Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Cavendish Hydrogen 's Q2 presentation. My name is Robert Borin, and I am the CEO of Cavendish Hydrogen . With me today, I have our CFO, Marcus Halland. This presentation will last for approximately 25 minutes, and there will be a live Q&A session after the presentation. Most of you know us pretty well by now, but for those of you who are not familiar with us or new to our company, I will start out with a brief introduction before I move on to the Q2 business update. We, Cavendish Hydrogen , are in the business of ending emissions from mobility, and we do this through reliable hydrogen fueling solutions across the world. Hydrogen has a strong advantage over fossil fuels, like, for instance, no emissions.
This is something that we see as an absolute, I would say, almost like a hygiene factor in the modern vehicle industry of today. There are more advantages, especially over battery electric vehicles, where the hydrogen vehicles have a longer driving range, where a well-functioning truck of today needs to have a range of above 800 km in one charge or one refill. Finally, the grid connection needed to install a hydrogen fueling station for heavy-duty mobility is significantly smaller than the grid connection needed for a heavy-duty electrical charger, which is able to charge a truck in the comparable time. This is especially important in today's environment where the load on the grid, the general grid, is getting higher and higher.
Of course, the less demanding the installation is, the better it is, and the easier it is to get the connection to the grid. In Cavendish Hydrogen ASA, we offer the complete scope of equipment required for installation of a fueling station. If we start at the lower left end, we have the connection panel, and this is the interface for where we connect the hydrogen that is coming into a fueling station. This can be a pipeline, it can be a trailer that comes and connects to the panel, or it can be an electrolyzer or something else. Then we have the hydrogen storage. If you move over to the first dot on the right, the storage size depends on the type of connection you have. If you have your station connected to a pipeline, obviously your storage can be smaller and so on.
Then we have the actual fueling station, and the fueling station is sort of the main act. This is where we have all the control, the compression, and the cooling of the hydrogen before it can go into the dispenser, which is the last point you have there. The dispenser is the interface to the vehicle where the operator is basically taking the hose, as you know, from a normal fueling station and connecting it to the car. A number of minutes later, you are ready to go again. That's the sort of equipment range that we are supplying. On the services side, we are applying services all the way from design and manufacturing down to operational services. You should be able to call it a one-stop shop or something like that.
Moving ahead, as many of you know, Cavendish was publicly listed on the Oslo Børs in 2024. At the IPO, we stated a few things where we said that in 2023, we initiated the development of the high-capacity stations for heavy-duty mobility. Today, we are proud to say that the engineering, design, and the building materials are close to being completed, and the product is now ready for pilot sales. We said at listing that we have, and we will continue to capitalize on insights derived from the light-duty market to standardize products and to derisk the high-capacity fueling business case. Today, the design of new equipment, new high-capacity hydrogen fueling stations, has fully integrated the experience that we have gained from the light and medium-duty fueling stations, which ensures reliability and operational robustness.
This is just something that you can also see now in the numbers where, for instance, I will come to that later, but in this quarter, we have record high numbers dispensed worldwide, and we are also seeing really, really high availability numbers on our stations. The product happiness is significantly going up. That's really positive. We also said that our next-generation hydrogen fueling stations are expected to be commercialized by 2025. As I said before, the product is now ready for the pilot sales phase. That's positive. The ambition at listing was to capture 15% of the high-capacity market for hydrogen fueling in Europe and the Americas. The ambition remains.
We see Europe as a frontrunner, and this is, of course, thanks to the current tender activity that we see increasing, and also thanks to the regulatory signals like the Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Regulation and the RED III, the Renewable Energy Directive III, which is also really favoring hydrogen as fuel for heavy-duty transportation. Moving on, I will now take you through the latest business update for the second quarter. As I just mentioned before, we had an all-time high dispensed volume of hydrogen. Close to 300,000 kg of hydrogen went through Cavendish equipment in the second quarter. We are well on our way to have a year where we have above 1.1 million kg, 1.2 million kg dispensed across the world. This is really, of course, a testament to the fact that the equipment is being used and utilized and that the availability numbers are increasing all over the place.
We opened two new fueling stations in California together with a major U.S. customer, and these were the first two stations with this customer. We are very proud to be able to do this, and the two stations are working fine. I'm coming back to that a little bit later. We also appointed a new Chief Commercial Officer to make sure that we are ready to grab the market opportunity out there and to increase our sales activities moving forward. If we are zooming in on the dispensed volumes, and as earlier stated, this quarter, we again dispensed a record high volume through Cavendish Installed Equipment. Looking at it from a global perspective, we had a 41% increase year over year compared to last year. This is a lot driven by high utilization in the North American market, but also increases in Europe mainly.
We see that this is really going in the right direction. In North America, we are really happy to see that we have a close to 400% increase since the last quarter, and this is really showing that hydrogen is now again back on the map in California and is being utilized after the hydrogen shortage seems to have been sort of resolved over there. Last but not least, of course, the key takeaway here is that the higher utilization and reliable operations is, of course, also paving the way for future sales. Moving on to the operational part of the business, we have handed over or completed two sites together with our U.S. customer, and these are the two first sites that we have completed during the second quarter. The third one is to be completed during or before the end of the year.
In Italy, we are in the progress of installing our first Italian station ever, and it will be completed in the third quarter and be ready for the Winter Olympics in February 2026, where this station will be filling buses and cars for transporting the athletes during the Olympic Games. This is a pretty cool station out there. In France, we are about to complete the installation and handover of our fourth station with also a new customer on the French market. Quite some activities going on. Zooming in specifically on the two stations we opened up in Moreno Valley and Vacaville in California, Moreno Valley in the southern part of California and Vacaville a little bit further up north, the stations are engineered to deliver, of course, industry-leading performance. The stations opened in the second quarter, mid-part of the second quarter 2025.
Since then, we have seen really good availability numbers and performance from these stations where the site availability has been close to 100% on the locations. We have served more than 3,000 vehicles as of August 2025, and we have filled close to 9,000 kg in those first few months of operations. We can see that it's positively received by the end users in California that there are new and operational stations in the market, and we are proud to be able to help this build out in the Californian market. As I said before, we have excellent feedback from the end users where we really can see on, for instance, social medias that they are happy to have new stations coming into operation and also that these stations are being utilized.
The third station is in construction as we speak, and it's expected to be completed before the end of the year, and that's with the same customer in the United States. Moving over to Europe and to Germany, where we see that Germany plans to build a large number of new hydrogen bus stations, which is signaling a robust infrastructure investment on the German market. The national and regional policies in Germany, like the RED III , the Renewable Energy Directive III, are highly favorable for hydrogen adoption, which also helps accelerate the German market readiness. Cavendish has already installed two high-performing bus stations in Germany, and each of these two stations is delivering a constant filling performance.
On the customer side, they are actually demanding products and configurations that are highly aligned and a pretty good product fit with what Cavendish is currently supplying within the bus segment, where our equipment is perfect for a normal-sized bus fleet of somewhere between 20- 3 5 buses. A very good product fit for the German market. In the end, we believe that Germany sets a really good example and forms a platform for broader European expansion, which is backed both by demand from the customer and policies from the government and performance from our stations. We believe that Germany could be something that we will come back to later. Moving ahead, we also, of course, mentioned in our report this quarter that we both see challenges, but there are also good signals out there.
Obviously, the uncertain geopolitical climate is something that is affecting every business out there right now. There are wars raging around in the world and also on the borders of Europe. That has a potential effect, sort of a slightly slowing down effect on decision-making. We also see high energy and hydrogen prices that are affecting the customer business case, so the end customer business case. Here, we see changes coming on the horizon. We see a lack of commitment or a delay from heavy-duty hydrogen vehicle OEMs, where the vehicles are seemingly coming later than originally anticipated. We also see markets where we have incomplete or maybe inconsistent funding structure. To put a few more words around that, that means that, for instance, you can have a region where you have CapEx funding. It's good to build the station, but there's no OpEx funding.
The offtake of the hydrogen is not subsidized. You have part of the business case subsidized, but not the end offtake subsidized. On the other hand, as I mentioned on the slide before, in the German market, they seem to have understood that the whole value chain needs to be subsidized, and there are good funding initiatives in place. That's good. We see challenges, but of course, also good signals on the horizon. AFIR is out there, Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Regulation, which mandates that one hydrogen refueling station, heavy-duty refueling station, needs to be built every 200 km along the Trans-European transport network and in all European urban nodes. The AFIR forces member states to define and submit targets for build-out of hydrogen fueling networks, and they need to do that by the end of this year.
Already now, 11 member states have submitted their national policy frameworks, under which they have also introduced the national targets for this. As mentioned before, the RED, the Renewable Energy Directive III, is in Germany, has been taken into legislation as well, and it also sets mandates for pushing hydrogen as a fuel in transport and specifically heavy-duty transport. Just as a reminder, this is the timeline for those of you who don't remember the timeline for Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Regulation. Last year, December, the deadline for submission of the draft national policies was due, and by the end of this year, the deadline for the actual final national policy frameworks is due. Already now, as I said, 11 countries, member states of the European Union have submitted their targets. We are still waiting for the last ones, but already ahead of time, we see someone submitting their targets.
With that, I would like to hand over to Marcus, our CFO, for a quick walkthrough of the key figures for the second quarter.
Thank you, Robert. Let me try to shed some light on the financial performance in the second quarter. The revenues ended at EUR 5.6 million, a reduction from EUR 9.2 million in the second quarter last year. That reduction is a result of fewer equipment deliveries to customers. At the same time last year, we had a record high amount of simultaneous ongoing installation projects. The project revenue this quarter is lower due to the lower activity. There is a growth from the first quarter this year, and that is because of actually higher progress on installation projects currently. We have progress on the two stations in the U.S. that was completed and two projects in Europe that are to be completed now in the second half of the year. The EBITDA were EUR 4.6 million, a development that is 32% better than the same quarter last year.
Last year's quarters included costs from the listing process of Cavendish . The EBITDA has a negative effect from lower sales volumes, and that is partly offset by lower indirect costs as a result of the restructuring that was completed in the first quarter this year and continued tight cost control. We continue to see improved margins on our service business due to operational improvements that lead to lower costs from running the stations. For the order intake and backlog, we have not succeeded with selling new stations in this quarter. The order backlog is not being replenished at the same rate as we use it. As Robert said, it is a challenging market, and that is evident that customer decisions are taking longer time than what we anticipate.
On the positive side, the tender activity in Europe is increasing, and we expect that our proven reliable operational performance will have a positive influence on the customer's decision time. With a decreasing order backlog, our financial outlook for the second half of the year is cautious. We expect to have 0 new stations deliveries, so the equipment revenue will be lower, while the revenue from the ongoing installation projects and the service business will be at similar levels as the first half of this year. Finally, we ended the second quarter with a solid cash balance of close to EUR 29 million.
Great. Thank you, Marcus, for that financial summary. We are now going over to a short summary and outlook, and then we will, after that, go into the Q&A session. As Marcus said before, Q2 largely ended as expected, our fueling stations are operating steadily at customer sites around the world, and we see positive feedback through channels like social media, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc., where people are posting positive comments now on our equipment, which is really, really good to see, and also good to see that there is activity out there. For instance, on the light-duty fueling market in California. As I said, we see positive signals in the challenging hydrogen market, with examples like the RED III being taken into legislation in Germany, and the AFIR still standing strong in the European Union, with 11 countries already submitting their plans.
Financially, we have a cautious outlook for the remainder of the year, but we see positively on the long-term market outlook for heavy-duty transportation. As Cavendish, we are well positioned to take on the long-term market opportunities. With that, we are done with the main part of the presentation, and I just wanted to remind you that the third quarter presentation will be in November later this year. With that said, we are opening up for our Q&A session. Just from a practical point of view, we would like to remind you to raise your hand if you have a question. Tell us who you are, and in case you're representing someone, who you're representing, and remember to unmute the microphone on your end before you speak. We are now opening up for any questions that might be.
Lars, if you please unmute and then state who you are and where you're coming from and what your question is.
Yes. My name is Lars, and I'm working as an equity research analyst in Fearnley Securities. I was just wondering, what specific measures is management taking to accelerate new order intake and rebuild the backlog, especially given customers' delays and cancellations in the market?
Thank you.
Thank you, Lars, very much for that question. As we presented earlier in the presentation, we have onboarded a new Chief Commercial Officer who is also sort of restructuring the whole commercial team and the commercial organization, so the sales organization, where we are also currently onboarding more members, so more hands and legs in relation to being out and meeting the customer. We believe that being close to the customer is really key to understanding the customer decision process, but also being able to close orders together with the customer. That's the main change.
Thank you.
Yeah. Thank you.
Any other questions? Yeah. We will give it another few minutes if anyone is coming up with a question. Maybe as a completing information to your question before, also Lars, we also have introduced a separate team called Application Engineering that is working closely in line with the sales organization to make sure that we are fast on the customer feedback in relation to technical requests and potentially also smaller configuration and adaptation requests that might come from a customer, so that we are always on the toes and close to the customer also from the technical perspective. That's also something that we have since our restructuring introduced, and we see that gives us a better connection to the customer.
Yes. I can also just ask one more question. How comfortable are you with the current cash runway going forward? What's your expectations?
We have a comfortable cash balance currently, and we took some pretty drastic measures in the first quarter with the restructuring, which, of course, has improved our cost basis. We are actively doing adjustments as needed, and also targeting short-term sales opportunities is key for us.
Yeah.
We have a robust and solid cash balance at the moment.
Yes, thank you.
Thank you very much. Thank you very much. It seems like there are no more questions, and that the presentation was clear to everyone participating. Of course, there is always the opportunity to mail additional questions to ir@cavendishh2.com if there are any questions that might come up afterwards and that you would like to have the answer on. We encourage everyone who has questions to also do that afterwards. With that, we would like to say thank you to everyone for logging on this morning, and have a great day. We see you again for the third quarter presentation in November. Thank you, everyone, and have a great day.