LGI Limited (ASX:LGI)
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May 1, 2026, 4:10 PM AEST
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Earnings Call: H1 2026

Feb 19, 2026

Operator

Joining me from LGI today is CEO Jarryd Doran, as well as CFO Dean Wilkinson, on behalf of the board. Jarryd and Dean will take a few minutes this morning running through the results released to the ASX. Following this, the audience will have an opportunity to ask questions. There'll be a choice of 2 options: First, analysts and investors can either raise their hand via Zoom, should they wish to ask a verbal question of the management team, or you can also submit written questions via the Q&A function at the bottom of your screen. We will endeavor to get to the majority of questions asked, in some cases, combining questions specifically . And for analysts asking verbal questions, we'd kindly ask that you limit your questions to no more than 2 live questions in first instance on today's call. And thank you, and over to you, Jarryd.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Thanks very much, Sam, and thank you for everyone who's joining us this morning. I'll take you straight into our presentation. So appreciating it's Friday, everyone is very busy right now. We'll try and keep it to our highlights and the key points, but I do always like to start off by just reiterating who is LGI and what is it that LGI does. So for anyone who may be unfamiliar to our story or new to LGI, we are a market leader in the collection and the conversion of biogas, in particular from landfill sites around Australia, and the subsequent conversion of the biogas into a number of commodities. So renewable electricity is one of our primary commodities, or our revenue segments. Carbon abatement credits or Australian Carbon Credit Units is, is our next primary revenue center.

And then there's also a operations and maintenance and a services division in our business, so site infrastructure and management. Across our presentation today, we'll talk you through the financial performance of these divisions and also our plans and our strategy going forward. Straight to the highlights. I'm very pleased with the results that the team's achieved over the first half of FY 2026. If I start off by drawing everyone's attention to our EBITDA that we've achieved, a 33% increase when you compare this to the same period of time last year. When we come through the detail of the drivers behind it, I think it'll become quite clear.

But such a sizable step up in our, in our earnings is something that we're extremely proud about, and that directly flows through into an increase in our NPAT as well. This has put us in a position where the board has resolved to pay a fully franked dividend of AUD 0.0125 for this half. That's a slight increase compared to the same period last year. And also in, in the, in the half, we completed our recent capital raise, which started in October and came to conclusion in November, which was excellent to see the support from our existing and our, our new and expanded shareholder base as well. Now, talking into the detail of how we got to the financial numbers.

So if you were to look probably on the far right side, I'm very pleased to say that the team have worked diligently over this period. There's been no lost time injuries through that reporting period, which is fantastic, as we've added more people to the team, as the people in the team are working more, and there's simply just a higher level of, of work and productivity around the business. That directly shows through our increase in our biogas recovery, so that is an increase of 37% for the six-month period. Well, up to 82 million cubic meters of which we've collected and converted through our equipment in the portfolio. That increase in biogas has allowed us to also increase our ACCU creation, so that's up, up by 19%, and our megawatt hours, our renewable electricity, has increased by 41%.

So again, really, really strong, very solid increases there from an operations standpoint. And all the while, if I now take you to the midsection of this slide, our team has secured more landfill gas contracts, so I'm pleased to talk to 2 new biogas rights arrangements that we've secured in the 6-month period. They're currently working through the Clean Energy Regulator's registration and approval process, and if they're successful, we'll bring them into an operating contract in the coming months. We've managed to convert a number of sites which we secured and signed 6-12 months ago. They've since come online, and those biogas flows have transpired through these numbers, creating ACCUs, and we're seeing the benefit of those numbers come into the second half...

or sorry, into the first half of this, this financial year, and you'll largely see the benefit in the second half. I'm also really pleased to talk about the, the timing around the Mugga Lane commissioning of our batteries. So the team has done an amazing job down there to get it to this position where we now have dates that have been provided by both the network authority and AEMO around the commissioning of those assets, and we still see a path where we could have them adding value, working through commissioning, certainly by the end of this, this financial year, so end of second FY. Which is fantastic because that's consistent with the update we provided to market as recently as the equity raise in October.

We've also made advancements with our Belrose project, and I'll talk to this in more detail, but it's currently working through its final regulatory approval process. Our Nowra project has now moved into that phase, where we're advancing our plans and submissions for the various bodies. And again, we're very confident around the overall time frames of this strategic pipeline that we're building out, and it's great to see that, as we take you through the slide set today, our step up of trading capacity will continue to increase, to and above the 80-megawatt target that we talked about just in October. So overall, we're very pleased with these results, and it certainly puts us in a nice, strong position as we come into our second half for the financial year. So with that, I'll just take you into some more detail.

Now, the slide we have on screen was new to the market in October and November during our equity raise, and it very much tried to paint a picture of why it is that we are wishing to expand our operating capacity in the electricity market, and how it is that we're going to keep growing our business and creating more value. There's no change to that information, and again, you'll see today through both the projects we're providing updates on, timeframes are all still consistent, so we're quite pleased with that. But that's just more of an important starting point. It's important to understand as well, over the six-month period, that the markets that we trade into and the commodities that we actually create, there has been some interesting movements.

We thought it was very important for everyone to understand the pricing which LGI was able to capture and realize, which we've presented there on the right-hand side across our three core commodities of electricity, LGCs, and ACCUs. If I draw your attention to the electricity line, for example, when you combine the generation assets we have in Queensland and New South Wales, the actual price that we have created, or the revenue, sorry, we've created from those assets equates to AUD 97 worth of revenue per megawatt that we have exported or traded into the market. Now, this has happened while there has been some softening of the wholesale electricity price itself.

The average electricity price through that same period was around AUD 77, and the way in which LGI has been able to capture and realize a higher price is through a combination of our DACS system and how we trade the assets in the day, or how we optimize the output, how our team engages in hedging into the contract and the forward electricity market, right through to the benefit that the Bunya Battery has contributed as well and the FCAS revenue flowing into that segment.

Now, I think it's important for everyone to be reminded of is that LGI has been observing these changes in the electricity market for so many years, and this is why we first looked to invest both in more generation and in batteries, to put us in a position where we can decouple from the average price, achieve a higher price than the averages that are in the market. And I believe we've been able to demonstrate that since the year that we came to the ASX in FY 2022, which is what the chart on the left-hand side is showing you. We've used this chart before, and it's a good one to come back out to the market with.

So using FY 2022 as our base year, you can see the green line is presenting our, our earnings, our EBITDA for that full year. The blue line, or the teal line, is the electricity commodity price, and the orange line is the ACCUs in that period. And if you follow the years going to the right on that chart, you'll see that the ACCU price and the electricity price in FY 2023 was largely sideways. FY 2024, they were both down slightly. Fast-forward to FY 2026, electricity prices in particular are down quite a bit to that FY 2022 point.

But our earnings, our EBITDA, has actually increased year-over-year as we advance through time, and this is a direct result of all of what I just covered off before, from our operating model, our contracting model, through to our strategy and our execution of that strategy. So I'm quite pleased to see this chart. It's just a nice, simple way to demonstrate that we are actually delivering and our strategy seems to be quite sound and strong. We'll cover off more on the pricing of LGCs and ACCUs in the financials.

Looking at the contracting footprint chart here, there was a change that we made to this, moving it from a map to a table, because we have secured more sites each half, each time we talk to market, and I'm pleased to say we now have two more sites that are on this chart here. So in particular, we have a contract signed in Mackay, and we have a contract that's been signed in Mudgee with Mid-Western Council . Now, both of those contracts are conditional on them receiving a successful Clean Energy Regulator accreditation, so that's currently with the regulator at the moment. If successful, LGI will develop a gas collection system at the landfills to produce ACCUs, and look at the prospect of other revenue like electricity in the future.

But as that stands today, we now have 36 contracted sites across our portfolio, which is fantastic. Another key item to talk through this morning is the regulatory environment, and it's been a very busy six-month period coming into December. Starting off firstly with the Australian Carbon Credit Units. LGI has been a very big part of the integrity improvements that have been considered and have been worked through by the federal government, and I'm quite pleased that we saw in late November, the federal government pass through the new ACCU method for landfill gas projects.

It's entirely as LGI was expecting from integrity improvements, upward-sloping baselines, consistent baselines on projects, and that's fantastic for LGI because now that we have this new method available in front of us, it gives us the policy comfort and the policy certainty to consider investing in new projects, but also to consider investing in existing and older projects to further increase our ACCU creation. Now, at the end of the day, what does it mean for LGI? Yes, there, there are some of our legacy, older landfill gas projects that create ACCUs that will see a contraction of their ACCU creation, both with the new baseline standardization and the upward-sloping baseline coming into effect. But as we have been saying, we've been working very hard to continue to chase the gas from our sites-...

to combat that baseline effect, but also bringing in new sites into our portfolio, so that the net effect is that our year-on-year ACCU creation remains steady. And what we're actually providing the market with today is a comfort factor that we see in FY 2027. We should expect to see a modest increase in the ACCU volume relative to the current year, and that is the first year where the ACCU method, the new method, will take effect on our portfolio, is into FY 2027. So that's really at a very high level there on the ACCU front. There is a lot of material that is available for the public to read, if you've got the time, and, but it provides us ultimately with comfort to reinvest in existing sites and invest in new sites.

Still on the ACCU space, there's also been an update where the government is now allowing parties which had Carbon Abatement Contracts , so essentially carbon offtake contracts with the federal government, the option to exit some of those in a format where there will be a partial delivery of the contracted volume. So 25% of the contracted volume would still be delivered, but the balance of the undelivered quantity can then be paid out to the federal government as a way of exiting the CAC, the Carbon Abatement Contracts . Now, the government's chosen to call this a PEA. It's a Permanent Exit Arrangemen t. They certainly love their acronyms. Again, there's material that you can find in the market. What does that mean for LGI?

Well, ultimately, there is some volume there, a smaller volume of our portfolio, that we were otherwise due to sell and transact to the federal government, that we will now be able to value at spot price of ACCUs, which is an improvement to what the CAC price was at the time. A very minor improvement, but still worthy of noting in itself. And the third regulatory space item that's worth just raising to everyone's attention is, we now see the government has actually passed through the policy framework for the replacement to the LGCs. So the Large-scale Generation Certificates have done a very good job of helping spur investment in renewables, decarbonise the energy sector. That came into effect in the early 2000s. It has an end date of 2030.

Now that the government has put forward this policy framework, we have some pathway, some clarity of what that looks like beyond 2030. We haven't yet seen any pricing for these REGOs, or the new commodity per se, but we'll continue to monitor that, and we'll consider the appropriate time to start engaging in some of those transactions. But across those three areas, that's pretty key policy improvements that we now have, or policy clarity standpoints, which is great for us to invest in the future. So onto operations. I talked through earlier about the significant increase in our biogas recovery, and it's quite noticeable when you look at it in a chart form here from half year FY23 through to now.

It goes without saying that obviously the commissioning of our facility in Eastern Creek is a contributor of this, 'cause we now have a six-month run rate driving through these numbers. But equally, if you were to peel out the Eastern Creek site from its contribution, the increases that our team have achieved from all other existing portfolio sites across the group, I believe, was 8% of an increase, year-over-year. So that's still a very healthy amount of biogas increase being achieved from chasing the gas, which is what we do, it's how we operate, but it's always fantastic when we can bring online new sites like Eastern Creek. And also in this period, we're happy to say that we brought online the flaring facility at Warwick, at Jandowae, and also at Lithgow, so they've had a contribution into these flow rates also.

Very similar story when we look at our generation or our electricity generation portfolio. So firstly, the team have done an absolutely amazing job in planning and delivering preventative maintenance and reacting, sorry, to unplanned maintenance. You can see that in the top chart with the team achieving a 98% availability of the plant and equipment to be available to generate and trade in the energy market. This sits way above our target of 95%, and you can see they've done an amazing job of maintaining that consistency of 97%-98% now for some years. That really just means that we're in the best possible position to capture pricing, to create value with our assets from the market, so that's fantastic. Coming down to the volume side, again, you'll see the similar story to the biogas.

Across this whole period of time, there's been incremental increases, but particularly when you look at the first half of this financial year, there has been a step up there, and that's largely through the commissioning of Eastern Creek and the addition of the two units in Canberra contributing across the six-month period, which is fantastic. ACCUs. ACCUs have been, you know, in themselves, there is a healthy increase in their ACCU volume. It may not be as noticeable in this particular chart format, but I believe it was a 19% increase in the ACCU volume over the same period. And that's fantastic because we are trying to demonstrate that LGI can not just extract more gas from existing sites, but we can concurrently work on integrating new sites into our portfolio, which you can see here through these increases.

ACCUs will continue to be a, a core part of our business going forward. It's, it's, you know, been core to our history, and it's a great source of funding as we roll through our, our, megawatt capacity build-out as well.

So I'll hand it over to Dean for the financials.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Thanks, Jarryd. Starting off with our profitability and our return, you can see that we've had over a 20% increase in revenue. Now, that's off the back of, of the volume increase that Jarryd's just stepped you through. And all of our commodities, we've either achieved at or above the actual, spot market rates, so that's reflected in those revenue numbers. As Jarryd said, that drops down into EBITDA, and there's been a healthy increase of 33% in our EBITDA. Our depreciation amortization is up. It's up 43%. What we've done is, we've commissioned the Eastern Creek site, the additional couple of units at, Canberra as well. And so, as they've been commissioned, they've moved into assets and use, and so you'll see that step up in depreciation as a result.

It's very pleasing to see an improvement on what was already a very good number, which is our EBITDA margin was 47%, but now it's over 50%. It's 51%. Effectively, that's just showing that a lot of that revenue is dropping right the way down into EBITDA, and there is some very good cost control measures that are built into the business to make sure we can achieve that. The EBIT margins also increased. Despite the fact that the depreciation amortization has gone up, the EBIT margin has also increased, so we're very pleased with that. Interest expense, excuse me. Interest expense. There's been a little bit of an increase in interest expense for the period-on-period comparison. We did actually have some borrowings in the book all the way through to October.

Once we did the capital raise in October, we've paid down the debt facility down to zero. However, there was a good 4, 4 odd months of interest expense built into the numbers here. So, we'll see that improve when we look at the whole year numbers when we come back in six months. NPAT is also up, so it's up 28%, and that's given us the opportunity to have a modest increase in the dividend of AUD 0.0125, as opposed to AUD 0.012, as it was last six months. Just focusing on the revenue for a second in terms of the actual split of the revenue, you can see that, LGCs, or I've called them environmental credits here, the LGCs have increased.

That's as a result of both, the volume increase and some of our hedge pricing that we are still receiving on those LGCs. So, a good result for that segment of our portfolio for the six months. Focusing specifically on electricity. So there's been a significant step up in volume. Jarryd's already talked through that, through the commissioning of Canberra and Eastern Creek. And there's also been some great cost control measures, which actually have meant that the increase in the EBITDA margin is actually higher than the increase in the revenue. So that's a great result. There is absolutely a focus on cost control in our generation segment. It is by far the largest cost area of our business, so we do indeed focus on it.

Looking at the forward electricity prices on the chart on the right, we are still seeing average prices in Queensland, a bit over AUD 80 and in the high 90s for New South Wales across the next couple of years, these prices taken from the ASX forwards market. What we're also seeing is the, this is the last, sorry, the last six months of electricity pricing across 24 hours, so it's 181 odd days of electricity pricing condensed into the one chart, and you'll see Queensland and New South Wales there. What we're seeing is the Duck Curve, as people have been calling it, in terms of the sort of the pronounced increase in price in the morning, but certainly that pronounced increase in price in the afternoon.

So as average electricity prices have dropped, the Duck Curve is still there. It's still absolutely a feature of our market, which again plays into the strategy about putting more batteries on our sites. The carbon abatement segment or ACCUs. We've talked... Jarryd's talked about chasing the gas. Absolutely, we're chasing the gas. We're making sure that we increase the gas available for us to create ACCUs. We do that by chasing existing gas on sites we're already on, plus also plugging in the new sites. With new sites, we've still got to go through the process of obviously installing the pipework and actually connecting up flares. And so we're doing both those things has increased the volume of both gas flows and ACCUs. Looking at the market chart on the right, so that's the last 12 months of ACCU pricing.

You can see it's actually very stable, so it's traded in a pretty tight band, just drifting up slightly. We're seeing that market mature, a lot more than maybe what it was, say, two or three years ago. The maturity is the fact that there's a lot more buyers in the market now, and so the market's responding a little bit better to fundamentals, rather than market sentiment. So that's actually very encouraging for us in terms of being able to not just sell into the spot market, but also set some prices into the future with forward contracting. The construction part of our business. Construction's actually a little bit down on what it was this time last year. We have indeed focused on chasing the gas, as I mentioned a minute ago, and actually installing that new pipework.

That's meant we've had a little less time to do construction work. That's fine. We are more than happy to chase the gas and get those volumes up on the gas flows, but it does mean this particular segment is down a little bit on last year. So the balance sheet. Now, the movement in the balance sheet is pretty much dominated by that capital raise that we did back in October, November. There's some key, excuse me, some key outcomes as a result of that equity raise. First of all, we paid off the debt facility, as I mentioned. So the facility is still there. We still have it. There's, there's still approximately AUD 50 million worth. However, we've actually paid that down to zero.

The cash, the cash has significantly stepped up as well, and that cash position includes some term deposits with the surplus cash that we have just for this six months. Obviously, equity stepped up when we did that capital raise as well. Other movements in the balance sheet, you'll see that the environmental ACCU environmental certificates have actually increased period on period. I'll talk about that in a minute in terms of cash flow. Property, plant, and equipment obviously is increasing as we're building out the portfolio of assets that we're looking to build out. So with the cash flow, both operating cash and cash conversion are down based on this time last year. A couple of reasons for this. One is that ACCU position I just mentioned.

You can see that we're holding more on balance sheet than we were this time last year. So that really reflects the timing of how the forward contracts are actually just maturing and settling, and when we're getting the cash for those forward contracts. So as that build-up on the balance sheets occurred, we're not quite seeing all of that cash flushing through, in, into, into the cash flow, in this particular six-month period. It really is a timing issue, and as those mature, forward ACCU contracts mature in the future, we'll see that cash come through. The other thing is, as our profit has grown, there has been a, an increase in our tax expense. We did pay our tax position for FY 2025, our income tax return for FY 2025 in the six months.

We actually then have completed the tax return, and there's a modest tax refund coming back our way, so again, but that's just built into those cash flow numbers. Just focusing on the CapEx spend for the last six months. Now, this is an interesting chart because the three bars on the left-hand side are full years, and the one on the right-hand side is just the last six months. And so we've already spent more in this six months than we had in three years ago. The bulk of it, by far, the bulk of it's construction of our high conviction projects, which are well underway, and they're sort of being spent so we can achieve an on-time commissioning date.

The key focus in the last particular six months, or in the six months that we're just talking about, is the purchase of the six batteries for our Canberra site, so they are on CapEx spend for the last six months. The other thing to note is the pipework. I did talk about us chasing the gas and installing new pipework, so you can see that our pipework CapEx has also increased. So that will be a feature of our CapEx spend into the future as well. All right, hand back to Jarryd now.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Thanks very much, Dean. So I'll talk to strategy and a forward-looking view as well. But it's important for everyone to understand that while we do emphasize how much we see from an opportunity perspective in the energy market, what we're building out in electricity, we're certainly not suggesting that we are neglecting the desire for us to grow our contracted footprint. And so the purpose behind bringing this chart here is to show that over time, how we have grown the sites we have under contract in our operating portfolio. I talked about the two extra sites that we've secured working through the Clean Energy Regulator's approval right now, but that is track record demonstration of how LGI has applied this strategy in the past.

It's worked for us, and we'll continue to seek more landfill gas sites that work well for us or complement our portfolio into the future as well. And really, in the six-month period, we have three projects here that we're quite proud about to talk around the conversion of those from a contract that we won, was working through the Clean Energy Regulator's approval process. We obtained that approval, and we were then able to quite quickly mobilize the site, install the gas collection system, deploy a flare, commission it, and have it brought to operation. So across those three projects there between Warwick, Jandowae, and Lithgow, down in New South Wales, it's an amazing effort from our team.

And again, it's fantastic to see the benefit of that now contributing into the later part of the first half, and certainly more fulsome in the second half of this financial year. Bringing everyone back to the electricity market, though. Dean had the chart there before of the Duck Curve and showing you the actual pricing in the market. Now, we've used these charts before as a way of helping people understand it's not just the average price, and how to think about what is LGI doing and how is it sort of trying to leverage value from that. It is the spread within the day and the intra-day separation, what is of highest interest to us. And these charts give you that insight across a period of time, both in Queensland and in New South Wales.

We've affectionately used the State of Origin colors here to give you Queensland on the left and New South Wales on the right. What you're looking at between the colored bar chart in the first instance on both of these charts is the quartiles of the price bands. So this is to demonstrate the points at which a battery would charge or would take from the market to fill the battery up and the points at which it would discharge. It's essentially the lower 25th quartile is the point at which our system, our strategy, would charge those assets, and it's the upper 75th quartile at which we would be discharging and we'd actually be operating the asset.

And if you look at that spread between the upper and the lower band across time, we have then given you a trend line, which is the solid, dark blue color on both those charts, and you can see it's trending up. So even in the most recent six-month period from July to December, where the average price has come down and you can see the bands have slid down as well, the overall trend is still increasing, indicating that there is still a separation of price in the day, which is of attractive nature to LGI, and we still see this as high strategic benefit, and hence why we still have a high conviction to build out more megawatts of flexible generation capacity. And couple that with batteries, so we have even more enhanced flexibility in how we trade in the market.

It's really exciting to see the way that these charts are playing out, because, yes, there is more capacity coming in, both from a household level in the household battery scheme supported by the federal government. We're seeing more projects come online, large battery projects into the market as well, but we're not seeing the shape of this curve change, even though we are seeing some of the larger macro themes like average price that is changing. Do you have anything else to add to that, Dean?

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

No, that's well said.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yep. And we'll most likely keep bringing this chart back to the market as well, because we, we look at this monthly, sometimes more than monthly, but I think it's quite insightful to consider relative to these changing market conditions. Now, how is it we're going to use that information or use that insight? Well, it's the build-out of our, our portfolio, and so that's what we largely brought to the market when we did our equity raise in October and November, was to extend our high conviction development pipeline from 56 megawatts to in excess of 80.

But the projects that we had in that pipeline that took us from where we are today at 21 megawatts to 56 were these three projects that I have on the screen in front of you, which is our facility in Canberra with the addition of the batteries. As I said earlier, we are on track for those batteries to be commissioned late in the second half of this financial year. Full run rate contribution into FY 2027, and that will actually have a 57% increase in our trading capacity as we step up from 21 megawatts to 33 megawatts in our portfolio. So that's really exciting. All the equipment's on site, the team are ready to go. We're just finalizing the commissioning plan with the network and AEMO.

The second project here in our strategic growth pipeline is our facility at Belrose and this project is quite exciting because it's our first standalone battery project, so we have no generation on site. It would be batteries being deployed, batteries charging from the network, discharging back into the network, creating value through FCAS, perhaps even creating value through network support contracts. But it's our first opportunity to demonstrate how we see this particular model playing out in other locations at a smaller scale, all across Queensland, New South Wales and even Victoria. South Australia is also interesting as well.

But Belrose is very exciting because it's actually a simpler project than Mugga Lane, where when it is just one type of equip-- just the batteries, the process of network connection commissioning is, is much more streamlined and fast-tracked than when you have the hybridization projects like Canberra and Nowra. They do take more time because there's just more to it. So we're still quite comfortable with the overall timeframes of Belrose, in that we see works on site, being completed through the later part of this year, in a position where commissioning can start very late in the calendar year, of, of this calendar year, so really contributing into the second half of FY 2027. And that will result in a step up of our portfolio capacity from 33 MW to 45 MW. And then lastly, on, on the Nowra Renewable Hybrid .

So this is a really cool project. Yet again, an example of where we've struck a long-term gas rights contract with the council. We've made significant increases in the biogas that we're recovering. That has resulted in us reassessing the best way to use the biogas, and that is why we're now saying a 3-MW generation site with 8 MW, 16 MWh of batteries, is the optimal combination of equipment. This project is now advancing through the preparation of a development application and the various network and the regulatory approvals.

Our expectation is that we should be in a position to be commencing our construction of the site as the Belrose project construction is nearing end, and therefore, we see Nowra being in a position where it contributes late into FY 2027 second half, which again is consistent with what we told the market in October and November for our equity raise. But these three projects will be very critical to that step up in our capacity, and it's very exciting for us to really start to deepen our, our value creation from our assets into the energy market.

And that means, going forward, we are comfortable to reaffirm our guidance for this financial year, in that we still expect to see our full-year EBITDA increase by 25%-30% in comparison to FY25, and this is subject to market dynamics, the timing and operational matters that are outside of the company's control. And it's also just worth highlighting, too, that there is a seasonality with our earnings. If you look back through our halves for the last few years, you would generally note that the first half is not half of the full year.

In fact, we quite often see the second half is quite strong for LGI, from a range of factors, being activity in the electricity market, some of the buying activity and the liable parties from a Safeguard Mechanism, coming in and acquiring credits for their offsets, through to how our team just does an amazing job to bring online projects and bring online more capacity as the year is coming into a close. So we're still very comfortable with our guidance, and it looks like a very exciting few months in front of us as well.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Good.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

And with that, we're happy to open it to questions.

Operator

Thank you very much, Jarryd, and thank you, Dean. Just as a reminder to the audience, you can ask questions via the Q&A function on your Zoom screen, and covering research analysts may also raise your hand should you wish to ask a verbal question, and we'll endeavor to get to you shortly. Two pre-submitted questions. Firstly, just on policy and the regulatory environment, which you've touched upon. Can you just elaborate on the impact of new ACCU methodology and Permanent Exit Arrangement on LGI's future ACCU creation and anticipated cash flow?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

I'll, I'll talk to on a volume perspective, and I can let Dean talk to a cash flow position. But, essentially, overall, what we're trying to simplify this message as is the year-to-year change for LGI, will see us still create a modest increase in volume from current year into next year, and we still see a pathway in the following years after as well. If you really get into the detail of it, and if someone was to, look at individual projects and how they've performed, and you can see this through the Clean Energy Regulator's, register, you can see the ACCU creation volume.

If you were to analyze this, say, in two years' time compared to the years prior, there may be projects within our portfolio where the overall creation volume does come down as a direct effect of an increase in the standard baseline and the upward-sloping baseline. But given that we have been supportive of these integrity measures with the government, with the broader industry as well, we've strategically tried to buffer our exposure to that by chasing the gas, increasing abatement from the broader portfolio, and bringing in the new sites. So my goal from this process was that the effect would not result in us having a contraction, and we still seem to be on track to achieve that from year to year.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah, and from a cash flow perspective, clearly having more ACCUs, even if it is a modest increase, gives us the opportunity to either sell them in the spot market, or more likely, we'll probably sell them in the futures or forwards market. Same with the Permanent Exit Arrangement . With the Permanent Exit Arrangement , we're currently, they're currently in our portfolio at their current contract price with the federal government. In all cases, that price is below the current spot price. So when and if those ACCUs no longer need to be subject to that existing contract arrangement, we'll be able to sell them for a higher price, either in the spot market or in the futures market as well.

Both the regulatory certainty around the methodology and the Permanent Exit Arrangemen t will result in slightly increased cash flows from our ACCU portfolio.

Operator

Got it. Thank you. And just on gross margin, can you just elaborate on the ninety-odd basis point gross margin improvement to 76%? And is this sustainable amid potential volatility in electricity, LGC, and ACCU prices?

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Look, the short answer is yes, it is sustainable. So as we've mentioned, that we are positioning, or just, LGI is positioning ourselves to take advantage of the volatility in the pricing. So average pricing coming down is not necessarily going to impact that margin position too much. The sort of the business model of LGI, where one of our largest cost items is actually the royalty we pay back to our landfill owners. Being a percentage of our revenue, it's also a protection of that margin in terms of, if there was to be a decrease in our revenue, there's actually a decrease in one of our largest cost items as well.

So the margin's well, well protected in terms of both the business model and also the business strategy around trying to chase the pricing in the Duck Curve.

Operator

Great, thank you, and we'll switch to some live questions. First live question from Jarrod at Morgans. Jarrod, please unmute your line and go ahead.

Speaker 6

Thanks, Sam. Morning, guys. Congratulations on a really solid operational result. Just a couple from me, if I can. Maybe just if you could just build us a path to EBITDA. I mean, Jarryd, I know you touched on the, you know, seasonally stronger second half, but could we maybe just understand the composition of, you know, getting to AUD 12.5 million-AUD 13 million EBITDA hit guidance? I mean, I'm just understanding, you know, what arms of business will contribute to that and maybe, you know, how much Mugga Lane will contribute to that, assuming it all goes according to plan.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Do you want to...? Yeah, yeah, I can cover that off. Look, there's a couple of pathways there. Excuse me. So first of all, those three sites that we switched on were switched on. In fact, I think one was as late as November. I think Lithgow was in November, in terms of the ACCUs. So we are expecting, you know, another full six-month run rate from those three sites. They're actually flying quite well. One or two of the sites are flying a little bit more than we expected, which is great. So we'll get some good ACCUs from those sites. We're in the process right now, building out some pipework on some other sites that we won the contracts for, so we will see an increase in those ACCUs in the second half.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

This would be the Mid-West, sorry, Central Coast sites. And trying to see if it's possible to, if pending the approval from the Clean Energy Regulator, bring in or fast-track those new contract wins as well into our second half from an ACCU creation perspective.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

From a Mugga Lane Battery perspective, in my forecasting, I've really only got that built right into the back end in June and a little bit in May. So there is a contribution, but it's not as significant as you might imagine in terms of, in terms of Mugga Lane assisting us achieve those EBITDA outcomes. And the EBITDA outcomes are also built on a knowledge and understanding of our electricity contract position for the next six months as well.

Speaker 6

Great, thanks. That's, that's clear. And maybe just on the LGC, guys, if I can. I mean, just the revenue expectations in the second half, because obviously, you know, we're still achieving a really high price there, and, you know, that, that certificate and that pricing is obviously coming off quite sharply in the year ahead. So just trying to understand, you know, maybe the hedge position, what you can sort of speak to within that, within that revenue stream.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yeah, look, what I can speak to is I'm happy to say that that hedge position is going to be there for at least the next six months so we'll be there till the end of the FY, yes.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

And, and Jarryd, beyond that, certainly with the commissioning of the batteries in Canberra, the price uplift that we achieve off the energy, the FCAS that comes through, or the other revenue sources that those assets allow us to access, will very much offset the view of how the commodity price of LGCs has drifted down as our hedging position starts to wind out into the new financial year.

Speaker 6

Yeah, okay. No, that's clear. And sorry, maybe just one final one, just while we're on hedging and pricing, just maybe broadly on electricity pricing. Obviously, seeing, you know, some weakness within wholesale electricity prices, I'm just interested in that hedge position. I know you look at it closely, Dean, but just how do we sort of think about that into the second half, just given, you know, maybe pricing was a little bit softer than we would've thought for this result?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yeah. So, the hedge position is still in play for the, for the six months we're currently in, so for this six months. So it is hedged, very similar to it was, as it was in the first half. So, we're still looking about 75%. The one subtle change will be in the period of April to June, when we're actually switching on and going through the commissioning of the batteries at Mugga Lane. The hedge position in New South Wales is a little bit less than it would've been otherwise. But that's sort of by design. By design, 'cause we want to expose those gen sets to the price anyway, and the batteries to the price, to the spot price.

So, we're pretty comfortable with the hedge position across the next six months. And a little bit more color too, of, keeping on the first half, we entered into the financial year with a position and a percentage of hedging across our generation assets in the different regions. As we were monitoring and observing the pricing, which did surprise us as to how low it was relative to prior periods, but we actually altered our hedging program. And it's that level of active monitoring and reaction and response to it, which has enabled partly how we got to the price point we got for the half. So it's not just a set and forget. And there can sometimes be value in considering exiting out of hedges, again, because of market factors changing. It is an area that we actively look at, you know, quite frequently.

Speaker 6

Perfect. That's clear. That's all from me, guys. Thanks for taking my questions.

Operator

Thanks, Jarryd. Cool Thank you, Jarryd. Our next question coming from Tim Elder at Ord. Tim, please unmute your line and go ahead.

Tim Elder
Equity Research Analyst, Ord Minnett

Yeah. Good morning, Jarryd and Dean. Thanks for taking my question. First one, just on some strong biogas growth that we saw this half. You're talking about how a lot of that is kind of related to Eastern Creek. Just interested if, you know, we should be, you know, baking into our forecast a significant increase in kind of ACCU generation as well in, in coming halves?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Good question, Tim. So, probably worth me first just unpacking that biogas increase number. If you were to take Eastern Creek out of the mixture and just look at the portfolio of sites LGI had this time last year, the increase that we achieved was still 19%, wasn't it? Oh, no, it's actually - Sorry. 8%. 8%. Sorry, my apologies. So 8%. Now, that's our direct reflection of how we chase gas and how we actively expand collection systems. That number is generally a better representation of how to think about, like, a more sustained forward year-on-year increase. And historically, we would tell people that what we aim for is, at a minimum, a 5% increase of biogas. It is achievable that we land on 10%, sometimes even higher, from just the year-on-year increases.

But certainly, over this period, a contributor of why it lifted up even higher again, was just the sheer fact of Mugga Lane's operation flowing through those flows. Now, Mugga Lane does not actually create carbon credit-

Tim Elder
Equity Research Analyst, Ord Minnett

Eastern Creek.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Sorry, Eastern Creek. Sorry. Thank you. Eastern Creek doesn't create carbon credits, Mugga Lane does. And so I would caution you on using the total volume of biogas that we've reported as a proxy of ACCU creation. It's not a tight correlation in that sense.

Tim Elder
Equity Research Analyst, Ord Minnett

Thanks. That's really useful. And then just in terms of Mugga Lane, maybe you can just talk through, like, you say you've got the dates from AEMO, but, like, how much testing and will be required post those dates coming through?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yeah, so, so that is a really good question, genuinely, because this is a new process for LGI, given the size and scale of the project and the AEMO interaction. So really, it, it can play out in two ways. All going well, if the equipment performs as per the modeling and all of the simulated operational outputs, commissioning can be quite quick. I'm talking a couple of weeks. We are required to operate the equipment, demonstrate it's operated as per the modeling, have it validated, and then you get clearance to move to the next phase of your testing. So all going well, that could be started and finished within a couple of weeks.

Where projects can get bogged down or slowed down in this space is if the equipment does not perform in line with the expectations, 'cause then you have to go back, work with your modeling team, work with your engineering advisors to understand why, what's going on, make changes, and go back through AEMO. Now, again, Dean and the team have been very conservative here in saying, "Well, it's on site. We have these dates." The financial contribution is really pushed to the very back of the financial year. So we've done this intentionally because it is new for us, but if there is any advantage that we can get by starting it early and finishing it early, that'll be fantastic.

That will flow through to a greater benefit into our numbers, and only mean that our guidance band, you know, is firmed up even higher, through the range. But if there were unexpected delays or challenges with the project, we've considered that in our guidance here, and that is why we have a range, and we would say that if there were no value from the Mugga Lane batteries in the year, we're still within guidance and we're still comfortable with our numbers.

Tim Elder
Equity Research Analyst, Ord Minnett

Thanks, that's useful. And then just one, one more question, if I may. Just on, like you talked about, your kind of broader portfolio of 25 megawatts of projects, incremental to, to those nearer-term ones. I haven't seen too much commentary about, those projects advancing in this most recent half, so just wondering if you can give us any color on that?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

So that's the new projects we brought to the market, Tim, from October specifically?

Tim Elder
Equity Research Analyst, Ord Minnett

That's right. Yeah.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yeah, and that's intentional here, because when we came to market, we were laying out a broader strategy of not specifically just landfill gas field generation assets, but it was standalone batteries, new sites, new locations. So I am pleased to say that on that particular activity front, we have secured some land options, some land agreements. That has put us in a position where we're able to explore and put a bit more cost to discover the network capacity and the planning considerations. But as we'd always do with our material, we feel it's appropriate to talk about the specifics when it's a bit more mature on a project-by-project basis.

So from the completion of the equity raise, October, November, debt's been paid down, resourcing has been allocated into this space, and I'm pleased with the result of a couple of these sites having land agreements in place, and that will evolve over the next six-month period, where we would hope to see one or two of those projects mature to a point where there might be something we can talk to the market about.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah, and Tim, just to add to that, some of the CapEx I talked to, some of that CapEx is in relation to those projects, those six projects. So, yes, there is progress being made on them, but nothing that we're coming to the market with in the six-month period.

Tim Elder
Equity Research Analyst, Ord Minnett

That's brilliant. Thank you.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Thanks, Tim.

Operator

Thank you, Tim. Next question comes from James Bullen at Canaccord. James, please go ahead.

James Bullen
Equity Research Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Group Inc

Thanks, Sam. Just a quick question around capital management and gearing. Just wondering how we should think about gearing moving forward and the level of gearing that you're comfortable with, with this business?

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah, hey, good question, actually. So, clearly, gearing is 0 at the minute. So, but as we move through building out the projects, yes, we will then start tapping into the debt facility again. Where we're comfortable, look, there, there's sort of no hard and fast number. We do have a debt covenant that sits within the debt facility of 2.5 times EBITDA, so that is actually, that is a number that actually is, that the market's aware of. And so, yeah, it won't be above 2.5 times EBITDA while that debt covenant's in place. So that might give you a bit of a guidance.

I guess we would be a bit uncomfortable if we start getting close to that covenant, so we're probably not gonna get too close to the 2.5x. But yeah, that's a good question, but it's probably 18 months, almost 24 months away before we start getting to those sorts of levels of debt.

James Bullen
Equity Research Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Group Inc

Understood. Thanks, Dean. Just around the revenue that you assume when you're putting together the economic model for batteries. I do notice that FCAS has come off quite sharply. How much do you assume when you've got for a battery that you get from electricity arbitrage versus FCAS revenue?

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah, by far, the bulk of it's from the arbitrage. Yeah, look, yes, we've noticed that the FCAS market drop off a little bit. The other thing with FCAS is it can be quite patchy. Like, some months it'll be a few thousand AUD, the next month will be a few tens of thousand AUD, so, with our existing battery. So we sort of see that in the market. So, yes, we put a small amount in our modeling for FCAS, but no, by, by far, the bulk of it, 90% or more of the revenue is coming from the arbitrage.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

The forward view is very conservative in-house, in that we do expect to see saturation of that market, and so it's not a revenue source which builds year on year. It diminishes-

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah, I actually have that declining in my modeling.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yeah

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

in future years.

James Bullen
Equity Research Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Group Inc

Okay, understood. Thank you very much, guys. Well done on the result.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Thank you.

Operator

Great. Thank you, James. The next question is from Ritesh Varma at Bell Potter. In relation to Bunya achieving 44% above average AEMO pricing, that is lower than previously announced, I think circa 70%. Do you think this is around the uplift you will achieve going forward?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Really good question. I mean, it's worth understanding that that result was when the, as we've said already, overall average price has come down. We're still seeing attractive price spread. I would probably frame it as this is at a lower-end level of, overall electricity market activity than what we've observed historically, looking back for quite some time.

So I would be mighty surprised if that has suddenly become the new norm, because at the end of the day, the macro factors in the electricity space are an increase in electricity consumption from a household level, from a business level, from an economy-wide perspective, depending on what view you take on data center rollout and data center growth, the fact that we have an increasing demand for electricity, while renewables and variable renewables are coming into the market, only likely plays into more price spread and more intraday spread. Hence, we're so attracted to batteries. So coming back to the point of the question, yes, the 44% is lower than our long-term average that we've seen from Bunya with the price uplift. But you can see that on a numbers basis, it still generates a very good return.

That, I would say, is at the lower end of what it's likely to be.

Dean Wilkinson
CFO, LGI

Yeah, I'd agree with those comments.

Operator

Great, thank you. Just a final question for today: could you just please elaborate on how LGI will ensure it remains competitive in future tenders, particularly versus, other players in the market like LMS and others?

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Yeah, this is a constant. For all of our years of existence, I think it would go without saying that we don't just assume we're going to win every contract, but equally, we're not out trying to win every contract. It's about understanding what is right for LGI, the right use of our capital, the right way to grow the business. And so we use every tender interaction as a feedback loop to try and understand, did we offer too much? Did we offer too little? How do we need to remain agile and sharp? And that's the constant.

I would hope that you've seen over the years where there's been periods that we haven't won as many tenders, and maybe they're contracts that we weren't as keen to win, and then there have been others where we've fought harder, and we've secured it with a highly competitive process. So, not every landfill is equal, and not every landfill or contract is worth us attempting to chase it and win it.

Operator

Great, thank you. That's it for questions today. Should you have any follow-up questions, please feel free to send them through to either Dean or myself, and we'll endeavor to get back to you. And maybe with that, I'll just pass it back to you, Jarryd, for any closing comments.

Jarryd Doran
CEO, LGI

Thank you very much, Sam, and thanks for everyone's time this morning. Again, I can't express enough just how pleased I am at the team's performance and what they've achieved for this period of the year. And it's, again, it's a whole team effort across the business. It certainly puts us in a very strong position coming into the second half. And then with the advancements we've made on our strategic project build-out between the batteries in Canberra, the Belrose Battery Project, and the Nowra Renewable Project, it's looking like a very exciting couple of years in front for LGI. And the markets, the conditions that we trade our products into, only continue to be very conducive to our strategy. So it's, it's looking great for the years ahead as well. But thank you very much for your time.

Operator

Thank you very much for joining today's LGI first half 2026 results call. Thank you, and enjoy the rest of your day. Goodbye.

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