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Manufacturing

Babcock makes £165m loss as Covid-19 grounds helicopters

Engineering giant writes down value of aviation arm as it receives 'exceptional' hit during pandemic crisis

Devonport Dockyard in Plymouth, operated by Babcock

Defence engineering giant Babcock International Plc has made a £165million annual loss as the coronavirus pandemic grounded its aviation division.

The company, which operates huge dockyards in Plymouth and Rosyth, blamed a £503million “exceptional” hit to the business, which was mainly due to a write-down in the value of its aviation goodwill, and in its oil and gas division.

The company runs aviation services, mostly involving helicopters, for civil and military clients, including in the oil and gas exploration industry, for instance in the North Sea. This was affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Devonport dockyard operator had been predicting a £540million profit but in February 2020, before the coronavirus lockdown began in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, it had already warned that trading in its aviation business was facing challenges and was undergoing a restructuring.

Archie Bethel, chief executive of Babcock

Babcock, which made a pre-tax profit of £196.5million in 2019, has now deferred making a decision on whether to pay shareholders a dividend until the “Covid-19 situation becomes clearer”.

Archie Bethel, Babcock’s chief executive, was nevertheless upbeat and said: “We end a busy year in a strong position to deal with the current Coronavirus (Covid-19) uncertainty. We saw strong performances across our Marine, Nuclear and Land sectors and have taken action to address weaknesses in Aviation, including writing down goodwill to reflect our updated expectations of the oil and gas market.

“The early impact of the global Covid-19 pandemic had a limited impact on the group in the last financial year but is creating uncertainty as we head into this new financial year.”