This announcement contains inside information for the purposes
of Article 7 of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 as it forms part of UK
domestic law by virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018.
With the publication of this announcement via a Regulatory
Information Service, this inside information is now considered to
be in the public domain.
23 May 2024
European Green Transition
plc
("European Green Transition", "EGT" or
"the Company")
Option Agreement to Acquire
Prospective
Carbon Credit
Project in Ireland
European Green Transition (AIM: EGT), a company
developing green economy assets in Europe which aims to capitalise
on the opportunity created by the green energy transition, is
pleased to announce it has entered into an exclusive
option agreement (the "Option") to investigate the potential
to develop a peatland carbon sink programme and in turn generate
carbon credits (the "Carbon Credit Project") at the Altan farm in
Donegal, Ireland ("Altan").
Highlights
· Altan is a c.1,370 acre site
primarily comprising of blanket peatland located in county Donegal
in the northwest of Ireland.
· Option offers EGT full,
exclusive access to conduct additional due diligence on the
proposed Carbon Credit Project over a 12-month period.
· Agreement is in line with
EGT's strategy to target green economy assets in Europe with
revenue potential.
· EGT will conduct further
diligence activities to ascertain the work required to commence the
generation of carbon credits at Altan.
· During the due diligence
phase, EGT will engage with all relevant stakeholders to ensure the
project aligns with the Company's ESG standards.
· Should EGT exercise the
Option it would expect to monetise the project by generating
revenue through carbon credits.
· EGT does not intend to
acquire the land from the landowner, rather EGT intends to generate
carbon credits through a revenue sharing model with the landowner,
ensuring low capital expenditures in line with the Company's
capital light approach.
· The Carbon Credit Project
provides the potential for EGT to develop a business both
generating and trading carbon credits.
· The Company intends to
replicate this revenue sharing model, building a portfolio of
peatland carbon credit projects, similar to a number of
successfully implemented projects in Scotland.
· EGT could extend this
business to trading third party carbon credits outside
of the Company's portfolio of carbon credit generating
projects.
· Should the Company exercise
the Option, any further agreement with Altan would be subject to,
inter alia, the Company successfully agreeing terms, purchase price
and entering into further documentation. There can be no guarantee
that the Option will be exercised.
· The Company will make further
announcements as appropriate.
Jack Kelly,
Chief Financial Officer of European Green Transition,
said:
"The Altan
Option agreement offers EGT the opportunity to generate cash flow
in a capital light manner by generating carbon credits. The market
for voluntary carbon credits is projected to grow by a factor of 15
or more by 2030 as companies progress towards carbon-neutrality
goals, and this agreement offers us an entry point into this
high-growth market. Other European countries, particularly
Scotland, already have a thriving carbon credit industry,
generating credits from peatland sinks.
"Peatland
covers 1.5 million hectares of land in Ireland, however most of our
blanket bog habitats are in poor condition due to human activity
and, as a result, are not functioning as they should. Rather than
absorbing carbon from the atmosphere, they are leaking carbon back
into the environment, which had previously been stored in the peat
for thousands of years. The UN has estimated that Ireland's
degraded peatlands emit 21.5 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent per
year, and Ireland has recently been referred to the Court of
Justice of the European Union for failure to protect its peat bogs.
We see this Option as not only developing our prospective carbon
credit revenue stream, but also potentially contributing
positively to Ireland's climate goals.
"The Altan
carbon credit generation project has the potential to be one of
Ireland's first peatland carbon sink projects, and could also be
the first step in a business model of both generating and trading
carbon credits that could be scaled up in the years and months
ahead."
Structure of
Option Agreement
The Company has signed an exclusive 12-month
option agreement with the Trustee of the Landowner for Altan (the
"Landowner") to obtain the economic rights to develop the Carbon
Credit Project at Altan. The Company has paid a fee of €100,000 to
the Landowner as consideration for entering into the Option. The
Company may exercise the Option to acquire the rights to generate
carbon credits at Altan upon successfully completing its due
diligence review of the Carbon Credit Project. It is not EGT's
intention to acquire the land, rather to generate carbon credits at
Altan through a revenue sharing model between EGT and the
Landowner. The Company is looking to replicate a number of
successfully implemented projects in Scotland. Scotland leads the
way in Europe in peatland re-wetting and will be restoring 3,000
hectares of bog a year by 2025.
Building a
Carbon Credit Generating Business
As energy demands of businesses grow globally,
there is an increased scrutiny on the environmental footprint of
each business, particularly its emissions. Policymakers have
implemented challenging targets for businesses to progress towards
carbon neutral goals in the coming years. Therefore, large
organisations actively buy carbon credits to absorb their emissions
or to claim a contribution to societal climate targets. The
Taskforce on Scaling Voluntary Carbon Markets, sponsored by the
Institute of International Finance with knowledge support from
McKinsey, estimates that demand for voluntary carbon credits could
increase by a factor of 15 or more by 2030, with a value upwards of
$50 billion, and by a factor of up to 100 by 2050.
A carbon credit is generated by either removing
from the atmosphere, or avoiding the emission of one tonne of
carbon dioxide equivalent. Carbon credits can be sold through a
large number of organisations and carbon markets exist as mandatory
(compliance) schemes or voluntary programs. Peatlands have immense
carbon market potential as restoration can substantially reduce
emissions and ultimately sequester carbon. As a result, EGT sees
significant opportunity to generate carbon credits from Altan and
scale the Carbon Credit Project across other peatland
opportunities.
Peatlands - A
Nature-Based Solution to Europe's Climate Goals
Peatlands are vital ecosystems in the fight
against climate change, covering just 3% of the world's surface yet
holding nearly 30% of all natural carbon - almost twice as much as
the entirety of Earth's forest biomass. Peatlands are characterised
by permanently waterlogged conditions that prevent plant material
from fully decomposing, keeping carbon locked in and preventing it
from entering the atmosphere as greenhouse gas.
Peatlands continue to be degraded around the
world. About 12% of the world's peatlands have been drained for
agricultural and forestry use with degraded peatlands accounting
for 4% of global annual emissions. The European Union has
experienced the largest losses, with over 50% of former peatland
areas no longer accumulating peat. Peatlands cover 1.5
million hectares in Ireland and approximately 30% have been
degraded through activities such as draining and agricultural
practices.
Drained and degraded peatlands currently emit
around twice as much greenhouse gas as the aviation industry. This
is a result of the peat soil becoming exposed to air, which
accelerates the decomposition of its organic matter, releasing
stored carbon as CO2 into the atmosphere. Restoring European
peatlands would prevent roughly the same amount of annual emissions
as taking 84 million passenger vehicles off the roads. Peatlands
also naturally sequester carbon by absorbing it through plants and
storing it in the ground (provided the water table is kept
persistently high), making them a valuable tool in plans in climate
mitigation plans.
Enquiries
European Green
Transition plc
Aiden Lavelle, CEO
|
+44 (0) 208 058 6129
|
Jack Kelly, CFO
|
|
|
|
Panmure Gordon
- Nominated Adviser and Broker
James Sinclair-Ford / Dougie McLeod / Ivo
Macdonald
Mark Murphy / Hugh Rich / Rauf Munir
|
+ 44 (0) 20 7886 2500
|
Camarco -
Financial PR
Billy Clegg, Elfie Kent, Lily Pettifar, Poppy
Hawkins
|
europeangreentransition@camarco.co.uk
+ 44 (0) 20 3757 4980
|
Notes to Editors
European Green Transition plc (listed on the
AIM London Stock Exchange under the ticker "EGT") is a business
operating in the green economy transition space in Europe. EGT
intends to capitalise on the opportunities created by Europe's
transition away from fossil fuels to a green, renewables-focused
economy. The Company plans to expand its existing portfolio of
green economy assets through M&A, targeting what it believes to
be distressed and undervalued projects. EGT sees substantial
opportunities to deliver value from its M&A pipeline, which
includes critical material, wind, solar, processing and recycling
projects.
EGT's highly experienced leadership team have a
strong track record of building successful public companies through
the acquisition of distressed assets. EGT plans to replicate this
approach, creating a sustainable and profitable business while
generating shareholder returns.
The Company's current portfolio of green
economy assets includes the Olserum Rare Earth Project in Sweden.
The Olserum project is one of Sweden's projects of "National
Interest" and has the potential to become Europe's first operating
REE mine. EGT has taken an exclusive option over a copper tailings
recycling project in Cyprus with the potential to generate
meaningful amounts of copper, and with the site and surroundings
offering an excellent long-term location to establish a potential
solar power facility. EGT own additional projects in northern
Sweden and Germany which have defined and tangible upside with
potential to realise near-term inflection points in a cost
effective manner. EGT's objective is to build a profitable business
while aiming to monetise some of its assets through sale or
partnership with larger industry players or European end users. The
team is focused on success while remaining committed to its defined
ESG strategy, ensuring excellent development practices across all
projects in addition to regular local community
engagement.
For more information visit
www.europeangreentransition.com
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and LinkedIn.