H2O rises despite losses

Shares in Canadian water technology company H2O Innovation gained 19.2% during September to end the month at €0.31, despite the firm’s announcement of lower revenues and increased losses for its financial year to 30 June. Even so, H2O’s share price is still some way off its high for the year of €0.48.
Sales at the company declined to $27.7 million from $31.2 million in 2009, while its net loss increased to $10 million from $65,148. The sales backlog increased from $13.4 million to $14.7 million, which the company says is a sign of the industry’s gradual economic recovery.

During its 2011 financial year H2O plans to target high-growth markets for its products and services. These include North Africa, the Middle East and Russia.

At the end of last month, the firm announced that it had been awarded several new contracts, worth a total of $4.3 million. These contracts will see H2O supply custom-built water treatment systems and equipment for municipal and industrial customers. Frédéric Dugré, H2O’s chief executive officer, said that the signing of the contracts was “a result of both a higher level of bidding activity that we have been experiencing since the second half of fiscal 2010 along with capital equipment investments picking up in the industrial segment of the water treatment industry”.

Last year H2O acquired California-based Profession¬al Water Technologies, transforming the company from a simple manufacturer of water systems to a complete water treatment solutions business.

H2O’s shares are quoted on NYSE Euronext’s Alternext exchange for small companies: they also trade on Toronto’s TSX Venture Exchange.

Market: Alternext
Symbol: ALHEO
Price: €0.31
12 month high/low: €0.48/€0.26
Market cap: €18.6m

 

Login

AIM Comment

AIM - a tough market for cleantech compnies - by Andrew Hore

Although a few new entrants have joined AIM this year, cleantech companies are still leaving the junior market. Stock markets around the world are becoming tougher places to raise money again, but the problems with the latest company to shun its AIM quotation date back to its flotation and lack of financial progress since, rather than current market conditions.

Read more


SUBSCRIBE

Quoted Cleantech costs £85 for annual subscription.

DOWNLOAD TRIAL ISSUE

Register Now! - to receive regular email alerts.

Subscribe Now! to receive the newsletter for one year AND gain online access to all the back issues.

Already a subscriber (and logged in)? Download the latest issue - and back issues - now

Editor´s Message

by Anne McIvor

The Solyndra collapse in the US has damaged investor sentiment throughout the solar industry. In an unrelated move, the UK Government has backtracked on its policy to provide feed-in-tariffs (FiTs) for the solar sector. The UK Government’s argument is that the prices of solar modules have fallen substantially since the policy was first put in place, and that the FiT subsidy now permits solar installers to make an unjustifiable return on their investments.

Read more

 

 

Cleantech Utility Comment

UK Energy Policy – Prescribed by Germany and France? - by Nigel Hawkins

The last few weeks have been busy times in the EU and UK energy sectors – and the next few months are unlikely to be any different. 

Read more