Legal & Professional

Triodos Bank posts annual profits of £9 million

Published by
Peter Davison

Bristol-based ethical bank Triodos made profits of £9.2 million in the last year, according to its latest set of financial results.

The bank said profits had increased from £7.8 on the previous year to yield a 4.8 per cent return on equity.

The UK arm of the Dutch bank continued to grow, with customers numbers up 3.5 per cent to 87,896, and customer deposits increasing by 2.1 per cent to £1.642 million.

The bank made new loans of £131 million, which was down on the £183 million it lent in 2021. Its total loans and advances contracted slightly to £1.121 million (2021: £1.132 million) due to challenging economic conditions slowing customer investment plans, affecting some of the bank’s core sectors, and the sharply rising interest rates that prompted higher levels of early repayment.

Bevis Watts, CEO of Triodos Bank UK: “We have achieved a sound financial performance given the external challenges in 2022, particularly in the UK economy.

"As the UK’s leading sustainable bank, we have focused on supporting our community through difficult times, with rising inflation and the energy crisis coming straight off the back of the pandemic years.

"However we continue to pursue our mission to support impactful projects – for example affordable homes and community renewable energy and education providers, small businesses and charities. We also explored new impactful sectors, such as our first loan to a rewilding project.

“In these tumultuous times, long-standing global and societal issues, like climate change and inequality, can often feel like they are being side-lined.

"However, as we rebuild our economy, if we are to avoid future crises then we cannot simply follow the status quo. Triodos continues to be about challenging the existing narrative and championing a new way to do finance that’s good for people and planet.”

Peter Davison

Peter Davison is deputy editor of The Business Magazine. He has spent his life in journalism – doing work experience in newsrooms in and around Bristol while still at school, and landing his first job on a local newspaper aged 19. By 28 he was the youngest newspaper editor in the country. An early advocate of online news, he spent the first years of the 2000s telling his bosses that the internet posed both the biggest opportunity and greatest threat to the newspaper industry and the art of journalism. He was right on both counts. Since 2006 he has enjoyed a career as a freelance journalist. He lives in rural Wiltshire with one wife, two children, and three cats.

Recent Posts

Five steps to becoming the South Coast Tech Company of the Year

Nominations for the South Coast Tech & Innovation Awards 2024 are in full swing, and…

11 hours ago

University of Gloucestershire’s new city centre campus delayed

The opening of the University of Gloucestershire’s new City Campus in the centre of Gloucester…

19 hours ago

Hampshire-based defence simulation firm Mabway sold to Canadian group

Mabway, a defence sector simulation and training business based in Havant, Hampshire, has been acquired…

19 hours ago

Green light for Graftongate’s £40m industrial/logistics unit near Southampton

Warwickshire-based commercial property developer Graftongate has been granted planning consent for a new low-carbon industrial/logistics…

19 hours ago

New logistics yard at Southampton Container Terminal set to double cargo

A new logistics and freight yard beside Southampton Container Terminal is predicted to give a…

19 hours ago

Ofsted praises post-merger progress of South Hampshire College Group

South Hampshire College Group has been commended by Ofsted inspectors for making significant progress in…

19 hours ago