Ceres Power Stock Faces a Fresh Test as Delta-Centrica Fuel-Cell Deal Targets AI Data Centres

Ceres Power Stock Faces a Fresh Test as Delta-Centrica Fuel-Cell Deal Targets AI Data Centres

April 30, 2026

London, April 30, 2026, 19:21 BST

Ceres Power Holdings plc on Thursday said Delta Electronics, its manufacturing partner, has teamed up with Centrica in a new infrastructure deal targeting UK and European data centres and energy-heavy industries. The focus: off-grid solid oxide fuel cells. Delta manufactures fuel-cell stacks and systems under license from Ceres. Centrica, for its part, has an existing strategic partnership with Ceres aimed at accelerating rollout of the technology.

The deal comes at a moment when power supply, not only land or chips, is turning into a choke point for AI data-centre buildouts. Centrica and Delta flagged that surging demand from data centres and big industrial users is overwhelming the grid. They described it as a “multi-gigawatt on-site power opportunity.” Centrica Plc

Solid oxide fuel cells, or SOFCs, skip combustion entirely—they make electricity using an electrochemical reaction. According to Delta, its SOFCs built on Ceres technology can operate on natural gas and push electrical efficiency up to 60%. That’s a sizable jump over the 35% to 42% range for open-cycle gas turbines, a typical choice for on-site and backup generation.

The partners are aiming to establish a UK demonstration site in the next 12 months. Looking further out, they’re targeting delivery of megawatt-scale “gas-to-power” systems—setups that convert natural gas to electricity right where the customer needs it—in a three- to five-year window. Centrica Plc

Chris O’Shea, CEO of Centrica, put it plainly: businesses want power delivered faster than current grids manage, calling the new solution “fast, reliable off-grid power at scale.” Delta Electronics’ Charles Tsai, who oversees Hydrogen Energy Business Development, pointed to Centrica’s local reach and experience in flexible power as key reasons it’s the right fit for data centre clients and big industrial players. Delta EMEA

Ceres faces a familiar challenge: converting partner activity into licence fees and royalties quickly enough. The Horsham-based firm booked its first royalties in 2025 after Doosan kicked off production. As things stand, contracted group revenue for 2026 comes in at roughly £45 million, not counting any fresh deals.

Ceres ended the session at 619 pence in London, slipping 0.32% for the day. Still, MarketScreener numbers put the stock up 31.5% across five trading days, and a hefty 190.9% gain since the year’s open. The market had closed before this story was published.

The landscape is shifting fast. This week, U.S.-listed Bloom Energy posted first-quarter revenue of $751.1 million—a 130.4% jump over last year—and lifted its guidance for 2026. Earlier this month, Bloom announced Oracle plans to buy up to 2.8 gigawatts of its solid-oxide fuel-cell systems, starting with 1.2 gigawatts already under contract.

The Thursday update comes after Ceres and Centrica joined forces back in March, targeting SOFC power systems for commercial and industrial clients in the UK and Europe. Ceres CEO Phil Caldwell, speaking to Reuters then, described the tech as “more efficient than a combined cycle gas turbine” and emphasized its “modular” design—making rollout quicker. Reuters

The latest announcement left out plenty of specifics—no word on financial terms, order numbers, volumes, or when Ceres might see royalty payments. That’s notable given Ceres is still in the red: revenue dropped to £32.6 million in 2025, down from £51.9 million, and losses deepened to £47.5 million from £28.3 million. Still, the company closed the year with £83.3 million in cash and short-term investments.

That makes the near-term takeaway tight but still significant. Ceres picks up an extra path into data-centre power. Now, it’s a waiting game: investors need to see the demo site, customer deals and manufacturing scale from partners before they’ll know if this approach brings recurring sales.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

Stock Market Today

  • Ingenia Communities Group (ASX: INA) shares halted, announcement pending
    July 9, 2026, 8:35 PM EDT. Trading in Ingenia Communities Group (ASX: INA) was paused by the ASX on July 10, 2026, with the halt set to last until the company gives more details. Ingenia didn't provide financial info when the suspension hit. An ASX halt like this can happen for multiple reasons - deals, capital raises, or regulatory queries - and doesn't always point to bad news. Ingenia says it will update investors when it can. The stock is down 16% for the year so far, while the S&P/ASX 200 Index is up 3% in the same period. Investors are waiting on Ingenia's next release to see what's behind the halt.