National Ploughing firm sees losses of €1.25 million during pandemic years

business
National Ploughing Firm Sees Losses Of €1.25 Million During Pandemic Years
Accounts filed by The National Ploughing Association of Ireland show that the company last year recorded pre-tax losses of €600,353 when the event was cancelled for a second year due to Covid. Photo: PA Images
Share this article

Gordon Deegan

The company that operates the National Ploughing Championships recorded combined losses of €1.25 million during the two pandemic hit years when the event was cancelled.

New accounts filed by The National Ploughing Association of Ireland show that the company last year recorded pre-tax losses of €600,353 when the event was cancelled for a second year running due to Covid-19.

Advertisement

The 2021 loss followed the NPAI recording losses of €656,240 in 2020.

The cancellations decimated the Association’s revenues across 2021 and 2020.

In the year 12 months to the end of January 2022, the Association recorded revenues of €105,219 and this followed revenues of €90,990 in 2020.

In 2019, the Ploughing Association recorded revenues of €5.6 million after 297,000 people attended the

Advertisement

88th National Ploughing Championships at Ballintrane, Fenagh, Co Carlow.

Commenting on the figures, NPAI assistant managing director, Anna Marie McHugh said: “The losses are what they are – the National Ploughing Association is a national voluntary association limited by guarantee – we have no shareholders, and we are self funding – we don’t receive any government grants to run the event.”

Last year the Association’s administrative expenses stood at €1.1 million and Ms McHugh said: “During Covid we still had to run the National Association and support our club and county ploughing associations.”

Ms McHugh said that one national ploughing championship costs in the region of €6 million to €7 million to stage.

Advertisement

Financial ruin

The loss last year reduced the association’s accumulated profits from €12.3 million to €11.7 million.

Ms McHugh said: “The NPA have always endeavoured to have enough reserves to run one maybe two events.

"This rainy day fund had to be tapped into during Covid and that is what it was for.

"The reality is that if the NPA did not have these reserves and without any government funding the Association would have run the risk of financial ruin as a result of Covid, but that has not happened, and we are back and as strong as ever thankfully.”

Advertisement

She said the Covid pandemic “had a massive financial impact on the NPA as we were not eligible for the “events industry” grants which would really have helped when the Association had absolutely no revenue for almost three years.”

Ms McHugh said the Association was eligible for the Wage Subsidy Scheme “so we managed to keep all our staff which was massively important to the Association as our work is quite specialised”.

The Association’s losses last year would have been far higher but for ‘other operating income’ of €545,695 that included €391,171 profit on the sale of investments, wage subsidy scheme payments of €79,524 and a Government grant of €75,000.

The other operating income was offset by a non-cash loss in value of €165,898 in investments.

Advertisement

Save costs

Ms McHugh said: “We are very cognisant of the losses – of course  - it’s a lot of money, and we are endeavouring to save costs wherever we can this year without impacting at all on the “event” but we have the reserves, and they are being used to produce the Ploughing experience exactly the same as we have done over the years.”

This year’s Ploughing Championships are to take place at Ratheniska, Co Laois on September 20th to 22nd.

She said they are expecting 300,000 visitors over the three days.

She said: “Honestly we are absolutely delighted with the way the event is shaping up – we had no idea how our exhibitors and patrons would respond to the return of the event after a full three-year gap.

"We have been blown away by the demand for exhibition space and ticket sales to date.  Already the event is very close to being as big as ever which  we would never have expected.”

However, Ms McHugh does not expect the Association to return to profit this year.

“No I would not anticipate that the Ploughing Championships will make a profit this year – hosting the world contest adds costs in the region of €1.5 million and there is no real financial return on that – obviously there is a massive status associated, and it is brilliant for tourism but no financial gain for the National Ploughing," she said.

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com