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Construction company Esh Group bounces back to profit after challenging conditions

The Durham firm's chief executive said the company was seeing unprecedented cost pressures

Andy Radcliffe, chief executive of Esh Group(Image: publicity handout from Esh Group)

Construction and civil engineering firm Esh Group has returned to profitability after a difficult period in recent years.

The County Durham company has undergone a major re-organisation over the past four years and fell to a loss during the pandemic, having previously noted ‘challenging’ conditions in the years before that. But now it says that turnover has increased by £32m to £255m - one of the largest increased in the company’s history - and that it has posted an operating profit of £4m.

Chief executive Andy Radcliffe noted that the business, and the wider construction sector, was seeing unprecedented cost pressures and was targetting projects that would “increase turnover via routes to market which present reduced risk”.

Read more: Northumbrian Water pays first dividend in three years as revenues rise

He said: “We are delighted to report a remarkable improvement in profitability, particularly during another year which was marred by the impact of the global pandemic.

“This achievement is no mean feat and is underpinned by the cumulative efforts over the last four years to reposition the group to target resilient sectors of the construction industry which demonstrate long-term stable fundamentals.

“Despite continued pressures emanating from supply chain constraints and elevated levels of cost inflation, our efforts to deliberately design a business model that allows the smoothing of positive and negative factors across our operations has paid dividends, allowing us to insulate a large part of the business from levels of inflation not seen in our generation.”

Esh said it had ended 2021 with £21m and remains debt free, without drawing on its £7m credit facility at any point in the year. Gross profit margins were at their highest levels in the last six years, and it said it had a forward order book of more than £500m and was working on high profile schemes on the Tyne Bridge and the Stockton Waterfront.