creation. Since taking
over as CEO after the year-end, I have prioritised exercising tight
cost control and adopting a more disciplined approach to ensure
that every investment aligns with our strategic objectives and
drives sustainable value. This marks a shift toward greater
financial prudence and accountability under my
leadership.
People and Partnerships: Driving Progress
At the core of our transformation
is a talented team of experts, supported by strategic partnerships
that amplify our operational capacity. The addition of a seasoned
leadership team and our collaboration with partners in Angola and
Brazil are critical enablers of our vision. We are building an
organization that thrives on collective expertise, delivering
impactful results with precision and accountability.
Looking Ahead: The Road to 2025
Corcel is entering an era of
execution. Our focus for the year ahead includes advancing
exploration on KON-16, expanding our footprint in Brazil, and
maximising the value of KON-11 and KON-12 through close
collaboration with Sonangol. Simultaneously, we will work to
maximise value from our Battery Metals and Rare Earth assets to
capture the opportunities, presented by the energy
transition.
As we execute on these priorities,
we will remain uncompromising in our commitment to financial
prudence, operational excellence, and stakeholder value. Corcel is
poised to deliver a balanced portfolio that marries the immediacy
of production revenues with the upside potential of long-term
exploration.
A
Shared Vision for Success
I am deeply grateful to our
shareholders, to our employees, and our partners. Together, we are
not just building a Company-we are crafting a legacy of sustainable
growth, innovation, and resilience in the energy sector.
Thank you for your support as we
take bold steps toward realising the full potential of Corcel
Plc.
Yours sincerely,
Scott Gilbert
Chief Executive Officer
Corcel Plc
Results and Dividends
The Group made a loss after
taxation of £3.03million (2023: loss of £1.26 million) with the
increase on the prior year, driven largely by the costs associated
with operating an expanded Group, inclusive of operations in
Angola, which had only been acquired at the end of the prior year.
The Directors do not recommend the payment of a dividend (2023:
nil).
For further information, please contact:
Scott
Gilbert
Corcel Plc CEO &
Director
Development@Corcelplc.com
James Joyce / James Bavister / Andrew de Andrade
Zeus NOMAD &
Broker
020 3829 5000
Jonathan Wright / Rupert Holdsworth
Hunt
Auctus Advisors Joint
Broker
07711 627449
Patrick d'Ancona
Vigo Communications IR
0207 3900 230
The information, contained within this
announcement, is
deemed to constitute inside information as stipulated under the
Market Abuse Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014, which is part of UK law
by virtue of the
European Union (withdrawal) Act 2018. Upon the publication of this
announcement, this inside information is now considered to be in
the public domain.
About Corcel
Corcel has a notable oil and gas
portfolio in onshore Angola that includes brownfield redevelopment
opportunities and significant exploration upside. Corcel marked a
new country entry into Brazil by acquiring rights to producing gas
and exploration assets, further diversifying its portfolio and
enhancing its growth potential.
Corcel's
Angola portfolio consists of interests in three
licences:
· KON
- 16 Operated - 55% working interest - 49.5% net to CRCL
· KON
- 11 Non-Operated - 20% working interest - 18% net to
CRCL
· KON
- 12 Non-Operated - 25% working interest - 22.5% net to
CRCL
Corcel's Brazil portfolio
consists of the option to acquire:
· a
20% interest in the IRAI gas field
· a
right-of-first refusal ("ROFR") over the remaining 80% in the IRAI
field, and
· another ROFR for 100% of the adjacent TUC-T-172 exploration
block, located in the state of Bahia, onshore Brazil.
Independent Auditor's Report to
the Members of Corcel Plc
Opinion
We have audited the Financial
Statements of Corcel Plc (the "Company") and its subsidiaries (the
"Group") for the year ended 30 June 2024, which comprise the
Consolidated and Company Statements of Financial Position, the
Consolidated Income Statement, the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income, the Consolidated and Company Statements of
Changes in Equity, the Consolidated and Company Statements of Cash
Flows and notes to the Financial Statements, including significant
accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has
been applied in their preparation is applicable law and UK-adopted
international accounting standards and as regards the Company
Financial Statements, as applied in accordance with the provisions
of the Companies Act 2006.
In our opinion:
· the
Financial Statements give a true and fair view of the state of the
Group's and of the Company's affairs as at 30 June 2024 and of the
Group's loss for the year then ended;
· the
Group Financial Statements have been properly prepared in
accordance with UK-adopted international accounting
standards;
· the
Company Financial Statements have been properly prepared in
accordance with UK-adopted international accounting standards and
as applied in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act
2006; and
· the
Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006.
Basis for Opinion
We conducted our audit in
accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs
(UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those
standards are further described in the Auditor's responsibilities
for the audit of the Financial Statements section of our report. We
are independent of the Group and the Company in accordance with the
ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the
Financial Statements in the UK, including the FRC's Ethical
Standard as applied to listed entities, and we have fulfilled our
other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these
requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained
is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our
opinion.
Material uncertainty related to going
concern
We draw attention to Note 1.2 in
the Financial Statements, which indicates that the Group and the
Company are reliant on raising additional funding in order to meet
commitments as they fall due, including working capital
requirements and funding of agreed work programmes. As stated in
Note 1.2, these events or conditions indicate that a material
uncertainty exists that may cast significant doubt on the Group's
and the Company's ability to continue as a going concern. Our
opinion is not modified in respect of this matter.
In auditing the Financial
Statements, we have concluded that the Directors' use of the going
concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the Financial
Statements is appropriate. Our evaluation of the Directors'
assessment of the Group's and the Company's ability to continue to
adopt the going concern basis of accounting included:
·
consideration of the objectives, policies and
processes in managing its working capital;
·
reviewing the cash flow forecasts for the ensuing
twelve months from the date of approval of these Financial
Statements and critically analysing the key inputs and assumptions
used;
·
reviewing the stress testing performed by
management for reasonableness;
·
obtaining an understanding of committed spend
versus spend that can be deferred if needed, and how management is
able to cut back costs should it be needed to preserve cashflow in
the short term;
·
reconciling the opening bank balance as per the
cashflow forecast to the bank statements at the beginning of
December 2024;
·
reviewing management's going concern memorandum
and holding discussions with management regarding future plans and
availability of funding;
·
reviewing the adequacy and completeness of
disclosures in the Group and Company Financial Statements;
and
·
reviewing post balance sheet events as they
relate to the Group's and Company's ability to raise
funds.
Our responsibilities and the
responsibilities of the Directors with respect to going concern are
described in the relevant sections of this report.
Our Application of Materiality
For the purposes of determining
whether the Financial Statements are free from material
misstatement, we define materiality as a magnitude of misstatement,
including omission, that makes it probable that the economic
decisions of a reasonably knowledgeable person, relying on the
Financial Statements, would be changed or influenced. We have also
considered those misstatements, including omissions that would be
material by nature and would impact the economic decisions of a
reasonably knowledgeable person based our understanding of the
business, industry and complexity involved.
We apply the concept of
materiality both in planning and throughout the course of audit,
and in evaluating the effect of misstatements. Materiality is used
to determine the Financial Statements areas that are included
within the scope of our audit and the extent of sample sizes during
the audit.
We also determine a level of
performance materiality, which we use to assess the extent of
testing needed to reduce to an appropriately low level the
probability that the aggregate of uncorrected and undetected
misstatements exceeds materiality for the Financial Statements as a
whole. No significant changes have come to light during the course
of the audit, which required a revision to our materiality for the
Financial Statements as a whole.
In determining materiality and
performance materiality, we considered the following
factors:
· our
cumulative knowledge of the Group and its environment, including
industry specific trends;
· any
change in the level of judgement required in respect of the key
accounting estimates;
· significant transactions during the year;
· the
stability in key management personnel; and
· the
level of misstatements identified in prior periods.
Materiality for the Group
Financial Statements was set at £181,000 (2023: £172,400). This was
calculated at 3% of net assets (2023: 3% of net assets). Using our
professional judgement, we have determined this to be the principal
benchmark within the Group Financial Statements as it is from these
net assets that the Group seeks to deliver returns for
shareholders, in particular the value of exploration and
development projects the Group is interested in through its
subsidiaries, mining tenements and joint venture.
Materiality for the significant
components of the Group, ranged from £91,500 to £180,000 (2023:
£87,600 to £171,000) calculated as a percentage of net
assets.
Performance materiality for the
Group Financial Statements was set at £126,700 (2023: £120,600),
being 70% (2023: 70%) of materiality for the Group Financial
Statements as a whole.
Materiality and performance
materiality for the Company was set at £180,000 (2023: £171,000)
and £126,000 (2023: £119,700) respectively.
The materiality and performance
materiality for the significant components, including the Company,
are calculated on the same factors as Group materiality and
performance materiality.
We agreed to report to those
charged with governance all corrected and uncorrected misstatements
we identified through our audit with a value in excess of £9,050
(2023: £8,600) for the Group and for the Company a value in excess
of £9,000 (2023: £8,500). We also agreed to report any other audit
misstatements below that threshold that we believe warranted
reporting on qualitative grounds.
Our Approach to the Audit
Our audit is risk based and is
designed to focus our efforts on the areas at greatest risk of
material misstatement, being areas subject to significant
management judgement as well as areas of greatest complexity and
size. The scope of our audit was based on the significance of
components' operations and materiality. Each component was assessed
as to whether they were significant to the Group based on financial
significance or risk.
The Group includes the listed
Company in United Kingdom and a number of subsidiaries based in
different jurisdictions. The listed Company and one subsidiary were
considered to be significant components due to identified risk and
size.
In designing our audit, we
determined materiality, as above, and assessed the risk of material
misstatement in the Financial Statements. We tailored the scope of
our audit to ensure that we performed sufficient work to be able to
give an opinion on the Financial Statements, considering the
structure of the Group.
We considered areas deemed to
involve significant judgement and estimation by the Directors, such
as the key audit matters surrounding: the carrying value of
investments in subsidiaries, assets held for sale, and receivables
from other Group companies; and the carrying value of exploration
and evaluation assets. Other judgemental areas relate to the
valuation of share options and warrant instruments. We also
addressed the risk of management override of controls, including
consideration of whether there was evidence of bias that
represented a risk of material misstatement due to
fraud.
The Group's and the Company's
centralised accounting function is based in United Kingdom and the
audit work on all significant components was performed by our Group
audit team in London.
Key Audit Matters
Key audit matters are those
matters that, in our professional judgment, were of most
significance in our audit of the Financial Statements of the
current period and include the most significant assessed risks of
material misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) we identified,
including those, which had the greatest effect on: the overall
audit strategy, the allocation of resources in the audit; and
directing the efforts of the engagement team. These matters were
addressed in the context of our audit of the Financial Statements
as a whole, and in forming our opinion thereon, and we do not
provide a separate opinion on these matters.
In addition to the matter
described in the Material uncertainty related to going concern
section, we have determined the matters described below to be the
key audit matters to be communicated in our report.
We have determined the matters
described below to be the key audit matters to be communicated in
our report
Key Audit Matter
|
How our scope addressed this matter
|
Carrying value of investments in subsidiaries and receivables
from subsidiary (Company only) (Notes 10 and 13).
Investments in subsidiaries and receivables from subsidiaries
are significant balances in the financial
statements.
Investments:
The Company holds a 90% interest in Atlas Petroleum
Exploration Worldwide Ltd (carrying value of £966,000) and a 100%
interest in Corcel Australasia (carrying value of
£1,014,000).
Receivable
balance:
The Company currently has outstanding receivables due of
£3,882,000 from subsidiary Atlas Petroleum Exploration Worldwide
Ltd.
As at 30 June 2024, these assets have material value in the
Financial Statements.
Given the losses in these entities and uncertainty around the
development as the projects are in early stages of development,
there is a risk that these balances may be impaired. As determining
the recoverability involves a high degree of management estimate
and judgement, this is considered to be a key audit
matter.
|
Our work in this area
included:
·
Obtaining relevant documentation relating to the
ownership of investments at the year end;
·
Reviewing management's assessment of
recoverability of investments in subsidiaries and receivable from
subsidiary, including challenging and corroborating key assumptions
made therein;
·
Consideration of the recoverability of these
balances by reference to underlying net asset values, including the
recoverability potential of the underlying projects where
applicable;
·
Obtaining and reviewing any relevant agreements
relating to investments (including shareholder agreements and
licence agreements) to ensure all terms were complied
with;
·
Review of Board minutes and Regulatory News
Service (RNS) announcements to identify potential indicators of
impairment to these assets; and
·
Considering the appropriateness of disclosures
included in the Financial Statements.
|
Carrying value of exploration and evaluation assets (Group)
(Note 21).
The exploration and evaluation asset represents a significant
balance in the Group's Financial Statements. There is the risk that
this amount is impaired and the capitalised amounts do not meet the
recognition criteria as adopted by the Group. The capitalisation of
the costs and determination of the recoverability of these assets
are subject to a high degree of management estimation and judgement
and therefore there is a risk this balance is materially misstated.
Given the level of judgement involved, this is considered to be a
key audit matter.
|
Our work in this area
included:
·
Confirming that the Group has good title to the
projects through inspection of relevant licenses, contracts and
agreements;
·
Testing a sample of costs capitalised, including
considerations of their appropriateness for capitalisation in
accordance with IFRS 6-Exploration for and
Evaluation of Mineral Resources and
the Group's accounting policy;
·
Reviewing management's impairment assessment in
respect of the carrying value, including challenging and obtaining
corroborating evidence for key assumptions used;
·
Performing independent assessment of the
existence of impairment indicators as required by IFRS 6;
and
·
Considering the appropriateness of disclosures
included in the Financial Statements.
|
Accounting treatment and recoverability of assets held for
sale (Group and Company) (Notes 1.5 and 22).
The Group and Company hold a 41% interest in JV Company Oro
Nickel Ltd. The sale agreement was entered into with the Buyer in
October 2023 subject to completion terms. This was treated as an
asset held for sale in the previous year in accordance with
IFRS 5 Non-current assets held
for Sale and Discontinued operations.
The sale transaction could not be completed in the current
year due to a dispute raised by the JV partner in relation to
pre-emption rights on the sale of the interest.
At the year end, £3,000,000 (Company) and £2,975,000 (Group)
have been classified as Assets held for sale in relation to the
Group's and Company's investment in the JV, made up of equity
investment and loan balance. This balance is material to the
Financial Statements.
There is a risk that the balances relating to the Group's and
Company's interest in Oro Nickel are inappropriately classified as
Assets held for sale and, further, that the carrying value is not
held at the lower of carrying value and fair value less costs to
sell as required by IFRS 5. Given the significance of these
balances to the Financial Statements, we have considered this to be
a key audit matter.
|
Our work in this area
included:
·
Obtaining the agreements signed in the disposal
process and reviewing the terms and conditions of the
disposal;
·
Agreeing the consideration received or receivable
to the underlying calculations, agreements and other relevant
supporting documentation;
·
Obtaining an understanding of progress made
during the year and the appropriateness of classification of the
relevant assets as held for sale in accordance with IFRS
5;
·
Reviewing RNS announcements and Board minutes, as
well as holding discussions with management, to understand the
latest position with regard to the planned disposal and related
dispute raised by the partner;
·
Holding discussions with the Company's external
lawyer with regard to the dispute raised by the JV partner to
understand the status of the claim and current
proceedings;
·
Independently considering indications that the
carrying value of the related IFRS 5 assets may need to be written
down to fair value; and
·
Considering the appropriateness of disclosures
included in the Financial Statements.
|
Other Information
The other information comprises
the information, included in the annual report, other than the
Financial Statements and our auditor's report thereon. The
Directors are responsible for the other information contained
within the annual report. Our opinion on the Group and the Company
Financial Statements does not cover the other information and,
except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we
do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon. Our
responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so,
consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent
with the Financial Statements or our knowledge obtained in the
course of the audit, or otherwise appears to be materially
misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent
material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this
gives rise to a material misstatement in the Financial Statements
themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude
that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we
are required to report that fact.
We have nothing to report in this
regard.
Opinions on Other Matters Prescribed by the Companies Act
2006
In our opinion, based on the work
undertaken in the course of the audit:
· the
information given in the Strategic Report and the Directors' Report
for the financial year for which the Financial Statements are
prepared is consistent with the Financial Statements;
and
· the
Strategic Report and the Directors' Report have been prepared in
accordance with applicable legal requirements.
Matters on Which We are Required to Report by
Exception
In the light of the knowledge and
understanding of the Group and the Company and their environment,
obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified
material misstatements in the Strategic Report or the Directors'
Report.
We have nothing to report in
respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies
Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our
opinion:
· adequate accounting records have not been kept by the
Company, or returns adequate for our audit have not been received
from branches not visited by us; or
· the
Company Financial Statements are not in agreement with the
accounting records and returns; or
· certain disclosures of Directors' remuneration specified by
law are not made; or
· we
have not received all the information and explanations we require
for our audit.
Responsibilities of Directors
As explained more fully in the
Statement of Directors' Responsibilities, the Directors are
responsible for the preparation of the Group and Company Financial
Statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair
view, and for such internal control as the Directors determine is
necessary to enable the preparation of Financial Statements that
are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or
error.
In preparing the Group and the
Company Financial Statements, the Directors are responsible for
assessing the Group and the Company's ability to continue as a
going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going
concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the
Directors either intend to liquidate the Group or the Company or to
cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do
so.
Auditor's Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial
Statements
Our objectives are to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the Financial Statements as a
whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or
error, and to issue an auditor's report that includes our opinion.
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance but is not a
guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will
always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements
can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if,
individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected
to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of
these Financial Statements.
Irregularities, including fraud,
are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We
design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined
above, to detect material misstatements in respect of
irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures
are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is
detailed below:
· We
obtained an understanding of the Group and the Company and the
sector in which they operate to identify laws and regulations that
could reasonably be expected to have a direct effect on the
Financial Statements. We obtained our understanding in this regard
through discussions with management. We also selected a specific
audit team based on experience with auditing entities within this
industry, facing similar audit and business risks.
· We
determined the principal laws and regulations relevant to the Group
and the Company in this regard to be those arising from:
o AIM Rules;
o QCA Corporate Governance Code;
o UK Companies Act 2006;
o UK-adopted international accounting standards;
o UK employment law;
o UK tax legislation;
o General Data Protection Regulations;
o Anti-Bribery Act;
o Anti-Money Laundering Regulations; and
o Local environmental and exploration regulations.
· We
designed our audit procedures to ensure the audit team considered,
whether there were any indications of non-compliance by the Group
and the Company with those laws and regulations. These procedures
included, but were not limited to:
o Making enquiries of management;
o A
review of Board minutes;
o A
review of legal and professional ledger accounts; and
o A
review of Regulatory News Service Announcements
· We
also identified the risks of material misstatement of the Financial
Statements due to fraud. Other than the non-rebuttable presumption
of a risk of fraud, arising from management override of controls,
we did not identify any significant fraud risks.
· As
in all of our audits, we addressed the risk of fraud, arising from
management override of controls by performing audit procedures
which included, but were not limited to: the testing of journals;
reviewing accounting estimates for evidence of bias (Refer to the
Key Audit Matter section); and evaluating the business rationale of
any significant transactions that are unusual or outside the normal
course of business.
· Our
review of non-compliance with laws and regulations, incorporated
all Group entities. The risk of actual or suspected non-compliance
was not sufficiently significant to our audit to result in our
response being identified as a key audit matter.
Because of the inherent
limitations of an audit, there is a risk that we will not detect
all irregularities, including those leading to a material
misstatement in the Financial Statements or non-compliance with
regulation. This risk increases the more that compliance with a law
or regulation is removed from the events and transactions reflected
in the Financial Statements, as we will be less likely to become
aware of instances of non-compliance. The risk is also greater
regarding irregularities occurring due to fraud rather than error,
as fraud involves intentional concealment, forgery, collusion,
omission or misrepresentation.
A further description of our
responsibilities for the audit of the Financial Statements is
located on the Financial Reporting Council's website at:
www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities.
This description forms part of our auditor's
report.
Use of Our Report
This report is made solely to the
Company's members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part
16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so
that we might state to the Company's members those matters we are
required to state to them in an auditor's report and for no other
purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept
or assume responsibility to anyone, other than the Company and the
Company's members as a body, for our audit work, for this report,
or for the opinions we have formed.
Imogen Massey (Senior Statutory Auditor)
15 Westferry Circus
For and on behalf of PKF Littlejohn
LLP
Canary Wharf
Statutory Auditor
London E14 4HD
13 December 2024
Financial Statements
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position
as at 30 June 2024
|
Notes
|
30
June
2024
£'000
|
30
June
2023
£'000
|
ASSETS
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Exploration & evaluation assets
|
21
|
7,713
|
2,014
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
|
8
|
1
|
Financial instruments - fair value through
other comprehensive income (FVTOCI)
|
12
|
1
|
1
|
Other receivables
|
13
|
173
|
2,231
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
7,895
|
4,247
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
18
|
268
|
257
|
Trade and other receivables
|
13
|
917
|
754
|
Total current assets
|
|
1,185
|
1,011
|
Assets held for sale
|
22
|
2,975
|
1,575
|
Total assets
|
|
12,055
|
6,833
|
EQUITY AND LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Equity attributable to owners of the
Parent
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
16
|
2,953
|
2,842
|
Share premium account
|
16
|
31,110
|
28,138
|
Other reserves
|
|
2,802
|
2,481
|
Retained earnings
|
|
(30,980)
|
(27,945)
|
Total equity attributable to owners
of the Parent
|
|
5,885
|
5,516
|
Total equity
|
|
5,885
|
5,516
|
LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
14
|
4,840
|
715
|
Short-term borrowings
|
14
|
1,330
|
602
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
6,170
|
1,317
|
Total equity and
liabilities
|
|
12,055
|
6,833
|
The accompanying notes form an integral part of
these Financial Statements.
These Financial Statements were approved by
the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 13 December 2024
and are signed on its behalf by:
Scott
Gilbert
Executive Director
Registration number: 05227458
Consolidated Income Statement
for the year ended 30 June 2024
|
|
Notes
|
Year
to
30
June
2024
£'000
|
Year
to
30
June
2023
£'000
|
|
Gain on disposal of
tenements
|
|
2
|
-
|
475
|
|
Gain on disposal of
subsidiaries
|
|
2
|
-
|
287
|
|
Gain on disposal of JV's and
associates
|
|
2
|
-
|
384
|
|
Project expenses
|
|
|
(144)
|
(114)
|
|
Impairment of investments in joint ventures and
financial instruments held at fair value through profit and loss
(FVTPL)
|
|
11
|
-
|
(337)
|
|
Impairment of E&E asset
|
|
21
|
(220)
|
-
|
|
Administrative expenses
|
|
4
|
(2,572)
|
(1,442)
|
|
Foreign currency gain/(loss)
|
|
|
14
|
(13)
|
|
Other income
|
|
|
43
|
25
|
|
Finance costs, net
|
|
5
|
(129)
|
(451)
|
|
Share of loss of associates and joint
ventures
|
|
11,22
|
-
|
(76)
|
|
Loss for the year before taxation
|
|
3
|
(3,008)
|
(1,262)
|
|
Taxation
|
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
|
Loss for the year for continuing
operations
|
|
|
(3,008)
|
(1,262)
|
|
Loss for the year for discontinued
operations
|
|
22
|
(27)
|
-
|
|
Loss per share attributable
to:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity holders of the
Parent
|
|
|
(3,035)
|
(1,262)
|
|
Non-controlling interest
|
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
(3,035)
|
(1,262)
|
|
Earnings per share attributable to
owners of the Parent:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted
|
9
|
9
|
(0.2) pence
|
(0.2) pence
|
|
Basic and diluted (continued
operations)
|
9
|
9
|
(0.2) pence
|
(0.2) pence
|
|
Basic and diluted (discontinued
operations)
|
9
|
9
|
(0.0) pence
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income
for the year ended 30 June 2024
|
30
June
2024
£'000
|
30
June
2023
£'000
|
Loss for the year (Continuing and
discontinued operations)
|
(3,035)
|
(1,262)
|
Other
comprehensive income
|
|
|
Items that will be not be
reclassified subsequently to profit or loss
|
|
|
Unrealised foreign currency (loss)/gain on
translation of foreign operations
|
(17)
|
5
|
Total other comprehensive income
for the year
|
(17)
|
5
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
year (Continuing and discontinued operations)
|
(3,052)
|
(1,257)
|
Total comprehensive loss
attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Equity holders of the
Parent
|
|
(3,052)
|
(1,257)
|
Non-controlling
interest
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
(3,052)
|
(1,257)
|
The accompanying notes form an integral part
of these Financial Statements.
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity
for the year ended 30 June 2024
The movements in equity during the year were as
follows:
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Shares to be
issued
£'000
|
Retained
earnings
£'000
|
Other
reserves
£'000
|
Total
Equity attributable to
owners of the Parent
£'000
|
Non-controlling
interests
£'000
|
Total
Equity
£'000
|
As at 1 July 2022
|
2,751
|
24,961
|
75
|
(26,758)
|
2,095
|
3,124
|
-
|
3,124
|
Changes in equity for
2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,262)
|
-
|
(1,262)
|
-
|
(1,262)
|
Other comprehensive income for the
year
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unrealised foreign exchange loss
arising on retranslation of foreign company operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5
|
5
|
-
|
5
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,262)
|
5
|
(1,257)
|
-
|
(1,257)
|
Transactions with
owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of shares, net of issue
costs
|
91
|
3,177
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,268
|
-
|
3,268
|
Cancellation of shares to be
issued
|
-
|
-
|
(75)
|
75
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Options issued
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
53
|
53
|
-
|
53
|
Warrants issued
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
328
|
328
|
-
|
328
|
Total transactions with
owners
|
91
|
3,177
|
(75)
|
75
|
381
|
3,649
|
-
|
3,649
|
As at 30 June 2023 and 1 July
2023
|
2,842
|
28,138
|
-
|
(27,945)
|
2,481
|
5,516
|
-
|
5,516
|
Changes in equity for
2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,035)
|
-
|
(3,035)
|
-
|
(3,035)
|
Other comprehensive income for the
year
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unrealised foreign exchange loss
arising on retranslation of foreign company operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(17)
|
(17)
|
-
|
(17)
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,035)
|
(17)
|
(3,052)
|
-
|
(3,052)
|
Transactions with
owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of shares, net of issue
costs
|
111
|
2,972
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,083
|
-
|
3,083
|
Options issued
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
216
|
216
|
-
|
216
|
Warrants issued
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
122
|
122
|
-
|
122
|
Total transactions with
owners
|
111
|
2,972
|
-
|
-
|
338
|
3,421
|
-
|
3,421
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
2,953
|
31,110
|
-
|
(30,980)
|
2,802
|
5,885
|
-
|
5,885
|
See Note 15 for a description of each reserve
included above.
Consolidated Statement of Changes in
Equity
|
Other reserves
|
FVTOCI
financial
asset
reserve
£'000
|
Share-based
payment
reserve
£'000
|
Warrant
reserve
£'000
|
Foreign
currency
translation
reserve
£
|
Total
other
reserves
£
|
|
As at 1 July 2022
|
(2)
|
116
|
1,450
|
531
|
2,095
|
Unrealised foreign exchange gain
arising on retranslation of foreign company operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5
|
5
|
Options granted during the
year
|
-
|
53
|
-
|
-
|
53
|
|
Warrants granted during the
year
|
-
|
-
|
328
|
-
|
328
|
|
As at 1 July 2023
|
(2)
|
169
|
1,778
|
536
|
2,481
|
|
Unrealised foreign exchange loss
arising on retranslation of foreign company operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(17)
|
(17)
|
|
Options granted during the
year
|
-
|
216
|
-
|
-
|
216
|
|
Warrants granted during the
year
|
-
|
-
|
122
|
-
|
122
|
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
(2)
|
385
|
1,900
|
519
|
2,802
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
See Note 15 for a description of each reserve
included above.
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
for the year ended 30 June 2024
|
Year
to
30
June
2024
£
|
Year
to
30
June
2023
£
|
Cash flows from operating
activities (Continued and discontinued
operations)
|
|
|
Loss before taxation
|
(3,035)
|
(1,262)
|
Impairment of investments in joint ventures
and financial instruments held at fair value through profit and
loss (FVTPL)
|
220
|
337
|
Gain on disposal of subsidiaries
|
-
|
(287)
|
Gain on disposal of mineral
tenements
|
-
|
(475)
|
Gain on disposals of Joint Ventures and
Associates
|
-
|
(384)
|
Depreciation
|
1
|
10
|
Finance cost, net (Note 5)
|
129
|
451
|
Share-based payments
|
294
|
53
|
Share of loss in associates and joint
ventures
|
-
|
76
|
Equity settled expenses
|
12
|
201
|
Decrease/(Increase) in receivables
|
121
|
(139)
|
(Decrease) / increase in payables
|
(181)
|
94
|
Unrealised foreign exchange
|
(4)
|
-
|
Net cash outflow from
operations
|
(2,443)
|
(1,325)
|
Cash flows from investing
activities
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
(8)
|
-
|
Expenditure on exploration & evaluation
assets (Note 21)
|
(1,601)
|
(386)
|
Proceeds from disposal of Joint Ventures and
Associates
|
-
|
384
|
Proceeds from disposal of
Subsidiaries
|
268
|
246
|
Proceeds from disposal of mineral tenements
(Note 21)
|
-
|
535
|
Proceeds from the partial disposal
of assets held for sale (Note 22)
|
116
|
-
|
Net cash outflow from investing
activities
|
(1,225)
|
779
|
Cash inflows from financing
activities
|
|
|
Proceeds from issue of shares net of issue
costs
|
1,823
|
1,738
|
Proceeds of new borrowings, as received net of
associated fees (Note 20)
|
2,344
|
-
|
Repayment of borrowings (Note 20)
|
(471)
|
(954)
|
Net cash inflow from financing
activities
|
3,696
|
784
|
Net decrease in cash and cash
equivalents
|
28
|
238
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of
year
|
257
|
25
|
Foreign exchange on translation of foreign
currency
|
(17)
|
(6)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
year
|
268
|
257
|
Major non-cash transactions are
disclosed in Note 20.
The accompanying notes and accounting policies
form an integral part of these Financial Statements.
Company Statement of Financial Position
Corcel Plc (Registration Number: 05227458) as
at 30 June 2024
|
Notes
|
30
June
2024
£
|
30
June
2023
£
|
ASSETS
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Investments in subsidiaries
|
10
|
1,980
|
1,980
|
Investments in associates and joint
ventures
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
Investments in mineral tenements
|
21
|
184
|
392
|
Loans to subsidiaries
|
13
|
3,882
|
286
|
Financial assets with fair value through other
comprehensive income (FVTOCI)
|
12
|
1
|
1
|
Other receivables
|
13
|
-
|
1,517
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
6,047
|
4,176
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
18
|
89
|
256
|
Trade and other receivables
|
13
|
265
|
453
|
Total current assets
|
|
354
|
709
|
Assets held for sale
|
22
|
3,000
|
1,775
|
Total assets
|
|
9,401
|
6,660
|
EQUITY AND LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
16
|
2,953
|
2,842
|
Share premium account
|
16
|
31,110
|
28,138
|
Other reserves
|
|
2,283
|
1,945
|
Retained earnings
|
|
(30,459)
|
(27,332)
|
Total equity
|
|
5,887
|
5,593
|
LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
14
|
1,862
|
465
|
Loans from subsidiaries
|
14
|
322
|
-
|
Short-term borrowings
|
14
|
1,330
|
602
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
3,514
|
1,067
|
Total equity and
liabilities
|
|
9,401
|
6,660
|
Company Statement of Comprehensive Income
As permitted by Section 408 Companies Act
2006, the Company has not presented its own Statement of
Comprehensive Income. The Company's loss for the financial year was
£3,127,247 (2023: loss of £1,494,325). The Company's total
comprehensive loss for the financial year was £3,127,247 (2023:
loss £1,419,325).
These Financial Statements were approved by the
Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 13 December 2024 and
are signed on its behalf by:
Scott Gilbert
Executive Director
The accompanying notes form an
integral part of these Financial Statements.
Company Statement of Changes in
Equity
for the year ended 30 June 2024
The movements in reserves during the year were
as follows:
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Shares to be
issued
£'000
|
Retained
earnings
£'000
|
Other
reserves
£'000
|
Total
equity
£'000
|
As at 30 June 2022
|
2,751
|
24,961
|
75
|
(25,913)
|
1,564
|
3,438
|
Changes in equity for
2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,494)
|
-
|
(1,494)
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,494)
|
-
|
(1,494)
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of shares, net of issue costs
|
91
|
3,177
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,268
|
Cancellation of shares to be issued
|
-
|
-
|
(75)
|
75
|
-
|
-
|
Share options granted
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
53
|
53
|
Share warrants granted during the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
328
|
328
|
Total transactions with
owners
|
91
|
3,177
|
(75)
|
75
|
381
|
3,649
|
As at 30 June 2023 and 1 July
2023
|
2,842
|
28,138
|
-
|
(27,332)
|
1,945
|
5,593
|
Changes in equity for
2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,127)
|
-
|
(3,127)
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,127)
|
-
|
(3,127)
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of shares, net of issue costs
|
111
|
2,972
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,083
|
Share options granted
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
216
|
216
|
Share warrants granted during the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
122
|
122
|
Total transactions with
owners
|
111
|
2,972
|
-
|
-
|
338
|
3,421
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
2,953
|
31,110
|
-
|
(30,459)
|
2,283
|
5,887
|
Company Statement of Changes in
Equity
Other reserves
|
FVTOCI
financial
asset
reserve
£'000
|
Share-based
payment
reserve
£'000
|
Warrants
reserve
£'000
|
Total
other
reserves
£'000
|
As at 30 June 2022
|
(2)
|
116
|
1,450
|
1,564
|
Changes in equity for
2023
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with shareholders in
the year
|
|
|
|
|
Share options granted during the
year
|
-
|
53
|
-
|
53
|
Warrants issued during the year
|
-
|
-
|
328
|
328
|
Total transactions with
shareholders
|
-
|
53
|
328
|
381
|
As at 30 June 2023 and 1 July
2023
|
(2)
|
169
|
1,778
|
1,945
|
Changes in equity for
2024
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with shareholders in
the year
|
|
|
|
|
Share options granted during the
year
|
-
|
216
|
-
|
216
|
Warrants issued during the year
|
-
|
-
|
122
|
122
|
Total transactions with
shareholders
|
-
|
216
|
122
|
338
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
(2)
|
385
|
1,900
|
2,283
|
See Note 15 for a description of each reserve
included above.
Company Statement of Cash Flows
for the year ended 30 June 2024
|
Year
to
30
June
2024
£'000
|
Year
to
30
June
2023
£'000
|
Cash flows from operating
activities (Continued and discontinued
operations)
|
|
|
Loss before taxation
|
(3,127)
|
(1,494)
|
Impairment of investments in joint ventures
and financial instruments held at fair value through profit and
loss (FVTPL)
|
-
|
337
|
Impairment of mineral tenements
|
220
|
-
|
Impairment of assets held for sale
|
175
|
-
|
Gain on disposal of tenements
|
-
|
(475)
|
Gain on disposal of subsidiaries
|
-
|
(247)
|
Gain on disposal of Joint Ventures and
Associates
|
-
|
(384)
|
Finance costs (Note 5)
|
219
|
451
|
Share-based payments
|
294
|
53
|
Equity settled transactions
|
12
|
201
|
Decrease /(Increase) in receivables
|
110
|
(87)
|
Increase/(Decrease) in payables
|
204
|
(60)
|
Unrealised foreign exchange
|
7
|
-
|
Net cash outflow from
operations
|
(1,886)
|
(1,705)
|
Cash flows from investing
activities
|
|
|
Proceeds from disposal of mineral
tenements
|
-
|
535
|
Proceeds from disposal of
Subsidiaries
|
-
|
246
|
Proceeds from disposal of Joint Ventures and
Associates
|
-
|
384
|
Proceeds from the partial disposal of assets
held for sale
|
116
|
-
|
Loans to subsidiaries (Note 10)
|
(2,081)
|
(8)
|
Investments in mineral tenements
|
(12)
|
-
|
Net cash outflows from investing
activities
|
(1,977)
|
1,157
|
Cash inflows from financing
activities
|
|
|
Proceeds from issue of shares, net of issue
costs (Note 16)
|
1,823
|
1,738
|
Proceeds of new borrowings (Note 20)
|
2,344
|
-
|
Repayments of borrowings (Note 20)
|
(471)
|
(954)
|
Net cash inflow from financing
activities
|
3,696
|
784
|
Decrease in cash and cash
equivalents
|
(167)
|
236
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of
period
|
256
|
20
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
period
|
89
|
256
|
Major non-cash transactions are
disclosed in Note 20.
The accompanying notes and accounting policies
form an integral part of these Financial Statements.
Notes to Financial Statements
1. Principal Accounting
Policies
1.1 Authorisation of
Financial Statements and Statement of Compliance with
IFRS
The Group Financial Statements of Corcel Plc
(the "Company", "Corcel" or the "Parent Company"), for the year
ended 30 June 2024, were authorised for issue by the Board on 13
December 2024 and signed on the Board's behalf by Scott
Gilbert. Corcel Plc is a public limited company, incorporated
and domiciled in England and Wales. The Group's ordinary shares are
traded on AIM. The principal activity of the Group is the
management of a portfolio of oil and gas projects in Africa and
Brazil and battery metals exploration and development projects in
Australia and PNG. The registered address of the Group is Salisbury
House, Suite 425, London Wall, London EC2M 5PS.
1.2 Basis of
Preparation
The Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards ("UK
IAS") in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act
2006. They are presented in thousand Pounds Sterling (£'000),
unless stated otherwise.
The principal accounting policies adopted are
set out below.
Going Concern
It is the prime responsibility and requirement
of the Board to prepare the Group and the Company Financial
Statements on a going concern basis, unless inappropriate to assume
the Group will continue in business. At 30 June 2024, the Group had
cash and cash equivalents of £0.3 million (2023: £0.3 million) and
£1.3 million of borrowings (2023: £0.6). The Group has nil
revenues.
The Directors note the necessity, given the
limited cash resources currently held by the Group, that additional
funding be raised in the near term to meet the ongoing spending
projections and working capital requirements of the business.
This would most likely be through equity and/or debt issuances in
Q1 2025 with, dependent on the quantum of near term funding raised,
further resources required to be secured in the first quarter of
2025. Whilst the Directors remain confident that funding will be
secured as and when required to continue to progress the Group's
projects and meet its obligations, there can be no certainty that
the Company will be able to secure the necessary funding when
required. Consequently, there exists a material uncertainty over
the application of the going concern principle. See Note 1.2
to these Financial Statements for further details.
Having considered the prepared cashflow
forecasts and the Group budget, expected operational costs and the
continued support of the Company's suppliers and shareholders, the
Directors consider that they will have access to adequate resources
in the 12 months from the date of the signing of these Financial
Statements. As a result, they consider it appropriate to continue
to adopt the going concern basis in the preparation of the
Financial Statements.
Should the Group be unable to continue trading
as a going concern, adjustments would have to be made to reduce the
value of the assets to their recoverable amounts, to provide for
further liabilities, which might arise, and to classify non-current
assets as current. The Financial Statements have been prepared on
the going concern basis and do not include the adjustments that
would result if the Group was unable to continue as a going
concern. Notwithstanding the confidence and historical track record
of the Board and the Company in raising funding as and when
required, there can be no certainty that the Company will be
successful in raising the additional funding, necessary to continue
to meet its obligations as and when they fall due.
Consequently, a material uncertainty exits, which may cast
significant doubt on the Group and the Company's ability to act as
a going concern.
New
Standards, Amendments and Interpretations Not Yet
Adopted
At the date of approval of these Financial
Statements, the following standards and interpretations, which have
not been applied in these Financial Statements were in issue but
not yet effective:
· Amendments to
IAS 1: Presentation of Financial Statements: Classification of
Liabilities as Current or Non-current (effective 1 January
2024);
· Amendments to
IAS 1: Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current -
Deferral of Effective Date (effective 1 January 2024);
· Amendments to
IAS 1: Presentation of Financial Statements and IFRS Practice
Statement 2: Disclosure of Accounting Policies (effective 1 January
2023);
· Amendments to
IAS 8: Accounting policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and
Errors - Definition of Accounting Estimates (effective 1 January
2023);
· Amendments to
IAS 12: Income Taxes - Deferred Tax related to Assets and
Liabilities arising from a Single Transaction (effective 1 January
2023);
· Amendments to
IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements: Non-current Liabilities
with Covenants (effective 1 January 2024);
· Amendments to
IAS 12 International Tax Reform: Pillar Two Model Rules (effective
1 January 2023);
· Amendments to
IAS 7 Statement of Cash Flows and IFRS 7 Financial Instruments:
Disclosures: Supplier Finance Arrangements (effective 1 January
2024);
· Amendments to
IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rate: Lack of
Exchangeability (effective 1 January 2025).
The effect of these new and amended Standards
and Interpretations, which are in issue but not yet mandatorily
effective, is not expected to be material.
Standards
Adopted Early by the Group
The Group has not adopted any standards or
interpretations early in either the current or the preceding
financial year.
1.3 Basis of Consolidation
The consolidated Financial Statements of the
Group incorporate the Financial Statements of the Company and
entities controlled by the Company, its subsidiaries, made up to 30
June each year.
Subsidiaries
Subsidiaries are entities over which the Group
has the power to govern the financial and operating policies so as
to obtain economic benefits from their activities. Subsidiaries are
consolidated from the date on which control is obtained, the
acquisition date, until the date that control ceases. They are
deconsolidated from the date on which control ceases.
The acquisition method of accounting is used
to account for the acquisition of subsidiaries by the Group. The
cost of an acquisition is measured as the fair value of the assets
given, equity instruments issued, contingent consideration and
liabilities incurred or assumed at the date of exchange. Costs,
directly attributable to the acquisition, are expensed as incurred.
Identifiable assets acquired and liabilities and contingent
liabilities assumed in a business combination are initially
measured at fair value at the acquisition date.
Provisional fair values are adjusted against
goodwill if additional information is obtained within one year of
the acquisition date about facts or circumstances, existing at the
acquisition date. Other changes in provisional fair values are
recognised through profit or loss.
Intra-group transactions, balances and
unrealised gains and losses on transactions between Group companies
are eliminated on consolidation, except to the extent that
intra-group losses indicate an impairment.
Goodwill is capitalised as an intangible asset
with any impairment in carrying value being charged to the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income. Any impairment,
recognised for goodwill, is not reversed.
A change in the ownership interest of a
subsidiary, without a loss of control, is accounted for as an
equity transaction. If the Group loses control over a subsidiary,
it:
· derecognises the
assets (including goodwill) and liabilities of the
subsidiary;
· derecognises the
carrying amount of any non-controlling interest;
· derecognises the
cumulative translation differences recorded in equity;
· recognises the
fair value of the consideration received;
· recognises the
fair value of any investment retained;
· recognises any
surplus or deficit in profit or loss; and
· reclassifies the
Parent's share of components previously recognised in other
comprehensive income to profit or loss or retained earnings, as
appropriate.
Non-Controlling Interests
Profit or loss and each component of other
comprehensive income are allocated between the Parent and
non-controlling interests, even if this results in the
non-controlling interest having a deficit balance.
Transactions with non-controlling interests,
that do not result in loss of control, are accounted for as equity
transactions. Any differences, between the adjustment for the
non-controlling interest and the fair value of consideration paid
or received, are recognised in equity.
1.4 Summary of Significant
Accounting Policies
1.4.1 Mineral Tenements
and Exploration Property
Exploration licence and property
acquisition costs are capitalised in intangible assets. Licence
costs, paid in connection with a right to explore in an existing
exploration area, are capitalised and held at cost. Licence and
property acquisition costs are reviewed at each reporting date to
confirm that there is no indication that the carrying amount
exceeds the recoverable amount. If no future activity is planned or
the licence has been relinquished or has expired, the carrying
value of the licence and property acquisition costs are written off
through the statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive
income.
1.4.2
Investment in Associates
An associate is an entity over which the
Company is in a position to exercise significant influence, but not
control or joint control, through participation in the financial
and operating policy decisions of the investee.
Investments in associates are recognised in
the Consolidated Financial Statements, using the equity method of
accounting. The Group's share of post-acquisition profits or losses
is recognised in profit or loss and its share of post-acquisition
movements in other comprehensive income are recognised directly in
other comprehensive income. The carrying value of the investment,
including goodwill, is tested for impairment when there is
objective evidence of impairment. Losses in excess of the Group's
interest in those associates are not recognised, unless the Group
has incurred obligations or made payments on behalf of the
associate.
Where a Group company transacts with an
associate of the Group, unrealised gains are eliminated to the
extent of the Group's interest in the relevant associate.
Unrealised losses are also eliminated, unless the transaction
provides evidence of an impairment of the asset transferred in
which case appropriate provision is made for impairment.
Where the Company's holding in an associate is
diluted, the Company recognises a gain or loss on dilution in
profit and loss. This is calculated as the difference between the
Company's share of proceeds, received for the dilutive share issue
and the value of the Company's effective disposal.
In the Company accounts, investments in
associates are recognised and held at cost. The carrying value of
the investment is tested for impairment, when there is objective
evidence of impairment. Impairment charges are included in the
Company Statement of Comprehensive Income.
1.4.3
Interests in Joint Ventures
A joint venture is a joint arrangement,
whereby the partners, who have joint control of the arrangement,
have rights to the net assets of the joint arrangement. Joint
control is the contractually agreed sharing of control of the joint
arrangement, which exists only when decisions on relevant
activities require the unanimous consent of the parties sharing
control. The Group recognises its interest in the entity's assets
and liabilities, using the equity method of accounting. Under the
equity method, the interest in the joint venture is carried in the
balance sheet at cost plus post-acquisition changes in the Group's
share of its net assets, less distributions received and less any
impairment in value of individual investments. The Group Income
Statement reflects the share of the jointly controlled entity's
results after tax. In the Company, only Financial Statements, the
Company's interests in Joint Ventures is recognised at historic
cost less any impairment charged to date.
Any goodwill, arising on the acquisition of a
jointly controlled entity, is included in the carrying amount of
the jointly controlled entity and is not amortised. To the extent
that the net fair value of the entity's identifiable assets,
liabilities and contingent liabilities is greater than the cost of
the investment, a gain is recognised and added to the Group's share
of the entity's profit or loss in the period in which the
investment is acquired.
Financial Statements of the jointly controlled
entity is prepared for the same reporting period as the Group.
Where necessary, adjustments are made to bring the accounting
policies, used into line with those of the Group and to reflect
impairment losses where appropriate. Adjustments are also made in
the Group's Financial Statements to eliminate the Group's share of
unrealised gains and losses on transactions between the Group and
its jointly controlled entity. The Group ceases to use the equity
method on the date from which it no longer has joint control over,
or significant influence in, the joint venture.
1.4.4
Taxation
Corporation tax payable is provided on taxable
profits at the prevailing tax rate. The tax expense represents the
sum of the current tax expense and deferred tax expense.
The tax currently payable is based on taxable
profit for the year. Taxable profit differs from accounting profit
as reported in the Statement of Comprehensive Income because it
excludes items of income or expense that are taxable or deductible
in other years and it further excludes items that are never taxable
or deductible. The Group's liability for current tax is measured,
using tax rates that have been enacted or substantively enacted by
the reporting date.
Deferred tax is the tax expected to be payable
or recoverable on differences between the carrying amount of assets
and liabilities in the Financial Statements and the corresponding
tax bases used in the computation of taxable profit and is
accounted for using the balance sheet liability method. Deferred
tax liabilities are recognised for all taxable temporary
differences and deferred tax assets are recognised to the extent
that it is probable that taxable profits will be available against
which deductible temporary differences can be utilised. Such assets
and liabilities are not recognised if the temporary difference
arises from the initial recognition of goodwill or from the initial
recognition, other than in a business combination, of other assets
and liabilities in a transaction, which affects neither the taxable
profit nor the accounting profit.
Deferred tax liabilities are recognised for
taxable temporary differences arising on investments in
subsidiaries and associates and interests in joint ventures, except
where the Group is able to control the reversal of the temporary
difference and it is probable that the temporary difference will
not reverse in the foreseeable future.
Deferred tax is calculated at the tax rates
that are expected to apply to the period when the asset is realised
or the liability is settled based upon tax rates that have been
enacted or substantively enacted by the reporting date.
Deferred tax is charged or credited in profit
or loss, except when it relates to items credited or charged
directly to equity, in which case the deferred tax is also dealt
with in equity, or items charged or credited directly to other
comprehensive income, in which case the deferred tax is also
recognised in other comprehensive income.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are offset
where there is a legally enforceable right to offset current tax
assets and liabilities and the deferred tax relates to income tax
levied by the same tax authorities on either:
· the same taxable
entity; or
· different
taxable entities, which intend to settle current tax assets and
liabilities on a net basis or to realise and settle them
simultaneously in each future period, when the significant deferred
tax assets and liabilities are expected to be realised or
settled.
1.4.5
Property, Plant and Equipment
Property, plant and equipment, acquired and
identified as having a useful life that exceeds one year, is
capitalised at cost and is depreciated on a straight-line basis at
annual rates that will reduce book values to estimated residual
values over their anticipated useful lives as follows:
Office furniture, fixtures and
fittings -
33% per annum
Leasehold
improvements
- 5% per annum
1.4.6
Non-Current Assets and Liabilities Classified as Held for Sale and
Discontinued Operations
A discontinued operation is a
component of the Group that either has been disposed of, or is
classified as held for sale. A discontinued operation represents a
separate major line of the business. Profit or loss from
discontinued operations comprises the post-tax profit or loss of
discontinued operations and the post-tax gain or loss, recognised
on the measurement to fair value less costs to sell on the disposal
group(s) constituting the discontinued operation.
Non-current assets, classified as
held for sale, are presented separately and measured at the lower
of their carrying amounts immediately prior to their classification
as held for sale and their fair value less costs to sell. Once
classified as held for sale, the assets are not subject to
depreciation or amortisation. See Note 22 for further
details.
1.4.7
Foreign Currencies
Both the functional and presentational
currency of Corcel Plc is Sterling ("£"). Each Group entity
determines its own functional currency and items included in the
Financial Statements of each entity are measured using that
functional currency.
The functional currencies of the foreign
subsidiaries and joint ventures are the Australian Dollar ("AUD"),
the Papua New Guinea Kina ("PNG"), the Angolan Kwanza (''AOA'') and
the US Dollar ("USD"). The Company's operations in Angola are
primarily conducted in USD.
Transactions in currencies, other than the
functional currency of the relevant entity, are initially recorded
at the exchange rate, prevailing on the dates of the transaction.
At each reporting date, monetary assets and liabilities, that are
denominated in foreign currencies, are retranslated at the exchange
rate, prevailing at the reporting date. Non-monetary assets and
liabilities, carried at fair value that are denominated in foreign
currencies, are translated at the rates, prevailing at the date,
when the fair value was determined. Gains and losses, arising on
retranslation are included in profit or loss for the period, except
for exchange differences on non-monetary assets and liabilities,
which are recognised directly in other comprehensive income, when
the changes in fair value are recognised directly in other
comprehensive income.
On consolidation, the assets and liabilities
of the Group's overseas operations are translated into the Group's
presentational currency at exchange rates, prevailing at the
reporting date. Income and expense items are translated at the
average exchange rates for the period, unless exchange rates have
fluctuated significantly during the year, in which case, the
exchange rate at the date of the transaction is used. All exchange
differences arising, if any, are recognised as other comprehensive
income and are transferred to the Group's foreign currency
translation reserve.
1.4.8
Exploration Assets and Mineral Tenements
Exploration assets comprise exploration and
evaluation costs, incurred on prospects at an exploratory stage.
These costs include the cost of acquisition, exploration,
determination of recoverable reserves, economic feasibility studies
and all technical and administrative overheads, directly associated
with those projects. These costs are carried forward in the
Statement of Financial Position as non-current intangible assets
less provision for identified impairments. Costs associated with an
exploration activity will only be capitalised if, in management's
opinion, the results from that activity led to a material increase
in the market value of the exploration asset, which is determined
by management to be following the economic feasibility
stage.
The Group adopts the "area of interest" method
of accounting whereby all exploration and development costs,
relating to an area of interest, are capitalised and carried
forward until either abandoned or an indicator of impairment is
determined. In the event that an area of interest is abandoned, or
if, following determination of an impairment indicator being
present, the Directors consider the expenditure to be of no value,
accumulated exploration costs are written off in the financial year
in which the decision is made. All expenditure, incurred prior to
approval of an application, is expensed, with the exception of
refundable rent, which is raised as a receivable.
Upon disposal, the difference between the fair
value of consideration receivable for exploration assets and the
relevant cost within non-current assets is recognised in the Income
Statement.
1.4.9
Impairment of Non-Financial Assets
The carrying values of assets, other than
those to which IAS 36 "Impairment of Assets" does not apply, are
reviewed at the end of each reporting period for impairment, when
there is an indication that the assets might be impaired.
Impairment is measured by comparing the carrying values of the
assets with their recoverable amounts. The recoverable amount of
the assets is the higher of the assets' fair value less costs to
sell and their value-in-use, which is measured by reference to
discounted future cash flow.
An impairment loss is recognised immediately
in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income.
When there is a change in the estimates, used
to determine the recoverable amount, a subsequent increase in the
recoverable amount of an asset is treated as a reversal of the
previous impairment loss and is recognised to the extent of the
carrying amount of the asset that would have been determined (net
of amortisation and depreciation) had no impairment loss been
recognised. The reversal is recognised in profit or loss
immediately, unless the asset is carried at its revalued amount, in
which case, the reversal of the impairment loss is treated as a
revaluation increase.
1.4.10 Share-Based
Payments
Share
Options
The Group operates equity-settled share-based
payment arrangements, whereby the fair value of services provided
is determined indirectly by reference to the fair value of the
instrument granted.
The fair value of options and warrants,
granted to Directors and other parties, in respect of services
provided, is recognised as an expense in the Income Statement with
a corresponding increase in equity reserves - the share-based
payment reserve. On exercise or lapse of share options, the
proportion of the share-based payment reserve, relevant to those
options, is retained in the share-based payment reserve. On
exercise, equity is also increased by the amount of the proceeds
received.
The fair value is measured at grant date and
charged over the vesting period, during which, the option becomes
unconditional.
Where issued for services, fair value of
services is used for determining the value of options and if not
determinable, a valuation model such as the Black-Scholes model is
used, taking into account the terms and conditions upon which the
options were granted. The exercise price is fixed at the date of
grant.
Non-market conditions are performance
conditions that are not related to the market price of the entity's
equity instruments. They are not considered, when estimating the
fair value of a share-based payment. Where the vesting period is
linked to a non-market performance condition, the Group recognises
the goods and services it has acquired during the vesting period,
based on the best available estimate of the number of equity
instruments expected to vest. The estimate is reconsidered at each
reporting date, based on factors such as a shortened vesting
period, and the cumulative expense is "trued up" for both the
change in the number, expected to vest, and any change in the
expected vesting period.
Market conditions are performance conditions
that relate to the market price of the entity's equity instruments.
These conditions are included in the estimate of the fair value of
a share-based payment. Where the vesting period is linked to a
market performance condition, the Group estimates the expected
vesting period. If the actual vesting period is shorter than
estimated, the charge is be accelerated in the period that the
entity delivers the cash or equity instruments to the counterparty.
When the vesting period is longer, the expense is recognised over
the originally estimated vesting period.
For other equity instruments, granted during
the year (i.e. other than share options and warrants), fair value
is measured on the basis of an observable market price.
Share
Incentive Plan
Where the shares are granted to the employees
under Share Incentive Plan, the fair value of services provided is
determined indirectly by reference to the fair value of the free,
partnership and matching shares, granted on the grant date. Fair
value of shares is measured on the basis of an observable market
price, i.e. share price as at grant date and is recognised as an
expense in the Income Statement on the date of the grant. For the
partnership shares, the charge is calculated as the excess of the
mid-market price on the date of grant over the employee's
contribution.
1.4.11
Pension
The Group operates a defined contribution
pension plan, which requires contributions to be made to a
separately administered fund. Contributions to the defined
contribution scheme are charged to the profit and loss account as
they become payable.
1.4.12 Finance
Income/Expense
Finance income and expense is recognised as
interest accrues, using the effective interest method. This is a
method of calculating the amortised cost of a financial asset and
allocating the interest income over the relevant period, using the
effective interest rate, which is the rate that exactly discounts
estimated future cash receipts/re-payments through the expected
life of the financial asset or liability to the net carrying amount
of the financial asset or liability.
1.4.13 Financial
Instruments
The Group classifies its financial assets into
one of the categories discussed below, depending on the purpose for
which the asset was acquired. Other than financial assets in a
qualifying hedging relationship, the Group's accounting policy for
each category is as follows:
Fair Value
through Profit or Loss (FVTPL)
This category comprises in-the-money
derivatives and out-of-money derivatives, where the time value
offsets the negative intrinsic value. They are carried in the
Statement of Financial Position at fair value with changes in fair
value recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income in the finance income or expense line. Other than derivative
financial instruments, which are not designated as hedging
instruments, the Group does not have any assets held for trading
nor does it voluntarily classify any financial assets as being at
fair value through profit or loss.
Amortised
Cost
These assets comprise the types of financial
assets, where the objective is to hold these assets in order to
collect contractual cash flows and the contractual cash flows are
solely payments of principal and interest. They are initially
recognised at fair value plus transaction costs that are directly
attributable to their acquisition or issue and are subsequently
carried at amortised cost, using the effective interest rate
method, less provision for impairment. Impairment provisions for
current and non-current trade receivables are recognised, based on
the simplified approach within IFRS 9, using a provision matrix in
the determination of the lifetime expected credit losses. During
this process, the probability of the non-payment of the trade
receivables is assessed. This probability is then multiplied by the
amount of the expected loss, arising from default to determine the
lifetime expected credit loss for the trade receivables. For the
receivables, which are reported net, such provisions are recorded
in a separate provision account, with the loss being recognised in
the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income. On confirmation
that the receivable will not be collectable, the gross carrying
value of the asset is written off against the associated
provision.
Impairment provisions, for receivables from
related parties and loans to related parties, are recognised based
on a forward-looking expected credit loss model. The methodology,
used to determine the amount of the provision, is based on whether
there has been a significant increase in credit risk, since initial
recognition of the financial asset. For those, where the credit
risk has not increased significantly, since initial recognition of
the financial asset, twelve month expected credit losses, along
with gross interest income, are recognised. For those for which
credit risk has increased significantly, lifetime expected credit
losses along with the gross interest income are recognised. For
those that are determined to be credit impaired, lifetime expected
credit losses, along with interest income on a net basis, are
recognised.
The Group's financial assets, measured at
amortised cost, comprise trade and other receivables and cash and
cash equivalents in the Consolidated Statement of Financial
Position. Cash and cash equivalents include cash in hand, deposits
held at call with banks, other short term highly liquid investments
with original maturities of three months or less, and - for the
purpose of the statement of cash flows - bank overdrafts. Bank
overdrafts are shown within loans and borrowings in current
liabilities on the Consolidated Statement of Financial
Position.
Fair Value
through Other Comprehensive Income (FVTOCI)
The Group held a number of strategic
investments in listed and unlisted entities, which are not
accounted for as subsidiaries, associates or jointly controlled
entities. For those investments, the Group has made an irrevocable
election to classify the investments at fair value through other
comprehensive income rather than through profit or loss as the
Group considers this measurement to be the most representative of
the business model for these assets. They are carried at fair value
with changes in fair value, recognised in other comprehensive
income and accumulated in the fair value through other
comprehensive income reserve. Upon disposal any balance within fair
value through other comprehensive income reserve is reclassified
directly to retained earnings and is not reclassified to profit or
loss.
Dividends are recognised in profit or loss,
unless the dividend clearly represents a recovery of part of the
cost of the investment, in which case the full or partial amount of
the dividend is recorded against the associated investments
carrying amount.
Purchases and sales of financial assets,
measured at fair value through other comprehensive income, are
recognised on settlement date with any change in fair value between
trade date and settlement date being recognised in the fair value
through other comprehensive income reserve.
Financial
Liabilities
The Group classifies its financial liabilities
into one of two categories, depending on the purpose for which the
liability was acquired:
Other
Financial Liabilities
Other financial liabilities
include:
· Borrowings,
which are initially recognised at fair value net of any transaction
costs, directly attributable to the issue of the instrument. Such
interest-bearing liabilities are subsequently measured at amortised
cost, using the effective interest rate method, which ensures that
any interest expense over the period to repayment is at a constant
rate on the balance of the liability carried in the Consolidated
Statement of Financial Position. For the purposes of each financial
liability, interest expense includes initial transaction costs and
any premium payable on redemption as well as any interest or coupon
payable, while the liability is outstanding.
· Liability
components of convertible loan notes are measured as described
further below.
· Trade payables
and other short-term monetary liabilities, which are initially
recognised at fair value and subsequently carried at amortised
cost, using the effective interest method.
Fair Value
Measurement
Fair value is the price that would be received
to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly
transaction between market participants at the measurement date.
The fair value measurement is based on the presumption that the
transaction to sell the asset or transfer the liability takes place
either:
· In the principal
market for the asset or liability; or
· In the absence
of a principal market, in the most advantageous market for the
asset or liability.
The principal or the most advantageous market
must be accessible by the Group.
The fair value of an asset or a liability is
measured, using the assumptions that market participants would use
when pricing the asset or liability, assuming that market
participants act in their economic best interest.
A fair value measurement of a
non-financial asset takes into account a market participant's
ability to generate economic benefits by using the asset in its
highest and best use or by selling it to another market participant
that would use the asset in its highest and best use.
The Group uses valuation
techniques that are appropriate in the circumstances and, for which
sufficient data are available to measure fair value, maximising the
use of relevant observable inputs and minimising the use of
unobservable inputs.
All assets and liabilities, for
which fair value is measured or disclosed in the Financial
Statements, are categorised within the fair value hierarchy,
described as follows, based on the lowest level input that is
significant to the fair value measurement as a whole:
· Level 1 - Quoted (unadjusted) market prices in active markets
for identical assets or liabilities;
· Level 2 - Valuation techniques for which the lowest level
input that is significant to the fair value measurement is directly
or indirectly observable; and
· Level 3 - Valuation techniques for which the lowest level
input that is significant to the fair value measurement is
unobservable.
For assets and liabilities that
are recognised in the Financial Statements on a recurring basis,
the Group determines whether transfers have occurred between levels
in the hierarchy by re-assessing categorisation (based on the
lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement as a whole) at the end of each reporting
period.
For the purpose of fair value
disclosures, the Group has determined classes of assets and
liabilities on the basis of the nature, characteristics and risks
of the asset or liability and the level of the fair value hierarchy
as explained above.
More information is disclosed in
Note 19.
1.4.14 Investments in
the Company Accounts
Investments in subsidiary companies are
classified as non-current assets and included in the Statement of
Financial Position of the Company at cost at the date of
acquisition less any identified impairments.
For acquisitions of subsidiaries or
associates, achieved in stages and qualifying as a business
acquisition under IFRS 3, the Company re-measures its previously
held equity interests in the acquiree at its acquisition-date fair
value and recognises the resulting gain or loss, if any, in profit
or loss. Any gains or losses, previously recognised in other
comprehensive income, are transferred to profit and loss. Any
acquisitions undertaken of interests, not qualifying as a business
under IFRS 3, is treated as an asset acquisition and recognised at
cost.
Investments in associates and joint ventures
are classified as non-current assets and included in the Statement
of Financial Position of the Company at cost at the date of
acquisition less any identified impairment.
1.4.15 Share
Capital
Financial instruments, issued by
the Group, are classified as equity only to the extent that they do
not meet the definition of a financial liability or financial
asset. The Group's ordinary shares are classified as equity
instruments.
1.4.16 Convertible
Debt
The proceeds, received on issue of
the Group's convertible debt, are allocated into their liability
and equity components. The amount, initially attributed to the debt
component, equals the discounted cash flows, using a market rate of
interest that would be payable on a similar debt instrument that
does not include an option to convert. Subsequently, the debt
component is accounted for as a financial liability, measured at
amortised cost until extinguished on conversion or maturity of the
bond. The remainder of the proceeds is allocated to the conversion
option and is recognised in the "Convertible debt option reserve"
within shareholders' equity, net of income tax effects.
1.4.17 Warrants and
Share Options
Derivative contracts, that only
result in the delivery of a fixed amount of cash or other financial
assets for a fixed number of an entity's own equity instruments,
are classified as equity instruments. Warrants, relating to equity
finance and holders of debt liabilities and issued together with
ordinary shares placement and share options issued to staff, are
valued as outlined above and charged to profit and loss over the
period in which they vest or, in the event of the instruments
vesting on grant, in the period in which they arise. Warrants and
options, classified as equity instruments, are not subsequently
re-measured (i.e., subsequent changes in fair value are not
recognised). On expiry, exercise or lapse of such
instruments, the fair value of the instruments in question is
retained in the warrant reserve and is not transferred to retained
earnings.
1.4.18 Segment
Reporting
Operating segments are reported in
a manner consistent with the internal reporting, provided to the
chief operating decision-maker as required by IFRS 8 "Operating
Segments". The chief operating decision-maker, responsible for
allocating resources and assessing performance of the operating
segments, has been identified as the Board of Directors. The
accounting policies of the reportable segments are consistent with
the accounting policies of the Group as a whole. Segment
profit/(loss) represents the profit/(loss) earned by each segment
without allocation of foreign exchange gains or losses, investment
income, interest payable and tax. This is the measure of profit
that is reported to the Board of Directors for the purpose of
resource allocation and the assessment of segment performance. When
assessing segment performance and considering the allocation of
resources, the Board of Directors review information about segment
non-current assets. For this purpose, all non-current assets are
allocated to reportable segments.
1.4.19
Leases
All leases are accounted for by
recognising a right-of-use asset and a lease liability except
for:
· Leases of low value assets; and
· Leases with a duration of 12 months or less.
On initial recognition, the
carrying value of the lease liability also includes:
· amounts expected to be payable under any residual value
guarantee;
· the
exercise price of any purchase option, granted in favour of the
Group, if it is reasonably certain to assess that option;
and
· any
penalties payable for terminating the lease if the term of the
lease has been estimated on the basis of termination option being
exercised.
Lease liabilities are subsequently
measured at the present value of the contractual payments due to
the lessor over the lease term.
Right of use assets are initially
measured at the amount of the lease liability, reduced for any
lease incentives received and increased for:
· lease payments made at or before commencement of the
lease;
· initial direct costs incurred; and
· the
amount of any provision recognised, where the Group is
contractually required to dismantle, remove or restore the leased
asset.
1.4.20 Asset
Acquisitions
Acquisitions of mineral
exploration licences through the acquisition of non-operational
corporate structures that do not represent a business, and
therefore do not meet the definition of a business combination, are
accounted for as the acquisition of an asset.
The consideration for the asset is
allocated to the assets based on their relative fair values at the
date of acquisition.
Inter-company transactions,
balances and unrealised gains on transactions between group
companies are eliminated. Unrealised losses are also
eliminated.
1.5 Significant Accounting
Judgements, Estimates and Assumptions
The preparation of the Group's Consolidated
Financial Statements, requires management to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of
revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities at the end of the
reporting period. However, uncertainty about these assumptions and
estimates could result in outcomes that require a material
adjustment to the carrying amount of the asset or liability
affected in future periods.
Significant Judgements and Accounting
Estimates
In the process of applying the Group's
accounting policies, management has made the following judgements
and estimates, which have the most significant effect on the
amounts, recognised in the Consolidated Financial
Statements.
Recognition of Non Controlling Interest in
APEX
In June 2023, the Company acquired
a 90% interest in the equity of APEX in Angola, which holds the
KON-11, KON-12 and KON-16 oil and gas licences. The
commercial terms of at the acquisition are such that the remaining
10% shareholders of APEX are carried through all exploration,
appraisal and development costs of the projects, essentially to the
point of first oil. As a consequence of this arrangement,
Corcel is responsible for meeting 100% of the funding requirements
of APEX over this period.
The commercial intentions, behind
the above legal agreement, was to achieve an effective royalty
arrangement, whereby the carried interest of the 10% partners is
realised through production revenues or, in this case net revenues
post production and corporate costs. However, it was
determined that this commercial end goal be achieved via a carried
interest in equity rather than the granting of a royalty
interest.
The Company therefore considers
that, whilst the legal structure of the agreement is one of a 90/10
equity split, which primarily facie would give rise to the
recognition of NCI on consolidation of APEX, the commercial
substance of the arrangement more closely represents a profit
royalty, arising out of net production revenues. Consequently, it
has not proposed to recognise NCI on consolidation of the entity
into the Group accounts with the amount being
immaterial.
Recoverability of Carrying Value
of Joint Ventures and Exploration and Evaluation Assets
The carrying amount of investments
in joint ventures and mineral tenements is tested for impairment
annually and this process is considered to be key judgement along
with determining whenever events or changes in circumstances
indicate that the carrying amounts for those assets may not be
recoverable.
The Company has assessed the
viability of the Mambare nickel project, given current and expected
nickel prices and the anticipated cost of a DSO operation, and
believes the project can be successfully taken into production in
the mid-term with a mining lease application already at a very
advanced stage with the PNG mining authorities. The Board further
believes that the likelihood of recovery of the receivable has
remained firm over the past 12-24 months following agreement
during the year of terms
for the disposal of the investment. See below under heading "Assets
Held for Sale - Oro Nickel" for further details.
The Canegrass Lithium Project was
purchased in April 2023 for £200,000 of new ordinary shares in
Corcel. The Company is currently conducting initial
exploration activities on the license and is currently considering
its options as relates to the project. The Company, following discussions with the underlying
tenement holders, Huntsman Exploration, have deemed it necessary to
impair the Canegrass Project in full as Huntsman intends to drop
the tenements and Corcel currently does not consider it possible to
practically acquire them. See Note 21 for further
details.
The Group holds E&E assets of
£7.7 million at 30 June 2024. Exploration
assets comprise exploration and evaluation costs, incurred on
prospects at an exploratory stage. These costs include the cost of
acquisition of rights to explore, determination of recoverable
reserves, economic feasibility studies and all technical and
administrative overheads, directly associated with those projects.
These costs are carried forward in the Statement of Financial
Position as non-current intangible assets less provision for
identified impairments. The most significant assumption for the
Group is that exploration and evaluation work undertaken to develop
its key projects will ultimately lead to successful recovery of
these costs through production or sale. The Group believes these
costs are fully recoverable, based on information available at this
time.
The Company acquired the Mt. Weld
Rare Earth Element project during the course of the second half of
2022, and immediately entered into a farm out agreement with
Riversgold (ASX:RGL) ("RGL") for an immediate cash payment of AUD
30,000 and where RGL can earn a 50% interest through paying 100% of
a work program with a required spend of AUD 500,000 over 12
months. Subsequently, as announced on 5 May 2023 the Company
sold a 20% interest in Mt. Weld to Extraction SRL for AUD
1,000,000, valuing the entirety at AUD 5 million and Corcel's 80%
interest at AUD 4 million (£3.29 million). During the year RGL
notified the Company of a rationalisation of its portfolio of
projects, resulting in its decision to discontinue work on the Mt
Weld project. The Company consequently retains its 80% interest in
the project and is current assessing its options to take the
project forward in 2025.
Recoverability of Carrying Value
of Investment In and Loan to Subsidiaries
The carrying amount of
investments, in and loans made to subsidiaries, is tested for
impairment annually and this process is considered to be key
judgement along with determining whenever events or changes in
circumstances indicate that the carrying amounts for those assets
may not be recoverable. When assessing the recovery of these
balances, the Directors consider the likelihood that the
subsidiaries will be able to settle amounts owing, either out of
future cashflows or though the recovery of balances receivable or
divestment of assets. Where recovery of these balances is
driven by receivable balances within the subsidiary, assessment of
the likelihood of recovery and present value of future cash inflows
is undertaken to ensure the amounts support the subsidiary loan
carrying values in full.
No impairment of inter-company
loans were deemed necessary in the year.
Determination of Fair Value of
Share-Based Payments
The Group measures the cost of equity-settled
transactions with employees and the issuance of warrants to
investors by reference to the fair value of the equity instruments
at the date at which they are granted. The fair value of share
options and warrants without market based vesting conditions is
determined using the Black-Scholes model and the estimates used
within this model are disclosed in Note 17. Where market
conditions exist for the vesting of any options or warrants
granted, alternative approaches such as a probability weighted
barrier model or Monte Carlo probability distribution model is
used.
Consideration Receivable on
Disposal of Niugini Nickel
During the prior year, the Group divested of
its subsidiary Niugini Nickel Pty Ltd. Consideration for the
disposal is receivable in three tranches, see Note 22 for
details. In arriving at determination of the fair value of
the consideration receivable, the Directors have had to make
certain judgements as to the discount rate to use for the present
valuing of future cashflows, arising from this consideration and
the application of a risk, weighting to the determination of fair
value for the tranche of consideration that remains conditional on
the project, entering into production and generating a certain
level of profits. Management have assessed the recoverability of
the receivable and no risks have been identified.
Recoverability of Assets Held for
Sale - Oro Nickel
During the prior year, the Group had entered
into various discussions for the divestment of its interest in the
Oro Nickel joint venture. On 16 October 2023, the Group announced
the agreement of a deal to sell its share of the project to
Integrated Battery Metals, the purchasers of the Niugini Nickel
project during the course of the year. As the consideration
proceeds agreed with the purchaser exceed the carrying value of the
investment in the joint venture, which is held for sale, the
Directors have determined that no impairment of this balance is
necessary in these consolidated Financial Statements (with an
impairment of £175,000 being recognised in the Company only
Financial Statements as a result of the discounting of the present
value of the consideration). On 23 October 2023, the initial
consideration proceeds of USD 1.6 million, in the form of a loan
for the divestment were received, following the execution of the
transaction agreements. Management have assessed the recoverability
of the receivable and no risks have been identified.
The Company is assessing various
spurious claims made by its Joint Venture partner as regards to the
project, including their purported rights to pre-empt the
transaction under an earlier version of the sale of the project as
originally announced on 14 April 2023 and terminated in October
2023.
Currently, the Company is working
with Australian legal counsel on determining the best manner in
which to enforce its rights to complete this transaction as
announced on 16 October 2023. The completion of the sale of this
asset requires Joint Venture partner's administrative actions and
processing in order to effect the transfer of shares in the holding
company of the project.
Final determination of both the timing of any
disposal and of the ultimate sale proceeds realised by the Company
thus remain yet to be definitively determined.
Refer to Note 24 for further information on
how the criteria within IFRS 5 have been met to classify the
investment as held for sale at the year end.
2. Segmental
Analysis
In 2023, the focus of the Group changed from
the development of battery metals projects and flexible storage
solutions to oil and gas exploration and production. As a
consequence, the nature of the operating segments for disclosure
has changed in the current year to include oil and gas activities
and exclude flexible grid solutions, to reflect this operational
tilt toward the former and away from the latter.
As the Group's main focus of operations
becomes production of oil and gas, the nature of management
information, examined by the Board, will alter to reflect the need
to monitor revenues, margins, overheads and trade balances as well
as cash.
IFRS 8 requires the reporting of information
about the revenues, derived from the various areas of activity and
the countries in which revenue is earned, regardless of whether
this information is used in by management in making operating
decisions. Management determined that the most useful presentation
of revenues and expenses came from an analysis by operational type
as opposed to geographic representation due to the similar nature
of the revenues and expenses when grouped in these categories.
|
Year to 30 June 2024
|
Battery
Metals
£'000
|
Oil
and
Gas
£'000
|
Corporate
and
unallocated
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Management services
|
-
|
-
|
42
|
42
|
Other income
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
2
|
Project expenses
|
(19)
|
(126)
|
-
|
(145)
|
Administrative expenses
|
(9)
|
(42)
|
(2,520)
|
(2,571)
|
Currency (loss)/gain
|
(9)
|
-
|
23
|
14
|
Impairment of Joint venture projects
|
(221)
|
-
|
-
|
(221)
|
Finance cost - net
|
90
|
-
|
(219)
|
(129)
|
Net loss before tax from continuing
operations
|
(168)
|
(167)
|
(2,454)
|
(3,008)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Year to 30 June 2023
|
Battery
Metals
£'000
|
Flexible
Grid Solutions
(UK)
£'000
|
Corporate
and
unallocated
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Management services
|
-
|
-
|
8
|
8
|
Other income
|
-
|
-
|
17
|
17
|
Project expenses
|
(114)
|
-
|
-
|
(114)
|
Administrative expenses
|
(55)
|
(28)
|
(1,360)
|
(1,443)
|
Currency (loss)/gain
|
(7)
|
-
|
(5)
|
(12)
|
Share of profits in joint ventures
|
(76)
|
-
|
-
|
(76)
|
Gain on sale of tenements
|
475
|
-
|
-
|
475
|
Gain on sale of Joint venture projects and
associates
|
384
|
-
|
-
|
384
|
Gain on sale of subsidiaries
|
41
|
246
|
-
|
287
|
Impairment of Joint venture projects
|
(337)
|
-
|
-
|
(337)
|
Finance cost - net
|
-
|
-
|
(451)
|
(451)
|
Net loss before tax from continuing
operations
|
311
|
218
|
(1,791)
|
(1,262)
|
Information by Geographical Area
Presented below is certain information by the
geographical area of the Group's activities. Investment sales
revenue and exploration property sales revenue are allocated to the
location of the asset sold.
Year to 30 June 2024
|
UK
£'000
|
Australia
£'000
|
Papua
New
Guinea
£'000
|
Africa
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
|
42
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
42
|
Total segment revenue and other
gains
|
42
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
42
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8
|
8
|
Exploration & evaluation assets
|
-
|
184
|
-
|
7,529
|
7,713
|
Receivable from sale of subsidiary
|
-
|
173
|
-
|
-
|
173
|
FVTOCI financial instruments
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Total segment non-current
assets
|
1
|
357
|
-
|
7,537
|
7,895
|
Year to 30 June 2023
|
UK
£'000
|
Australia
£'000
|
Papua
New
Guinea
£'000
|
Africa
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
|
8
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8
|
Total segment revenue and other
gains
|
8
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Exploration & evaluation assets
|
-
|
392
|
-
|
1,622
|
2,014
|
Receivable from a joint venture
|
-
|
-
|
1,517
|
-
|
1,517
|
Receivable from sale of subsidiary
|
-
|
-
|
714
|
-
|
714
|
FVTOCI financial instruments
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Total segment non-current
assets
|
2
|
392
|
2,231
|
1,622
|
4,247
|
3. Loss on Ordinary
Activities Before Taxation
Group
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
|
Loss on ordinary activities before taxation is
stated after charging:
|
|
|
Auditor's remuneration:
|
|
|
- fees payable to the Company's auditor for the
audit of consolidated and Company Financial Statements
|
46
|
42
|
Directors' emoluments (Note 8)
|
448
|
632
|
|
|
|
|
| |
4. Administrative
Expenses
|
Group
2024
£'000
|
Group
2023
£'000
|
Company
2024
£'000
|
Company
2023
£'000
|
Staff
costs
|
|
|
|
|
Payroll
|
816
|
498
|
807
|
498
|
Pension
|
24
|
27
|
23
|
27
|
Share-based payments
|
227
|
63
|
227
|
63
|
Staff Welfare
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
3
|
Employers NI
|
79
|
86
|
79
|
86
|
Professional
services
|
|
|
|
|
Accounting
|
109
|
106
|
106
|
87
|
Legal
|
25
|
65
|
25
|
54
|
Business development
|
105
|
12
|
105
|
12
|
Marketing & Investor relations
|
81
|
32
|
81
|
32
|
Funding costs
|
347
|
94
|
347
|
94
|
Other
|
113
|
83
|
113
|
44
|
Regulatory
compliance
|
145
|
125
|
145
|
125
|
Travel
|
283
|
60
|
283
|
60
|
Office and
Admin
|
|
|
|
|
General
|
90
|
43
|
84
|
35
|
IT costs
|
8
|
8
|
9
|
8
|
Rent
|
33
|
29
|
32
|
29
|
Insurance
|
84
|
108
|
84
|
106
|
Total
administrative expenses
|
2,572
|
1,442
|
2,553
|
1,363
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
5. Finance Costs,
Net
Group
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Interest expense
|
(7)
|
(123)
|
Share based payments - investors
|
(122)
|
(328)
|
|
(129)
|
(451)
|
6. Taxation
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Current period transaction of the
Group
|
|
|
Corporation tax at blended rate of 20.00%
(2022: 19.00%) on profits for the period
|
-
|
-
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of temporary
differences
|
-
|
-
|
Deferred tax assets derecognised
|
-
|
-
|
Tax (credit)
|
-
|
-
|
Factors affecting the tax charge for
the year
|
|
|
Loss on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
(3,008)
|
(1,262)
|
Loss on ordinary activities at the average
blended rate of 20% (2022: 19.00%)
|
(602)
|
(240)
|
Effect of non-deductible expense
|
120
|
75
|
Effect of tax benefit of losses carried
forward
|
482
|
164
|
Tax losses brought forward
|
-
|
-
|
Current tax (credit)
|
-
|
-
|
Deferred tax amounting to £nil
(2023: £nil), relating to the Group's investments was recognised in
the Statement of Comprehensive Income. No deferred tax charge has
been recognised due to uncertainty as to the timing of future
profitability of the Group. Unutilised trading and capital losses
are estimated at circa £4,309 thousand (2023: £3,827).
On 6 April 2023, the UK
corporation tax rate increased from 19% to 25%, affecting approx.
25% of the losses for the year of report. The Company and the
Group has elected not to apply a blended rate to the above
calculations of current tax on the grounds that any such adjustment
would be immaterial.
7. Staff Costs
The aggregate employment costs of staff for the
Group (including Directors) for the year was:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Wages and salaries
|
807
|
534
|
Pension
|
24
|
27
|
Social security costs, net of
allowances
|
80
|
87
|
Medical costs
|
3
|
3
|
Employee share-based payment charge
|
227
|
63
|
Total staff costs
|
1,141
|
714
|
The average number of Group employees
(including Directors) during the year was:
|
2024
Number
|
2023
Number
|
Directors
|
4
|
3
|
Executives
|
2
|
2
|
Administration
|
2
|
1
|
|
8
|
6
|
During the year, for all Directors and
employees, who have been employed for more than three months, the
Company contributed to a defined contributions pension scheme as
described under Directors' remuneration in the Directors' Report
and a Share Incentive Plan ("SIP") as described under Management
incentives in the Directors' Report.
All emoluments presented for current and
comparative years, except for pension, are short-term in
nature.
8. Directors'
Emoluments
2024
|
Directors'
fees
£'000
|
Bonus
£'000
|
Share
Incentive Plan
£'000
|
Pension
contributions
£'000
|
Short
term benefits
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Executive Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
J Parsons*
|
191
|
-
|
-
|
10
|
-
|
201
|
G Geraldo
|
31
|
-
|
-
|
3
|
-
|
34
|
S Gilbert
|
22
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
22
|
A Karam
|
80
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
80
|
Non-executive Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
E Ainsworth
|
29
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
29
|
A Fairclough
|
21
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
21
|
Y Zhao
|
40
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
40
|
P Kabra
|
21
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
21
|
|
435
|
-
|
-
|
13
|
-
|
448
|
|
2023
|
Directors'
fees
£'000
|
Bonus
£'000
|
Share
Incentive Plan
£'000
|
Pension
contributions
£'000
|
Short
term benefits
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
Executive Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
J Parsons*
|
253
|
30
|
-
|
19
|
-
|
302
|
|
S Kaintz
|
182
|
35
|
2
|
17
|
-
|
236
|
|
A Karam
|
4
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4
|
|
Non-executive Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
E Ainsworth
|
42
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
42
|
|
H Bellingham
|
37
|
10
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
47
|
|
Y Zhao
|
2
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2
|
|
|
520
|
75
|
2
|
36
|
-
|
633
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
* Includes 8% pension contribution
paid in cash as a part of gross salary.
The number of Directors who exercised share
options in year, was nil (2023: nil).
During the year, the Company contributed to a
Share Incentive Plan, more fully described in the Directors' Report
on page 20, where shares were issued to employees, making a total
of 3,556,362 (2023: 3,506,490) partnership and matching shares.
Those shares were issued in relation to services provided by those
employees during the reporting year.
The Company also operates a contributory
pension scheme, more fully described in the Directors' Report in
the section Directors' Remuneration on page 23.
188,943,480 options were granted to Directors
in the current year. No options were granted in the prior
year.
2024
|
Number of
Options
|
Exercise
price (pence)
|
Grant
date
|
Expiry
date
|
Executive Directors
|
|
|
|
|
A Karam
|
125,962,320
|
0.1p
|
11 January
2024
|
12 January
2029
|
G Geraldo
|
31,490,580
|
0.1p
|
11 January
2024
|
12 January
2029
|
Non-executive Directors
|
|
|
|
|
P Kabra
|
31,490,580
|
0.1p
|
11 January
2024
|
12 January
2029
|
|
|
|
|
|
9. Earnings per
Share
The basic earnings/(loss) per share is derived
by dividing the loss for the year attributable to ordinary
shareholders of the Parent by the weighted average number of shares
in issue. Diluted earnings/(loss) per share is derived by dividing
the loss for the year attributable to ordinary shareholders of the
Parent by the weighted average number of shares in issue plus the
weighted average number of ordinary shares that would be issued on
conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary shares into ordinary
shares.
|
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
Loss attributable to equity holders of the Parent Company,
£'000
|
(3,035)
|
|
(1,262)
|
|
Weighted average number of ordinary shares of £0.0001 in
issue, used for basic EPS
|
1,711,966,625
|
|
714,863,518
|
|
Earnings per share - basic, pence
|
(0.2)
|
|
(0.2)
|
|
Earnings per share - fully diluted, pence
|
(0.2)
|
|
(0.2)
|
|
At 30 June 2024 and at 30 June
2023, the effect of all the instruments in issue is anti-dilutive
as it would lead to a further reduction of loss per share,
therefore, they were not included into the diluted loss per share
calculation.
Options and warrants with
conditions not met at the end of the period, that could potentially
dilute basic EPS in the future, but were not included in the
calculation of diluted EPS for the periods presented:
|
|
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
(a) Share options granted to
employees - total, of them
|
333,720,567
|
|
26,687,412
|
|
· Vested at the end of reporting period
|
6,081,134
|
|
-
|
|
· Not
vested at the end of the reporting period
|
327,639,433
|
|
26,687,412
|
|
(b) Number of warrants in
issue
|
461,552,900
|
|
511,942,464
|
|
Total number of contingently issuable shares that could
potentially dilute basic earnings per share in future and
anti-dilutive potential ordinary shares that were not included into
the fully diluted EPS calculation
|
795,273,467
|
|
538,629,876
|
|
|
|
|
| |
There were no ordinary share
transactions after 30 June 2024, that that could have changed the
EPS calculations significantly if those transactions had occurred
before the end of the reporting period.
10. Investments in
Subsidiaries and Goodwill
Company
|
Investments in subsidiaries
2024
£
|
Investments in subsidiaries
2023
£
|
Goodwill
2024
£'000
|
Goodwill
2023
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 July
|
1,980
|
1,014
|
-
|
131
|
Additions (Note 23)
|
-
|
966
|
-
|
-
|
At 30 June 2024 and 30 June
2023
|
1,980
|
1,980
|
-
|
131
|
Impairment
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 June 2024 and 30 June
2023
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(131)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net book amount at 30 June
2024
|
1,980
|
1,980
|
-
|
-
|
Net book amount at 30 June
2023
|
1,980
|
1,980
|
-
|
-
|
The Parent Company of the Group holds more
than 50% of the share capital of the following companies, the
results of which are consolidated:
Company Name
|
Country of
registration
|
Class
|
Proportion
held by
Group
|
Nature of
business
|
Corcel Australasia Pty Limited
|
Australia
|
Ordinary
|
100%
|
Mineral
exploration
|
Flexible Grid Solutions Limited (former ESTEQ
Limited)
|
UK
|
Ordinary
|
100%
|
Holding
company
|
Flexible Grid One Limited (former Allied Energy
Services Ltd (indirectly owned through ESTEQ Limited))I
|
UK
|
Ordinary
|
100%
|
Dormant
|
Atlas Petroleum Exploration Worldwide
Limited
|
BVI
|
Ordinary
|
90%
|
Oil and gas
exploration
|
Atlas Petroleum Exploration Worldwide -
Sucursal Em Angola
|
AO
|
Ordinary
|
100%
|
Oil and gas
exploration
|
Corcel Australasia Pty Limited
registered office is c/o Paragon Consultants PTY Ltd, PO Box 903,
Claremont WA, 6910, Australia.
Flexible Grid Solutions Limited
registered office is Salisbury House, London Wall, London EC2M 5PS,
United Kingdom.
Flexible Grid One Limited
registered office is Salisbury House, London Wall, London EC2M 5PS,
United Kingdom.
Atlas Petroleum Exploration
Worldwide Limited registered office is Simmonds Building, Wickam's
Cay 1, P.O Box 961, Road Town, Tortola, BVI.
Atlas Petroleum Exploration
Worldwide, - Sucursal Em Angola with registered office at
Escritório 72, 7 Andar Edifício Galáxia, Rua Amílcar Cabral,
Município das Ingombotas, Luanda, Angola
Niugini Nickel Pty
Ltd
On 26 June 2023, the Group
disposed of its 100% interest in Niugini Nickel Pty Ltd. See
Note 22 for further details. Disposal of the subsidiary in
the prior year gave rise to a gain of £41,000.
11. Investments in
Associates and Joint Ventures
|
Group
|
|
Company
|
Carrying balance
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
At 1 July 2022
|
1,988
|
|
2,112
|
Additions
|
-
|
|
-
|
Share of loss in joint venture
|
(76)
|
|
-
|
Impairment of investment in
associate
|
(337)
|
|
(337)
|
Transfer to assets held for sale (Note
24)*
|
(1,575)
|
|
(1,775)
|
Net book amount at 30 June 2023 and
30 June 2024
|
-
|
|
-
|
*During the prior year the Group undertook the
decision to dispose of its JV interests in Oro Nickel.
Consequently it has been reclassified as assets held for sale in
the prior year and remains held as assets held for sale at the end
of the current year, pending finalisation of the disposal
process. See Note 24 for further details.
At 30 June 2024, the Parent Company of the
Group had a significant influence by virtue other than a
shareholding of over 20% or had joint control through a joint
venture contractual arrangement in the following
companies:
Company Name
|
Country of
registration
|
Class
|
Proportion
held by
Group at 30 June
2023
|
Proportion
held by
Group at 30 June
2022
|
Status at
30 June
2023
|
Accounting
year end
|
Direct
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oro Nickel Ltd (Held indirectly through
Oro Nickel Vanuatu) (Joint Venture)
|
Papua New
Guinea
|
Ordinary
|
41%
|
41%
|
Active
|
30 June
2024
|
Oro Nickel Ltd registered office
is c/o Sinton Spence Chartered Accountants, 2nd Floor,
Brian Bell Plaza, Turumu Street, Boroko, National Capital District,
Papua New Guinea.
Summarised financial information for the
Company's associates and joint ventures, where available, is given
below for the year as at 30 June 2024:
Company
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Loss
£'000
|
Assets
£'000
|
Liabilities
£'000
|
Net Assets
£'000
|
Oro Nickel Ltd
|
-
|
(184)
|
4,683
|
(4,219)
|
464
|
|
|
Oro
Nickel
|
DVY196
|
Total
Group
|
Carrying balance
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
At 30 June 2023 and 2024
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
12.
Financial Instruments with Fair Value through Other Comprehensive
Income (FVTOCI)
|
|
30 June
2024
Group
£'000
|
30 June
2023
Group
£'000
|
30 June
2024
Company
£'000
|
30 June
2023
Company
£'000
|
FVTOCI
financial instruments at the beginning of the
period
|
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
Transferred from Available-for-sale
category
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Additions
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Disposals
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Revaluations and impairment
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
FVTOCI
financial assets at the end of the period
|
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Market Value of
Investments
The market value as at 30 June 2024 of the
investments', available for sale listed and unlisted investments,
was as follows:
|
30 June
2024
Group
£'000
|
30 June
2023
Group
£'000
|
|
30 June
2024
Company
£'000
|
30 June
2023
Company
£'000
|
Quoted on other foreign stock
exchanges
|
1
|
1
|
|
1
|
1
|
At 30 June
|
1
|
1
|
|
1
|
1
|
13. Trade
and Other Receivables
|
Group
|
|
Company
|
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
Non-current
|
|
|
|
|
|
Amounts owed by Group undertakings
|
-
|
-
|
|
3,882
|
286
|
Purchased debt
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
Amounts owed by related parties
|
|
|
|
|
|
- due from associates and joint
ventures
|
-
|
1,517
|
|
-
|
1,517
|
- due from sale of subsidiary
|
173
|
714
|
|
-
|
-
|
Total
non-current
|
173
|
2,231
|
|
3,882
|
1,803
|
Current
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sundry debtors
|
203
|
371
|
|
187
|
64
|
Prepaid directors fees - J Parsons
|
-
|
79
|
|
-
|
79
|
Prepayments
|
78
|
168
|
|
78
|
174
|
Debt from issue of shares
|
-
|
136
|
|
-
|
136
|
Amounts owed by related parties
|
|
|
|
|
|
- due from sale of subsidiary
|
636
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
Total
current
|
917
|
754
|
|
265
|
453
|
14. Trade and Other
Payables
|
Group
|
|
Company
|
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
Trade and other payables
|
4,786
|
177
|
|
1,808
|
213
|
Accruals
|
54
|
538
|
|
54
|
252
|
Trade and other payables
|
4,840
|
715
|
|
1,862
|
465
|
Loans from subsidiaries
|
-
|
-
|
|
322
|
-
|
Borrowings (note 20)
|
1,330
|
602
|
|
1,330
|
602
|
Total
|
6,170
|
1,317
|
|
3,514
|
1,067
|
The increase in trade and other
payables in the year arise from the undertaking of drilling
activity on the KON-11 and KON-12 licences in Angola.
Consolidated trade payables includes all costs, incurred but not
settled, in support of this activity, whereas Company only trade
and other payables includes only those costs, which have been
recognised by the Parent Company on behalf of the subsidiary Atlas
Petroleum.
Borrowings in the year take the
form of a loan from Integrated Battery Metals (IBM). The loan
is interest free and repayable out of the proceeds from completion
of the proposed sale of the Mambare JV to IBM or in cash by 14
October 2025 (being the earlier of the two events).
Short Term Borrowings Maturity
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
14 October 2025 (see above re IBM
loan)
|
1,265
|
-
|
|
31 January 2025
|
65
|
-
|
|
30 September 2024
|
-
|
547
|
|
Due by 31 January 2024
|
-
|
55
|
|
Total long-term
borrowings
|
1,330
|
602
|
|
|
| |
YA PN II - Riverfort
In the current year, £390,749 of
the principle was repaid by the Company in cash and £200,000 of the principal was converted into ordinary
shares of the Company, fully retiring all outstanding
obligations.
CLN - Extraction SRL
During the year, Extraction SRL
provided funding of £1,000,000, which included interest of £47,836
in the year all of which was repaid via converted shares in the
Company.
More details on all the borrowing
are given in Note 25.
15. Reserves
Share Premium
The share premium account represents the
excess of consideration received for shares, issued above their
nominal value net of transaction costs.
Foreign Currency Translation
Reserve
The translation reserve represents the
exchange gains and losses that have arisen on the retranslation of
overseas operations.
Retained Earnings
Retained earnings represent the cumulative
profit and loss net of distributions to owners.
FVTOCI Revaluation Reserve
The fair value through other comprehensive
income (FVTOCI) reserve represents the cumulative revaluation gains
and losses in respect of FVTOCI investments.
Share-Based Payment Reserve
The share-based payment reserve represents the
cumulative charge for options granted, still outstanding and not
exercised.
Warrant Reserve
The warrant reserve represents the cumulative
charge for warrants granted, still outstanding and not
exercised.
16. Share Capital, Share
Premium and Shares to be Issued of the Company
The share capital of the Company is as
follows:
Authorised, issued and fully paid
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
|
2,458,300,515 ordinary shares of
£0.0001 each (2023: 1,344,381,984)
|
246
|
135
|
|
1,788,918,926 deferred shares of
£0.0009 each
|
1,610
|
1,610
|
|
2,497,434,980 A deferred shares of
£0.000095 each
|
237
|
237
|
|
8,687,335,200 B Deferred shares of
£0.000099 each
|
860
|
860
|
|
As
at 30 June
|
2,953
|
2,842
|
|
Movement in ordinary shares
|
Number
|
Nominal, £
|
Share Premium, £
|
As at 30 June 2022 - ordinary
shares of £0.0100 each
|
440,878,296
|
44,089
|
24,961,184
|
Issued on 27 July 2022 at £0.004
per share (cash placing)
|
84,000,000
|
8,400
|
302,234
|
Issued on 22 August 2022 at £0.004
(cash placing)
|
5,330,000
|
533
|
20,787
|
Issued on 31 October 2022 at £0.004
per share (cash placing)
|
50,000,000
|
5,000
|
195,000
|
Issued on 23 December 2022 at
£0.004 per share (non-cash acquisition of asset)
|
50,000,000
|
5,000
|
195,000
|
Issued on 4 January 2023 at £0.004
per share (cash placing)
|
116,500,000
|
11,650
|
454,350
|
Issued on 5 January 2023 at £0.004
per share (non-cash creditor settlement)
|
5,000,000
|
500
|
19,500
|
Issued on 5 January 2023 at
£0.00210003 per share (non-cash creditor settlement))
|
37,028,094
|
3,703
|
74,057
|
Issued on 3 February 2023 at
£0.0026 per share (non- cash salary settlement)
|
16,910,618
|
1,691
|
42,277
|
Issued on 20 April 2023 at £0.0035
per share (cash placing)
|
85,714,185
|
8,572
|
291,429
|
Issued on 9 May 2023 at £0.004 per
share (non-cash acquisition of asset)
|
50,000,000
|
5,000
|
195,000
|
Issued on 5 June 2023 at £0.00385
per share (non- cash SIP)
|
1,870,128
|
187
|
7,013
|
Issued on 5 June 2023 at £0.0033
per share (non- cash SIP)
|
1,636,362
|
164
|
5,236
|
Issued on 6 June 2023 at £0.004 per
share (non-cash acquisition of asset)
|
28,240,839
|
2,824
|
110,139
|
Issued on 6 June at £0.0033 per
share (non-cash acquisition of asset)
|
200,000,000
|
20,000
|
640,000
|
Issued on 6 June at £0.004 per
share (non-cash acquisition of asset)
|
70,685,250
|
7069
|
275,672
|
Issued on 9 June 2023 at £0.0035
per share (cash placing)
|
85,714,285
|
8,571
|
291,429
|
Issued on 20 June 2023 at £0.004
per share (non- cash salary settlement)
|
14,873,828
|
1,487
|
58,008
|
As at 30 June 2023 - ordinary
shares of £0.0100 each
|
1,344,381,885
|
134,440
|
28,138,315
|
Issued on 6 July 2023 at £0.0035
per share (cash placing)
|
130,147,004
|
13,015
|
442,500
|
Issued on 18 September 2023 at
£0.004 per share (non-cash creditor settlement)
|
25,000,000
|
2,500
|
97,500
|
Issued on 27 September 2023 at
£0.004 per share (non-cash creditor settlement)
|
25,000,000
|
2,500
|
97,500
|
Issued on 27 September 2023 at
£0.0021 per share (cash placing)
|
75,000,000
|
7,500
|
150,000
|
Issued on 28 December 2023 at
£0.0021 per share (cash placing)
|
39,285,714
|
3,928
|
78,571
|
Issued on 1 January 2024 at £0.008
per share (non-cash creditor settlement)
|
32,061,643
|
3,206
|
253,287
|
Issued on 8 January 2024 at £0.0035
per share (cash placing)
|
5,000,000
|
500
|
17,000
|
Issued on 29 February 2024 at
£0.008 per share (non- cash creditor settlement)
|
98,917,808
|
9,892
|
781,451
|
Issued on 5 March 2024 at £0.0021
per share (cash placing)
|
100,000,000
|
10,000
|
200,000
|
Issued on 8 April 2024 at £0.005
per share (cash placing)
|
79,950,000
|
7,995
|
391,755
|
Issued on 24 May 2024 at £0.00375
per share (non- cash SIP)
|
1,920,000
|
192
|
7,008
|
Issued on 24 May 2024 at £0.0033
per share (non- cash SIP)
|
1,636,362
|
164
|
5,236
|
Issued on 14 June 2024 at £0.001
per share (cash placing)
|
350,000,000
|
35,000
|
315,000
|
Issued on 14 June 2024 at £0.001
per share (cash placing)
|
150,000,000
|
15,000
|
135,000
|
As at 30 June 2024 - ordinary
shares of £0.0100 each
|
2,458,300,416
|
245,832
|
31,110,123
|
The Company's share capital
consists of three classes of shares, being:
· Ordinary shares with a nominal value of £0.0001, which are
the Company's listed securities;
· Deferred shares with a nominal value of £0.0009;
· A
Deferred shares with a nominal value of £0.000095;
· B
Deferred share with a nominal value of £0.000099
Subject to the provisions of the Companies Act
2006, the deferred shares may be cancelled by the Company, or
bought back for £1 and then cancelled. These deferred shares are
not quoted and carry no rights whatsoever.
Warrants
At 30 June 2024, the Company had
461,552,900 warrants in issue (2023: 511,942,464) with exercise
prices ranging £0.004-£0.25 (2023: £0.004-£0.25). The weighted
average remaining life of the warrants at 30 June 2024 was 437 days
(2023: 482 days).
Details related to valuation of all
warrants are disclosed below.
Group and Company
|
2024
number of
warrants
|
|
|
2023
number
of
warrants
|
|
|
|
|
|
Outstanding at the beginning of the
period
|
511,942,464
|
|
|
171,999,329
|
Granted during the
period
|
291,052,900
|
|
|
444,582,214
|
Exercised during the
period
|
(219,285,714)
|
|
|
-
|
Lapsed during the period
|
(122,156,750)
|
|
|
(104,639,079)
|
Outstanding at the end of the
period
|
461,552,900
|
|
|
511,942,464
|
At 30 June 2024, the Company had the following
warrants to subscribe for shares in issue:
Grant date
|
Expiry date
|
Warrant exercise
price
|
Number of post consolidation
warrants
|
17 July 2019
|
1 July 2024
|
£0.25
|
200,000
|
14 Dec 2021
|
13 December 2024
|
£0.015
|
3,800,000
|
17 Oct 2022
|
16 Oct 2025
|
£0.004
|
50,000,000
|
20 Dec 2022
|
20 Dec 2025
|
£0.004
|
116,500,000
|
1 Jan 2024
|
25 April 2025
|
£0.008
|
211,102,900
|
8 April 2024
|
8 April 2026
|
£0.010
|
39,975,000
|
9 April 2024
|
9 April 2026
|
£0.010
|
39,975,000
|
Total warrants in issue at 30 June 2024
|
|
|
461,552,900
|
The aggregate fair value recognised in
warrants reserve in relation to the share warrants, granted during
the reporting period was £122,294 (2022: £327,660) and has been
recognised in finance costs during the year.
The following information is relevant in the
determination of the fair value of warrants, granted during the
reporting period. Black-Scholes valuation model was applied for all
the warrants below:
Grant date
|
Expiry date
|
Number of
warrants
|
Warrant life,
years
|
Warrant exercise price,
£
|
Share price at the grant
date, (p)
|
UK risk-free rate at the
date of grant, %
|
Volatility,
%
|
FV of 1 warrant,
£
|
FV of all warrants,
£
|
1 Jan 24
|
25 April 25
|
211,102,900
|
2
|
0.008
|
0.335
|
3.7510
|
58.79
|
0.0004
|
74,968
|
8 April 24
|
8 April 25
|
39,975,000
|
2
|
0.010
|
0.425
|
4.2260
|
64.55
|
0.0006
|
23,789
|
9 April 24
|
9 April 25
|
39,975,000
|
2
|
0.010
|
0.425
|
4.1920
|
64.29
|
0.0006
|
23,537
|
Total at 30 June 2024
|
|
291,052,900
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
122,294
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Expected volatility values, used in the
calculation of fair value for options and warrants, have been
determined by reference to the historical volatility of the Company
over the same backward looking period as the expected exercise
period of the option or warrant on the date of grant.
Capital Management
Management controls the capital of the Group
in order to control risks, provide the shareholders with adequate
returns and ensure that the Group can fund its operations and
continue as a going concern. The Group's debt and capital, includes
ordinary share capital and financial liabilities, supported by
financial assets such as cash, receivables and investments. There
are no externally imposed capital requirements.
Management effectively manages the Group's
capital by assessing the Group's financial risks and adjusting its
capital structure in response to changes in these risks and in the
market. These responses include the management of debt levels,
distributions to shareholders and share issues. There have been no
changes in the strategy adopted by management to control the
capital of the Group since the prior year.
17. Share-Based
Payments
Employee Share Options
In prior years, the Company established an
employee share option plan to enable the issue of options as part
of the remuneration of key management personnel and Directors to
enable them to purchase ordinary shares in the Company. Under IFRS
2 "Share-based Payments", the Company determines the fair value of
the options issued to Directors and employees as remuneration and
recognises the amount as an expense in the Income Statement with a
corresponding increase in equity.
At 30 June 2024, the Company had outstanding
options to subscribe for post-consolidation Ordinary shares as
follows:
|
Options issued 5 December
2019, exercisable at £0.0275 per share, expiring on 5 December
2024
|
Options issued 31 January
2020 exercisable at £0.0285 per share, expiring on 31 January
2025
|
Options issued 28 February
2022 exercisable at £0.017 per share, expiring on 27 February
2027
|
Options issued 11 January
2024 exercisable at £0.001 per share, expiring on 12 January
2029
|
Total
Number
|
S Gilbert
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
31,490,580
|
31,490,580
|
G Geraldo
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
31,490,580
|
31,490,580
|
P Kabra
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
31,490,580
|
31,490,580
|
A Karam
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
125,962,320
|
125,962,320
|
E Ainsworth
|
-
|
-
|
2,805,942
|
-
|
2,805,942
|
Employees
|
3,040,567
|
3,040,567
|
17,800,336
|
86,599,095
|
110,480,565
|
Total
|
3,040,567
|
3,040,567
|
20,606,278
|
307,033,155
|
333,720,567
|
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
Company and Group
|
Number
of
options
Number
|
Weighted
average
exercise
price
£
|
|
Number
of
options
Number
|
Weighted
average
exercise
price
Pence
|
|
Outstanding at the beginning of the
period
|
26,687,412
|
0.0195
|
|
26,783,412
|
0.022
|
|
Granted during the year
|
307,033,155
|
0.0001
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
Lapsed during the period
|
-
|
-
|
|
(96,000)
|
0.008
|
|
Outstanding at the end of the
period
|
333,720,567
|
0.0017
|
|
26,687,412
|
0.0195
|
|
The exercise price of options outstanding at
30 June 2024 and 30 June 2023, ranged between £0.0001 and £0.80.
Their weighted average contractual life was 4.35 years (2023: 4.176
years).
As the vesting conditions for the options
granted in the year were based on market conditions, the
Monte-Carlo valuation model has been used to determine the vesting
period and probability of the vesting conditions to provide a fair
value based off the results calculated by the model. The
probabilities are 53%, 27% and 15% for T1, T2 and T3 respectfully
and the vesting periods are 1.72 years, 3.3 years and 4.45 years
for T1, T2 and T3 respectfully.
Of the total number of options outstanding at
30 June 2024, 6,081,134 (2023: nil) had vested and were
exercisable. The weighted average share price (at the date of
exercise) of options, exercised during the year, was nil (2023:
nil) as no options were exercised during the reporting year (2023:
nil).
Share-based remuneration expense, related to
the share options granted during the reporting period, is included
in the Administrative expenses line in the Consolidated Income
Statement in the amount of £217,000 (2023: £52,167).
Share Incentive Plan
In January 2012, the Company implemented a tax
efficient Share Incentive Plan (SIP), a government approved scheme,
the terms of which provide for an equal reward to every employee,
including Directors, who have served for three months or more at
the time of issue. The terms of the plan provide for:
· each employee to
be given the right to subscribe any amount up to £150 per month
with Trustees, who invest the monies in the Company's
shares;
· the Company to
match the employee's investment by contributing an amount equal to
double the employee's investment ("matching shares");
and
· the Company to
award free shares to a maximum of £3,600 per employee per
annum.
The subscriptions remain free of taxation and
national insurance if held for five years.
All such shares are held by SIP Trustees and
the shares cannot be released to participants until five years
after the date of the award.
During the financial year, a total of
3,556,362 free, matching and partnership shares were awarded (2023:
3,506,490), resulting in a share-based payment charge of £10,800
(2023: £10,800), included into administrative expenses line in the
Consolidated Income Statement.
18. Cash and Cash
Equivalents
Group
|
30
June
2024
£'000
|
30
June
2023
£'000
|
Cash in hand and at bank
|
268
|
257
|
Company
|
30
June
2024
£'000
|
30
June
2023
£'000
|
Cash in hand and at bank
|
89
|
256
|
Credit Risk
The Group's exposure to credit risk, or the
risk of counterparties defaulting, arises mainly from notes and
other receivables. The Directors manage the Group's exposure to
credit risk by the application of monitoring procedures on an
ongoing basis. For other financial assets (including cash and bank
balances), the Directors minimise credit risk by dealing
exclusively with high credit rating counterparties.
Credit Risk Concentration Profile
The Group's receivables do not have
significant credit risk exposure to any single counterparty or any
group of counterparties, having similar characteristics. The
Directors define major credit risk as exposure to a concentration
exceeding 10% of a total class of such asset.
The Company maintains its cash reserves in
Coutts & Co, which maintains an A-1 credit rating from Standard
& Poor's.
19. Financial
Instruments
19.1 Categories
of Financial Instruments
The Group and the Company holds a number of
financial instruments, including bank deposits, short-term
investments, loans and receivables and trade payables. The carrying
amounts for each category of financial instrument are as
follows:
Group
30 June
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Financial
assets
|
|
|
Fair value through other comprehensive
income financial assets
|
|
|
Quoted equity shares (Note 12)
|
1
|
1
|
Total
financial assets carried at fair value, valued at observable market
price
|
1
|
1
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
268
|
257
|
|
|
|
Loans and
receivables
|
|
|
Receivable from JVs
|
-
|
1,517
|
Receivable from sale of subsidiary
|
809
|
714
|
Other receivables
|
281
|
754
|
Total
financial assets held at amortised cost
|
1,090
|
2,985
|
|
|
|
Total
financial assets
|
1,358
|
3,243
|
|
|
|
Total
current
|
1,185
|
1,011
|
Total
non-current
|
173
|
2,232
|
Company
30 June
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
|
Financial
assets
|
|
|
|
Fair value through other comprehensive
income financial assets
|
|
|
|
Quoted equity shares
|
1
|
1
|
|
Total FVTOCI
financial assets
|
1
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fair value through profit and loss
financial assets
|
|
|
|
Investments in a project of a private
entity
|
-
|
-
|
|
Total
financial assets carried at fair value, valued using valuation
techniques
|
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
89
|
256
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loans and
receivables
|
|
|
|
Receivable from JVs
|
-
|
1,517
|
|
Receivable from subsidiaries
|
3,882
|
287
|
Other receivables
|
265
|
453
|
Total
financial assets held at amortised cost
|
4,147
|
2,257
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
financial assets
|
4,236
|
2,514
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
current
|
354
|
709
|
|
Total
non-current
|
3,882
|
1,805
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Financial Instruments Carried at Fair Value
Using Valuation Techniques Other than Observable Market
Value
Financial instruments, valued
using other valuation techniques, can be reconciled from beginning
to ending balances as follows:
Group
30 June
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Financial
liabilities at amortised cost
|
|
|
Loans and
borrowings
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
4,840
|
715
|
Borrowings
|
1,330
|
602
|
Total
financial liabilities
|
6,170
|
1,317
|
Company
30 June
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Financial
liabilities at amortised cost
|
|
|
Loans and
borrowings
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
2,184
|
715
|
Borrowings
|
1,330
|
602
|
Total
financial liabilities
|
3,514
|
1,317
|
Trade Receivables and Trade
Payables
Management assessed that other receivables and
trade and other payables approximate their carrying amounts largely
due to the short-term maturities of these instruments.
Borrowings
The carrying value of
interest-bearing loans and borrowings is determined by calculating
the principal owing and accrued interest as at the reporting date.
The loans are due in January 2025 and October 2025 and impact of
discounting the present value of future cashflows is immaterial
and, therefore, not included into the valuation. See Note 14 for
further detail.
19.2
Fair Values
Financial assets and financial liabilities,
measured at fair value in the statement of financial position, are
grouped into three levels of a fair value hierarchy. The three
levels are defined, based on the observability of significant
inputs to the measurement, as follows:
· Level 1: Quoted
(unadjusted) market prices in active markets for identical assets
or liabilities;
· Level 2:
Valuation techniques for which the lowest level input that is
significant to the fair value measurement is directly or indirectly
observable; and
· Level 3:
Valuation techniques for which the lowest level input that is
significant to the fair value measurement is
unobservable.
The carrying amount of the Group
and the Company's financial assets and liabilities is not
materially different to their fair value. The fair value of
financial assets and liabilities is included at the amount at which
the instrument could be exchanged in a current transaction between
willing parties, other than in a forced or liquidation sale. Where
a quoted price in an active market is available, the fair value is
based on the quoted price at the end of the reporting period. In
the absence of a quoted price in an active market, the Group uses
valuation techniques that are appropriate in the circumstances and
for which sufficient data are available to measure fair value,
maximising the use of relevant observable inputs and minimising the
use of unobservable inputs.
The following table provides the
fair value measurement hierarchy of the Group's assets and
liabilities:
Group and Company
|
Level
1
£'000
|
Level
2
£'000
|
Level
3
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets at fair value through other
comprehensive income
- Quoted equity shares
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Financial assets at fair value through profit
and loss
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Group and Company
|
Level
1
£'000
|
Level
2
£'000
|
Level
3
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
30 June 2023
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets at fair value through other
comprehensive income
- Quoted equity shares
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Financial assets at fair value through profit
and loss
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
19.3
Financial Risk Management Policies
The Directors monitor the Group's financial
risk management policies and exposures, and approve financial
transactions.
The Directors' overall risk management
strategy seeks to assist the consolidated Group in meeting its
financial targets, while minimising potential adverse effects on
financial performance. Its functions include the review of credit
risk policies and future cash flow requirements.
Specific Financial Risk Exposures and
Management
The main risks the Group is exposed to through
its financial instruments are credit risk and market risk,
consisting of interest rate risk, liquidity risk, equity price risk
and foreign exchange risk.
Credit Risk
Exposure to credit risk, relating to financial
assets, arises from the potential non-performance by counterparties
of contract obligations that could lead to a financial loss to the
Group.
Credit risk is managed through the maintenance
of procedures (such procedures include the utilisation of systems
for the approval, granting and renewal of credit limits, regular
monitoring of exposures against such limits and monitoring of the
financial liability of significant customers and counterparties),
ensuring, to the extent possible, that customers and counterparties
to transactions are of sound creditworthiness. Such monitoring is
used in assessing receivables for impairment.
Risk is also minimised through investing
surplus funds in financial institutions that maintain a high credit
rating or in entities that the Directors have otherwise cleared as
being financially sound.
Trade and other receivables, that are neither
past due nor impaired, are considered to be of high credit quality.
Aggregates of such amounts are as detailed in Note 13.
There are no amounts of collateral held as
security in respect of trade and other receivables.
The consolidated Group does not have any
material credit risk exposure to any single receivable or group of
receivables under financial instruments entered into by the
consolidated Group.
Liquidity Risk
Liquidity risk arises from the possibility
that the Group might encounter difficulty in settling its debts or
otherwise meeting its obligations related to financial liabilities.
The Group manages this risk through the following
mechanisms:
· monitoring
undrawn credit facilities;
· obtaining
funding from a variety of sources; and
· maintaining a
reputable credit profile.
The Directors are confident that adequate
resources exist to finance operations and that controls over
expenditures are carefully managed. All financial liabilities are
due to be settled within the next twelve months.
Market Risk
Interest Rate Risk
The Company is not exposed to any material
interest rate risk because interest rates on loans are fixed in
advance.
Equity Price Risk
Price risk relates to the risk that the fair
value, or future cash flows of a financial instrument, will
fluctuate because of changes in market prices, largely due to
demand and supply factors for commodities, but also include
political, economic, social, technical, environmental and
regulatory factors.
Foreign Exchange Risk
The Group's transactions are carried out in a
variety of currencies, including Australian Dollars, United Stated
Dollars, Papua New Guinea Kina and United Kingdom Pounds Sterling.
To mitigate the Group's exposure to foreign currency risk,
non-Sterling cash flows are monitored. Fluctuation of +/- 10% in
currencies, other than UK Sterling, would not have a significant
impact on the Group's net assets or annual results.
The Group does not enter forward exchange
contracts to mitigate the exposure to foreign currency risk as
amounts paid and received in specific currencies are expected to
largely offset one another.
These assets and liabilities are denominated in
the following currencies as shown in the table below:
Group
30 June 2024
|
GBP
£'000
|
AUD
£'000
|
USD
£'000
|
CAD
£'000
|
AOA
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
89
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
178
|
268
|
Amortised cost financial assets -
Other receivables
|
265
|
-
|
636
|
-
|
16
|
917
|
FVTOCI financial assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
Amortised costs financial assets -
Non-current receivables
|
-
|
-
|
173
|
-
|
-
|
173
|
Trade and other payables, excluding
accruals
|
407
|
-
|
4,379
|
-
|
-
|
4,786
|
Short-term borrowings
|
-
|
-
|
1,330
|
-
|
-
|
1,330
|
|
Group
30 June 2023
|
GBP
£'000
|
AUD
£'000
|
USD
£'000
|
CAD
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
257
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
257
|
Amortised cost financial assets -
Other receivables
|
452
|
302
|
-
|
-
|
754
|
FVTOCI financial assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
Amortised costs financial assets -
Non-current receivables
|
2,231
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,231
|
Trade and other payables, excluding
accruals
|
177
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
177
|
Short-term borrowings
|
602
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
602
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Company
30 June 2024
|
GBP
£'000
|
AUD
£'000
|
USD
£'000
|
CAD
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
89
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
89
|
Amortised cost financial assets -
Other receivables
|
265
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
265
|
FVTOCI financial assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
Trade and other payables, excluding
accruals
|
443
|
-
|
1,365
|
-
|
1,808
|
Loans from subsidiaries
|
322
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
322
|
Short-term borrowings
|
-
|
-
|
1,330
|
-
|
1,330
|
Company
30 June 2023
|
GBP
£'000
|
AUD
£'000
|
USD
£'000
|
CAD
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
256
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
256
|
Amortised cost financial assets -
Other receivables
|
453
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
453
|
FVTOCI financial assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
Amortised costs financial assets -
Non-current receivables
|
1,517
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,517
|
Trade and other payables, excluding
accruals
|
465
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
465
|
Short-term borrowings
|
602
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
602
|
Exposures to foreign exchange rates
vary during the year, depending on the volume and nature of
overseas transactions.
20 Reconciliation of Liabilities
Arising from Financing Activities and Major Non-Cash
Transactions
Significant non-cash transactions,
from financing activities in relation to loans and borrowings, are
as follows:
|
30 June
2023
£'000
|
Cash flows Loans
received
£'000
|
Non-cash flow
Restructured
£'000
|
Non-cash flow
Conversion
£'000
|
Non-cash flow Forex
movement
£'000
|
Non-cash flow Interest and
arrangement fees accreted
£'000
|
Cash flows Principal
repaid
£'000
|
Cash flows Interest
repaid
£'000
|
30 June
2024
£'000
|
IBM loan
|
-
|
1,257
|
-
|
-
|
8
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,265
|
CLN Extraction SRL
|
-
|
1,000
|
-
|
(1,048)
|
-
|
48
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
C4 / Riverfort Capital and YA II PN
Ltd loan
|
547
|
-
|
-
|
(200)
|
-
|
44
|
(391)
|
-
|
-
|
Premium Credit Finance
|
55
|
87
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3
|
(80)
|
-
|
65
|
Total
|
602
|
2,344
|
-
|
(1,248)
|
8
|
95
|
(471)
|
-
|
1,330
|
Significant non-cash transactions
from financing activities in relation to raising new capital are
disclosed in Note 16.
There were no significant non-cash
transactions from investing activities in the current
year.
Significant non-cash transactions
from operating activities were as follows:
· Payment for services (share-based payments in the form of
options and warrants), in the amount of £10,800 (2023: £10,800),
disclosed in Notes 16 and 17;
· Prepayment of £79,000 of salary to James Parsons through the
issuance of ordinary shares of the same value in the prior year,
which have been expensed in the current year within Administrative
expenses;
· Share
settled transactions to settle loan balances £1,247,836 (2022:
£97,760).
· Extraction SRL converted £1,047,836 at a price of £0.008 for
130,979,451 Ordinary shares. A related party transaction as a
result of having a common director.
21 Exploration & Evaluation
Assets and Mineral Tenements
Movements in exploration &
evaluation assets and mineral tenements in the year were as
follows:
Group
30 June 2024
|
Wowo Gap
GBP
£'000
|
Mt Weld
GBP
£'000
|
Canegrass
GBP
£'000
|
APEX
GBP
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
B/f
|
-
|
172
|
220
|
1,622
|
2,014
|
Impairment of mineral rights
assets
|
-
|
-
|
(220)
|
-
|
(220)
|
Additions in the year
|
-
|
12
|
-
|
5,907
|
5,919
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c/f
|
-
|
184
|
-
|
7,529
|
7,713
|
Group
30 June 2023
|
Wowo Gap
GBP
£'000
|
Mt Weld
GBP
£'000
|
Canegrass
GBP
£'000
|
APEX
GBP
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
B/f
|
1,026
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,026
|
Acquisitions of new
licences/tenements
|
-
|
215
|
220
|
-
|
435
|
Disposal of derecognition of
subsidiaries
|
(1,026)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,026)
|
Acquired on business
combination
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
966
|
966
|
Additions in the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
656
|
656
|
Partial disposal on farmout of
tenements
|
-
|
(43)
|
-
|
-
|
(43)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c/f
|
-
|
172
|
220
|
1,622
|
2,014
|
Company
30 June 2024
|
|
Mt Weld
GBP
£'000
|
Canegrass
GBP
£'000
|
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
B/f
|
|
172
|
220
|
|
392
|
Impairment of mineral rights
assets
|
|
-
|
(220)
|
|
(220)
|
Additions in the year
|
|
12
|
-
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c/f
|
|
184
|
-
|
|
184
|
Company
30 June 2023
|
|
Mt Weld
GBP
£'000
|
Canegrass
GBP
£'000
|
|
Total
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
B/f
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
Acquisitions of new
licences/tenements
|
|
215
|
220
|
|
435
|
Partial disposal on farmout of
tenements
|
|
(43)
|
-
|
|
(43)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c/f
|
|
172
|
220
|
|
392
|
The total value of mineral
tenements at the year-end for the Group and Company was £184,000
(2023: £392,000) and the total value of Exploration and evaluation
assets at the year end for the Group was £7,529,000(2023:
£2,014,000) and for the Company was £nil (2023: £nil).
22 Discontinued
Operations
On 16 October 2023, the Group
announced an agreement with Integrated Battery Metals (the
Purchaser) for the disposal of its 41% interest in the Mambare
nickel/cobalt project held via its interest in Oro Nickel Ltd,
following extensive discussions with the Purchaser over the course
of the financial year ended 30 June 2023. The Group then notified
its partner in the joint venture of the receipt of a bonafide offer
for its interest, which started a 45-day period in which the
partner was able to legally pre-empt the transaction. This
pre-emption period subsequently expired with no notification of
pre-emption from the joint venture partner. The Company
further requested and received shareholder approval for the sale in
December of 2023 at a General Meeting of the Company.
Following the pre-emption period,
the Company has taken legal advice and has been advised to attempt
to complete the sale of its interest to Integrated Battery Metals,
a process, which requires multiple inputs and actions from the
joint venture partner, which to date have not been forthcoming. The
Company is currently exploring its options as to how best to
complete the transaction as previously announced.
Under IFRS 5, the interest in Oro
Nickel Ltd is classified as an Asset Held for Sale, as the
Directors had made a definitive determination to dispose of the
asset prior to the reporting date of these Financial
Statements. As such, the carrying value of the investment
£1,459,000 (2023: £1,575,000) was reclassified as held for sale in
the prior year. In the prior year, the loan receivable from the JV
of £1,516,000 was considered recoverable separately from the
proposed sale of the JV equity interest and so was retained as a
loan receivable in the prior year Financial Statements. In October
2023, a revised proposal for the sale of the JV interest was agreed
with the purchaser, giving rise to the assessment that the loan
receivable from the JV would now be recovered via the sale of the
JV equity interests to the purchaser under these new deal
terms. As a consequence, the loan receivable from the JV of
£1,516,000 (2023: £1,516,000) has also been reclassified in the
current year as forming part of the asset held for sale, giving
rise to a total carrying value of assets held for sale of
£2,975,000 (2023: £1,575,000). The same reclassification of
the investment in JV in the prior year and loans to the JV in the
current year has been undertaken in the Company only Financial
Statements, with the year end carrying value of assets held for
sale consequently being £3,000,000 (2023: £1,775,000).
In the Company only Financial
Statements, an impairment of £175,000 has been recognised in regard
to the carrying value of the asset held for sale in the to align
the carrying value to the present value of the expected transaction
proceeds. The total carrying value of the asset held for sale in
the Company only Financial Statements is £2,999,846 (2023:
£1,775,000) The Group's loss for the year for discontinued
operations is £26,746 (2023: £nil) and the Company's loss for the
year for discontinued operations is £201,530 (2023:
£nil).
Cashflows, arising from
discontinued operations in the year amount, to £16,000 of legal
fees paid in support of the transaction settlement process (2023:
£nil).
23 Significant
Agreements and Transactions
Financing
· On 11
October 2023, the Company entered into a subscription agreement
with Extraction SRL for up to £10,000,000 Convertible Bonds,
resulting in the initial drawdown of £1,000,000 in convertible loan
notes on the agreement date. Subsequent to this, in the year, the
full amount plus interest was converted at a price of £0.008 per
share for a total of 130,979,451 Ordinary shares. On 15 April 2024,
the Company announced the termination of the remaining facility,
with all amounts having been fully settled via conversions in the
year.
· On 19
September 2023, the Company announced the conversion of £100,000 of
outstanding convertible loan notes into 25 million ordinary
shares.
· On 15
April 2024, the Company announced the placing of 259.95 million new
ordinary shares at £0.005 per share to raise approx. £1.3 million
in gross funding proceeds. Settlement of the placing took place in
two tranches, with Tranche 1 (£800,000) taking place on 13 May 2024
and Tranche 2 (£500,000) taking place following the Company AGM. On
17 June 2024, the Company announced that the Tranche 2 fundraising
would be re-placed to alternative investors at a price of £0.001
per share, raising £500,000 in gross funds via the allotment of 500
million new ordinary shares
Battery Metals Joint Venture
· On 16
October 2023, the Company announced it had received a revised offer
from Integrated Battery Metals ("IBM") for the purchase of Corcel's
41% interest in the Mambare Nickel project, held via its interest
in Oro Nickel Limited, the Joint Venture vehicle. The key
terms of the revised offer were:
- USD
1.6 million in cash, payable on completion of the sale of Corcel's
41% interest in the JV vehicle;
- USD
1.4 million in cash or fully paid ordinary shares in IBM (at the
election of Corcel), payable on completion of the sale of Corcel's
41% interest in the JV vehicle;
- USD
1.0 million in cash or fully paid ordinary shares in IBM (at the
election of Corcel), payable 24 months after completion of the sale
of Corcel's 41% interest in the JV vehicle;
- USD
148,000 payable immediately to Corcel for the sale of its gross
smelter royalty interest in the Mambare project (held as a separate
interest to the Company's 41% equity interest in the
project).
· As
part of the terms of the above disposal, IBM further agreed to
provide the Company with a USD 1.6 million loan (interest free), to
be settled on completion of the above transaction, following the
waiving of the pre-emption rights, held by Corcel's JV partner
Battery Metals Australia ("BMA"). In the event that BMA
elected to exercise its pre-emption rights, then the loan is to be
settled on completion of the sale of the Company's interests in the
JV to BMA.
· Completion of the above disposal agreement with IBM remains
pending completion of discussions regarding BMA's pre-emption
rights under the JV agreement.
Mt. Weld Rare Earth Element Project
· On 4
January 2023, the Company announced that had agreed a farm-out with
Riversgold Ltd (ASX:RGL), covering its rare earth element project
at Mt. Weld. The transaction consisted of a AUD 30,000 immediate
payment to Corcel, with RGL agreeing to fund a AUD 500,000 work
programme over the next year in exchange for a 50% interest in the
project. CRCL further had the right but not the obligation to
allow the farm-in of a further 20% for an additional AUD 1,000,000
in a subsequent period.
· On 5
May 2023, the Company announced that it had sold a 20% interest in
the Mt. Weld Rare Earth Element Project to Extraction SRL, a
private Italian company, controlled by Mr. Antoine Karam, for cash
consideration of AUD 1,000,000, payable by 31 May 2023. Extraction
SRL is a shareholder of Corcel, having held 9.61% and Mr. Karam was
expected to join the Board of Corcel, following perfunctory
regulatory checks. Riversgold agreed to waive its pre-emption
rights over the sale of this interest and Extraction SRL would then
become a party to original joint venture agreement. The 20%
interest in Mt. Weld being sold was held in the Company's interim
accounts balance sheet at £43,000, leaving a net profit after costs
on disposal of approximately £475,472.
· On 28
March 2024, the Company announced that Riversgold, following a
review of its project portfolio to determine strategic fit with its
corporate objectives, had elected to withdraw from the earn-in
agreement, with Corcel's interest in the project reverting to 80%
following this election. The Company has determined that the
strategic nature of the decision to withdraw from the project,
which involved a focusing of the Riversgold business on lithium
assets, does not give rise to an indication of impairment of the
asset. The Company is assessing its options for further development
of the project.
Canegrass Lithium
Project
· On 18
March 2024, the Company announced the results of initial
exploration/evaluation work on its 100% owned Canegrass project,
noting the presence of Lithium, Vanadium and Nickel bearing
structures. Following discussions with Huntsman Exploration,
the Company has been informed that Huntsman intends to drop the
underlying tenements, and that it is currently not economically
sensible for Corcel to acquire them. As such, the project has been
fully impaired as at 30 June 2024.
APEX Angola
· During the year, Drilling activity was undertaken by
Sonangol, the Angolan state oil company and operator of the KON-11
block in which the Company holds a 20% interest. The Company paid
approx. USD 1.6 million in cash calls to Sonangol over the period
(and a payment plan for the balance of 2024 and all of 2025 agreed
budgets for both KON-11 and KON-12 was agreed with Sonangol in
October 2024). The results of the drilling activity were
inconclusive, following substantial drilling challenges, with
Sonangol noting its intention to fully analyse the data, extracted
from the wells, and determine the optimal means for continued
development of the wells and the block as a whole. The Company has
determined that the challenges, encountered in these wells were of
an engineering/execution nature and so do not reflect the
underlying prospectivity of the assets and, as such, do not give
rise to an indication of impairment of these prospects.
24 Commitments
As at 30 June 2024, the Company had entered
into the following commitments:
· Exploration
commitments: On-going exploration expenditure is required to
maintain title to the Group mineral exploration permits. No
provision has been made in the Financial Statements for these
amounts as the expenditure is expected to be fulfilled in the
normal course of the operations of the Group and did not give rise
to a legal or constructive obligation as at the date of
report.
· On 1 March 2024,
the Company extended its existing lease at We Work, Aldwych House,
through to 31 March 2025. Total lease rentals, payable to March
2025, are £21,467.
25 Related Party
Transactions
·
Related party receivables and payables, between
Group companies, are disclosed in Notes 13 and 14,
respectively.
· The
key management personnel are the Directors and their remuneration
is disclosed within Note 8.
· During the year, the following Directors participated in
funding activity undertaken by the Company:
o Extraction Srl, in which Antoine Karam holds a 45% interest,
provided £1,000,000 in convertible loan funding in the year, which
was fully converted by the reporting date into a total of
130,979,451 ordinary shares. During the year interest
totalling to £47,835 was accrued on this loan and was converted
along with the principal;
o Geraldine
Geraldo subscribed for 39.975 million new ordinary shares at a
price of £0.005 per share;
o Integrated
Battery Metals (IBM), a company of which Yan Zhao is a director,
agreed to the purchase of the Company's interests in the Mambare
Joint Venture in the year for total consideration of USD 4.1
million in staged tranches, see Note 23 for further details. During
the year, IBM also provided the Company with a loan of USD 1.6
million, which is interest free and repayable out of the first
tranche of consideration, payable of the purchase of the Mambare
JV.
26 Events After the
Reporting Period
· On 10
July 2024, the Company announced it had entered into a
collaboration agreement with Conterp Serviços Téchnicos Ltda
("Conterp"), a Brazilian energy services company, for the purposes
of identifying onshore oil and gas production opportunities in
Brazil.
· On 12
July 2024, the Company announced the resignation of Antoine Karam
as Chairman of the Board (noting he remains a Non-Executive
Director of the Company), the appointment of Andrew Fairclough as
acting Non-Executive Chairman and the appointment of Scott Gilbert
as Chief Executive Officer of the Company.
· On 10
September 2024, the Company announced the completion of the data
acquisition phase of its KON-16 program (over which the Company
holds a 35% interest and operatorship). The Company is now engaging
in processing and interpretation work over the data to further
refine the prospectivity of the block ahead of further exploration
work.
· On
24 September 2024, the Company announced the acquisition of a
further 20% interest in its operated KON-16 block in Angola,
bringing the total interest of the Company to 55% gross (49.5% net
to Corcel, considering its 90% interest in APEX Angola). The
acquisition was undertaken for no consideration, following the exit
of one of the JV partners from the block.
· On
24 September 2024, the Company announced the raising of £1.22
million in gross funding through the placement of 1.22 billion new
ordinary shares to a group of strategic investors, at a price of
£0.001 per share.
· On 4
November 2024, the Company announced that Antoine Karam had
resigned from the Board with immediate effect.
· On
18 November 2024, the Company announced that it had agreed an
option to acquire a 20% interest in the IRAI gas field, onshore
Brazil, as well as a right of first refusal over the remaining 80%
and a separate right of first refusal over 100% of the adjacent
TUC-T-172 exploration block. The Company agreed to provide a loan
of USD 550,000 to Petroborn to conduct the first two workovers in
the field, after which the Company would have the choice whether to
exercise the option. Further tranches of USD 0.850 million
and USD 2.1 million would be payable to fund operations in 2025 and
2026, following execution of the option. The Company would receive
an additional 10% of future cash flows to accelerate repayment of
its investments in the field.
· On
19 November 2024, the Company announced that existing Non-Executive
Director, Pradeep Kabra, would take over the role of Non-Executive
Chairman, and Andrew Fairclough, the current Non-Executive
Chairman, would step down and remain on the Board as an Independent
Non-Executive Director.
27 Control
There is considered to be no controlling
party.
28
These results are audited, however, the
information does not constitute statutory accounts as defined under
section 434 of the Companies Act 2006. The consolidated
statement of financial position at 30 June 2024 and the
consolidated income statement, consolidated statement of
comprehensive income, consolidated statement of changes in equity
and the consolidated cash flow statement for the year then ended
have been extracted from the Group's 2024 statutory Financial
Statements. Their report was unqualified and contained no
statement under sections 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The Financial Statements for 2024 will be delivered to the
Registrar of Companies by 31 December 2024.