Drax cleared after investigation into sourcing of wood pellets
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has closed its investigation into the power generator Drax concerning the sourcing of wood pellets for its biomass station. After a nearly 10-month review, the FCA found no evidence of misleading statements in Drax's annual reports and accounts between 2021 and 2023 that would justify further action.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has closed its investigation into the power generator Drax concerning the sourcing of wood pellets for its biomass station. After a nearly 10-month review, the FCA found no evidence of misleading statements in Drax's annual reports and accounts between 2021 and 2023 that would justify further action. The investigation began last year amid concerns about the sustainability of Drax's biomass fuel, which is used to generate electricity and receives government subsidies. While Drax previously paid £25 million to a redress scheme after Ofgem found inadequate data governance in reporting wood sourcing from Canada, the FCA's focus was specifically on market disclosures. Drax's shares rose following the announcement of the investigation's closure.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedDrax's shares rose by 1.2% in early trading on Thursday after the investigation closure.
Ofgem found no evidence that the biomass sourced was unsustainable or that Drax had wrongly claimed renewable energy subsidies.
Drax agreed to pay £25m to a redress scheme after Ofgem found it failed to put adequate data governance and controls in place when reporting wood sourcing details from Canada.
The FCA did not find evidence that justified any further action against Drax.
The City watchdog (FCA) has closed an investigation into Drax after a review into the sourcing of wood pellets.