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Rotork plc

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Industry Industrial - Machinery
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FY2024 Annual Report · Rotork plc
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Annual Report 2024
 Growth+
Delivering our vision

Rotork is a market-leading global provider of mission-critical intelligent flow control 
solutions for oil and gas, water and wastewater, power, chemical process and industrial 
applications. Rotork helps customers around the world to improve efficiency, reduce 
emissions, minimise their environmental impact and assure safety. The Group employs 
about 3,500 people, has assembly facilities in 15 locations and serves 170 countries 
through a global service network.
Contents
Strategic report
1	
Highlights of 2024
2	
What we do
4	
Our market dynamics
6	
Business model
8	
Chair’s statement
10	
Chief Executive Officer's statement
14	
Key performance indicators
16	
Investment case
17	
Our strategy
24	
Divisional review
30 	
Financial review
34	
Sustainability review
67	
Risk management
70	
Principal risks and uncertainties
78	
Viability statement
79	
Task Force on Climate-related 
Financial Disclosures
86	
Non-financial and sustainability 
information statement
Corporate governance
91	
Chair’s governance overview 
94	
Board of directors
96	
Governance highlights
98	
Corporate governance report, including 
our Section 172(1) statement
117	 Safety and Sustainability Committee report
121	 Audit Committee report
126	 Nomination Committee report
131	 Directors’ Remuneration report
159	 Directors’ report
163	 Statement of directors’ responsibilities
Financial statements
165	 Independent auditor’s report
173	 Consolidated income statement
	
Consolidated statement of 
comprehensive income
174	 Consolidated balance sheet
175	 Consolidated statement 
of changes in equity
177	 Consolidated statement of cash flows
178	 Notes to the Group financial statements
205	 Company balance sheet
	
Company statement of changes in equity
206	 Notes to the Company financial statements
Other information
211	 Ten year trading history
212	 Share register information
213	 Corporate directory
 Stay up to date with the latest news 
www.rotork.com

•	 Revenue increased 4.9% year-on-year despite 
a significant currency headwind (8.2% on an 
organic constant currency basis1).
•	 Adjusted operating margins were 70bps 
higher year-on-year at 23.6%.
Financial highlights
+6.1% 
Orders were 6.1% higher 
year‑on-year (OCC)
24
744
23
724
22
682
24
754
23
719
22
 642
Orders  
(£m)
Revenue  
(£m)
+8.2% 
Revenue was 8.2% ahead  
year-on-year (OCC)
24
 140
23
151
22
 124
24 
7.75
23
7.20
22 
6.70
Profit before tax  
(£m)
Dividend per share  
(p)
£140m
Profit before tax was 
6.8% lower year-on-year
7.75p
Annual dividend increased 
by 7.6% year-on-year
24 
15.9
23
14.6
22
 12.7
Adjusted basic EPS  
(p)
15.9p
Basic EPS was 12.1p
Adjusted operating  
profit (£m) and margin (%)
£178m
Reported operating profit  
was £136m
24
178 (23.6%)
23
164 (22.9%)
22
143 (22.3%)
 Growth+
Delivering our vision
Target Segments 
P.18
Customer Value 
P.20
Innovative Products & Services 
P.22
The delivery of Growth+ continues and the 
benefits of the strategy are evident in our 
improved financial performance.
Read more inside about how our Growth+ 
strategy is delivering our vision.
Our Growth+ pillars
1	
Adjusted figures and organic constant currency (‘OCC’) figures are alternative performance measures and are 
used consistently throughout the Annual Report. They are defined in full and reconciled to the statutory measures 
in note 2 to the financial statements.
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
1
Highlights of 2024
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
1

Americas 
Employees 564
Offices 9
Assembly facilities 3
Revenue
£200m
EMEA 
Employees 1,872
Offices 24
Assembly facilities 10
Revenue 
£307m
Asia Pacific 
Employees 1,057
Offices 31
Assembly facilities 4
Revenue 
£247m
Rotork is a market-leading global 
provider of mission-critical intelligent 
flow control solutions.
Divisional split
Global presence
 Offices 
 Assembly facilities
Oil & Gas 
P.24
Chemical, Process & Industrial 
P.26
Water & Power 
P.28
The leading supplier of 
electric critical duty actuators 
and related services to the 
global oil and gas sector 
with the largest installed 
base and site services team. 
Our products and services 
are used by customers across 
their upstream, midstream 
and downstream segments 
to automate and electrify 
processes, assure safety and 
eliminate fugitive emissions.
Revenue
£355m +8% YoY
Adjusted operating margin
25.9%
A supplier of specialist 
actuators and instruments 
for niche applications in the 
chemical, process industry 
and industrial sectors. CPI 
identifies and solves critical 
reliability, efficiency and 
safety challenges for 
customers across a range 
of end markets including 
speciality and other 
chemicals, metals and 
mining, critical HVAC, 
pharmaceutical, steel 
and cement.
Revenue
£205m -4% YoY
Adjusted operating margin
25.8%
Supplier of premium 
actuators, predominantly 
electric, and gearboxes for 
applications in the water and 
power generation sectors. 
Our products and services 
are used to solve water 
management, quality and 
scarcity challenges and in 
climate change adaptation 
and alternative energy, 
as well as to automate, 
electrify and digitalise 
our customers’ processes.
Revenue
£194m +10% YoY
Adjusted operating margin
29.1%
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
2
What we do
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

The flow-control markets Rotork serves 
have great potential for growth
Typical flow control applications
Our market position is driven by our technical capabilities, 
the quality and reliability of our products and services and our 
reputation in the market. Our products must satisfy challenging 
and complex certification requirements which differ from industry 
to industry and geography to geography, meaning barriers to 
entry are relatively high.
Extraction
Our products are used 
in the extraction of 
high-value materials 
such as oil and gas, 
metals and minerals
Recycling
They often play a 
key role in recycling 
processes – for 
example of reclaimed 
and effluent water
Transportation
Rotork products 
provide critical safety 
functions during 
the transportation 
of fluids, e.g. 
via pipelines
Storage
Our products control 
the flow of fluids in 
and out of storage 
tanks and shut them 
down in an emergency
Utilisation
Our products are 
regularly used in the 
utilisation of fluids – 
for example producing 
hydrogen from water
Heating and cooling
They are used in 
severe service HVAC 
applications such as 
in semiconductor 
fabrication plants 
and data centres
Recovery
Rotork products have 
an important role to 
play in the circular 
economy, e.g. carbon 
capture and storage
Processing
They are used to 
automate material 
processing plants, 
such as refineries and  
chemical facilities
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
3
What we do continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Global megatrends driving our growth
Our growth is driven by significant long-term megatrends, from automation  
to sustainability, as well as our own self-help initiatives.
Automation
Automation is the introduction of automatic equipment 
into processes to improve reliability, safety and efficiency. 
We benefit from this powerful trend as our end users 
upgrade from manually-operated to automated valves.
>90%
Over 90% of Rotork sales are into the industrial 
automation and control systems market and benefit 
from this megatrend
Electrification
Electrification is the conversion of a machine or system to 
the use of electrical power. Electrification is occurring across 
many areas of industry, including flow control and actuation, 
driven by emissions reduction and need for precise control.
>50%
Electric-powered valve actuators represented over 
50% of Rotork sales in 2024
Digitalisation
Digitalisation is the use of digital technologies to develop 
a business model and provide new value to customers. 
Digitalisation is a major theme in our markets – examples 
include condition monitoring and remote diagnostics.
iAM
Rotork’s Intelligent Asset Management (iAM) 
system analyses actuator performance data and 
uses this to provide users with value added services 
Energy security 
Energy security has risen up the global priority list and has 
triggered an acceleration in infrastructure spend including in 
LNG liquefaction facilities, hydrocarbon storage capacity and 
plant life extensions.
£100m
LNG is a Rotork target segment and we 
estimate the addressable market could 
grow to £100m in two to three years' time
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
4
Our market dynamics
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
Opportunities for Rotork

Global megatrends driving our growth continued
Water scarcity
Water scarcity is resulting in greater investment in 
leak detection and monitoring as well as water re-use 
and recycling. We are well placed to benefit, for 
example through our CK range of waterproof actuators.
CK/IQ3
Intelligent actuators with remote operation can 
be used to manage water network pressure, 
thereby reducing leakage
Water quality
The water sector is a major user of Rotork flow control 
equipment and water quality challenges present us with 
opportunities, for example in network infrastructure 
modernisation, wastewater treatment and desalination. 
£150m
Desalination is a Rotork target segment and 
we estimate the serviceable addressable market 
at approximately £150m
Decarbonisation
We see exciting opportunities in carbon capture utilisation 
and storage, and green and blue hydrogen as well as in the 
production, transportation and storage of transition bridge 
fuels such as LNG and low- and zero-carbon fuels.
£10-20k
A 5MW proton exchange membrane containerised 
electrolyser would typically contain £10-20k of 
flow control equipment of the type we provide 
Sustainability
Sustainability is the societal goal of our time – 
people safely coexisting over the long term. 
Sustainability is a major opportunity for us, including 
through methane emissions and flaring elimination.
CH4
To eliminate or reduce emissions the oil and 
gas sector is transitioning to electric powered 
from pneumatic powered valve actuators 
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
5
Our market dynamics continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
Opportunities for Rotork

Operating 
responsibly 
Enabling a 
sustainable 
future 
Making 
a positive 
social 
impact
Identify our customers’ 
automation challenges
Our customers rely on us for innovative solutions 
to control safely the flow of their liquids, gases 
and powders. We proactively seek out their 
product and service needs and develop solutions 
that offer improved efficiency, assured 
safety and environmental protection and 
are tailored to their precise requirements.

Innovation and development  
of products and services

The innovative research and development 
activities across Rotork ensure  
cutting-edge products are available  
for every application across the markets 
we serve. Our new product development 
is particularly focused on products  
that help improve our customers’ efficiency 
and environmental performance.
World class product 
manufacturing

We are a global business with product 
manufacturing sites located around the world. 
Our factories operate to the highest 
international standards and supply our 
quality products to our customers on time 
and at short notice if required.
Lifecycle services  
and support
We offer dedicated, expert service and 
support from initial inquiry to product 
installation and, through Rotork  
Service, long-term aftersales  
care including planned and  
predictive maintenance and  
end‑of‑life decommissioning.

Industry-leading 
application engineering

We have been widely acknowledged as the 
market leader in flow control for over 60 
years, recognised for our comprehensive, 
high-quality range of products and solutions. 
Our products are available with extensive 
certifications, including for use in hazardous 
areas and in safety applications.
Commitment to a 
sustainable future
 Read more P.34 
A business model that delivers
Our customers rely on us for 
innovative solutions to safely 
control the flow of their liquids, 
gases and powders. 
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
6
Business model
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

End users
Specification approval
Key to direct or indirect sales
The value we created in 2024
Own sales Our highly experienced sales 
and application engineering teams
Channel partners Industrial distributors 
and manufacturer’s agents
Rotork Service Our market-leading 
global aftersales and service team
Specification approval Understanding 
customer needs and confirming our 
products meet them
OEMs Customers who incorporate 
Rotork components into their products 
and systems
EPCs, contractors and integrators 
Third-party infrastructure construction 
and speciality automation partners
Our routes to market
20%
20%
Distributors
45%
10%
5%
OEMs/valve makers
EPCs
Own sales
Channel partners
Rotork Service
Our offering
We launched four new products in 2024, including a new 
range of modular electro-hydraulic actuators and Integrated 
Ethernet for the IQ3 Pro family of electric actuators.
 Read more P.22
4
product launches
Employees
We offer our employees a safe working environment, 
fair pay, terms and conditions, and equality and fairness 
in the workplace.
 Read more P.58
£202m
wages, salaries, 
etc. paid
Suppliers
We have a sizeable supply chain. Social, environmental 
and ethical considerations are embedded into 
our Global Supplier Excellence programme.
 Read more P.47
£364m
spend with 
external suppliers
Communities
We endeavour to make a positive social impact by being 
a good corporate citizen. We are pleased to pay taxes and 
contribute to society in the countries in which we operate.
 Read more P.62
£39m
corporation tax 
cash paid
The 
environment
We delivered a good set of results across our key 
environmental metrics in 2024, including a 7% reduction 
in total scope 1 and market-based scope 2 CO2 emissions.
 Read more P.41
-7%
CO2 emissions, YoY
Shareholders
We have a strong track record of creating shareholder 
value and have increased our ordinary dividend each 
year for more than 20 years.
 Read more P.30
£63m 
dividends paid
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
7
Business model continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

objectives. This guidance underscored the 
importance of evolving our culture to support 
long-term success and foster an environment 
where innovation and collaboration thrive. 
Through this work we further defined our core 
cultural DNA by identifying our key behaviours 
which will drive success: We Value Our Customers, 
We Grow Together and We Win as a Team. 
Our cultural DNA captures what makes Rotork 
unique and establishes the foundation for how 
we work, interact and succeed collectively. This 
evolution is a multi-year journey to create a more 
connected, customer-focused and collaborative 
organisation. By aligning our practices with our 
new cultural values and behaviours, we are 
better positioned to address challenges, seize 
opportunities, and unlock our full potential.
Board engagement with employees
The Board also sought to gather the views and 
opinions of employees across the company on 
broader topics. We achieved this through several 
initiatives. Firstly, through site visits: in 2024, 
I visited Rotork’s site in Rochester (US), while my 
Board colleagues visited Chennai (India), Winston 
Salem (US), Shanghai (China), and Manchester 
(UK). We toured the facilities at each location 
with regional and local leaders and engaged 
with a broader group of employees through 
town halls and round tables. I want to thank all 
the colleagues we met for their warm welcome.
Secondly, we held focused employee sessions on 
customer value and met with representatives of 
each intake of our graduate programme. These 
interactions provided invaluable insights into our 
focus areas and fostered a deeper connection 
between the Board and our employees. 
By directly engaging with staff at various levels 
and locations, we reinforced our commitment to 
a transparent and inclusive culture, ensuring that 
all voices are heard and valued as we continue 
to grow and evolve.
“2024 was the third year of our Growth+ 
strategy and we continue to make 
strong progress."
Dorothy Thompson, CBE 
Chair
Dorothy Thompson, CBE 
Chair
2024 was the third year of our Growth+ 
strategy. The strategy is designed to deliver 
profitable growth by targeting the right market 
segments, providing value to our customers, 
innovating our products and services and 
enabling a sustainable future. 
We made strong progress during the year. 
Through the Target Segments approach we 
continue to identify new market areas where 
Rotork can win. Target Segments sales grew 9% 
year-on-year OCC in 2024, outperforming the 
Group overall, and reflecting earlier successes 
under this pillar. Our Customer Value initiatives 
are delivering, with our new systems and processes 
helping to significantly reduce the lead times of 
our more commonly ordered products. Under 
the Innovative Products & Services pillar the 
highlights of the year were the launches of 
Integrated Ethernet functionality for the IQ3 
Pro range of electric actuators and of the new 
Rotork website. The website launch is another 
important step in improving the customer 
experience that Rotork provides. 
Purpose
Our Purpose, as well as our sustainability vision, is 
‘keeping the world flowing for future generations’. 
Our purpose is a powerful motivator and drives 
everything that we do. We want to help drive the 
transition to a clean future where environmental 
resources are used responsibly. We have a major 
role to play in the transition to a low-carbon 
economy, as well as helping preserve natural 
resources such as fresh water and eliminating 
energy sector methane emissions. 
Culture evolution
In 2024, we progressed an extensive programme 
to fully understand our culture, identifying 
both its strengths and any aspects that might 
constrain our future success. The programme 
included workshops with 800 employees across 
27 countries. The Board actively reviewed 
progress over the year and provided strategic 
direction to ensure alignment with our Growth+ 
Growth+ is delivering
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
8
Chair’s statement
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Employee engagement survey
Additionally, we conducted our annual employee 
survey in partnership with a third-party provider 
for the first time. This new approach enables us 
to benchmark against our peers, focus our 
engagement activities, and accurately measure our 
progress in fostering a supportive and dynamic 
workplace culture. The insights gained from the 
survey are instrumental in shaping our future 
initiatives and ensuring that our strategies align 
with the needs and aspirations of our workforce.
As we look ahead, the Board remains committed 
to nurturing a culture that supports our 
Growth+ strategy, ensuring that Rotork 
continues to thrive and deliver exceptional 
value to our shareholders.
Dividend and capital allocation
We have a clear and disciplined capital allocation 
framework. Our priorities, in order, are organic 
investment, a progressive dividend, acquisitions 
and other shareholder returns. We have increased 
our dividend each year for over 20 years and 
have completed 30 acquisitions since 2000. 
We have demonstrated discipline and flexibility 
in using buybacks and special dividends to deliver 
shareholder returns, including in March 2024 the 
launch of a £50m share buyback programme 
which we completed in December 2024. Net 
cash at period end was £125.3m (31 December 
2023: £134.4m). We remain active in looking 
for suitable acquisition opportunities, consistent 
with our Growth+ strategy, and post period 
end agreed to acquire Noah, a South Korean 
headquartered electric actuator supplier, for 
an enterprise value of £44m.
The Board is recommending a final dividend of 
5.00p per share. With the 2024 interim dividend 
of 2.75p, the total dividend for the year is 7.75p, 
a 7.6% increase on the 2023 full-year dividend. 
This equals 2.1 times cover based on adjusted 
earnings per share (2023: 2.0 times). Subject to 
Section 172(1) Statement
In accordance with Section 172(1) of the 
Companies Act 2006, we as a Board have 
a duty to promote the success of Rotork for 
the benefit of Rotork's members. In doing 
so, the Board has regard for the interests of 
our people, the success of our relationships 
with suppliers and customers, the impact 
of our operations on the community and 
the environment, the desirability of 
maintaining a reputation for high standards 
of business conduct and the consequences 
of decisions in the long term. Stakeholder 
considerations are woven throughout all 
Board discussions and decisions.
Further information on our stakeholder 
engagement, can be found on pages 106 
to 111 of the Corporate Governance report. 
Details on how we have engaged with our 
stakeholders on our sustainability strategy 
can be found on page 36.
shareholder approval, the 2024 final dividend 
will be paid on 3 June 2025, to ordinary 
shareholders on the register at the close of 
business on 25 April 2025. The last date to 
elect for the Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRIP) 
is 12 May 2025. 
Consistent with the Group’s stated capital 
allocation policy, the Board has decided to 
return a prudent level of cash to shareholders 
while retaining a strong balance sheet. As a 
result, Rotork will be commencing a share 
buyback programme of £50m.
Board update
Tim Cobbold stepped down as a Director of 
Rotork in December 2024, having been our 
Senior Independent non-executive Director and 
Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement. 
We would like to thank Tim for his considerable 
contribution to Rotork over the last six years, and 
we wish him all the best in his role as Chair of 
Spirax Group plc. I am pleased that with effect 
from 1 January 2025 Andrew Heath agreed 
to become Rotork’s Senior Independent 
non-executive Director, and that Vanessa Simms 
agreed to become Rotork’s Non-executive 
Director for Workforce Engagement.
I was pleased to recently welcome a new 
non-executive director to Rotork. Svein Richard 
Brandtzæg joined the Board on 20 November 
2024. Svein Richard is currently Chair of 
dormakaba Holding AG, a non-executive 
director of Mondi plc and also Chair of the 
Council on Ethics for Norges Bank Investment 
Management. Svein Richard has further 
strengthened the diverse mix of skills and 
experience on the Board and was appointed 
Chair of the Remuneration Committee with 
effect from 1 January 2025.
“The Rotork Board knows that 
delivering the Group’s purpose 
and strategy would not be 
possible without its people. 
Our team is exceptional and 
continually focused on delivering 
customer value and innovation 
in everything it does.”
Dorothy Thompson, CBE 
Chair
People
The Rotork Board recognises that achieving our 
purpose and delivering on our strategy are only 
possible through us having an exceptional team. 
Its unwavering focus on delivering customer 
value and driving innovation is truly commendable.
I am proud of how our team has embraced the 
Growth+ strategy and the solid results achieved 
in 2024.
On behalf of the Board, I extend our heartfelt 
thanks to all Rotork colleagues for their dedication 
and commitment throughout the year.
Dorothy Thompson, CBE
Chair
10 March 2025
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
9
Chair’s statement continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Environmental performance
Sustainability is a major focus for Rotork. Whilst 
our impact in enabling our customers to improve 
their environmental performance likely exceeds 
the Group's environmental footprint, the latter 
is no less important. Our total scope 1 and 2 
(market-based) emissions decreased by 7% 
in 2024 compared with 2023, reflecting the 
implementation of energy efficiency projects 
and investment in on-site renewable generation.
Our SBTi-validated near-term greenhouse gas 
(GHG) emissions reduction targets are:
•	 To reduce our absolute scope 1 and 2 GHG 
emissions by 42% by 2030 from a 2020 
base year.
•	 To reduce our absolute scope 3 GHG 
emissions from the use of sold products 
by 25% by 2030 from a 2020 base year.
•	 That at least 25% of our suppliers by 
emissions covering purchased goods and 
services will have science-based targets 
by 2027.
We target net-zero by 2035 for scopes 1 and 2 
and by 2045 for scope 3.
Underlining the importance we attach to 
achieving our net-zero targets, scopes 1 and 2 
GHG reduction targets are included in our senior 
team’s long-term remuneration opportunity.
The sustainability highlight of the year was the 
opening of our new China manufacturing facility 
which was designed with sustainability as a key 
priority and attained a LEED Gold certification. 
We completed a project to decarbonise heating 
at our Manchester (UK) facility. Elsewhere we 
refreshed our Task Force on Climate-related 
Financial Disclosures (TCFD) approach and 
disclosures and commenced our preparations 
for the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting 
Directive (CSRD), including conducting our first 
double materiality assessment. Rotork is rated 
AAA in the MSCI ESG ratings assessment.
 
“We made strong progress in 2024, 
delivering good OCC sales growth, healthy 
margin improvement and a particularly 
strong cash flow performance."
Kiet Huynh
Chief Executive Officer
Growth+ delivering our vision
In 2024, Rotork achieved significant progress, 
a testament to the seamless collaboration of our 
3,500-strong team. Our commitment to health, 
safety, and environmental excellence remained 
unwavering, delivering outstanding results once 
again. We continued to advance our Growth+ 
strategy, with its benefits becoming increasingly 
evident. Financially, we delivered a solid 
performance, with revenues growing by high single 
digits year-on-year on an organic constant currency 
basis, and an improved adjusted operating margin.
Health, safety & wellbeing
The safety of our people, partners and visitors 
is our number one priority, and our objective 
for health and safety is zero harm. In 2024, we 
recorded a lost-time injury rate of 0.08, in line 
with the 0.08 recorded in 2023. Our total 
recordable incident rate was 0.22 (2023: 0.26).
In 2024, we transitioned from our internally 
managed pulse survey, which primarily measured 
employee satisfaction, to a comprehensive 
engagement survey conducted with a third-party 
partner. This strategic shift allows us to benchmark 
our engagement levels against industry standards 
and enhance our efforts to foster meaningful 
engagement across Rotork.
We were pleased that 80% of our employees 
participated in the new survey. We retained our 
‘Rotork as a Place to Work’ question and scored 
7.1 out of 10 in 2024.
The insights gained from this new survey will 
support the work we have done in 2024 to 
develop our Company culture, enabling us to 
measure effectively and cultivate our cultural 
initiatives in the years to come.
We have a committed team who are proud 
to work at Rotork and determined to deliver 
on our Growth+ ambitions. We offer our 
thanks and appreciation for all their efforts 
throughout 2024.
Kiet Huynh 
Chief Executive Officer
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
10
Chief Executive Officer’s statement
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

“The safety of our people, 
partners and visitors is our 
number one priority, and our 
vision for health and safety 
is zero harm. I want to 
thank every member of our 
committed team for their 
efforts in driving safety 
during the year.”
Kiet Huynh
Chief Executive Officer
our strategy are three pillars: Target Segments, 
Customer Value and Innovative Products & 
Services, each underpinned by our focus on 
‘Enabling a Sustainable Future’. 
Our ‘Target Segments’ are key segments within 
each of our divisions where there are significant 
opportunities for profitable growth. We are 
prioritising investment into these areas, helping 
us to grow faster than our overall markets. We 
have already seen significant benefits from our 
focus on Target Segments which represented 
around half of Group sales in 2024 and grew 
9% year-on-year OCC. 
Target Segment successes in Oil & Gas included 
in upstream and midstream electrification and 
LNG. In upstream electrification, Rotork supplied 
electric actuators and related services to a North 
Sea oil and gas producer for its latest platform. 
The platform is designed to be remotely operated 
and to require only occasional maintenance 
visits. Also in upstream electrification, Rotork 
received a significant order from a major oil and 
gas producer for electric actuators equipped 
with integral shutdown batteries which will be 
retrofitted on onshore wellheads, replacing 
older, less advanced models previously supplied 
by a competitor. In LNG, revenues grew in the 
period as earlier liquefaction orders started 
to ship. Rotork is positioned to support the 
liquefaction capacity increase expected in 
2025 and beyond.
Successes in Chemical, Process & Industrial 
included activity in the Target Segments of 
specialty chemicals and mining. In specialty 
chemicals, Rotork supplied equipment to a major 
greenfield urea plant being built in Western 
Australia. Demand for urea is forecast to grow 
rapidly, driven by agricultural and transportation 
applications. In mining, Rotork electric actuators 
were selected by a customer for an important 
water reuse project. When the project is 
completed, the mine will no longer have to draw 
water required for processing from a local river. 
HSE manager, Chennai, 
India, demonstrating 
health and safety 
practices
Growth+ strategy 
The starting point of our Growth+ strategy is 
our Purpose, ‘keeping the world flowing for 
future generations’. Our Purpose is a powerful 
motivator and recognises the role we play in 
making our world a great place to live, and the 
role we play in helping improve the safety, 
environmental and social performances of not 
just ourselves but also our end users, customers, 
suppliers and communities.
Our vision is for Rotork to be the leader in 
intelligent flow control. This recognises the 
ever-increasing importance of connectivity to 
our end users. Today’s intelligent flow control 
systems ensure safety, are reliable, efficient and 
easy to use, and play a vital role in ensuring the 
uptime of our end users’ operations (including 
through predictive and preventative maintenance).
Our financial ambition is to deliver mid to high 
single-digit revenue growth and mid-20s 
adjusted operating margins over time. Three 
powerful megatrends help drive our growth: 
automation, electrification and digitalisation, as 
well as the trends of sustainability, decarbonisation, 
energy security, water scarcity and water quality. 
Our Growth+ strategy is designed to drive our 
growth and to balance making investments with 
achieving margin progression. At the core of 
In Water & Power, examples of Target Segment 
successes included in wastewater treatment 
and alternative energy. The reuse of water is 
increasingly common, including for irrigation 
and industrial processes. Rotork electric 
actuators were chosen for a major water 
reclamation project in Singapore. In alternative 
energy, geothermal power has the potential to 
be a bigger source of renewable energy than 
wind and Rotork products play an important 
role in geothermal plants, including in a major 
geothermal facility in New Zealand. 
We continued to make strong progress under 
the Customer Value pillar, which puts the 
customer at the forefront of everything we do. 
During the year we launched our new Group 
website. The new website is an important step in 
a multi-year programme of customer experience 
improvement. In November we held the formal 
opening ceremony for our new facility in China. 
The 23,000m2 facility is strategically located in 
Changshu and was developed with sustainability 
as a key priority. Its 2,500 roof-mounted solar 
panels will generate an estimated 1,500 MWh 
of renewable electricity annually. 
In Innovative Products & Services, we launched 
integrated ethernet functionality for our IQ range. 
This is an important product enhancement 
which further differentiates our flagship electric 
actuators, extending compatibility, enabling 
higher data transfer volume and speeds, 
eliminating the requirement for gateway devices 
and operating seamlessly with our intelligent 
asset management (iAM) system. Integrated 
ethernet has multiple applications across all 
three Rotork sectors and the launch has been 
particularly well received by water industry 
end users.
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
11
Chief Executive Officer’s statement continued
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Financial statements

The downstream oil and gas sector was particularly 
active in 2024, with another significant year for 
net refining capacity additions globally and for 
the ‘replumbing’ of hydrocarbon transportation 
and storage networks necessitated by sanctions 
on Russia. The near-term outlook remains positive, 
with more years of net refining additions in 
prospect. In the medium term, fewer additions 
are expected, with investment instead targeted 
at modernisation and flexibility. Refinery shutdowns 
are expected to be relatively rare with refiners 
choosing instead to convert sites at end of life 
to produce renewable fuels, or to industrial hubs 
(for example producing low-carbon electricity 
or hydrogen) or storage depots. 
The outlook for the LNG export market is 
increasingly positive. The US currently has annual 
export capacity of around 90m tonnes according 
to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. An additional 
50m tonnes is already permitted and set to be 
commissioned in the next several years, with 
another 180m tonnes of capacity going through 
planning stages. Additional export capacity is 
also under way in Qatar and Australia.
The upstream oil and gas sector grew in both 
the Middle East and Europe in 2024. In the 
Middle East, investment focused on major 
natural gas projects in the UAE and Qatar. 
Investment in Europe increased, following 
several years of declines, in response to energy 
security concerns. In the Americas, Mexico’s oil 
and gas production was broadly unchanged 
year-on-year in 2024. US unconventional 
onshore activity slowed in the second half, 
impacted by election uncertainty and lower 
hydrocarbon prices. Following the US election, 
the outlook for drilling and completion is more 
positive, although higher prices may be required 
for a significant pickup. 
There was a generally soft backdrop to chemicals 
markets in 2024, reflecting weak demand from 
key end markets such as construction, automotive 
and pharmaceuticals and higher energy prices 
Market update
Elections played a major part in global events in 
2024, with almost half of the world’s population 
voting in national elections during the year 
(according to Reuters). The most significant 
from a market perspective was the Presidential 
election in the US. The election has the potential 
to have significant economic effects on global 
markets, including on manufacturing and energy.
The new US government has signalled a more 
local approach to its industrial strategy which 
will have implications for global manufacturing. 
However, we believe that any risk of increased 
import tariffs to Rotork would be largely 
mitigated by our predominantly local-for-local 
manufacturing footprint.
Energy security and the energy transition have 
been major global themes for several years 
and are likely to remain so. The US’s energy 
independence is expected to be of higher 
priority, potentially meaning more exploration 
and production activity. The energy transition 
remains a priority, but with the fossil fuel 
industry potentially having a greater part to play 
in the transition, e.g. through LNG, biofuels, 
carbon capture and hydrogen. Whilst US 
emissions reduction regulations might be of 
slightly lower importance at the Federal level, 
these are likely to remain important at state and 
industry levels.
In recent years, investment in global energy 
sector infrastructure has accelerated, reflecting 
both a previous period of underinvestment and 
the importance of the role of hydrocarbons 
in the world’s energy mix for years to come. 
The electrification of upstream and midstream 
operations to reduce the greenhouse gas 
intensity of processes that commenced with 
COP26’s Global Methane Pledge (in 2021) 
continues and methane emissions were again a 
major topic at COP29 in Azerbaijan. The upstream 
and midstream electrification sector represented 
close to 10% of Rotork Group sales in 2024. 
“Our purpose recognises the 
role we play in making our 
world a great place to live, 
and the role we play in 
helping improve the safety, 
environmental and social 
performances of our end 
users, customers, suppliers 
and communities.”
Kiet Huynh 
Chief Executive Officer
Daily SQDCP standup 
meeting, Chennai, India
which particularly impacted the industry in 
Europe, especially in bulk chemicals. However, 
Rotork’s chemicals market strategy is to target 
niche sectors that offer the potential for above 
market growth and CPI sales into this market 
grew year-on-year in 2024. 
Metals and mining markets remain attractive 
opportunities for Rotork. Whilst 2024 did not 
see the repeat of the activity in the battery 
materials sector experienced in 2023 (i.e. nickel), 
the wider industry continues to invest to build 
the capacity required to deliver the energy 
transition and to invest in sustainability projects. 
Critical HVAC refers to heating, ventilation and 
air conditioning systems that are essential for 
maintaining specific environmental conditions 
in sensitive or high-stakes environments, 
including temperature, humidity and air quality. 
Critical HVAC is typically specified in tunnel 
ventilation, data centres, clean rooms and 
industrial processes such as battery production 
plants and semiconductor fabrication facilities 
where the cost of downtime or failure can be 
significant. Critical HVAC markets benefitted 
from strong demand from data centre markets 
in 2023 and 2024 and the cooling requirements 
of artificial intelligence focused data centres 
could represent an exciting future opportunity. 
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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12
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Financial statements

It is apparent that tackling the climate crisis and 
delivering a just energy transition at pace will 
require a practical approach including a balance 
of technologies, with methane emissions 
reduction, LNG, carbon capture and storage, 
sustainable fuels, hydrogen and direct air 
capture all having significant roles to play.
Business performance
Group order intake increased 2.8% year-on-year 
(6.1% on an OCC basis) to £744.3m. All three 
divisions booked higher orders for the full year. 
Group revenue was 4.9% higher year-on-year 
(8.2% OCC) at £754.4m. Oil & Gas sales rose 
8.3% (11.7% OCC), with all geographic regions 
growing and Europe, Middle East & Africa 
(EMEA) and Asia Pacific particularly strong. The 
division’s growth was driven by the downstream 
and midstream sectors with upstream sales 
broadly unchanged year-on-year. CPI sales were 
4.1% lower (down 1.1% OCC), with solid growth 
in EMEA insufficient to offset lower sales in the 
Asia Pacific and Americas regions. Water & 
Power sales were up 9.5% (13.1% OCC), with 
all geographic regions delivering double-digit 
growth. Both sectors grew strongly, with water 
outgrowing power. 
By geography, EMEA sales by destination grew 
double digits (OCC) and was Rotork’s fastest 
growing region. Asia Pacific revenues grew low 
single digits year-on-year on an OCC basis, with 
China growth ahead of the region. The Americas 
region returned to growth in the second half 
and full year revenues were high single digits 
ahead (OCC).
In early 2025 we rebranded Rotork Site Services 
under one global brand, Rotork Service. Rotork 
Service is our global service network and a key 
differentiator in our industry. It performed well 
in 2024 with revenues growing faster than the 
Group overall. Its Lifetime Management and 
Reliability Services programmes have good 
momentum, as does its Intelligent Asset 
Management predictive analytics system. 
Market update continued
The outlook for water and wastewater remains 
positive with continuing investment in new and 
existing infrastructure. The market is focused on 
delivering water availability, improving water 
quality, reducing leakage, efficient water reuse, 
and automating and digitalising networks and 
processes. Significant investment initiatives 
worldwide are already in progress or set to 
begin, including in the US, China, India, the 
Middle East and the UK. The desalination 
market remains active, with projects underway 
worldwide, most notably in the Middle East. 
Reverse osmosis desalination is forecast to grow 
high single digits over the medium term (source: 
Future Market Insights). 
The outlook for the global power market is 
brighter than it has been for some time, driven 
by electrification, economic growth, artificial 
intelligence and, in the US, the repatriation of 
manufacturing. In response to this accelerating 
demand growth, the power generation industry 
is stepping up new build activity as well as plant 
modernisation, refurbishment and life extension 
(including in the traditional and nuclear sectors).
Renewable energy is playing an important role 
in delivering energy security as well as the energy 
transition. According to the IEA, renewables’ 
share in final energy consumption will be nearly 
20% by 2030, up from 13% in 2023. Rotork 
products are specified for several applications 
in offshore wind, including in HVDC converter 
cooling systems, geothermal energy plants and 
concentrated solar, as well as in facilities producing 
rechargeable batteries and solar panels. 
Decarbonisation remains a high-potential market 
for all three Rotork divisions. 2024 saw the 
world’s second consecutive hottest summer on 
record (according to the World Meteorological 
Organization) with a number of extreme 
weather events such as wildfires, droughts 
and flooding. These events served to remind 
us vividly of the urgency of tackling carbon 
emissions and adapting to climate change. 
Rotork Service is managed as a separate unit 
by each of our divisions and contributed 23% 
of Group sales (2023: 21%).
Adjusted operating profit was 8.5% higher 
year-on-year (12.8% OCC) at £178.4m, 
reflecting volume growth and positive net price/
mix which were partly offset by wage inflation. 
Adjusted operating margins were 70bps higher 
at 23.6% (100bps higher OCC) and reported 
profit before tax was £140.5m. The principal 
profit adjustments are costs relating to Business 
Transformation and the defined benefit 
scheme settlement.
Return on capital employed was 37.3% 
(2023: 33.9%), benefitting from an increase 
in adjusted operating profit and a decrease in 
capital employed. Cash conversion was 119% 
(2023: 120%).
Capital allocation
We retain a strong balance sheet and had a 
net cash position of £125.3m at the period end 
(31 December 2023: £134.4m). This gives us 
the financial flexibility to pursue our organic 
investment plans, pay a progressive dividend and 
execute our targeted M&A strategy. We regularly 
review our capital needs in line with our capital 
allocation strategy and have demonstrated 
discipline and flexibility in using buybacks 
and dividends to deliver shareholder returns. 
In March 2025 we agreed to acquire Noah 
Actuation (Noah) to broaden and strengthen 
our product offering in electric actuators. Noah 
is headquartered in Seoul, South Korea and its 
acquisition is fully aligned to the Growth+ 
strategy and to key Target Segments, especially 
with Water & Power, Chemical, Process & 
Industrial and upstream electrification within 
Oil & Gas. We estimate that Noah will deliver 
revenue and adjusted EBITDA of £17.5m and 
£3.5m respectively in the twelve months to 
December 2025.
Outlook
Three years into the Growth+ programme we 
remain confident of delivering our financial 
ambition of mid to high single digit sales growth 
and mid-20s adjusted operating margins over 
time. We have entered 2025 with confidence 
and expect a year of progress on an OCC basis. 
Kiet Huynh
Chief Executive Officer
10 March 2025
rotork.com
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13
Chief Executive Officer’s statement continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Financial KPIs
Sales growth, earnings quality and capital efficiency
Performance
Revenue growth % 
+4.9%
Adjusted operating margin % 
23.6%
Cash conversion % 
119%
Return on capital employed % 
37.3%
4.9
12.0
24
23
22
23.6
22.9
22.3
12.8
24
23
22
119
120
76
24
23
22
37.3
33.9
31.3
24
23
22
 Read more about Remuneration P.131 to 158
Reasons  
for choice
A key driver for the business that is 
reported for each division and geography. 
The measure enables us to track our overall 
success and our progress in increasing our 
market share by end market and by region.
This measure brings together the combined 
effects of pricing, volume and procurement 
as well as the leveraging of our operating 
assets. It is also an important check on the 
quality of revenue growth.
Our cash conversion demonstrates our 
operational efficiency and enables us to 
fund future growth. We consider 85% 
conversion as a base level of achievement. 
It is also part of the senior management 
reward system. 
We use this KPI to monitor the efficiency 
of our capital allocation. We also use this 
ratio internally, to help Group management 
monitor efficiency within Rotork’s divisions.
How we  
calculate
Increase in revenue year-on-year divided 
by prior year revenue.
Adjusted operating profit shown as a 
percentage of revenue. We use adjusted 
operating profit as this aids comparison 
year to year.
Cash flow from operating activities 
before tax outflows, the cash impact 
of other adjustments (including Business 
Transformation costs), and the pension 
charge to cash adjustment, as a percentage 
of adjusted operating profit.
Adjusted operating profit as a percentage 
of average capital employed. Capital 
employed is defined as shareholders’ funds 
less net cash held, with the pension fund 
surplus/deficit net of related deferred tax 
deducted/added back.
Comments 
on results
Group revenue was 4.9% higher year-on-
year despite a significant foreign exchange 
headwind which strengthened through 
the second half. Our ambition is to deliver 
mid to high single digit revenue growth 
year-on-year.
Adjusted operating margin was 70bps 
higher year-on-year at 23.6%. The operating 
margin was 18.0%. Our ambition is to 
deliver mid-20s adjusted operating margins 
over time.
Cash conversion in 2024 reflects a strong 
operating cash flow performance, largely 
driven by improvements in working capital 
including a reduction in inventory.
Return on capital employed increased 
strongly during the year. Adjusted operating 
profit increased by 8.5% and average capital 
employed decreased by 1.6%.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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14
Key performance indicators
Strategic report
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Financial statements

Non-financial KPIs 
Health, safety and environmental performance
Financial KPIs continued
8.7
14.8
13.2
24
23
22
0.22
0.26
0.53
24
23
22
-37%
-32%
-24%
24
23
22
Performance
Adjusted EPS growth % 
+8.7%
Performance
Total recordable incident rate (TRIR) 
0.22
Scope 1 and 2 emissions tCO2e 
-37%
Reasons  
for choice
Growth in EPS is a measure of our profit 
performance, taking into account all aspects 
of the income statement including the 
management of our capital structure, 
treasury and the Group’s tax rate.
Reasons  
for choice
TRIR is used as one measure of the effectiveness 
of our health and safety procedures. 
Sustainability is a major focus for us. 
We target net-zero by 2035 for scopes 1 and 2. 
How we  
calculate
Increase in adjusted basic EPS (based on 
adjusted profit after tax) year-on-year 
divided by the prior year adjusted basic EPS.
How we  
calculate
TRIR is the number of recordable incidents 
multiplied by 200,000 divided by the number 
of hours worked.
Energy usage data (scope 1 and market-based 
scope 2) is converted to equivalent tonnes of 
CO2e and compared to our 2020 baseline. 
Comments 
on results
Adjusted basic EPS was 8.7% higher 
year-on-year, with the increase broadly inline 
with growth in adjusted operating profit. 
Comments 
on results
TRIR for 2024 was 0.22, an improvement on 
the 0.26 in 2023. Our proactive approach is to 
continuously identify weaknesses in our safety 
processes and remove or mitigate them.
Energy efficiency projects, investment in 
on-site renewable generation and sourcing 
of renewable electricity resulted in a 7% 
year-on-year reduction in emissions in 2024. 
rotork.com
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Financial statements

Rotork: keeping the world flowing 
for future generations
Our financial ambition is mid to high single digit 
revenue growth and mid-20s adjusted operating 
margins over time. We will deliver this ambition 
whilst performing for our customers, our people 
and the environment.
Ambitious 
growth targets
Strong operating 
leverage
Leading  
returns
Highly cash  
generative
Committed to 
sustainability
Disciplined 
capital allocation
Targeting mid to high 
single digit revenue growth 
We are the global leader 
in highly attractive growth 
markets that have high 
barriers to entry and are 
relatively concentrated. 
Our served markets are 
benefitting from the 
megatrends of automation, 
electrification and 
digitalisation that are 
transforming industry. 
We aim to outgrow them 
through the implementation 
of our Growth+ strategy. 
Higher sales boost  
profits significantly  
Our business has a high 
gross margin and relatively 
low variable costs meaning 
high operating leverage – 
higher sales boost profits 
significantly and quickly. 
As well as having high 
margins and relatively low 
fixed assets, the business 
has a comparatively low 
level of net working capital, 
meaning that revenue 
growth need not absorb 
significant cash.
Market-leading returns  
with room for upside  
Our adjusted operating 
profit margin was 23.6% in 
2024, amongst the highest 
in the industrial goods and 
services sector. We target a 
return to the mid-20s over 
time through operational 
gearing, continuous 
improvement and sourcing 
and supply chain initiatives. 
We have an asset-light 
business model and our 
return on capital employed 
(ROCE) was 37.3% in 2024.
Balance sheet strength  
 
Our Group is highly cash 
generative – cash conversion 
averaged 111% over the last 
five years. This cash flow 
enables us to fund organic 
investments and pay a 
progressive annual dividend 
and gives us the flexibility to 
make strategic acquisitions. 
The cash conversion of 
119% in 2024 is largely 
driven by improvements 
in working capital.
Enabling a  
sustainable future  
Our sustainability 
framework is core to 
everything we do and 
embedded in the Growth+ 
strategy through our 
‘Enabling a Sustainable 
Future’ initiative. Every 
day we work to help 
customers better their own 
environmental performance, 
whilst also working to 
improve our own. 
A clear capital  
allocation framework  
Our capital allocation  
priorities are: 
i)	
organic investment 
(new product 
development, 
new markets, 
internal systems);
ii)	 our progressive 
dividend policy; 
iii)	 strategic investments; 
followed by, in the 
event in the future 
we determine we 
have excess cash; 
iv)	 return of cash.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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16
Investment case
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

VISION
To be the leader in intelligent flow control
PURPOSE
Keeping the world
flowing for future generations
Enabling a Sustainable Future
Helping customers better their own environmental performance, 
whilst at the same time working to improve our own
Target Segments
Innovative Products 
& Services
Customer Value
Our strategic pillars
Target Segments
Identifying the markets where there is significant 
profitable growth opportunity
Customer Value
Improving the customer experience and 
earning a greater share of their spend
Innovative Products & Services
Developing new products and services that deliver 
growth and a strengthened position 
Our Growth+ strategy
Growth+ is designed to deliver our ambition of mid to high single digit 
revenue growth and mid-20s adjusted operating margins over time.
 Read more P.18 to 23
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
17
Our strategy
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Strategy
Our first Growth+ pillar is ‘target segments’. 
We have identified key segments within each 
of our divisions where we have the right to play 
and where there are significant opportunities for 
profitable growth. We will prioritise investment 
into these areas, helping us to grow faster than 
our overall markets. The focusing on these 
segments does not mean we will stop playing 
in other areas – our core segments – where we 
anticipate there will still be market growth.
We estimate that the segments targeted by the 
Oil & Gas division will grow high single digit in 
the coming years, those targeted by CPI will 
grow low double digits and those targeted by 
Water & Power mid to high single digit. We 
estimate the combined market size of our 
chosen target segments to be £4.0bn and 
their combined market growth rate to be high 
single digits. Our target segments represent 
around half of Group sales currently.
Target segments by division
Oil & Gas
•	 Upstream electrification
•	 Asia infrastructure growth
•	 LNG (energy transition bridge)
•	 Brownfield opportunities
Water & Power
•	 Water infrastructure
•	 Water, wastewater and treatment
•	 Desalination
•	 Alternative energy
Chemical, Process & Industrial
•	 Chemical
•	 HVAC
•	 Mining
Decarbonisation is a target segment 
for all Rotork divisions.
Target segments 
“The benefits of the target 
segment approach under 
Growth+ are evident. Target 
segment sales are growing 
strongly, particularly in 
wastewater treatment, 
specialty chemicals, LNG and 
upstream and midstream 
oil and gas electrification.”
Kiet Huynh 
Chief Executive Officer
Progress during 2024
•	 Target segments represented around half of 
Group sales in 2024 and grew 9% YoY OCC.
•	 Successes in Oil & Gas included in upstream 
and midstream electrification and LNG. 
Rotork is well positioned to support the 
liquefaction capacity increase expected in 
2025 and beyond. 
•	 CPI successes included activity in specialty 
chemicals and mining. In specialty chemicals, 
we supplied equipment to a major greenfield 
urea plant being built in Western Australia.
•	 Water & Power supplied electric actuators 
to a major water reclamation project in 
Singapore and to a geothermal plant in 
New Zealand.
Investing in identified 
markets where there is 
significant profitable 
growth opportunity.
18
Our strategy continued
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Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com

Target segments
Division: Oil & Gas 
Segment: upstream and 
midstream electrification
The oil and gas industry is increasingly looking 
to electrify operations to reduce their carbon 
intensity. There are two methods of electrification: 
(i) replacing equipment running on hydrocarbon 
fuel (e.g. diesel powered pumps) with equipment 
powered by electricity; and/or (ii) converting 
pneumatic or hydraulic powered systems to 
electrically powered ones. The second of these 
also improves energy efficiency, allows for more 
compact production infrastructure, and improves 
control. It can also reduce direct and/or indirect 
methane emissions.
Why the focus on methane emissions? 
Fugitive methane emissions from energy 
production are estimated to contribute 
around 6% of global greenhouse gas 
emissions annually (source: Our World in 
Data). Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, 
significantly more powerful than CO2 at 
warming the atmosphere.
 Read more: www.ccacoalition.org/resources/
fossil-fuels-factsheet-2024
Target segments continued
Supporting customers 
in eliminating their 
methane emissions
Oil and gas customers are seeking zero-emission 
emergency shutdown solutions for use on 
existing wellheads and pipelines. Rotork 
has engineered a modular electro-hydraulic 
actuator range that combines the simplicity 
of electric operation with the high torque 
of hydraulics. Electro-hydraulic actuators 
have zero methane emissions and low power 
consumption and can be used in applications 
requiring the highest safety certifications, 
including for retro-fit onto existing fluid 
power actuators. 
Xxxxx
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19
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Rotork Annual Report 2024
Our strategy continued
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Customer value
Our vision is a seamless 
customer experience.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
Strategy
We want to put the value we provide to our 
customers at the forefront of everything we do. 
To achieve this we need to further improve our 
company-wide processes, to streamline these 
and to break down any silos. To deliver these 
processes we need our highly trained teams – 
wherever they are in the world – to be working 
using one modern enterprise resource system. 
We are working on three main areas. Go to 
market enhancement is about strengthening 
our relationships with customers and maximising 
our opportunities with them. Our global supply 
chain programme aims to improve our delivery 
and lead times and respond to any supply chain 
issues. Improved customer experience is about 
re-engineering our business processes, allowing 
us to quote quicker and be more responsive to 
our customers.
Progress during 2024
We continued to make good progress during 
the year. Our business process re-engineering 
programme is well underway with the Microsoft 
Dynamics D365 rollout continuing and is already 
making Rotork easier to do business with. 
In November we held the formal opening 
ceremony for our new facility in China. 
The 23,000m2 facility is strategically located in 
Changshu and was developed with sustainability 
as a key priority. Its 2,500 roof-mounted solar 
panels will generate an estimated 1,500 MWh of 
renewable electricity annually. We launched our 
new Group website in the final quarter. The new 
website is an important step in a multi-year 
programme of customer experience improvement, 
providing the foundation for future customer 
portals that will link to our iAM technology 
for predictive maintenance and performance 
and e-commerce.
“Making Rotork easier to do 
business with is a key priority.”
Lyndsey Norris
Business Transformation Director
Customer value initiatives
Go to market enhancement
•	 Global key account management
•	 Project pursuit programme 
•	 Sales force academy
•	 Rotork Service network expansion
Global supply chain programme
•	 Lead time reduction programme
•	 Global transportation programme
•	 Global shortages programme
Improved customer experience
•	 Business process re-engineering
•	 Faster quotations; on-time delivery
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Customer value continued
Responsiveness programme
Our Customer Responsiveness Programme 
was completed by 400 customer service 
colleagues from around the world. The 
‘Creating Great Intentional Customer 
Experiences’ course introduced a new 
competency framework and developed the 
customer relationship skills of our sales teams, 
helping make us easier to do business with.
Third-party call handling system
We successfully implemented a third-party 
call handling system to support our customer 
service teams and other colleagues and 
manage unwanted calls. The system is already 
freeing up significant time during which 
customer service teams can focus on 
customer quotes, enquiries and orders.
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Rotork Service training 
videos being produced at 
a customer's tank
storage facility in Germany

Innovation is the 
lifeblood of Rotork.
“Our success depends on 
innovation and this year 
we’ve made great progress 
on our ethernet technology.”
Ross Pascoe
Chief Technology Officer
Strategy
Innovation is the lifeblood of Rotork. Over the 
last several years we have brought our teams 
together and streamlined how we deliver 
innovation and the development of new products 
and services. Our teams are focused on projects 
which are aligned with our chosen target 
segments, customer value and our ‘enabling 
a sustainable future’ principle. Key innovation 
drivers include electrification, connectivity, data 
analytics and product efficiency. Additionally, 
our engineers remain focused on product-in-use, 
and increasingly lifecycle, emissions. Whilst we 
continue to innovate and develop new products 
we are always weighing ‘make versus buy’ 
arguments, recognising that in-house product 
development is not always the fastest route 
to successful commercialisation.
Progress during 2024
We launched Integrated Ethernet functionality 
for our IQ3 Pro range in the summer. We are the 
first in the industry to bring plug-and-play digital 
connectivity to explosion-proof systems – making 
them safer, smarter, and easier to use. With 
Integrated Ethernet, end users can connect these 
systems directly to their control systems and 
access real-time performance data, improving 
safety and efficiency. In January 2025 we 
launched Rotork Service, the successor to Rotork 
Site Services. Rotork Service offers comprehensive 
support to customers through four expanded 
key offerings: connected services (digital offerings 
including iAM), field services, reliability services 
and support services. 
Innovative products & services
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Innovative products & services continued
Integrated Ethernet
Integrated Ethernet functionality is an 
important product enhancement for our 
IQ3 Pro range. Integrated Ethernet further 
differentiates our flagship electric actuators, 
extending compatibility, enabling higher 
data transfer volume and speeds, eliminating 
the requirement for gateway devices and 
operating seamlessly with our intelligent 
asset management system (iAM). Integrated 
Ethernet has multiple applications across all 
three Rotork sectors and the launch has been 
particularly well received by water industry 
end users. 
23
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IQT3 Pro Integrated 
Ethernet demonstration 
at Valve World 2024 
in Düsseldorf

Divisional revenue was ahead 8.3% year-on-year 
and 11.7% year-on-year (OCC). The midstream 
and downstream sectors grew strongly whereas 
upstream sales were slightly lower due to the 
non-repeat of offshore projects. Downstream 
sales represented 52% of the total (49% in 
2023), upstream 24% (27%) and midstream 
24% (24%). Downstream sector sales were 
double-digits higher year-on-year benefitting 
from increased refinery and storage activity. 
EMEA sales grew strongly year-on-year and the 
region was the fastest growing, with Middle East 
/ Africa growing robustly and the midstream 
electrification sector particularly active. Americas 
sales were ahead mid to high single digit whilst 
APAC sales grew low double digits, driven by 
strong sales growth in India.
The division’s adjusted operating profit was 
£92.0m, 10.0% up year-on-year. The 40 basis 
point adjusted operating profit margin improvement 
reflected higher volumes which were partly 
offset by adverse mix and investment in the 
division’s commercial teams.
Key takeaways
•	 Revenue 11.7% higher OCC driven by spend 
on increasing output, improving productivity 
and decarbonisation.
•	 Downstream strength due to refinery and 
storage activity.
•	 Adj. operating margins rose 40bps to 
a record 25.9% with higher sales partly 
offset by adverse mix.
£m
2024
2023
Change
OCC change
Revenue
355.5
328.4
+8.3%
+11.7%
Adjusted operating profit
92.0
83.6
+10.0%
+13.6%
Adjusted operating margin
25.9%
25.5%
+40bps
+50bps
Oil & Gas’ focus on Target Segments during the 
period delivered notable successes in electrification, 
Asia infrastructure, decarbonisation and Rotork 
Service. One notable win in upstream electrification 
was supplying actuators to a Netherlands-based 
customer for its latest oil and gas platform, 
which is not only electrified but for safety 
reasons is designed to be ‘not normally manned’, 
requiring only two 14-day maintenance visits per 
year. In midstream, the division received follow-on 
orders from a major liquefaction project in Texas 
and several pipeline electrification projects including 
in Asia Pacific and North America. In the 
downstream, there was significant activity in 
both hydrocarbon storage and refining. The 
division supplied IQ3 actuators to a major tank 
farm expansion in South Korea which will enable 
increased LNG storage. LNG is widely seen as a 
bridge fuel in the energy transition for its lower 
carbon emissions compared to oil and coal, its 
flexibility and its abundance. Successes in 
refining included major automation/modernisation 
projects in EMEA, the Americas and Asia Pacific. 
Momentum in the oil and 
gas sector remained strong 
through 2024. Hydrocarbon 
prices remained broadly above 
investment incentive levels 
and most sectors saw higher 
customer spend, targeting 
increased output, improved 
productivity, electrification and 
decarbonisation. The industry’s 
electrification initiative 
continued with increased 
activity in the upstream and 
midstream sectors. These 
sectors represented close to 
10% of Rotork Group sales in 
2024. Investments to increase 
the world’s LNG export 
capacity remain ongoing.
Division: Oil & Gas
% of Group revenue
47%
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Oil & Gas: case studies
Segment: Target 
Sector: Upstream electrification 
Region: Americas
Engineers are increasingly demanding 
high-specification electric actuators for 
controlling production wellheads. These 
actuators enable remote operation, enhance 
production efficiency and provide quick 
shut-off capabilities in emergencies, such as 
leaks. In 2024, Rotork received a significant 
order from a major producer for electric 
actuators equipped with integral shutdown 
batteries. These actuators will be retrofitted, 
replacing older, more basic models previously 
supplied by a competitor.
Segment: Core 
Sector: Gas storage 
Region: Asia Pacific
LNG is widely seen as a bridge fuel in the 
energy transition for its lower carbon emissions 
compared to oil and coal, its flexibility and its 
abundance. For LNG storage operators Rotork 
is often a 'first to mind' supplier of electric 
actuators for control and emergency shutdown 
duties. In 2024, Rotork was pleased to supply 
IQ3 actuators to a major tank farm expansion 
in South Korea. 
Segment: Target 
Sector: Upstream electrification 
Region: EMEA
Modern North Sea oil and gas production 
platforms are typically electrified, connecting 
to electricity networks instead of relying on 
traditional diesel or gas generators. These 
platforms are also highly automated. In 2024, 
Rotork supplied electric actuators and related 
services to a Netherlands based customer for 
its latest platform, which is designed to be 
‘not normally manned’ and requires only two 
14-day maintenance visits per year.
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The division delivered an encouraging second 
half performance, despite economic weakness 
in a number of regions including most notably 
China. The division’s performance clearly 
benefitted from the pursuit of its chosen 
Growth+ Target Segments such as the focus on 
specialty chemicals and critical HVAC (including 
sales into data centres), as well as strength in 
core segments including marine.
Divisional revenues were 4.1% lower year-on-year 
at £205.0m and 1.1% lower year-on-year on an 
OCC basis, with the decline largely the result 
of reduced mining sector large project activity, 
following three years of strong sales growth. By 
destination, EMEA sales grew mid to high single 
digits (OCC), with all subregions higher. Asia 
Pacific sales were lower, despite good growth in 
India. China sales declined low single digit in the 
full year (OCC) but were unchanged year-on-year 
in the second half. Americas sales grew low 
single digits (OCC). 
The division’s adjusted operating profit was 
£53.0m, 3.4% higher than prior year. Adjusted 
operating margin rose 180 basis points to 
25.8%. The increase in adjusted operating 
margin largely reflected positive mix as well 
as disciplined cost management. 
Key takeaways
•	 Revenue 1.1% lower OCC largely due to 
reduced mining activity.
•	 Sales growth resumed in the second half 
of the period.
•	 Solid growth in target segments chemicals 
and critical HVAC.
•	 Adj. operating margin benefited from positive 
price/mix as well as cost control initiatives.
£m
2024
2023
Change
OCC change
Revenue
205.0
213.7
-4.1%
-1.1%
Adjusted operating profit
53.0
51.3
+3.4%
+7.4%
Adjusted operating margin
25.8%
24.0%
+180bps
+210bps
Rotork’s electric and fluid power actuators 
and instruments were selected by innovative 
customers for use in their energy transition 
projects. Rotork supplied several hundred flow 
control actuators to a major greenfield urea 
plant being built in Western Australia. The plant 
has been designed to minimise emissions and 
with the capacity to achieve net-zero carbon 
by 2050. Demand for urea is forecast to grow 
rapidly (source: the International Renewable 
Energy Agency) driven by applications including 
agriculture and transportation. Rotork’s 
actuators were chosen by an innovative steel 
plant in Sweden which has switched to 
fossil‑free hydrogen to heat steel at its rolling 
mill, produced on-site by a 20MW electrolyser. 
In the critical HVAC market, data centres are 
increasingly requiring higher levels of automation, 
reliability and precision in their cooling, power 
and fire protection systems. Rotork products 
including actuators, gearboxes, chainwheels 
and limit switch boxes are regularly selected 
for these projects. 
% of Group revenue
27%
CPI is a supplier of specialist 
actuators and instruments for 
niche critical applications in 
the broad chemical, process 
industry and industrial sectors. 
The division serves a wide 
range of end markets including 
specialty and other chemicals, 
metals and mining, critical 
HVAC, pharmaceutical, steel 
and cement. The automation, 
electrification, digitalisation and 
decarbonisation megatrends 
are important growth drivers. 
Rotork has historically been 
under-represented in several 
of these markets and has the 
opportunity to win market 
share in the years ahead.
Division: Chemical, Process & Industrial
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Segment: Target 
Sector: Mining 
Region: Americas
Copper is widely seen as the ‘energy 
transition’ metal due to its role in renewable 
energy infrastructure, energy storage systems 
and electric vehicles. Rotork’s IQ3 electric 
actuators were selected for critical flow 
control applications in an important water 
re-use project by a mining customer. When 
the project is completed the mine will no 
longer have to draw water from a local river. 
Segment: Core 
Sector: Marine 
Region: APAC
Rotork enjoys a significant installed base in 
the marine sector, a core segment for the 
CPI division. In H1 2024, Rotork Service was 
contacted by a customer wishing to complete 
a major actuator overhaul at short notice. 
The Rotork team successfully completed the 
refurbishment, which included a full repaint, 
and the reinstallation, enabling the vessel 
to depart from dock on schedule. 
Segment: Target 
Sector: Specialty chemicals 
Region: APAC
Demand for urea is forecast to grow rapidly 
(source: International Renewable Energy 
Agency) driven by applications including 
agriculture (fertiliser) and transportation 
(marine fuel). In 2024 Rotork supplied several 
hundred flow control actuators to a major 
greenfield urea plant being built in Western 
Australia. The plant has been designed to 
minimise emissions and with the capacity 
to achieve net-zero carbon by 2050. 
Chemical, Process & Industrial: case studies
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Divisional sales were ahead 9.5% year-on-year 
and 13.1% ahead year-on-year (OCC), with 
water sector sales growing slightly faster than 
those of the power sector. Asia Pacific sales 
were ahead low double digits year-on-year 
(OCC), with India’s ‘Water for All’ initiative 
continuing to drive very strong revenue growth 
in water in that country, and with the power 
sector strong across the Asia Pacific region. 
Americas sales grew robustly year-on-year with 
all subregions strong and the region was Water 
& Power’s fastest growing geography in the 
period. EMEA sales grew low double digits 
(OCC) despite lower power sector activity.
The division’s adjusted operating profit was 
£56.4m, 21.3% higher year-on-year. Deliveries 
benefitted from an improved supply chain 
performance, particularly in the first half, 
resulting in adjusted operating margin increasing 
290 basis points to 29.1%.
In the water sector, Rotork is focused on helping 
to ensure access to water and sanitation to all. 
Growth of the water sector is driven by the 
tailwinds of network automation, ageing 
infrastructure, urbanisation and climate change 
as well as water scarcity, quality and affordability 
challenges. Growth of the global power market 
is driven by electrification, economic growth, 
artificial intelligence and, in the US, the 
repatriation of manufacturing. The division made 
good progress in its Target Segments of water 
Key takeaways
•	 Sales grew double digits OCC with water 
sector growing slightly faster than power.
•	 All regions delivered double digits growth OCC.
•	 Target Segments of desalination and water 
infrastructure grew strongly.
•	 Adjusted operating margin +290bps.
£m
2024
2023
Change
OCC change
Revenue
193.9
177.0
+9.5%
+13.1%
Adjusted operating profit
56.4
46.4
+21.3%
+25.8%
Adjusted operating margin
29.1%
26.2%
+290bps
+300bps
infrastructure (including irrigation), water 
and wastewater treatment, desalination 
and alternative energy during the year. 
Rotork supplies electric and fluid power 
actuators to many wastewater treatment plants 
around the world, enabling these to provide 
better quality water more efficiently. Water 
& Power received additional orders in 2024 
for electric actuators to be used in a highly 
energy‑efficient water reclamation plant in 
Singapore. In alternative energy, offshore wind 
farms generate renewable A/C electricity, which is 
typically converted to high-voltage D/C electricity 
(HVDC) to minimise transmission losses. This 
conversion occurs on offshore platforms, which 
can be as large as multiple football fields and 
require critical-duty cooling systems. In 2024, 
Rotork secured orders from customers for 
various electric actuators, including those from 
the IQ3, IQTF, BBU, and Schischek families, to 
be used on platforms in the North Sea. Rotork 
is supplying electric actuators to a number of 
desalination projects around the world which 
will provide potable water, and won new orders 
from customers in the Middle East in the year. 
Actuators play a critical role in desalination 
plants, managing the flows of seawater and 
potable water throughout the production process. 
Precision control is crucial for maintaining pressures 
and optimising the plant’s energy efficiency.
Water & Power is a supplier 
of premium actuators, 
predominantly electric, and 
gearboxes for applications 
in the water, wastewater 
and treatment and power 
generation sectors. Rotork has 
significant growth opportunities 
including through helping to 
solve customers’ water quality 
and water scarcity challenges, 
as well as the automation, 
electrification and digitalisation 
trends. Water and wastewater 
contributed 68% of divisional 
sales in the year.
Division: Water & Power
% of Group revenue
26%
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Water & Power: case studies
Segment: Target 
Sector: Alternative energy (power) 
Region: Asia Pacific
Geothermal power, where electricity is 
generated from geothermal energy, is a 
renewable energy source with the potential to 
surpass the global electricity generation of the 
wind sector (according to the IEA). The most 
significant opportunities for geothermal power 
are in China, the United States and India. 
Recently, Rotork’s electric actuators and 
gearboxes were selected for a plant upgrade 
at a major geothermal facility in New Zealand.
Segment: Target 
Sector: HVDC (power) 
Region: EMEA
Offshore wind farms generate renewable 
A/C electricity, which is typically converted 
to high-voltage D/C electricity (HVDC) to 
minimise transmission losses. This conversion 
occurs on offshore platforms, which can be 
as large as multiple football fields and require 
critical-duty cooling systems. In 2024, Rotork 
secured orders from customers for various 
electric actuators, including those from the 
IQ3, IQTF, BBU, and Schischek families.
Segment: Target 
Sector: Wastewater treatment 
Region: Asia Pacific
Water reclamation (or re-use) is increasingly 
vital for enhancing water security and 
addressing water scarcity. The recycled water 
produced is used for irrigation, industrial 
processes, and even drinking water. This 
market holds significant potential for Rotork. 
In 2024, Rotork received additional orders for 
IQ3 electric actuators to be used in the highly 
energy-efficient Tuas Water Reclamation 
Plant in Singapore.
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Revenue
£754m
Adjusted operating profit
£178m
Adjusted operating profit margin
23.6%
Profit before tax
£140m
The Group delivered a strong financial result 
for the year as order intake, revenue, adjusted 
operating profit and adjusted operating margin 
all improved. Order intake for the year was 
£744.3m (2023: £723.7m), up 2.8% from the 
prior year or 6.1% on an organic constant 
currency (OCC) basis, with all divisions delivering 
OCC growth.
Group revenue increased 8.2% on an OCC basis 
to £754.4m (2023: £719.1m). On a reported basis, 
revenues increased 4.9%, impacted by a foreign 
exchange translation headwind of £24.1m. Double 
digit OCC revenue growth in W&P of 13.1% 
(9.5% reported) and O&G of 11.7% (8.3% reported) 
was partially offset by a reduction in CPI of 1.1% 
(-4.1% reported) which was largely due to reduced 
mining project activity compared to the previous year.
Rotork Service, our global service network and 
a key differentiator in our industry, performed 
strongly in the year growing ahead of Group 
revenues. Rotork Service is managed as a 
separate unit by each of Rotork’s divisions and 
contributed 23% (2023: 21%) of Group revenue.
Adjusted operating profit increased £13.9m, 
or 8.5%, to £178.4m, with adjusted operating 
margin increasing 70bps to 23.6% (2023: 22.9%). 
On an OCC basis, adjusted operating profit 
increased 100bps. However adverse foreign 
exchange movements of £7.1m equated to 
a 30bps headwind. 
“A strong financial result for the year with improvements 
in order intake, revenue and adjusted operating profit."
Ben Peacock
Chief Financial Officer
Growth+ delivering strong sales growth and margin progress
Ben Peacock
Chief Financial Officer
Financial highlights
£m
2023
Exchange
Acquisitions
OCC
2024
OCC change
Change
Revenue
719.1
(24.1)
2.2
57.2
754.4
+8.2%
+4.9%
Adjusted operating profit
164.5
(7.1)
0.9
20.1
178.4
+12.8%
+8.5%
Adjusted operating margin
22.9%
23.6%
+100bps
+70bps
The financial review includes a mixture of GAAP measures and those which have been derived from our reported results to provide a useful 
basis for measuring our operational performance. Details of these alternative performance measures are defined in full and reconciled 
to statutory measures in note 2 of the financial statements. Movements in revenue and adjusted operating profit are given on an organic 
constant currency basis (see definition, which has been updated in the period, in note 2 to the financial statements) so the assessment 
of performance is not distorted by acquisitions, disposals and movements in exchange rates.
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Results summary
2024
2023
Change
Adjusted profit before tax
£183.0m
£166.3m
+10.0%
Adjusted basic EPS
15.9p
14.6p
+8.7%
Reported operating profit
£135.9m
£148.8m
-8.7%
Reported operating margin
18.0%
20.7%
-270bps
Reported profit before tax
£140.5m
£150.6m
-6.8%
Reported basic EPS
12.1p
13.2p
-8.1%
Cash conversion
119%
120%
—
Dividend per share
7.75p
7.20p
+7.6%
Reported operating profit for the year of 
£135.9m was £12.9m unfavourable to the prior 
year, with the increase in adjusted operating 
profit offset by the recognition of one-time 
non-cash IAS 19 settlement of £18.0m related 
to the UK defined benefit pension scheme 
(see note 26). 
Net finance income was £4.6m (2023: income of 
£1.9m) with the increase driven by transactional 
foreign exchange gains on the Group’s hedging 
of foreign exchange risk.
Adjusted profit before tax was £183.0m 
(2023: £166.3m), driven by the increase in 
adjusted operating profit. The reported profit 
before tax was £140.5m (2023: £150.6m). 
The reconciling items between adjusted profit 
before tax and reported profit before tax are 
shown in the table.
Adjusted basic earnings per share was 15.9p 
(2023: 14.6p), an increase of 8.7%. Reported 
basic earnings per share was 12.1p (2023: 13.2p), 
a decrease of 8.1%.
Adjusted items
Adjusted profit measures are presented alongside 
statutory results as we believe they provide a 
useful comparison of underlying business trends 
and performance from one period to the next. 
The Group believes alternative performance 
measures, which are not considered to be a 
substitute for, or superior to, International 
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) measures, 
provide stakeholders with additional helpful 
information on the performance of the business.
The alternative profit measures are adjusted to 
exclude amortisation of acquired intangibles, 
costs related to business transformation from 
implementing a new ERP system and integrating 
business processes, as well as other significant 
adjustments. These adjustments are made to 
provide stakeholders with additional information 
to assess the Group’s trading performance on 
a consistent basis. Further details on adjusted 
items are provided in note 5.
Currency
The major currencies affecting the income 
statement are the US dollar and the euro, both 
of which weakened against sterling in 2024. The 
US dollar/sterling average rate of $1.28 (2023: $1.24) 
and the euro/sterling average rate of €1.18 
(2023: €1.15) both provided a headwind. The 
impact of these movements alongside the basket of 
other currencies was a £24.1m or 3.4% headwind 
to revenue and a £7.1m or 4.3% headwind to 
adjusted operating profit.
The impact of currency on the Group is both 
translational and transactional. Given the locations 
in which we operate and the international nature 
of our supply chain and sales currencies, the 
impact of transaction settlement differences 
can be very different from the translation impact. 
We can partially mitigate the transaction impact 
through matching supply currency with sales 
currency, but ultimately, we are net sellers of 
both US dollars and euros. It is the net sale of 
these currencies which we principally address 
through our hedging policy, covering up to 75% 
of net trading transactions in the next 12 months 
and up to 50% between 12 and 24 months.
To estimate the impact of currency at the current 
exchange rates we consider the effect of a one 
cent movement versus sterling. A one euro cent 
movement now results in approximately a 
£250,000 (2023: £150,000) adjustment to profit 
and for US dollar, and dollar-related currencies, 
a one cent movement equates to approximately 
a £650,000 (2023: £500,000) adjustment.
Return on capital employed (ROCE)
Our capital-efficient business model and strong 
profit margins mean Rotork generates a high 
ROCE. Our definition of ROCE is based on adjusted 
operating profit as a return on the average net 
assets excluding net cash and the pension scheme 
asset/liability, net of the related deferred tax. 
The average capital employed decreased 1.5% 
over the year to £478.4m (2023: £485.5m). 
As we grew revenue and expanded our adjusted 
operating profit margins in the year, ROCE 
increased 340bps to 37.3% (2023: 33.9%).
Adjusted earnings reconciliation
£m
Statutory 
results
Amortisation
Defined 
benefit scheme 
settlement loss
Business 
transformation
costs
Other
costs
Adjusted 
results
Operating profit
135.9
2.6
18.0
17.2
4.7
178.4
Profit before tax
140.5
2.6
18.0
17.2
4.7
183.0
Tax
(35.7)
(0.5)
(4.5)
(4.4)
(1.1)
(46.2)
Profit after tax
104.8
2.1
13.5
12.8
3.6 
136.8
The table above shows the adjustments between the statutory results for the significant non-cash and other adjusting items 
and the adjusted results. Note 2 sets out the alternative performance measures used by the Group and how these reconcile 
to the statutory results. Further details of the adjusted items are provided in note 5.
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Taxation
The Group’s effective tax rate increased from 
24.7% to 25.4%. Removing the impact of the 
adjusted items provides a better indication of the 
underlying rate and, on this basis, the adjusted 
effective tax rate is 25.2% (2023: 24.5%). The 
Group expects its adjusted effective tax rate to 
remain higher than the standard UK rate due to 
higher rates of tax in China, the US, Germany 
and India.
The Group’s approach to tax continues to be 
to operate on the basis of full disclosure and 
co-operation with all tax authorities and, where 
possible, to mitigate the burden of tax within 
the local legislation.
Cash generation
Cash generated from operations increased 
7.5% to £212.7m (2023: £197.8m) primarily 
driven by the increase in adjusted operating 
profit and a consistent cash conversion ratio 
of 119% (2023: 120%). 
Net cash generated from operating activities 
increased 19.1% to £148.8m (2023: £124.9m), 
benefitting from the above and the non-repeat 
of the £20m special contribution to the Rotork 
Pension and Life Assurance Scheme in 2023. 
However net cash generated from operating 
activities was adversely impacted by an increase 
in income taxes paid to £38.8m (2023: £32.8m)
and an increase in the cash flow impact of 
adjusting items to £21.2m (2023: £13.5m).
Capital expenditure in the year was £14.0m 
(2023: £7.3m), excluding £1.6m in capitalised 
software (2023: £2.1m) and £4.3m in capitalised 
1	
Days’ sales outstanding is calculated on a count-back 
method. The sales value including local sales taxes 
is deducted from the year-end trade receivables to 
calculate the number of days sales outstanding.
product development costs (2023: £2.4m). 
Capital expenditure largely related to the 
completion of our new facility in China which 
formally opened in November 2024. Our total 
Research and Development (R&D) cash spend 
was £13.4m which represented 1.8% of revenue 
(2023: £13.9m and 1.9% respectively). 
Net cash generated in the year was £6.4m 
(2023: £36.6m). In addition to the movements 
noted above, this was impacted by an increase 
in share purchases to £10.3m (2023: £2.4m) to 
support future vesting of employee share plans, 
dividends paid to ordinary shareholders of 
£63.3m (2023: £58.8m) and the completion 
of our £50m share buyback programme 
announced in 2024. 
Balance sheet
The Group finished the year with a net cash 
position of £125.3m (2023: £134.4m). This 
included lease liabilities of £24.6m (2023: £12.0m), 
the increase in the year attributed to the long-term 
lease for our new facility in Changshu, China.
Net working capital in the balance sheet decreased 
220bps to 25.1% of revenue (2023: 27.3%), 
providing a working capital cash inflow of £7.2m 
(2023: £11.9m outflow) in the year. Inventory 
decreased slightly by £0.6m and trade receivables 
days’ sales outstanding1, was largely maintained 
at 56 days (2023: 55 days).
During the year the Group extended liquidity 
by entering into a £75m Revolving Credit Facility 
(RCF) which matures in December 2027. As at 
31 December 2024, £nil was drawn under 
the RCF.
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Risk update
Geopolitical instability remains at an elevated 
level with potential knock-on impacts to other 
risks such as supply chain disruption. As a global 
business we continue to monitor the trade 
position between all locations where we are 
based or have customers or suppliers and have 
considered the potential impact of additional 
trade barriers between these countries. Where 
necessary, we will take steps to mitigate any 
such changes but continue to believe they will 
not materially impact the Group’s results. 
We have included scenarios in the viability 
assessment which model the impact of these 
current uncertainties. The viability statement 
can be found on page 78.
Supply chain disruption risk reduced through 
2024 as component shortages and constraints 
reduced in comparison to prior years. Despite 
this reduction, supply chain disruption continues 
to be a key risk for Rotork and management 
actions continue to mitigate potentially more 
severe outcomes. The risk ‘decline in market 
confidence’ was consolidated with the existing 
‘competition’ risk, as both risks deal with 
competitive forces. As a result, the competition 
risk has increased. Business change risk has 
reduced due to the increase in mitigating actions 
to deliver our various Growth+ programmes.
Emerging risks and opportunities continue to 
be monitored and reviewed, which are those 
risks and opportunities that may be ambiguous, 
uncertain, and difficult to assess. Risks and 
opportunities under review include those in relation 
to geopolitical events, technological, social, 
environmental, climate and sustainability risks.
Credit management
The Group’s credit risk is primarily attributable 
to trade receivables, with the risk spread over a 
large number of countries and customers, and no 
significant concentration of risk. Creditworthiness 
checks are undertaken before entering into 
contracts or commencing trade with new 
customers, and in companies where insurance 
cover operates, the authorisation process works 
in conjunction with the insurer, taking advantage 
of their market intelligence. We maintained 
coverage of the credit insurance policy during 
the year and have cover in place for virtually all 
of our companies at an aggregate of 80% of 
receivables. Where appropriate, we use trade 
finance instruments such as letters of credit 
to mitigate any identified risk.
Treasury
The Group operates a centralised treasury 
function managed by a Treasury Committee, 
chaired by me and also comprising the Group 
Financial Controller and Group Treasurer. The 
Committee meets regularly to consider foreign 
currency exposure, control over deposits, 
funding requirements and cash management. 
The Group Treasurer monitors compliance with 
the treasury policies and is responsible for 
overseeing all the Group’s banking relationships. 
A Subsidiary Treasury Policy restricts the actions 
subsidiaries can take, and the Group Treasury 
Policy and Terms of Reference define the 
responsibilities of the Group Treasurer and 
Treasury Committee.
Where appropriate, the Group uses financial 
instruments to hedge significant currency 
transactions, principally forward exchange 
contracts and swaps. These financial instruments 
are used to reduce volatility which might affect 
the Group’s cash or income statement. In 
assessing the level of cash flows to hedge with 
forward exchange contracts, the maximum cover 
taken is 75% of net forecast flows. The Board 
receives treasury reports which summarise the 
Group’s foreign currency hedging position, 
distribution of cash balances and any significant 
changes to banking relationships.
Retirement benefits
The Group accounts for post-retirement benefits 
in accordance with IAS 19, Employee Benefits. 
The balance sheet reflects the net liabilities of 
these schemes at 31 December 2024 based on 
the market value of the assets at that date, and 
the valuation of liabilities using year-end AA 
corporate bond yields. We closed both the 
main defined benefit pension schemes to new 
entrants – the UK scheme in 2003 and the US 
scheme in 2009 – to reduce the risk of volatility 
of the Group’s liabilities. In 2018 we further 
reduced the risk of volatility when we completed 
the closure to future accrual of both the UK 
and US schemes. Members of the defined 
benefit schemes were transferred onto the 
relevant defined contribution plan operating 
in their country. 
In 2023, the Group made a special contribution 
of £20m to the Rotork Pension and Life Assurance 
Scheme (UK Scheme). This contribution, together 
with some of the existing assets, was used to 
purchase a bulk annuity covering the UK scheme’s 
existing pensioner liabilities. This was accounted 
for as a buy-in. During the year the UK Scheme 
completed a further bulk annuity with the full 
premium amounting to £70m, largely to cover 
deferred pensioners. This second bulk annuity has 
been accounted for as a settlement under IAS 19. 
Further details on the risk transfer and associated 
settlement loss are provided in note 26.
The IAS 19 funding position of the UK and US 
schemes reduced from a net surplus of £9.1m 
in 2023 to a net deficit of £3.6m in 2024. The 
schemes’ assets reduced in value by £28.9m 
(2023: increase of £19.0m) and the schemes’ 
liabilities decreased by £16.1m (2023: increase 
of £1.8m). The Group paid total contributions 
of £4.1m over the year (2023: £26.5m).
Dividends
The Board is proposing a final dividend of 5.00p 
per share. When taken together with the 2.75p 
interim dividend paid in September 2024, the full 
year dividend of 7.75p (2023: 7.20p per share) 
represents a 7.6% increase in dividends over the 
prior year.
Ben Peacock
Chief Financial Officer
10 March 2025
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Sustainability 
review
In this section
35	 Sustainability framework
36	 Our progress and forward-looking statement
37	 Materiality overview
38	 Operating responsibly
52	 Enabling a sustainable future
57	 Making a positive social impact
64	 ESG and sustainability governance, integration 
and measurement
66	 Sustainability Accounting Standards Board 
(SASB) Index
Our business and products can 
enable the transition to net-zero 
while positively impacting our 
people and local communities.
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Financial statements

Sustainability framework
A leader in sustainability
MSCI:  
AAA (leader)
S&P Global CSA:  
94th percentile in 
Machinery and Electrical 
Equipment industry
CDP Climate: B 
CDP Water Security: B-
Sustainalytics ESG 
Medium risk
FTSE4Good:  
Constituent of the 
FTSE4Good index
Operating  
responsibly 
Our mission: to run safe, efficient 
and sustainable operations.
 Read more P.38
Our commitments
SDG targets:
12.2, 12.5, 
12.6
We will maintain strong 
safety performance through 
our total recordable incident 
rate (TRIR) as we strive for a zero 
harm workplace.
We will embed social, 
ethical and environmental 
considerations into our Global 
Supplier Excellence Programme.
Progress 
in 2024
TRIR improved to 0.22.
SDG targets:
13.1, 13.3
We will reduce our 
carbon emissions. 
•	 Reduce emissions per £1m 
revenue year-on-year.
•	 To reduce scope 1 and 2 
emissions by 42% by 2030.
•	 To reduce scope 3 (use of sold 
products) emissions by 25% 
by 2030.
•	 Net-zero for scope 1 and 2 by 
2035 and for scope 3 by 2045.
Progress 
in 2024
37% reduction in operational 
emissions vs 2020.
Our business and products 
can enable the transition 
to net-zero while positively 
impacting our people and 
local communities.
Enabling a 
sustainable future
Our mission: to help drive the 
transition to a cleaner future, 
where environmental resources 
are used responsibly.
 Read more P.52
Our commitments
SDG target:
6.4
We will enable sustainable 
management of water resources 
and greater water efficiency for 
our customers. 
SDG target:
7.3
We will support customers’ 
energy and emissions reduction 
and enable them to incorporate 
renewable energy into 
their operations.
SDG targets:
9.1, 9.4
We will play our part to enable 
the global energy transition 
and support a cleaner, more 
sustainable future.
Progress 
in 2024
30% of revenue from our 
eco-transition portfolio.
Making a positive 
social impact 
Our mission: to support thriving, 
fair and resilient communities.
 Read more P.57
Our commitments
SDG target:
5.5
We will develop and deliver 
initiatives to drive greater 
gender and ethnic diversity.
SDG targets:
8.5, 8.7
We will contribute to a 
fairer society more broadly, 
including ensuring 100% 
of employees are covered 
by our Fair Pay Framework.
Progress 
in 2024
Colleague engagement score 
maintained a strong score of 7.1.
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Our progress and forward-looking statement
Our purpose enables 
us to support the net-zero 
transition while creating 
a positive impact on our 
people and communities.
Our progress
2024 was another successful year for the 
programme. We maintained our strong ESG 
ratings in key benchmarks including MSCI 
(AAA rated), S&P Global’s Corporate Sustainability 
Assessment (94th percentile for the Machinery 
and Electrical Equipment industry), and CDP 
Climate (B rated). The proportion of total sales 
from our eco-transition portfolio increased to 
30% in 2024 (29.5% in 2023) and several case 
studies of sustainable product applications are 
available on pages 52 to 56.
Our preparations for the reporting requirements 
of the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting 
Directive progressed this year. We launched a 
double materiality assessment process in order 
to identify our material impacts, risks and 
opportunities. We also commissioned an assurance 
readiness assessment for our greenhouse gas 
reporting, specifically scopes 1, 2 and our three 
largest scope 3 categories. As a result, our 
assurance of scope 1 and 2 emissions in 2024 
now uses the ISAE 3000 standard. 
We continued our strong operational performance 
in 2024. Our Health and Safety team delivered 
further audit, training and engagement 
programmes, successfully reducing our total 
recordable incident rate (TRIR) to 0.22. We nearly 
achieved our 2030 climate target for scope 1 
and 2 emissions, with 2024 operational emissions 
37% below our 2020 baseline (target: 42%). 
These reductions were achieved through the 
use of rooftop solar power at our new facility 
in China, the transition to an electric heating 
system at our Manchester facility, and an overall 
increase in the use of renewable power across 
our sites. We also undertook resource efficiency 
audits at 10 facilities during the year, providing 
us with a project pipeline of energy, water, and 
waste reduction opportunities for future years. 
One of our key projects in 2025 will be the 
installation of 0.4 MW of solar capacity at 
our Lucca facility.
We continue to focus on managing the lifecycle 
impact of our products. Following the rollout 
of lifecycle assessment (LCA) software in 2023, 
we undertook four LCAs in 2024. In addition, 
our Procurement function established a cost 
engineering team, which focuses on delivering 
component-level efficiencies through design. 
Our teams successfully incorporated recycled 
materials into the design of our IQ3’s Integrated 
Ethernet solution, and we continue to engage 
with suppliers on the measurement of their 
emissions and setting science-based 
climate targets. 
In 2024, as our 12-month leadership programme 
for senior leadership completed, we launched 
the business manager programme for commercial 
and operational leaders. We maintained a strong 
colleague engagement score in 2024, and following 
engagement with over 800 colleagues in 
27 countries, we developed our new corporate 
values: We Value Our Customers, We Grow 
Together, and We Win as a Team. Supporting 
our people and communities will remain a key 
priority in 2025.
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Priorities for the year ahead
•	 Preparing to comply with new 
sustainability reporting regulations 
including the EU’s Corporate Sustainability 
Reporting Directive.
•	 Modelling our next scope 1 and 2 
emissions reduction target.
•	 Implementing the machinery safety 
audit programme.
•	 Conducting further environmental lifecycle 
assessments of products.
•	 Further engagement with suppliers on 
emissions measurement.
•	 Launching our updated Supplier Code 
of Conduct.
•	 Selecting a third global charity partner.

Materiality overview
Operating responsibly
1  Circular economy, including 
Products in Use
2  Climate change
3  Culture, ethics and governance
4  Cyber and information security
5  Geopolitical risk
6  Safety, health and wellbeing
7  Supply chain, including 
suppliers’ GHG emissions
Enabling a sustainable future
8  Customer and 
end user relationships
9  Energy security
10  Energy transition (net‑zero future)
11  Environmental benefits of products
12  Infrastructure, investment 
and modernisation
13  Innovation and new 
product development
14  New end markets and applications
Making a positive social impact
15  Brand and reputation
16  Diversity and inclusion
17  Safety benefits of products 
18  Cost of living, social contribution
19  Stakeholder engagement
20  Talent attraction and retention
21  Training and development
Materiality matrix
Moderate 
High
Internal
Moderate 
High
External
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
17
20
21
16
18
19
Materiality overview
Rotork uses materiality assessments to monitor 
changes in our stakeholders’ views on the 
relative importance of major sustainability issues. 
Effective management of material issues plays 
an important role in our management of risk and 
in identifying opportunities to support growth 
and efficiency. Our previous materiality exercise 
occurred in 2023, with results shown in 
the graphic.
CSRD and the transition to a double 
materiality approach
In 2024, Rotork commissioned its first double 
materiality assessment (DMA). This double 
materiality approach is a requirement of the 
EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive 
(CSRD), which requires consideration of both 
sustainability issues that are financially material 
to an organisation and issues where an 
organisation has a material impact on the 
environment or society. Due to complete in 
early 2025, the DMA has involved internal and 
external stakeholder engagement including 
senior leadership, customers, suppliers and 
investors. This process will determine our 
material impacts, risks and opportunities, 
establishing which sustainability disclosures 
are required to comply with CSRD.
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Operating 
responsibly
Our mission
We aim to run safe, efficient 
and sustainable operations.
Our commitments
•	 We will aim to reduce our lost time  
injury rate each year and strive for  
a zero-harm workplace.
•	 We will embed social, ethical and 
environmental considerations into our  
Global Supplier Excellence Programme.
•	 We will reduce carbon emissions generated 
per £1m of revenue and work to implement 
our net-zero roadmap.
In this section
•	 Safety, health and wellbeing
•	 Climate change and environment
•	 Circular economy and product responsibility
•	 Supply chain management
•	 Culture, ethics and governance
SDGs we will progress
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Safety, health and wellbeing
Our vision for health and safety 
is zero harm. This applies to 
our broader agenda of health 
and safety, environment and 
product safety.
A safe environment for all
Rotork continues to focus on actions to maintain 
and enhance the effectiveness of the safety 
processes and procedures for every Rotork 
working environment. Our objectives are to:
•	 Reduce the lost time and recordable incident 
rates (LTIR and TRIR).
•	 Reduce our work-related ill health incidents 
(included in TRIR calculation, but excludes 
work-related stress cases).
•	 Have zero avoidable severe road incidents.
Health and safety performance
We monitor and report on key workplace safety 
metrics in line with industry practice. Our 
performance is measured using several KPIs 
including total recordable incident rate (TRIR), 
which follows the Occupational Safety and 
Health Administration (OSHA) structure for 
incident reporting and is a requirement of the 
SASB framework. Using the OSHA structure 
ensures there is consistency and integrity in 
incident reporting.
We use TRIR to benchmark our performance 
against other listed industrial peers. Compared 
with peers' 2023 reporting, Rotork's 2024 
performance was a leader amongst this group. 
Operating responsibly continued
Given our improved performance in 2024, we 
hope to celebrate continued success against this 
metric in 2025.
Our TRIR performance in 2024 was 0.22 which is a 
15% reduction from 2023’s performance of 0.26.
We also monitor: 
•	 Lost time injury rate (LTIR) which measures 
any injury that results in a day or more away 
from work.
•	 Number of first aid injuries in the workplace. 
•	 Near miss frequency rate (NMFR), a 
requirement of the SASB framework for 
safety reporting.
We maintained the LTIR performance achieved 
in 2023 with 2024’s LTIR remaining at 0.08. 
Our NMFR reduced from 3.97 in 2023 to 3.78 
in 2024, a 5% reduction on the previous year. 
Our first aid injuries reduced by 32% from 88 
in 2023 to 60 in 2024. We are pleased to report 
that there were no workplace fatalities in 2024.
A leading approach to 
preventing incidents 
We complete regular trend analysis on both 
leading and lagging indicators to identify key 
focus areas. Once identified, we use safety 
campaigns to increase awareness and improve 
control measures for the potential issue. The 
campaigns include safety communications, 
corrective actions including engineering control, 
and tools to help reduce the risk to injury in 
the workplace. In 2024, when trend analysis 
highlighted an improvement opportunity in 
standardising personal protective equipment (PPE), 
we completed a standardised PPE campaign. 
Our health and safety risk identification and 
assessment approach is collaborative. Aligned 
with our Global Safety Standards, our assessment 
process informs prevention and mitigation 
strategies to reduce risks in our operational 
environments. We also encourage employee 
engagement in hazard identification through 
our Safety Spot system. It proactively drives 
awareness and continuous improvement by 
capturing hazards, minor near miss events and 
behavioural requirements before they result in 
an incident. 
Another preventative tool is completing safety 
Gemba walks at our facilities. Gemba is a ‘lean’ 
term for ‘the place where the value is created’. 
From a safety perspective, this means going to 
where the work takes place – on the factory 
floor – and testing how our safety requirements 
are applied in practice. In 2024, we completed 
2,597 Gemba safety walks across all Rotork 
facilities, a 47% increase from 2023.
Global annual audit programme
Having established our HSE audit programme 
in 2023, we more than doubled the number of 
audits completed globally, which included large 
factories, sales and service centres in 2024. The 
majority of the minor recommendations which 
were highlighted in the external audit of the 
programme have been implemented during 
2024, with the remaining improvements planned 
for 2025. 15 audits were completed in 2024 
using the new audit programme, with another 
15 planned in 2025.
Employee wellbeing 
Our focus on the wellbeing and mental health 
of our employees continued in 2024. Our 2024 
activities are discussed further on page 59.
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Operating responsibly continued
Safety, health and 
wellbeing continued
2024 performance highlights 
Total recordable incident rate (TRIR)
0.22
Decrease in TRIR from 2023 to 2024
15%
Lost time injury rate
0.08
24
0.22
24
0.08
23
0.26
23
0.08
22
0.53
22
0.13
21
0.56
21
0.20
20
0.24
19
0.25
Total recordable incident rate  
(TRIR)
Lost time injury rate 
(LTIR)
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Priorities for 2025
•	 Enhance machinery safety standards through the release of a comprehensive machinery safety 
audit programme.
•	 Development of a standardised HSE induction process for employees, contractors and visitors.
•	 Identify digitisation opportunities for HSE management processes.

Operating responsibly continued
Climate change and environment
We remain committed to 
playing our part in tackling 
climate change, and we are 
making progress against our 
science-based climate targets.
Our approach to the environment 
Environmental considerations are an integral 
part of our strategy and the way we operate. 
Efficient use of natural resources is a commercial 
imperative, as well as an environmental one. 
We set high standards of environmental conduct 
for our business and supply chain. We are 
committed to reducing our emissions, energy 
and water usage, and waste to landfill. 
We have set science-based targets to underpin 
our ambition, covering scopes 1, 2 and 3. We are 
targeting net-zero by 2035 for scopes 1 and 2 
and net-zero by 2045 across scopes 1, 2 and 3. 
Energy and emissions performance 
Overview
Scope 1 and 2 (market-based) emissions were 
reduced by 7% year-on-year and are now 37% 
below our 2020 baseline. Reductions reflected 
energy efficiency projects, renewable electricity 
contracts and the installation of an electric 
heating system at our Manchester (UK) facility, 
partly offset by increased scope 1 emissions in 
China following the opening of the new facility.
We developed an environmental reporting tool 
in 2024 to improve the efficiency of our monthly 
data collection process. Our 2024 scope 1 and 2 
GHG emissions and water withdrawal were 
independently assured by DNV Business 
Assurance Services UK Ltd (DNV). 
Performance against targets
We have a science-based target to reduce 
our scope 1 and 2 market-based emissions by 
42% by 2030 against a 2020 baseline, with 
2024 emissions 37% below baseline. We also 
measure our progress in this area by tracking 
our location-based carbon intensity per £1m 
revenue. In 2024, our financial intensity figure 
reduced by 4% year-on-year.
Our scope 1 and 2 emissions reductions were 
achieved through energy efficiency initiatives, 
increased use of on-site solar and the delivery 
of an electric heating project. Our renewable 
electricity consumption increased to 56% in 
2024 (44% in 2023). 
Emissions from the use of sold products were 
relatively flat, with some variance resulting from 
differing ratios of specific products sold in 2024 
vs 2023.
Science-based targets
2030
target
2024
2023
Scope 1 and 2 
reduction vs 2020
42%
37%
32%
Scope 3 (use of sold 
products) reduction 
vs 2020
25%
12%
14%
 
2027
target
2024
Scope 3 (purchased 
goods and services) 
proportion of suppliers 
with science‑based targets
25%
Engagement
ongoing 
See p. 47
Our greenhouse gas emissions and associated energy use 
Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas (GHG) (market-based) emissions were 7% lower year-on-year. The Group 
has no other material GHG emissions sources to report (such as methane, nitrous oxide, sulphur 
hexafluoride, HFCs or PFCs). 
In 2024, two scope 3 emissions categories decreased due to methodological changes. Our upstream 
transportation and distribution emissions reduced in 2024 as the emissions data was primarily 
sourced from our suppliers. This confirmed that our internal estimates in previous years were 
conservative. In addition, our spend-based calculation of purchased goods and services emissions 
yielded lower emissions due to changes to emissions factors and improved spend categorisation. 
Energy use
 
Unit of measure
2024
2023
2022
Electricity 
kWh
12,319,148
11,624,714
12,255,270
Gas 
m3
956,914
866,307
962,983
Other fuels and steam1
GJ
20,895
21,726
5,840
Total energy consumption
GJ
101,588
96,477
88,241
– UK energy consumption
GJ
22,273
24,607
27,870
GHG emissions
Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions 
 
Unit of measure
2024
2023
2022
Scope 1
Metric tonnes CO2e
3,533
3,197
3,132
Scope 2 location-based
Metric tonnes CO2e
3,605
3,953
4,122
Scope 2 market-based
Metric tonnes CO2e
2,344
3,113
3,920
Total scope 1 and 2 (LB)
Metric tonnes CO2e
7,138
7,150
7,254
– UK emissions (LB)
Metric tonnes CO2e
1,247
1,380
1,589
Total scope 1 and 2 (MB)
Metric tonnes CO2e
5,877
6,310
7,052
– UK emissions (MB)
Metric tonnes CO2e
724
854
1,064
Emissions intensity (LB)
tCO2e per £1m revenue
9.5
9.9
11.3
1	
Diesel and petrol are included in this table from 2023, which represents the increase versus 2022.
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Operating responsibly continued
Climate change and environment continued
Energy and emissions performance continued 
Our greenhouse gas emissions and associated energy use continued 
GHG emissions continued
GHG accounting methodology 
For Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR), 
we report on the emission sources required under the 
Companies Act 2006 (Strategic Report and Directors’ 
Reports) Regulations 2013 and the Companies 
(Directors’ Report) and Limited Liability Partnerships 
(Energy and Carbon Report) Regulations 2018 (‘the 
2018 Regulations’). For scope 1–3 emissions, we have 
followed the principles of the World Resources 
Institute Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol, which 
comprises the coverage of carbon dioxide, methane, 
nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons 
and sulphur hexafluoride. The location-based 
method calculates emissions using the average 
emission intensity of local electricity grids serving 
Rotork’s facilities. The market-based method captures 
the impact of Rotork’s contractual arrangements 
to procure renewable or low-carbon energy 
and energy certificates. 
The UK Government GHG Conversion Factors 
for Company Reporting have been applied, where 
relevant, to calculate emissions across all scopes. 
We have used additional regional emissions factors 
for non-UK sites, such as those from the International 
Energy Agency (IEA), the Association of Issuing 
Bodies (AIB) European Residual Mixes, the US 
Environmental Protection Agency and Green-e, to 
calculate our scope 1 and 2 market-based footprint. 
We continue to review our reporting in light of any 
changes in business structure, calculation methodology 
and the accuracy or availability of data. 
Rotork’s scope 1 emissions come from the use of: 
natural gas, diesel (on-site and off-site), liquified 
petroleum gas, fuel oil, petrol and refrigerants. 
Rotork’s scope 2 emissions come from the purchase 
of electricity and steam. We track the consumption 
of energy in our facilities each month and, in line 
with best practice, report both our market-based 
and location-based GHG emissions on a carbon 
dioxide-equivalent basis.
2020 is the baseline against which we set our targets. 
Scope 1 and scope 2 (location and market-based) 
emissions in 2024 have been assured by DNV. 
Annual energy consumption (kWh) is obtained from 
both actual sources (invoices and meter readings) and 
estimated sources (some office energy rates included 
in monthly charge). Where conversion of units to 
kWh is required, the latest conversion factors from 
the UK Government are used. In line with the SECR 
requirement to disclose the proportion of carbon 
emissions and energy associated with the United 
Kingdom, we estimate that 17% of emissions and 
21% of energy usage relates to our UK operations. 
Scope 3 purchased goods and services and capital 
goods were estimated based on mapping spend 
data against the US EPA’s Supply Chain Greenhouse 
Gas Emission Factors v1.3. 
Fuel and energy-related scope 3 emissions were 
calculated by applying WTT and T&D emission 
factors to Rotork’s energy consumption data. Upon 
review, a nominal amount of emissions previously 
categorised as 'downstream leased assets' is now 
classified as 'out of scope'. This category has been 
removed and the 2023 total was adjusted accordingly.
Upstream transportation and distribution was 
calculated using emissions data provided by suppliers. 
A small proportion of freight activity – where supplier 
calculations were not available – was calculated by 
extrapolating the reported data based on spend.
Scope 3 waste generation in operations has been 
calculated by applying UK emission factors to waste 
data collected by our facilities management team.
Business travel emissions have been calculated 
using UK conversion factors, applied to distance 
and nights away data for hotels, air, rail and road 
transport. Employee commuting emissions were 
estimated using full-time equivalents (FTEs), the 
national commuting survey and UK emission factors. 
Use of sold products has been calculated by applying 
emissions factors to the average operational energy 
usage of products over their lifetime. These emissions 
factors are sourced from DEFRA, US EPA, NGAF, 
IEA and carbonfootprint.com. This figure does 
not include the well-to-tank or transportation and 
distribution emissions related to product energy use. 
End of life treatment has been calculated using UK 
emissions factors applied to the number of products 
sold by the business during the reporting period.
Emissions intensity (per £1m revenue) is calculated 
by dividing location-based scope 1 and 2 emissions 
by total revenue.
Scope 3 emissions 
Category
Unit of measure
2024
2023
2022
Purchased goods and services 
Metric tonnes CO2e
70,861
85,386
93,879
Capital goods
Metric tonnes CO2e
181
600
271
Fuel and energy-related activities 
Metric tonnes CO2e
1,684
1,687
1,958
Upstream transportation 
and distribution 
Metric tonnes CO2e
7,899
28,881
24,108
Waste generation in operations 
Metric tonnes CO2e
196
209
205
Business travel 
Metric tonnes CO2e
4,857
5,707
4,106
Employee commuting 
Metric tonnes CO2e
962
1,870
1,894
Use of sold products 
Metric tonnes CO2e
253,939
248,465
285,588
End of life treatment of products 
Metric tonnes CO2e
1,374
1,045
638
Total scope 3 GHG emissions
Metric tonnes CO2e
341,953
373,850
412,747
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Our commitments
Scope 1 and 2 tCO2e absolute reduction: we will continue to achieve significant progress 
against our emissions reduction target. In 2024, we launched a smart-metering trial which will 
assess the feasibility of a rollout across the largest assembly sites within the business. Capital 
projects, energy efficient practices and increased use of renewable energy will continue to reduce 
our energy consumption and emissions. Investigating opportunities in paint plant optimisation, 
heat recovery and electrification of heating will inform projects in future years.
Scope 3 tCO2e absolute reduction: we are committed to reducing the emissions resulting from 
our use of sold products and our purchased goods and services. As these are the emissions of our 
customers and suppliers, achieving reductions will involve both product design and engagement 
with these stakeholders.

Operating responsibly continued
Climate change and 
environment continued
2024 performance highlights
Headline targets 
37% 
decrease in total scope 1 and scope 2 (market‑based) emissions 
versus 2020 baseline
9.5 
tCO2e per £1m revenue (location-based)
The site's energy management is aided by the 
facility's building management system.
Our use of renewable electricity continued to 
increase in 2024, with 56% of power consumption 
from renewable sources. In addition to the 
solar panels at our Changshu site, our sites in 
Milwaukee and Houston (USA) transitioned to 
purchasing renewable power. In 2025, we expect 
to install solar panels at our Lucca (Italy) site. 
Lastly, at our Manchester (UK) site, the end-of-life 
gas heating system was replaced with an electric 
alternative, removing the site’s primary source 
of scope 1 emissions. 
Progress in 2024
During 2024, energy efficiency initiatives 
continued to deliver savings. In the UK, several 
sites completed equipment upgrades, controls 
improvements and LED lighting installation, 
achieving 95 MWh of savings across the year. 
Our site in Bergamo (Italy) undertook heating 
and lighting optimisation projects, and our sites 
in India optimised air conditioning systems and 
trialled the use of variable flow drives (VFD).
Our new factory in Changshu (China) has several 
energy and emissions-saving features. This LEED 
Gold rated facility has nearly 1.5 MW of rooftop 
solar capacity, energy-efficient painting facilities 
and VFD-controlled air compressors. 
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Reducing emissions at Manchester (UK)
Our site in Manchester has delivered a series 
of emissions-saving projects over the past 
three years. Solar panels were installed in 
2022. Several energy-saving initiatives were 
delivered over 2023-24, including LED lighting 
and equipment upgrades. In 2024, the 
existing boiler reached its end of life and was 
replaced with a fully electric heating system. 
The new system is expected to save up to 
90 tonnes of CO2e per year. 
Prioritising environmental 
performance at new facility (China)
Our new Changshu facility opened in 2024. 
This facility is rated LEED Gold and features 
over 2,500 rooftop solar panels, modern 
building fabric insulation, double-glazed 
windows and EV charging facilities. 

Operating responsibly continued
Climate change and 
environment continued
Water management and use
Water consumption across Rotork’s own sites 
is relatively small, predominantly comprised of 
domestic and sanitary requirements. Some of 
our usage is attributed to operational activities 
such as paint processes, cleaning of products 
and pressure testing of Rotork’s products before 
shipping to our customers. 
Our water withdrawal increased by 9% in 
2024 in comparison to 2023, largely the result 
of an underground leak which was successfully 
repaired during the period. Water management 
opportunities were assessed as part of 10 resource 
efficiency surveys which were undertaken in 
2024. In 2025, each of the 10 sites will establish 
site-specific water management plans.
We have made a significant performance 
improvement compared to pre-COVID years 
with 2024 usage down 7% against 2019. 
 
2024
2023
2022
Total water 
withdrawal
(in cubic metres)
36,130
33,269
34,045
Water stress and preservation
We completed our annual water stress risk 
assessment in Q1 2024, to identify locations 
which should be prioritised for water-use 
reduction projects. We also examined risks 
associated with water scarcity, flooding, water 
quality and ecosystem services and determined 
that only a limited number of sites are exposed 
to water risks. Mitigation plans are also in 
place to protect our people, operations and 
the environment. 
Our role in water preservation
Demand for water infrastructure is strong across 
both developing and developed markets. Leak 
detection and water quality are a major focus of 
the water industry and shortages are driving the 
development of smart grids. The water network 
infrastructure also requires modernisation in 
many countries. Increasing regulations relating to 
water quality, water reuse and sludge treatment 
are driving water-related capital expenditure 
across industry. Water scarcity is resulting in 
greater need for recycling and desalination, 
driving investment in these processes. Rising 
water levels are necessitating flood defence 
investment. There are applications for Rotork’s 
products in all these processes.
Waste management
We encourage all our sites to minimise the 
volume of waste they produce and promote 
a sustainable method of waste disposal 
where possible. 
In 2024, total waste generated increased by 
2% across our operations and our recycling rate 
increased to 73% (72% in 2023). Our Lucca 
(Italy) site team reduced hazardous waste by 
optimising the cycles of the paint plant washing 
tunnel, which reduced the amount of paint 
waste by c.30%. In the UK, Rotork selected 
a new waste collection and disposal supplier, 
which will prioritise diverting waste-from-landfill 
across our UK sites. Our waste performance 
in 2025 will benefit from the transition to this 
supplier and our continued segregation of 
on-site waste streams.
Unit of measure 
in metric tonnes
2024
2023
2022
Total waste
2,399
2,363
2,068
Waste recycled
1,744
1,712
1,428
Sent to landfill
337
396
401
Of which hazardous
23
46
56
Sent to energy recovery
318
256
239
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Circular economy and 
product responsibility
We are committed to enabling a sustainable 
future, meeting our science-based emissions 
reduction targets and contributing to a 
low‑carbon economy through our intelligent 
products and services.
Materials use
We generally operate an assembly-only philosophy 
across the Group, meaning that most of the 
manufacturing processes to produce our products 
are undertaken by our suppliers. The main 
components of our products – aluminium, steel 
and copper – are highly recycled and recyclable.
Components vary by product family, depending 
on how they are operated – electrically, 
pneumatically, or hydraulically. The weight of 
material inputs also varies by product across our 
portfolio. Our IQ3 actuator, one of our flagship 
products, provides an example of the typical 
materials we use in our electric actuator product 
range. These are: metals, glass, electrical and 
electronic equipment, batteries, plastics, oil/
grease and rubber.
We expect suppliers to apply the principles of 
our Supplier Code of Conduct. This Code covers 
our expectations of social, ethical and environmental 
conduct, published on our website and included 
in our standard terms. The Supplier Code of 
Conduct requirements include an expectation 
that suppliers calculate and publish emissions 
associated with their manufacturing activities.
Our suppliers are required to certify their 
adherence with product compliance regulations, 
and we seek compliance from suppliers globally.
Product safety
Rotork products play an important role 
in supporting customers’ safety objectives. 
All Rotork products are compliant with 
internationally recognised safety standards. 
Many of our products are externally certified 
to internationally recognised safety standards, 
approximately 50% are externally certified 
for use in hazardous locations. This includes 
products that are compliant with functional 
safety standards for applications such as safe 
plant operation and emergency shutdown.
Product stewardship
Environmental criteria are considered as an 
integral part of our product development 
process. We aim to reduce the impact of our 
products through the consideration of key 
sustainability performance features: (i) standby 
energy, (ii) in-use energy, (iii) recycled content 
in product and packaging, (iv) recyclability of 
product and packaging, (v) material reduction 
(incorporating paint and adhesive reduction), 
(vi) disassembly, and (vii) recovery. 
In 2024, Rotork expanded its ability to undertake 
product footprints. In 2023, we selected and 
began to roll out lifecycle assessment (LCA) 
software. In 2024, we undertook four initial 
LCAs, with further studies planned for 2025. 
This work will enable us to identify opportunities 
to reduce environmental impacts and to deliver 
on our sustainability commitments.
Operating responsibly continued
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Standby energy 
reduction
In-use energy
reduction
• Recycled content
• Recyclability
2030
2045
• Material reduction
• Disassembly
• Recovery
To achieve our 2030 target of reducing 
emissions from product use by 25%, 
we have introduced these energy 
requirements for all future products
To achieve net-zero for scope 3 
emissions by 2045, we are embedding 
these additional sustainable design 
principles for all future products
Enabling a Sustainable Future
Helping customers better their own environmental performance, 
whilst at the same time working to improve our own

Operating responsibly continued
Circular economy and product 
responsibility continued
Product stewardship continued
We are particularly focused on the environmental 
performance of products in their use phase, where 
we have the greatest opportunity to support 
a positive environmental impact. We calculate 
emissions associated with the use of sold products 
during the year, as part of the calculation of our 
scope 3 inventory on page 42. We have set a 
science-based target to reduce those emissions 
by 25% by 2030 and are building this into our 
product development roadmaps. 
Reliability Services
Rotork’s Reliability Services offering is a suite 
of services provided by Rotork Service to help 
customers manage their assets efficiently. It is 
a full lifecycle asset programme that enables 
customers’ critical assets to operate at peak 
performance level, ensuring wider site uptime 
and productivity, improved safety and reduced 
environmental impacts. Reliability Services 
offers a service contract model that supports 
customers towards better maintained assets 
delivering greater process uptime.
Intelligent Asset Management is a cloud-based 
platform that sits within the Connected Services 
part of Rotork’s service business. The analytics 
platform collects information from the data logs 
held within intelligent electric actuators, offering 
anomaly detection and accurate asset health 
reporting that allow a user to understand the 
condition of their assets. This conditional insight 
supports both predictive and preventative 
maintenance strategies.
Service and maintenance programmes can be 
designed several ways. One way of approaching 
maintenance is to service assets on a regular 
schedule, regardless of age or usage. However, 
the age of a device is not the best predictor of 
the likelihood of actuator or valve failure; the 
precise condition of an asset is much more 
accurate. Some actuators are not frequently 
operated, instead providing testing or 
emergency shutdown (ESD) capabilities. 
Conversely, some offer constant modulating 
control in harsh environments.
Specific condition monitoring, using data from 
each actuator in the field, provides information 
about the actual operational characteristics of 
each asset. Data can be collected, analysed and 
then used to optimise the delivery of maintenance. 
This proactive analysis of data is key. It enables 
earlier failure prediction, reduced failure risk 
and cost, and a maintenance programme that is 
scheduled to match risk levels. Longevity of data 
capture is also important; the longer an asset 
is monitored for, the richer the data it provides 
becomes. By keeping a site running at an 
optimum level, customers are able to make the 
most efficient use of environmental resources.
Responsible disposal at end of life
Our product manuals provide end-user advice 
on disposal when an asset reaches the end of 
life stage, in accordance with environmental 
standards. We provide specific guidance on the 
disposal of batteries, electrical and electronic 
equipment, glass, metals, plastics, oil/grease 
and rubber. The majority of these are readily 
recyclable, with others recyclable by specialists.
Our manuals also include detailed health 
and safety advice for the installation and 
operation of products. We publish manuals 
on our website in numerous languages. 
See: www.rotork.com.
Due to their nature, our products typically have 
a long lifespan and are replaced infrequently. 
Generally customers take responsibility for 
disposal at end of life.
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Integrated Ethernet and 
circular design
One of Rotork’s achievements in 2024 
was the delivery of our Integrated Ethernet 
solution. As part of incorporating sustainability 
in product design, the terminal board’s 
enclosure is 85% recycled nylon. The embodied 
emissions of recycled nylon are 68% lower 
than that of virgin nylon.

Operating responsibly continued
Supply chain management
We expect our suppliers to maintain high 
standards of ethical conduct – aligned with our 
environmental and social aims – to maximise 
value created for us, those working in our supply 
chain, our communities and the environment.
Rotork has a long-standing reputation for 
integrity, fair dealing, ethical behaviour and 
paying on time. As part of our Growth+ 
strategy, we are working to rationalise our 
supply base and concentrate our spend with 
strategic supply partners. We spent over £360m 
with suppliers in 2024. Approximately 75% 
of our spend in 2024 was with 260 suppliers 
(management estimate). Our spend on product 
assembly and supply can be grouped into four 
main categories, as shown by the pie chart on 
the next page.
We have comprehensive quality assurance 
procedures for suppliers. These include supplier 
approval and component qualification processes, 
supplemented by supplier visits and a vendor 
rating system, to measure their performance.
Our approach
All suppliers are expected to comply with our 
Supplier Code of Conduct. This describes expected 
standards, including promoting equal opportunities, 
human rights, freedom of association, labour 
rights, environmental protection and our 
zero-tolerance approach to bribery and corruption. 
It applies to all suppliers globally and their own 
supply chains. We will take appropriate action 
against any supplier that fails to adhere to our 
Code, which can include the termination of 
their contract.
We undertake due diligence on prospective 
suppliers and assessments of existing suppliers 
to manage modern slavery risks in our supply 
chain. We engage an independent intelligence 
provider to help analyse our supply base and 
follow up with audits when necessary. 
During 2024, we established a cost engineering 
team and invested in software to measure and 
optimise component design which can reduce 
lifecycle GHG emissions. This software is now 
integrated into our New Product Development 
process to reduce emissions and optimise cost from 
the design stage. The 'Design for Manufacture' 
methodology identifies component design and 
manufacturing process changes that enable 
reduced manufacturing costs allowing suppliers 
to maintain a sustainable margin and deliver 
competitive pricing.
Our Supplier Code of Conduct
Our Supplier Code of Conduct sets out our 
expectations of suppliers on environmental, 
social and governance topics. This includes an 
express right of audit, incorporating a requirement 
to make supplier premises and personnel accessible 
to Rotork. The Code is applicable to all suppliers 
and third parties globally. 
Our Code includes an explicit requirement for 
suppliers to pursue efforts to publicly report 
greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, it 
expressly sets out our requirement for suppliers 
to pay wages and benefits that meet or exceed 
national minimum requirements and to adhere 
to working time regulations; to comply with 
applicable laws and regulations relating to 
fair competition, money-laundering and the 
non-facilitation of tax evasion; and to adhere 
to both the spirit and the letter of our Conflict 
Minerals Policy. The Code also encourages 
suppliers to align with internationally recognised 
social standards, such as SA8000. The Code 
is embedded in all new supplier contracts. 
We have a defined, Group-wide process to 
validate that suppliers are meeting the requirements 
of our Supplier Code of Conduct and upholding 
Rotork’s commitments to social, environmental 
and ethical standards in the supply chain. The 
process outlines our approach to assessment 
of social, environmental and ethical risks, which 
includes supplier self-assessment, enhanced 
surveys for suppliers scored as medium or 
high risk, and site audits for medium- and 
high-risk suppliers.
Our risk scores are developed through a 
combination of factors, including scores relating 
to their country of operation, with country‑based 
index scores for human freedom, child labour, 
corruption and health and safety, drawing on 
internationally-recognised indices provided by 
organisations such as the International Labour 
Organization. The process also documents our 
escalation procedures for any concerns identified, 
with significant concerns to be reported to the 
Legal Department.
Supply chain emissions 
One of our three science-based climate targets 
is a supplier engagement target which ultimately 
aims to reduce the emissions associated with our 
purchased goods and services. We are committed 
to engaging with suppliers on the topic of emissions 
measurement and data sharing, with a target 
that 25% of our suppliers (by estimated emissions) 
will set science-based targets by 2027. In 2023, 
our procurement team engaged 84 suppliers 
through four interactive webinars and targeted 
one-to-one workshops which introduced the 
topics of emissions measurement, reduction 
and target setting. In 2024, we added the topic 
of supplier emissions to the strategic business 
reviews with suppliers, began to review 
approaches for gathering supplier emissions 
data, and undertook an assurance readiness 
review of our current calculation approach. 
Risk management 
As an international group with a predominantly 
out-sourced manufacturing model, our supply 
chain is key to us delivering our purpose of 
‘keeping the world flowing for future generations’. 
Supply chain disruption is identified as a principal 
risk to the business. As a result, we monitor our 
supply chain very closely. Disruption could arise 
for a number of reasons, for example as a result 
of a tooling failure at a key supplier, a transportation 
issue, or a severe weather event impacting a 
key supplier.
We identify critical suppliers and components 
through our formal risk assessment process 
and focus our risk management efforts on the 
suppliers that present the greatest risk to our 
business. Criticality is determined via a number 
of criteria, including business dependency, criticality 
of the commodity supplied and financial 
considerations, such as spend and contribution 
to revenue. In 2023, the risk framework we use 
for the assessment of supplier risk was expanded 
to include a wider range of risk domains and 
elements. During 2024 the framework was applied 
to the top 50 suppliers across the Group and 
was developed to better define our definitions 
of risk and resilience, material risk domains and 
risk elements, and levels of diligence that will be 
applied to different types of suppliers. The risks 
are captured on a centralised scorecard and 
reviewed quarterly to identify if any specific actions 
are required. The framework also outlines several 
workstreams to improve resilience, including 
single-source risk mitigation strategies, sub-tier 
resilience and systematic scenario planning 
and stress testing processes. During 2025, 
we will continue to expand the application 
of the framework and implement the 
resilience workstreams.
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Operating responsibly continued
Supply chain 
management continued
Risk management continued
Our approach to supplier sustainability focuses 
on (i) key Group suppliers and (ii) highest risk 
suppliers. We use a third-party software platform to 
support management of supplier self-assessments 
and ensure their timely completion. The platform 
also includes additional ESG and compliance 
modules that we ask suppliers to complete on 
specific topics, such as greenhouse gas emissions 
reporting. The software automates the collection 
and collation of suppliers’ responses to support 
our effective oversight and management of 
ESG issues in the supply chain. During 2024 we 
appointed additional resources to increase the 
number of suppliers onboarded on the platform. 
As a result we have doubled the number of 
targeted suppliers, and tripled the number of 
suppliers which registered and reported data 
to Rotork. We have implemented a systematic 
approach to following up with non-responsive 
suppliers and red flags. During 2024 we adopted 
a dedicated software platform for supplier 
cybersecurity checks. The service is more 
targeted and has a more specific question set. 
The results are reviewed by a third party which 
provide recommendations to our procurement 
and cybersecurity teams.
Our supplier assessment and onboarding process 
ensures that potential suppliers that do not meet 
the minimum standards criteria are eliminated 
early from any formal tendering or engagement 
process. We also provide feedback to any 
companies we have assessed, even if they are 
unsuccessful, to provide them with potentially 
valuable development opportunities. Our Group 
vendor approval questionnaire includes questions 
aligned to our updated Supplier Code of Conduct. 
It was updated in 2024 to improve the question 
set and incorporate new requirements. 
We have incorporated sustainability related 
questions in our routine on-site supplier 
assessments and we are continuing to 
ensure sustainability elements are included 
in site-level processes.
Product assembly and supply spend (2024)
Conflict minerals
Rotork does not purchase raw materials from, 
or work directly with, smelters or refineries 
– we purchase components several tiers removed 
from smelters in the value chain. Our approach 
is therefore based on engaging with our suppliers 
to identify, manage and correct any risks. We 
report transparently on our engagement and risk 
management procedures to support stakeholders’ 
understanding of our approach.
Our Conflict Minerals Policy sets out our 
commitment to not use tantalum, tin, tungsten 
and gold (3TG) that directly or indirectly finances, 
or benefits, armed groups in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo or adjoining countries. 
The scope of the Conflict Minerals Policy also 
includes other Conflict Affected and High 
Risk Areas (CAHRAs). Management responsibility 
for the policy lies with our CEO. The policy is 
published on our website at: www.rotork.com.
We exercise due diligence based on the ‘Responsible 
Minerals Initiative’ (RMI) guidance, by mapping our 
supply chain using its reporting templates and 
following up any concerns raised via a corrective 
action management process. Group-wide 
procedures define our risk management process 
and support the commitments made in our Conflict 
Minerals Policy. We describe in-scope commodities; 
the supplier communications approach (including 
the requirement for an annual supply chain conflict 
minerals survey, based on the template provided 
by the RMI); and the management approach in 
the event of supplier non-conformance. 
Our Group-wide conflict minerals management 
procedure also describes our definition of 
high-risk smelters, to guide colleagues in 
interpreting the results of the supplier conflict 
minerals survey, which collects information on 
the smelters used by our suppliers and minerals’ 
country of origin.
We have a dedicated conflict minerals section 
on our employee intranet to help drive awareness 
of conflict minerals, the problems associated 
with them, how to identify the risk of these in 
the supply chain and how to respond to requests 
for Rotork’s conflict minerals declaration.
We also educate suppliers of commodities that 
could contain 3TG about conflict minerals risks 
when we request their responses to our annual 
survey. If we identify and confirm that a supplier 
is using a high-risk smelter, our process is to 
engage with our supplier to request that they 
change their source, and ultimately we may 
re-source to a supplier that does not use 
high-risk smelters. 
Modern slavery awareness training
Our training programme aims to raise employee 
awareness of modern slavery and human 
trafficking risks in our business and supply chain. 
It includes mandatory human rights eLearning 
for our global online population, designed to 
build knowledge of, and capability to identify 
and manage, modern slavery risks. 
See page 50 for further information about our 
approach to mitigating modern slavery and human 
rights risks in our business and supply chain.
 Mechanical components
60%
 Electronic and electrical components
14%
 Other indirect categories
17%
 Transportation and logistics
6%
 Packaging
3%
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Priorities for 2025
•	 Develop our approach for requesting and 
tracking supplier emissions data.
•	 Engage with engineering to embed the 
Design for Manufacture and Lifecycle 
Assessment processes.

Operating responsibly continued
Culture, ethics and governance
We strive to act ethically and in line with our 
values in the way that we do business. This is 
rooted in our culture and reflected in our Code 
of Conduct.
Our Code of Conduct
Our Code of Conduct sets out the standards 
of behaviour that Rotork expects from anyone 
acting on Rotork’s behalf, including all permanent 
employees, temporary workers and contractors. 
It is designed to underpin and shape our people’s 
behaviour, forming part of our desired culture, 
and serving as an important reference point as 
they carry out their day-to-day responsibilities 
and represent our business. We expect everyone 
to follow the Code and act with integrity at 
all times. 
We updated our Code of Conduct during 2024. 
Key updates included new topics, the addition 
of practical Q&A scenarios using examples that 
are relevant and directly applicable to Rotork’s 
business activities, and a new design to give the 
Code a fresh look and feel. 
The Board reviewed the updated Code of 
Conduct as part of its oversight of culture 
and governance within the organisation. 
Following this our CEO, Kiet, launched the 
refreshed Code in November 2024 and we 
further communicated its launch via a news 
article on our all-employee global intranet site. 
New mandatory eLearning was developed 
(which was launched in January 2025), to 
improve employee awareness and understanding 
of the Code and its supporting policies. Similar 
in-person training has been developed on the 
Code of Conduct for non-digital employees. 
Both the Code of Conduct and the associated 
eLearning are available in 11 languages. 
Our Code of Conduct is published on our 
website at www.rotork.com/en/sustainability/
esg-reports-and-policies/rotork-code-of-conduct. 
We have a number of policies that sit beneath 
and support our Code of Conduct, covering 
Anti-Bribery and Corruption, Speak-Up, 
Confidentiality, Conflicts of Interest, Fair 
Competition, Gifts and Hospitality, Data 
Protection, Modern Slavery and Trade Sanctions. 
These policies apply to our operations globally, 
including to subsidiary companies and 
joint ventures. 
We continue to embed our values and Code 
of Conduct across our organisation worldwide. 
Our Supplier Code of Conduct sets out our 
core expectations in terms of ethical values and 
behaviours of our suppliers and our suppliers’ 
own supply chains. Our Supplier Code of 
Conduct is published on our website at  
www.rotork.com/en/sustainability/esg-reports-
and-policies/supplier-code-of-conduct-policy.
Ethics and compliance training 
Employee training and awareness is one of the 
core elements of our Ethics and Compliance 
programme. New joiners are introduced to our 
values and expected behaviours during formal 
induction sessions.
We have an eLearning platform that enables a 
range of ethics and compliance training to be 
provided to employees and provides full auditability. 
This includes mandatory training on a variety of 
topics, which is available in a number of languages. 
As well as foundation Code of Conduct modules 
and Speak Up training that re-emphasises both 
the importance of speaking up if wrongdoing is 
suspected and Rotork’s no-retaliation policy, our 
new joiners training programme includes courses 
on anti-bribery and corruption, conflicts of 
interest, fair competition, modern slavery, 
gifts and hospitality and data protection.
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Operating responsibly continued
Culture, ethics and 
governance continued
Ethics and compliance training continued
As part of our commitment to good governance, 
our mandatory compliance certification, launched 
each year in January, asks colleagues to complete 
a statement confirming compliance with our 
Code of Conduct and associated policies, the 
completion of all mandatory training, and any 
actual or potential conflicts of interest. Any 
conflicts of interest declared are reviewed, 
assessed and addressed where necessary. As part 
of its oversight of culture within the organisation, 
the Board received an update on the completion 
of these mandatory certifications by our employees.
Human rights and modern slavery
Rotork continually looks for ways to support the 
promotion of human rights within our operations 
and our sphere of influence. We obey the laws, 
rules and regulations of every country in which 
we operate. We respect internationally-recognised 
human rights, as set out in the United Nations 
International Bill of Human Rights and the 
International Labour Organization’s Declaration 
on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. 
These cover freedom of association, the 
abolition of forced labour, equality and the 
elimination of child labour.
This might include: placing appropriate 
contractual obligations on a supplier; working 
together with a supplier on a corrective action 
plan; or ceasing to work with a supplier altogether. 
Further information about the steps we take to 
address modern slavery risk is set out in our 2024 
Modern Slavery Statement at www.rotork.com/
en/investors/modern-slavery-statement.
Anti-bribery and corruption
Rotork has a zero-tolerance policy towards 
bribery and corruption worldwide, irrespective 
of country or business culture. Both our Code of 
Conduct and Anti-Bribery and Corruption Policy 
prohibit the offering, paying or solicitation of 
bribes in any form. Additionally, our Gifts and 
Hospitality Policy provides guidance on the rules 
relating to the giving and receiving of gifts and 
hospitality. Requests to offer or accept gifts or 
hospitality (over a de minimis threshold) are 
recorded in our automated register, together 
with whether approval has been granted.
Third-party risks
We have procedures in place to manage 
third-party risks (including bribery risk) across 
our operations, through each of the selection, 
appointment and monitoring stages. Following 
a risk-based review of our channel partners 
(agents, distributors and resellers) population 
undertaken in 2023, during 2024 the findings 
from the review were used to enhance our 
existing programme and will continue in 2025.
Our Modern Slavery Policy includes a range of 
key performance indicators (KPIs), to monitor the 
risk-based actions that we take to mitigate risk 
and to assess the effectiveness of our control 
measures. We review the KPIs annually to ensure 
they remain relevant and appropriate. 
The policy is supported by training that aims to 
raise employee awareness of modern slavery 
and human trafficking risks in our business and 
supply chain. All employees who have access to 
the eLearning platform receive our mandatory 
modern slavery course. The course content 
includes what modern slavery is, its forms and 
key indicators, how to identify and respond to 
modern slavery risks, key risk areas, and how 
to report concerns. The course also provides 
targeted content for members of the Rotork 
Management Board and our Procurement and 
Human Resources functions. Our foundation 
Code of Conduct eLearning and training for 
our non-digital employees also include a 
module on human rights and modern slavery.
Our Supplier Code of Conduct sets out our 
minimum expectations regarding human and 
labour rights, among other requirements. 
We assess potential slavery and human trafficking 
risks arising from supplier relationships using 
a number of different methods. These include 
assessing new and existing suppliers and 
conducting supplier site visits. In the event 
that an issue is identified, we will undertake 
appropriate remedial action. 
Sanctions
Rotork has in place an established sanctions 
compliance programme that seeks to mitigate 
risk relating to trade and financial sanctions; 
this includes screening third parties through 
sanctions software and monitoring changes in 
legislation for restrictions on supplying products 
in certain territories or to certain third parties. 
With a focus on mitigating against diversion of 
goods to sanctioned territories and sanctioned 
persons, policies and procedures (documented in 
the Sanctions Manual) were updated throughout 
2024 and actions highlighted in the sanctions 
risk assessment were implemented. Review and 
updates to the policies and procedures were 
made with reference to guidance released from 
US, EU and UK regulatory authorities, including 
the new Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation 
which was established by the UK government in 
October 2024. Further training was also provided 
during 2024 and will continue throughout 2025. 
Fair competition
During 2024 we reviewed our Fair Competition 
Policy, and prepared updated policy wording 
and an accompanying manual, which provide 
more in-depth guidance for our employees. 
Launch of these documents, as well as 
accompanying targeted, risk-based training 
to relevant employees, is planned for 2025.
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Operating responsibly continued
Culture, ethics and 
governance continued
Our policy on political donations
Rotork is a politically neutral organisation. Our 
Code of Conduct includes a section on political 
donations, confirming that Rotork does not 
make political donations in any part of the world, 
to any political campaign, party, candidate or 
their affiliated organisation. No political donations 
were made during the year.
Encouraging colleagues to ‘Speak Up’ 
Rotork has an open and transparent culture, and 
this is underpinned by our Speak Up Policy.
Our Speak Up Policy encourages the reporting 
of any suspected wrongdoing as soon as possible 
and without fear of detrimental treatment 
because of raising a concern. It applies to all 
individuals working within, for, or with Rotork, 
including suppliers. 
We offer a range of channels for raising concerns. 
Our policy encourages colleagues to contact 
their line managers, our Head of Ethics and 
Compliance, our Chief Human Resources Officer 
or our Group General Counsel & Company 
Secretary. We also offer an independent, global 
and multilingual external reporting service 
managed by Safecall. This service allows concerns 
to be raised anonymously if preferred. 
The service is available to employees, external 
stakeholders and the public and is operated 
24 hours a day, seven days a week. Reports can 
be made to a local freephone number or submitted 
via Safecall’s website. All concerns raised are 
investigated promptly.
In 2024, we continued to promote the 
importance of speaking up and our different 
Speak Up mechanisms, through mandatory 
eLearning and other communication channels. 
Our Speak-Up Policy is available in 11 languages 
and is published on our website at www.rotork.
com/en/sustainability/esg-reports-and-policies/
speak-up-policy.
Priorities for 2025
Aiming to continuously improve, our key 
priorities in 2025 are to:
•	 Deliver training to all Rotork employees 
on our refreshed Code of Conduct. 
•	 Launch our revised Fair Competition 
Policy and manual and accompanying 
employee training.
•	 Continue to enhance our third-party risk 
management programme.	
Board-level oversight 
As part of its ongoing oversight of the 
Company’s good governance practices and 
oversight of the Company’s culture, the Board 
received a detailed presentation from the Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary on 
Rotork’s ethics and compliance programme at 
its August 2024 meeting, together with further 
updates at other meetings during the year as 
necessary. The Board reviews concerns reported 
about suspected wrongdoing, and, where required, 
agrees actions to be taken to prevent a potential 
reoccurrence. The Board is updated on the 
compliance training undertaken and planned 
during the year, together with completion 
statistics. It also reviews the results of our 
employee engagement surveys, to help identify 
any areas where employees feel that there is a 
divergence between their experience and our 
stated culture.
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Enabling a 
sustainable future
Our mission
To help drive the transition to a low carbon 
future where environmental resources 
are used responsibly.
Our commitments
•	 We play our part to enable the global 
energy transition and support a cleaner, 
more sustainable future.
•	 We support customers’ energy and emissions 
reduction and enable them to incorporate 
renewable energy into their operations.
•	 We enable sustainable management of 
water resources and greater water efficiency 
for our customers.
In this section
•	 Electrifying upstream oil and gas 
•	 Ensuring supply of key transitional materials
•	 Advancing sustainable fuels
•	 Managing water resources
SDGs we will progress
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Enabling a sustainable future continued
Electrifying upstream oil and gas
As electrification of the upstream and midstream 
becomes ‘business as usual’, Rotork is well 
placed to support and benefit from the transition 
to electric powered valve actuators and away 
from the fluid power actuators used traditionally 
in these sectors of the oil and gas industry. 
The signatories of the Oil and Gas Decarbonization 
Charter (OGDC), which represent 43% of global 
oil and gas production, are aiming for (i) near-zero 
upstream methane emissions by 2030 and (ii) 
zero routine flaring by 2030. Electric actuation 
is playing a crucial role in achieving these aims.
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Division: Oil & Gas
Segment: Target
Sector: Upstream electrification
Region: APAC
Oil and gas producers are seeking to electrify 
their operations and integrate the use of 
renewable energy as an alternative to traditional 
fuel sources in order to reduce their scope 1 
and 2 emissions per barrel of oil equivalent 
produced. In 2024 Rotork won a large order 
for electric control valve actuators from a 
major oil and gas exploration and production 
company working to electrify operations at 
a mature gas field in Eastern Australia.
Division: Oil & Gas
Segment: Target
Sector: Upstream electrification
Region: EMEA
A typical oil and gas production wellhead 
utilises a choke valve to control the flow 
and pressure of hydrocarbons to the next 
production process step. Traditionally the 
choke valve has been controlled manually 
using a hand wheel. A disadvantage of this 
method is the risk of methane emissions 
downstream (e.g. through emergency 
venting) if there is an unplanned increase 
in flow or pressure whilst the wellhead is 
unmanned. An alternative is to use electric 
actuators to control the choke. This approach 
was taken by a Rotork customer for its new 
oil field located in East Africa.

Enabling a sustainable future continued
Ensuring supply of key 
transitional materials
The transition to low-carbon technologies will 
require a reliable supply of critical metals and 
minerals used in clean energy systems such 
as solar and wind power, electric vehicles and 
batteries, and hydrogen electrolysers. However, 
the increased demand for these materials may 
surpass current known resources. 
Rotork products have applications across the 
mining and metals value chains. In the mining 
industry, applications include dewatering, HVAC 
and dust control in underground mines, as well 
as slurry pumping, dewatering, water management 
and flotation. Additionally green hydrogen, 
produced with the help of Rotork flow controls, 
can facilitate the lower-impact production of 
essential basic materials like steel and cement.
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Division: CPI
Segment: Target
Sector: Mining
Region: Americas
Copper is widely seen as the ‘energy 
transition’ metal due to its role in renewable 
energy infrastructure, energy storage systems 
and electric vehicles. Rotork’s IQ3 electric 
actuators were selected for critical flow 
control applications in an important water 
reuse project by a mining customer. When 
the project is completed the mine will no 
longer have to draw water from a local river.
Division: CPI
Segment: Target
Sector: Decarbonisation – hydrogen
Region: EMEA
Steel is widely viewed as essential for modern 
living whilst at the same time being a difficult 
to decarbonise industry. Rotork is working 
together with a highly innovative customer 
in Northern Sweden which is scaling up a 
production process to produce green hydrogen, 
green iron and green steel. Once the customer 
has succeeded in steel production it plans to 
turn its hand to other hard-to-abate industries.

Enabling a sustainable future continued
Advancing sustainable fuels
The global aviation and maritime sectors – 
responsible for 4-6% of total global emissions 
– have both committed to net-zero by 2050. 
In addition to operational efficiencies, the 
increased use of lower-carbon fuels is an 
important part of their transitions. 
Existing sustainable fuel projects already utilise 
Rotork’s network control equipment and electric 
actuators. The increased use of green hydrogen 
as a transport fuel is also an opportunity for 
further applications of Rotork technology. Green 
hydrogen is produced from water and electricity 
using an electrolyser, with each electrolyser 
requiring a significant amount of highly certified 
flow control equipment. Decarbonising transport 
offers power-to-fuel opportunities in renewable 
gases, fuels, and ammonia production. 
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Division: CPI
Segment: Target
Sector: Marine
Region: APAC
Leading shipowners are transitioning to 
low-carbon and zero-carbon fuels such as 
methanol and ammonia in order to achieve 
net-zero emissions in the sector by 2050. 
In 2024 Rotork’s battery-backed-up electric 
actuators were selected – over traditional 
pneumatic powered actuators – by a major 
shipping and logistics company for installation 
on its latest green methanol powered 
container vessels. These vessels will produce 
significantly lower lifecycle emissions 
compared to traditionally powered ones.
Division: CPI
Segment: Target
Sector: Decarbonisation
Region: APAC
Hydrogen has a wide range of potential 
future applications, thanks to its versatility 
and its clean energy properties. Possible 
applications include transportation, industrial 
processes (e.g. steel), power generation, 
heating, and energy storage. Rotork is 
supplying its fail-safe flow control solutions to 
an Australia-based electrolyser manufacturer 
currently building one of the world’s largest 
proton exchange membrane electrolysers. 

Enabling a sustainable future continued
Managing water resources
The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 
2025 rated extreme weather events (including 
flood and drought) as the second highest risk 
over the next two years and the most severe risk 
over the next ten years. At present, at least half 
of the world’s population experience high water 
stress for at least one month each year.
Technology will play an important role in managing 
these risks through increasing efficiency, supply and 
protection. Rotork technology assists water and 
wastewater treatment, recycling and desalination 
processes, as well as playing a role in flood defence 
infrastructure. In all these applications, Rotork 
provides innovative, reliable flow control solutions 
to help manage water and build resilience to 
extreme weather events. 
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Division: Water & Power
Segment: Target
Sector: Water
Region: APAC
There is strong demand for water infrastructure 
across developed and developing markets 
driven by health and safety, economic 
development and population growth and 
migration. During 2024 Rotork commenced 
a major wastewater treatment plant upgrade 
project by the Selangor river in Malaysia – 
replacing a nearing-retirement Rotork system 
with the latest IQ3 Pro electric actuators and 
Pakscan network controllers.

Making a positive 
social impact
Our mission
To support thriving, fair 
and resilient communities.
Our commitments
Diversity
•	 We develop and deliver initiatives to drive 
greater representation from diverse groups, 
including gender and ethnic diversity.
Fair pay
•	 We contribute to a fairer society more 
broadly, including by ensuring 100% 
of employees are covered by our Fair 
Pay Framework.
In this section
•	 Brand and reputation
•	 Our people and culture
•	 Our social contribution
SDGs we will progress
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Making a positive social impact continued
We aim to support thriving, 
fair and resilient communities.
We strive to make a positive social impact on 
our people, supply chain, and communities. By 
providing high-quality employment, we contribute 
significantly to economic stability. We engage 
proactively and fairly with all stakeholders to 
understand and address their needs. Additionally, 
we support charitable causes aligning with our 
sustainability goals and employees’ interests, 
extending our positive impact. 
We are committed to being a fair employer, 
promoting equal opportunity and fostering an 
inclusive workplace. Recognising that diversity 
enhances business success, we actively work to 
advance underrepresented groups and tackle 
social inequality through targeted outreach 
programmes. By nurturing talent from diverse 
backgrounds, we create a culture where everyone 
can thrive and contribute to our success. 
This section outlines how we engage with and 
support our people and communities, positively 
impacting individuals and society. 
Brand and reputation
Rotork’s brand is globally recognised and highly 
respected. It stands for innovative, quality, 
market-leading products and services. 
Our brand and reputation are consistently ranked 
among the most important sustainability issues 
in our materiality assessments. Our sustained 
success relies on building and maintaining 
Rotork’s strong brand with new and existing 
customers and employees. 
Attracting, developing, and retaining a diverse 
range of talented individuals by being an employer 
of choice, providing fair and equal pay and 
benefits, and demonstrating our commitment to 
diversity and inclusion are central to maintaining 
our market leadership and seizing new 
growth opportunities. 
Our people and culture
At Rotork, we strive to be a great place to work. 
Engaged and committed employees are essential 
to successfully delivering our strategy and 
achieving sustainable business growth. 
Talent management and 
succession planning
Attracting, recruiting, developing, and retaining 
talented people is key to successfully delivering 
our strategy. 
We completed a full talent review process 
in 2024 to look at our skills and capabilities 
throughout our entire organisation and reviewed 
colleagues identified as future talent for succession 
planning purposes. Our senior leaders also 
completed a personal profile, which our Board 
reviews as part of our talent management process. 
Personal profiles (which include a comprehensive 
development plan) enable us to better understand 
in detail our talent pipeline and ensure the 
right development is in place for key individuals. 
33% of our senior leaders are new in their role 
in 2024, with around half of those being 
internal promotions. 
In 2024, we digitalised our performance 
management process to enhance the experience 
for our people and managers and ensure that 
all employees' objectives are aligned with 
delivering our strategy. We conducted 
performance management training during the 
new system's launch and refresher training 
throughout the year. Our new performance 
management system enabled our colleagues 
to tie their objectives directly to our Growth+ 
strategy. It provides an easy-to-use, transparent 
process to support their performance and 
development conversations with their managers.
2024 also saw the third intake of our global 
Graduate and Internship Programmes as we 
continued our commitment to developing early 
career talent. We have set a target that at least 
50% of participants in our schemes are diverse, 
female, ethnic minority, or from other groups 
currently underrepresented in our business 
to increase the diversity of our talent pipeline. 
We exceeded this target in 2024 (90%). Our first 
wave of graduates also rolled off the programme 
into permanent positions around the business. 
In 2024, we again donated unused funds from 
our UK apprenticeship levy to organisations 
in other industries that support young people 
in developing new skills and capabilities. 
We are proud to have a good mix of long-serving 
and newer employees. 37% of employees have 
been with Rotork for over ten years, while 
46% joined in the last five years. We believe 
the mix of Rotork experience and new external 
experience is integral to our success and enables 
us to continue to develop and grow. 
In 2024, we launched a programme to 
understand our culture, identify strengths, and 
uncover long-term opportunities to accelerate 
growth and scalability. While our existing 
values have served us well over the past five 
years, this initiative provided an opportunity to 
evolve, aligning more closely with our Growth+ 
strategic pillar “Invest in our People and 
Culture” and shaping the sustainable future 
of Rotork’s leadership. 
To evolve and continue to build on our strong 
cultural foundations, we engaged 800 employees 
across 27 countries, listening to their insights 
to understand our strengths and areas for 
growth. This feedback was instrumental in 
understanding our path to evolve from our 
previous values, to defining our new cultural 
DNA which will guide us forward: 
We value our customers
We grow together
We win as a team
These principles will shape how we lead, grow, 
and engage our people and customers, fostering 
behaviours and experiences that drive success. 
Our cultural DNA reflects what makes Rotork 
unique while laying the foundation for 
collaboration, innovation, and shared success. 
In January 2025, we began introducing our 
evolved Cultural DNA attributes with our 
employees and leaders. Throughout 2025 and 
beyond, a full roll out of a comprehensive 
behaviours framework that underpins these 
DNA attributes will be deployed. This will 
be reinforced by actionable behavioural 
competencies linked to both the “what” and 
“how” of performance – empowering us to 
tackle challenges, seize opportunities, and 
unlock our full potential as an organisation. 
This multi-year journey ensures that our culture 
remains a driver of long-term success. By 
embracing our evolved DNA as Rotork scales, 
we are building a more customer-focused, 
connected, and winning Rotork.
Cultural journey: building a stronger Rotork
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Making a positive social impact continued
Our people and culture continued
Training and development 
We recognise that a strong learning culture is 
essential, and we are focused on ensuring that 
our people have the right skills and experience 
to deliver our Company strategy.
In 2024, we completed our 12-month Leadership 
Programme for our senior leadership population, 
which focused on developing leadership capabilities 
aligned with our values. We also launched the 
Business Manager Programme for our Country 
Leaders, Plant Managers, and other regional 
leaders, which built on the foundations of our 
Leadership Programme to develop commercial 
and operational leadership capabilities.
Line managers also attended performance 
management workshops, which focused on 
achieving results that align with our values 
and aligning reward with high performance. 
We also continued to develop the learning 
content and hosted functional programmes 
in our learning system, learning@rotork.
Employee engagement
Employee feedback is critical in ensuring our 
employees’ views are considered in decisions 
made at the Board and management levels. 
These insights also mean we can respond to 
any concerns promptly and understand what 
matters most to our people. 
In 2024, we transitioned from our internally 
managed pulse survey to a comprehensive 
engagement survey, partnering with a third party. 
This strategic shift enables us to benchmark our 
engagement levels against industry standards 
and sharpen our focus on fostering meaningful 
engagement across Rotork. 80% of employees 
participated in the new survey (79% in the former 
pulse survey in 2023). This year, in our survey, 
we carried forward the ‘Rotork as a place to 
work’ measure and maintained a strong score 
of 7.1/10 (7.4/10 in 2023).
As in previous years, for 2024, a portion of the 
management and leadership population’s bonus 
opportunity is linked to maintaining high levels 
of employee engagement. 
Wellbeing and mental health 
We have a strong focus on our employees’ 
wellbeing and mental health. We continue to 
increase the number of Mental Health First 
Aiders (MHFAs) trained worldwide, and we now 
have approximately 100 MHFAs throughout the 
Group. We hosted a Mental Health First Aiders' 
network session to discuss mental health at 
Rotork and the support they require to help 
other colleagues. We have also introduced new 
learning modules to support line managers on 
mental health awareness and other supporting 
content for managers and employees on our 
learning@rotork platform. We provide a Global 
Employee Assistance Programme, which includes 
mental health support and counselling 24/7 in 
colleagues’ local languages. 
Fair pay and benefits
All colleagues should be appropriately and fairly 
rewarded for their contributions. In 2020, we 
launched our Fair Pay Framework, which includes 
five focus areas to guide our reward policies, 
procedures, systems, and decision making and 
support fair and competitive remuneration. 
Our original Framework included a commitment 
to pay a real living wage (rather than the minimum 
wage) where this exists in a country. In 2021, we 
increased our commitment and now ensure we 
pay more than the living wage published in a 
country. Rotork is accredited as a Living Wage 
Employer by the Living Wage Foundation. 
In 2024, for the third consecutive year, we 
brought forward the annual pay review from 
April to January for all employees, excluding 
senior leaders. This adjustment continues to help 
address the ongoing impact of the cost of living. 
With most employees owning shares, Rotork is 
proud to have well above-average employee 
share ownership. Colleagues in many of our 
locations receive a gift of Rotork shares each 
year, giving our people an additional personal 
and financial stake in our success. 
All permanent employees participate in the 
Rotork bonus scheme, regardless of their role 
or level, after three months of service. We link 
performance to reward, ensuring we recognise 
those who make the most significant contribution 
in line with our values. We benchmark our reward 
and benefits arrangements externally in every 
country we operate. We also provide pension 
arrangements based on local laws and practices. 
2024 achievements
•	 Completed a cultural assessment of our 
business to understand our cultural 
strengths and how we evolve.
•	 Completed our Leadership Training 
Programme to help deliver Growth+.
•	 Launched our new Business 
Manager Programme to develop our 
leaders' capabilities. 
•	 Launched our new performance 
management system – Perform.
•	 Met our early career diversity targets for 
our Graduate and Internship Schemes.
Collective bargaining
We uphold colleagues’ freedom of association 
and recognise their right to collective bargaining. 
Collective bargaining arrangements exist in 
several of our sites and countries of operation. 
Around 6% of our employees globally are 
covered by union agreements. We are committed 
to open and constructive engagement with our 
employees and their representatives.
Diversity and inclusion
We are committed to fostering an inclusive and 
diverse workforce and recognise the strategic 
advantage of valuing diverse perspectives 
and contributions. Our Head of Culture and 
Inclusion leads our focus in this area. 
As at 31 December 2024, 55.56% of our Board 
are diverse (by gender or ethnicity), which signals 
our focus and commitment to diversity. This 
proportion changed to 62.5% from 1 January 2025. 
Our Board Diversity and Inclusion Policy is 
available to view at https://www.rotork.com/
en/investors/diversity-and-inclusion. 
For International Women in Engineering Day in 
June, we undertook a series of internal interviews 
with males and females in STEM-related roles 
across Rotork to share their experiences and 
thoughts. We again celebrated Pride Week, 
encouraging colleagues to adopt a rainbow 
version of the Rotork logo in their email 
signatures or to use a rainbow background 
in their Teams calls. 
We relaunched our Graduate and Internship 
Scheme in 2022, setting a target to ensure we 
reflect the diversity of the communities in which 
we operate. To increase the diversity of our 
talent pipeline, we have set a target that at least 
50% of participants in our schemes are female, 
from ethnic minorities, or from other groups 
currently underrepresented in our business. 
We exceeded this in 2024 (90%). 
Our Respect at Work and Equality of Opportunity 
Policy reflects our responsible employer approach. 
This aims to promote fair and objective treatment 
across recruitment and employment, regardless 
of any protected characteristic. 
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Making a positive social impact continued
Our people and culture continued
Gender diversity 
We are committed to increasing the number 
of women in our organisation at all levels. 
At 31 December 2024, females comprised 
25.0% of our workforce (2023: 23.7%), our 
Board comprised 44.44% females (2023: 50%), 
and the Rotork Management Board (our Executive 
Committee) and its direct reports combined 
comprised 25% females (2023: 23.7%). From 
1 January 2025, our Board was comprised of 
50% females. 
Our 2024 Gender Pay Report shows that the 
UK's mean pay gap of -17.6% (2023: -3.3%) 
continues to favour women, and our median 
average pay gap is 5.8% (2023: 7.2%). This 
compares to the UK’s national gender pay gap 
figure of 13.1% and reflects our continued work 
in this area. Our Gender Pay Report 2024 will be 
published in April 2025 and will be available on 
our website. 
We are a member of the 30% Club, which 
aims to achieve at least 30% representation 
of women on all boards and C-suites globally. 
We also participate in the Bloomberg Gender 
Reporting Framework, a voluntary disclosure 
of gender-related metrics, demonstrating our 
commitment to transparency and gender equality. 
We are also a partner of the Women in Engineering 
Society (WES), which aims to inspire women to 
achieve as engineers, scientists, and leaders. 
We are proud to have achieved the target in 
the Hampton-Alexander Review of 33% female 
representation on our Board. We also meet the 
requirement that at least one of the Chair, Senior 
Independent Director (SID), CEO, or CFO be 
female. Any new appointment to the Board is 
made with consideration to our Board Diversity 
and Inclusion Policy. The Board is committed 
to ensuring its membership has diversity in its 
broadest sense, and we work with search firms 
that are signed up to the Voluntary Code 
of Conduct. 
Ethnic diversity 
We have already exceeded the Parker Review 
target of having at least one member from an 
ethnic minority background on all FTSE 250 
boards by 2024.
We remain committed to increasing ethnic 
diversity at the Executive Committee (Rotork 
Management Board) and its direct reports levels. 
This is important in providing senior-level role 
models from diverse backgrounds. However, we 
cannot obtain full, accurate global ethnicity data 
for our senior population from all jurisdictions 
we operate, preventing us from stating a future 
senior diversity target at this stage.
We strive to ensure that diversity is considered 
in our talent management process. We actively 
review performance, talent, and remuneration 
decisions to ensure fairness. We have set a 
target of having at least 50% of our early 
careers programme participants come from 
diverse and underrepresented groups in 
our business. 
Since 2019, we have published our UK Ethnicity 
Pay Report alongside our UK Gender Pay Report. 
Our mean pay gap is 2.4% (2023: -13.1%), and 
our median pay gap is –5.4% (2023: 3.5%). 
The full details can be found in our Gender Pay 
Report for 2024, published in April 2025 and 
available on our website.
Gender pay data 
Gender pay gap reporting compares the hourly 
pay of men and women on a specific date, 
irrespective of their role or level in the 
organisation. A negative percentage figure 
indicates an outcome in favour of women. 
The mean (average) gender pay gap calculates 
the difference between men's and women’s 
average hourly pay using employees' hourly pay. 
Mean averages give a useful overall indication of 
differences in pay; however, a small number of 
highly paid individuals can significantly impact 
the figure.
The median pay gap is calculated by comparing 
the pay of people in the middle of the hourly pay 
lists for men and women. 
Rotork’s mean average pay gap in the UK has 
favoured women since 2019, and our figures 
remain well below the national average gender 
pay gap of 13.1%. 
Gender pay reporting
All Rotork employees in the UK:
At 5 April
2024
2023
2022
Mean Gender Pay Gap across all Rotork employees in the UK
(17.6)% 
(3.3)%
(8.3)%
Median Gender Pay Gap across all Rotork employees in the UK
5.8%
7.2%
5.5%
UK’s National Gender Pay Gap1
13.1%
14.2%
14.4%
1	
Source: Office of National Statistics 2024.
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Making a positive social impact continued
Our people and culture continued
Age profile
(As at 31 December 2024)
30 to 49
57%
50 and over
31%
Under 30
12%
Ethnic origin
(As at 31 December 2024, based on 
those who declared their information)
White
53.0%
Black
3.3%
Asian
36.0%
Other
1.8%
Hispanic
4.9%
Mixed
1.1%
Senior leaders’ ethnicity
(As at 31 December 2024, includes RMB members 
and their direct reports where declared)
Gender profile
(As at 31 December 2024)
Early careers diversity
(Graduate, Internship, and Apprentice Programme,  
diversity figures as at 31 December 2024)
Male
75.0%
Female
25.0%
Non diverse 
49%
Diverse
51%
Employees
White
73.6%
Hispanic
4.4%
Asian
16.5%
Mixed
2.2%
Black
2.2%
Other
1.1%
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Making a positive social impact continued
Our social contribution
Rotork strives to contribute positively to the 
communities in which we operate worldwide. 
This is integral to our commitment to being a 
good corporate citizen. Our ethos is grounded 
in our values and behaviours and is part of what 
makes Rotork a great place to work.
We target an annual contribution of 0.1% of 
profits to our nominated charity partners and a 
similar percentage to local charitable causes. Local 
teams are empowered to decide how to distribute 
funds and support their local communities.
Charity partner selection process
We partner with international charities that 
align closely with our purpose, our values, and 
the UN SDGs. We select charity partners using 
four key parameters:
1. Accountability requirements
How will donations be used, how readily are accounts 
available, and what proportion reaches recipients?
4. How are they funded?
Are they an established and registered charity, 
non-political and non-religious?
2. Fit. Do key causes align, 
and what’s the global reach? 
Do they align with our business and 
support our purpose of ‘keeping the 
world flowing for future generations’?
3. Do they empower for the long term? 
Are they involved in supporting 
communities in the long term? 
Our global charity partners
At the end of 2024, we donated £160,000 to 
our global charity partners, Renewable World 
and Pump Aid, increasing the donations from 
2023. These funds will be invested in 2025 
in the following areas:
Pump Aid 
We will further our commitment to Pump Aid’s 
Beyond Water initiative by establishing a shared 
value partnership. Through this collaboration, 
our UK-based teams will leverage their expertise 
to support and enhance Pump Aid’s work in 
Malawi. This partnership will support their 
efforts to reach over 400,000 people across 
1,000 rural villages with effective repair and 
maintenance services, resulting in a 99.8% 
functionality rate for water infrastructure – 
far above the national average of just 60%.
Through our support, we are investing in 
upskilling and equipping local mechanics to 
deliver affordable services to communities, 
improving technology to predict breakdowns 
and support supply chain efficiencies, and 
undertaking initial repairs on non-functional 
infrastructure to bring them into the Beyond 
Water ecosystem. Our collaboration also 
supports Pump Aid’s long-term goals, which 
include expanding services to rural piped water 
systems and implementing water resource 
management measures that strengthen rural 
communities’ resilience against the increasing 
threats of drought and flooding.
Our technical expertise will back Pump Aid’s 
training and assessment of mechanics while 
driving supply chain improvements, forging 
closer links between our global teams and 
Pump Aid’s team on the ground in Malawi.
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Our social contribution continued
Our global charity partners continued
Renewable World
Building on Renewable World’s current work in 
Kenya’s Kajiado County through the 2024 E4H2 
project, of which Rotork is a valued and vital 
supporter, the E4H3 project will leverage clean 
energy technologies to enhance the availability 
and quality of health services for over 42,000 
people in the catchment areas of 10 energy-poor, 
off-grid remote health facilities. E4H3 is a 
three-year initiative, starting January 2025 and 
concluding December 2027. Rotork’s support 
in 2025 will help Renewable World deliver 
round-the-clock health services powered by 
clean energy for 8,400 people served by the 
first two targeted facilities. 
E4H3 will enable the increased uptake of 24/7 
healthcare at 10 facilities for the 42,000+ people 
who rely on them. It will provide the necessary 
solar power systems to electrify the health 
facilities, promote their services within local 
communities, and support staff and stakeholders 
in managing facilities and technologies for the 
future. This will support critical functions such as 
vaccine refrigeration, lighting, laboratory testing, 
and round-the-clock care. Community awareness 
will also be a key component, with campaigns 
conducted through ‘barazas’ (community meetings) 
and medical camps to inform communities about 
available health services. 
Making a positive social impact continued
Additionally, the project will enhance healthcare 
systems by procuring ICT equipment and providing 
training for electronic medical record keeping. 
This will improve access to medical records, 
ensure timely reporting, and enhance the quality 
of care.
By the end of 2027, the target groups which will 
benefit include:
•	 Over 42,000 people will have access to 
improved, clean, energy-enabled health 
services at 10 remote health facilities.
•	 More than 24 health staff will be equipped 
to operate and maintain clean energy systems, 
health equipment, water filtration systems, 
handwashing stations, incinerators, and 
improved toilet facilities.
Looking forward
In 2024, we ended our partnership with WeForest 
and enjoyed working with them to advance their 
goals. In 2025, we will identify a new global 
charity partner through a collaborative employee 
voting process. This initiative underscores our 
unwavering commitment to social responsibility 
and enables us to extend our positive impact to 
new organisations that resonate with our team’s 
values. By empowering our employees to select 
the charity, we ensure that our philanthropic 
efforts are meaningful and aligned with the 
causes that matter most to our diverse workforce. 
This collective decision making fosters a more 
profound connection within our community. 
It amplifies our ability to make a significant 
difference in the lives of those we aim to 
support worldwide.
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ESG and sustainability governance, integration and measurement
We use several approaches to integrate ESG 
objectives into our approach to business. This 
includes tying the successful delivery of social 
and environmental objectives to management’s 
remuneration. It also includes standardising 
our approach by formalising sustainability 
considerations and expectations within key 
management and decision-making processes. 
We employ a range of published codes and 
policies which guide our approach. We also 
commit to measuring our performance and 
reporting transparently on our progress.
ESG governance 
Rotork plc Board oversight 
To ensure the appropriate level of governance in 
this key area, at the beginning of 2024 the 
Safety and Sustainability (S&S) Committee was 
reconstituted under its refreshed remit and the 
Committee meetings were structured to allow 
the Committee to undertake a deep dive into an 
important safety or sustainability focus area at 
each of its meetings. 
The Board receives an update on our ESG, safety 
and sustainability agenda from our CEO at 
every meeting. 
The Chairs of our Safety and Sustainability 
Committee and Nomination Committee 
also provide an update on the activities of 
the Committees following their meetings. 
The Board reviewed and approved this report, 
prior to publication.
Roles of the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee and the Nomination Committee
ESG topics are overseen by the Safety and 
Sustainability Committee and the Nomination 
Committee. The Safety and Sustainability 
Committee oversees the Group’s safety 
and sustainability strategy, performance, 
and disclosures. 
The Company’s Diversity and Inclusion Policy, 
strategy and implementation of initiatives 
are overseen by the Nomination Committee. 
The Safety and Sustainability Committee and 
Nomination Committee terms of reference 
were both updated in October 2024 and are 
published on our website at the following address: 
https://www.rotork.com/en/investors/committees.
Safety and Sustainability Committee 
membership is comprised of four independent 
non-executive directors being: Andrew Heath 
(Chair), Karin Meurk-Harvey, Vanessa Simms and 
Janice Stipp. Our CEO has a standing invitation 
to attend meetings, and other directors, the 
Investor Relations Director, the Head of ESG 
and Sustainability, the Chief Human Resources 
Officer and the Global Head of HSE may also 
attend meetings by invitation. Nomination 
Committee members include non-executive 
directors Dorothy Thompson (Chair), Andrew 
Heath, and Janice Stipp.
Rotork Management Board 
Members of the Rotork Management Board 
(RMB) take responsibility for elements of our 
ESG agenda as follows:
•	 Our Chief Executive Officer has overall 
responsibility for the delivery of our 
ESG agenda.
•	 Our Chief Human Resources Officer 
is responsible for the people and 
community strands.
•	 Our Chief Financial Officer is responsible for 
financial and non-financial reporting, including 
compliance with disclosure requirements.
•	 Our Operations Excellence Director is 
responsible for the environmental strands 
of our agenda and the integration of ESG 
within procurement.
•	 Our Chief Information Officer is responsible 
for information and cybersecurity.
•	 The Managing Directors of the Oil & Gas, 
Water & Power and Chemical, Process 
& Industrial divisions are responsible for 
ensuring our sustainability objectives 
are embedded within their respective 
divisional strategies.
Management Board members also have 
specific responsibilities for climate-related 
matters, including to support the delivery of 
our science‑based emissions reduction targets. 
See our TCFD report on pages 79 to 85 for 
further details.
Group-wide policies 
We have an extensive suite of ESG policies 
which govern our approach. The key policies are 
published on our website, at www.rotork.com/
en/environmental-social-governance/esg-
reports-and-policies. Our policies set out our 
commitments to responsible and sustainable 
business practices. They apply Group wide.
We provide training to ensure employees 
understand and implement our policies. We 
also monitor compliance with our policies, for 
example through audits of higher-risk suppliers. 
See page 49 for more information about 
employee compliance and ethics training.
ESG integration 
Key performance indicators
We measure the Group’s performance against 
five financial performance indicators and two 
non-financial performance indicators: scope 1 
and 2 emissions reduction and total recordable 
incident rate (see page 15 of this report). 
Link to remuneration 
Our performance against these non-financial 
KPIs has been linked to executive directors’ 
and senior leaders’ remuneration.
Annual bonus – ESG measures 
•	 Total recordable incident rate.
•	 Environmental innovation (measured through 
evidence of greater positive environmental 
impact through our products and increased 
customer engagement on sustainability issues).
•	 Culture and engagement scores.
In 2024 non-financial performance represented 
a 10% share of the bonus opportunity for 
executive directors. In order to drive increased 
focus, incentives for the entire senior leadership 
population (around 100 people) are also formally 
linked to these measures. 
Depending on their role, some individuals also 
have additional sustainability targets included 
in their strategic personal objectives for the 
year (15% of the bonus opportunity).
Long Term Incentive Plan – ESG measure
The LTIP awarded in 2024 included scope 1 and 
2 emissions reduction as a performance metric 
(see page 150). 
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ESG and sustainability governance, integration and measurement continued
Integration into strategy and 
business processes
We are continuing to drive deeper integration of 
ESG into our strategy and core business processes.
Corporate strategy 
We have integrated ESG and sustainability-related 
market dynamics into our Growth+ strategy. 
This includes embedding requirements to 
enable us to meet our science-based emissions 
reduction targets.
New product development 
We are also creating product development 
roadmaps to reduce emissions associated with 
use of our sold products, to meet our emissions 
reduction target and customer demand for 
lower energy use/emissions products. We have 
also included sustainability considerations at 
each of the important checkpoints in the Rotork 
Development and Launch Process for new 
products. See pages 41 and 42 for more details 
on our emissions reduction targets. 
Governance 
We formalise the integration of environmental, 
social and ethical considerations into our key 
governance documents. These are available 
at www.rotork.com/en/environmental-social-
governance/esg-reports-and-policies.
Our communications and ratings
We are committed to measuring our ESG 
performance and reporting transparently 
on progress. We report on the delivery of our 
sustainability programme through the Annual 
Report and our website, and we actively engage 
with the ESG indices (latest ratings on page 36).
Basis of preparation 
This report has been prepared in line with the 
Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Standards: Core 
option. While the implementation timelines of 
forthcoming sustainability reporting regulations 
may change, our future annual reports will seek 
to align with these frameworks.
We also provide disclosures against the 
Sustainability Accounting Standards Board 
(SASB) framework to support our 
communication of financially material 
sustainability information.
We shall publish our GRI index on our website 
in the first half of 2025.
Further information
Sustainability Accounting Standards Board
We have provided disclosures against the SASB 
framework to support our communication of 
financially material sustainability information 
on page 66. 
ESG commitments
We have been a signatory to the United 
Nations Global Compact since 2003. We work 
to meet its Principles. This report contributes 
toward our United Nations Global Compact 
Communication on Progress requirements. 
We are a member of the 30% Club, which 
aims to achieve at least 30% representation 
of women on all boards and C-suites globally. 
As at 31 December 2024, Rotork’s Board had 
44% female representation. From 1 January 2025, 
our Board is comprised of 50% females.
Get in touch 
We welcome any feedback on this report and 
our sustainability agenda. Get in touch via:  
esg@rotork.com. 
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Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) Index
Table 1. Sustainability disclosure topics and accounting metrics
Topic
Metric – quantitative
Unit
2024
2023
2022
Energy  
management
Electricity
GJ
44,349
41,849
44,119
Natural gas1
GJ
36,344
32,902
38,282
Diesel and petrol
GJ
16,856
16,475
nr 2
LPG1
GJ
2,677
3,736
4,674
Steam
GJ
1,363
1,515
1,166
Total energy consumed
GJ
101,588
96,477
88,241
Percentage grid electricity
% from grid
% on-site generation
93%
7%
98%
2%
98%
2%
Percentage renewable electricity
% renewable
% non-renewable
56%
44%
44%
56%
34%
66%
Workforce health and safety
Total recordable incident rate (TRIR)
Rate
0.22
0.26
0.53
Fatality rate
Rate
—
—
—
Near miss frequency rate (NMFR) 
Rate
3.78
3.97
3.49
Topic
Discussion and analysis
Materials sourcing
Description of the management of risks associated with the use of critical materials
n/a
Annual 
Report 
2024, 
p. 47–51
Annual
Report
 2023, 
p. 47–50
Annual
 Report 
2022, 
p. 52–54
1	
From 2023, the calculation of GJ transitioned to using the UK DEFRA energy conversion rates. While not material, the year-on-year percentage change of natural gas and LPG consumption in GJ differs slightly from the percentage change in their original 
units (e.g. in cubic metres of gas).
2	
Data not available and ‘not reported’ in prior years.
Table 2. Activity metrics
Activity metric
Unit
2024
2023
2022
Number of units produced by product category
Quantitative
Commercially sensitive, not disclosed
Number of employees
Quantitative, as at year end
3,493
3,342
3,234
Table 3. Sustainability disclosure topics and accounting metrics that are non-applicable to Rotork
Topic
Metric – quantitative
Fuel economy and emissions in use phase
Sales-weighted fleet fuel efficiency for medium- and heavy-duty vehicles
Sales-weighted fuel efficiency for non-road equipment
Sales-weighted fuel efficiency for stationary generators
Sales-weighted emissions of (1) nitrogen oxides (NOx) and (2) particulate matter (PM) for: (a) marine diesel engines, (b) locomotive diesel engines, (c) on-road 
medium- and heavy-duty engines, and (d) other non-road diesel engines
Remanufacturing design and services
Revenue from remanufactured products and remanufacturing services
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In this section
Risk management
Description of the Group’s risk 
management process. 
 Read more on page 68
Risk appetite framework
Description of how risks are reviewed and 
how the risk appetite framework is applied 
to the management of our risks. 
 Read more on page 69
Principal risks and uncertainties
Outline of the principal risks and 
uncertainties for Rotork and the approach 
taken to manage current and emerging risks. 
 Read more on page 70
Principal risks – detail
Detailed description of the principal risks, 
movements and mitigations. 
 Read more on pages 72 to 77
How we manage risk
Managing the risks of our business is essential to 
our purpose of ‘keeping the world flowing for future 
generations’. Our approach to risk is intended to 
protect the interests of all our stakeholders.
Managing business risks
The Board is responsible for determining the 
nature and extent of the risks it is willing to take 
in achieving our strategic objectives. Our Group 
risk appetite statement sets the tone from the top 
and supports decision making to mitigate, control 
or accept risks. Rotork’s purpose, ‘keeping the 
world flowing for future generations’, is embedded 
in the way we assess risks. 
Our Group risk management process reviews 
those risks that could have an immediate or 
longer-term impact. The Board considers risk 
throughout the year including key risk indicator 
dashboards and a formal review process conducted 
twice a year. The Board is assisted in the oversight 
of risk management by the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee, the Audit Committee, and the Rotork 
Management Board. 
Principal risks are reviewed and managed using 
the Group’s risk management framework which 
incorporates both a bottom-up and top-down 
assessment. Risk owners are assigned to the 
most material risks and appropriate control 
measures are decided based on the perceived 
materiality and agreed risk appetite. Where a 
new response is required to manage a risk, an 
action owner is assigned who is accountable for 
the delivery of the action, with support from the 
Risk and Compliance team. An appropriate action 
could be to perform further analysis, to put in 
place controls and mitigations, or to address the 
risk by identifying other opportunities. 
As with all businesses, there are certain risks and 
uncertainties that may impact Rotork’s ability to 
achieve its objectives. The Group risk management 
process is an established way of identifying and 
managing risk and is part of our governance 
framework as set out in our Corporate Governance 
Report; see page 98. The continuous improvement 
and execution of a comprehensive and robust 
risk management system is of paramount 
importance to Rotork. 
The Group continues to build on the progress 
made in recent years in relation to our risk 
management framework, further integrating 
it into business practices and decision making. 
In 2024, the Group continued to respond to our 
principal and emerging risks to provide a clear 
picture to our stakeholders on how we view 
and manage the key risks to our business. 
An established functional risk review process 
results in a bottom-up assessment of risks. 
The bottom-up assessment process includes 
a review with all central functions covering 
risk identification, mitigation and reporting, 
including emerging risks, risks associated with 
ESG and development of further plans to 
respond to risks in accordance with risk appetite. 
The risks identified in the bottom-up reviews are 
consolidated before a top-down evaluation is 
performed by management and then reviewed 
by the Board. The consolidation process looks at 
all risks identified, the impact and likelihood of 
each risk and where common risk themes have 
been identified. The risks identified are then 
evaluated against the existing set of principal 
risks and uncertainties, and management 
reviews if any updates are required to the 
principal risks and uncertainties.
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Top-down 
risk assessment
Ongoing risk 
mitigation reviews 
and controls testing
Rotork Board
•	 Oversight of risk management and internal controls
•	 Defines risk appetite, statements and preferences
•	 Promotes a risk-aware culture that emphasises integrity at all levels of business operations
•	 Determines our principal risks and considers emerging risks and opportunities, ensuring that risk management is embedded within the core processes of the Group
Audit Committee
•	 Reviews the effectiveness of 
internal controls
•	 Reviews the risk management policy
•	 Approves the internal audit assurance plans
•	 Oversight of preparations for Provision 29 of 
the 2024 UK Corporate Governance Code
Safety and Sustainability Committee
•	 Promotes appropriate risk management of safety and 
sustainability matters
•	 Oversight of how we use the three pillars of our sustainability 
framework (Operating Responsibly, Enabling a Sustainable 
Future, and Making a Positive Social Impact) to guide our 
decision making and drive our success in line with our 
risk appetite
Rotork Management Board (RMB)
•	 Identifies, consolidates, reports and 
manages principal and key risks
•	 Reports to the Board on the management 
of our principal and key risks
Bottom-up 
risk assessment
Divisions and functions 
identify, manage and 
monitor risks
Group internal audit
•	 Provides independent assurance over the risk management framework through audits and other assurance work performed during the year, 
which is reported to the Audit Committee
Group risk and compliance
•	 Supports the Group to identify risks and put in place appropriate mitigations
•	 Promotes a risk-aware culture and adherence to risk appetite
•	 Reports on the status of principal risks and emerging risks and opportunities periodically, including key risk indicator dashboards
Functional management
•	 Identifies current and emerging risks and opportunities specific to the relevant function/business unit
•	 Implements risk management within their designated area of accountability
Risk management process
How we manage risk continued
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Risk management process 
The Board sets the Group’s risk appetite preference, stating whether 
we are tolerant, neutral or averse to a particular risk. These preferences 
guide our approach to managing risk. The risk appetite statements 
provide guiding principles to support decision making at both a Board 
level and throughout the Group. During 2024, the Board reviewed the 
risk appetite framework to assess the impact of changes in both the 
internal and external environment.
The Board reviewed the application of risk appetite statements and 
preferences by monitoring the key risk indicators which are presented 
to the Board twice a year.
Rotork uses the three pillars of our sustainability 
framework – Operating Responsibly, Enabling a 
Sustainable Future, and Making a Positive Social 
Impact – to guide our decision making and drive 
our success. 
The Board is responsible for determining the 
nature and extent of the risks it is willing to take 
in the achievement of our strategic objectives. 
Our Group risk appetite statement sets the tone 
from the top and supports decision making. 
The risk appetite framework provides qualitative 
and quantitative insight on risks and supports 
proactive mitigation planning.
1
Review and update the 
risk appetite preferences
2
Identify key decisions
3
Evaluate decisions 
against risk appetite
4
Review key 
risk indicators
Risk appetite framework
Risk appetite statement: Rotork’s purpose, ‘keeping the world flowing for future generations’, is embedded in the way 
that we assess risk. We are committed to generating stakeholder value through innovation and sustainable growth 
and will only take considered risks that align with our strategic objectives and established risk appetite.
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The risks include those that would threaten the 
Group’s business model, future performance, 
solvency, liquidity or reputation. Leaders within 
the business have continued to develop Rotork’s 
risk aware culture through training and workshops 
and an increased focus on mitigating actions. 
Emerging risks and opportunities 
Our risk management process includes consideration 
of risks and opportunities that may impact 
Rotork across a range of time horizons. 
Emerging risks and opportunities may be 
developing or already known events which are 
subject to uncertainty and ambiguity and are 
therefore difficult to quantify using traditional 
risk assessment techniques. Emerging risks and 
opportunities are often complex and volatile, 
and may be uncontrollable. 
Emerging risks and opportunities are identified 
throughout the year on a formal basis through 
functional risk workshops and with the Rotork 
Management Board and the Board twice a year. 
The response to each emerging risk or opportunity 
is tailored to the specific scenario and emerging 
risks and opportunities are managed and 
monitored based on the information available. 
In 2024, emerging risks identified were kept 
under review and it was decided to move the 
risks and opportunities associated with technology 
and artificial intelligence into our current 
principal risks.
The emerging risks and opportunities identified 
under the emerging risk and opportunity titled 
'technology' are now covered by the principal risk 
titled ‘increased competition’. Rotork intends to 
continue to embrace new technologies and 
innovate to remain a leader in intelligent flow 
control solutions in the future. Rotork reviews the 
market for new or disruptive technologies and 
invests in innovation to stay at the forefront of flow 
control technology. As a result of the continued 
and measurable risk or opportunity associated, 
it was no longer deemed to be emerging.
The risks and opportunities associated with 
artificial intelligence impact a range of Rotork’s 
principal risks including ‘increased competition’, 
‘critical IT system failure and cybersecurity’, 
‘compliance with laws and regulations’ and 
‘business change management’. Rotork will 
continue to protect against the negative impacts 
of artificial intelligence (AI), while embracing the 
positive impacts of AI. New or emerging aspects 
of AI will continue to be identified as part of risk 
workshops, however Rotork will manage the 
risks and opportunities through business as 
usual activities and the established Group risk 
management process. 
The potential impact of a number of new and 
emerging risks and opportunities were reviewed 
and the defined responses to existing emerging 
risks and opportunities assessed. The ability to 
identify risks and opportunities that may have a 
future impact on Rotork and our stakeholders is 
fundamental to our successful risk management 
process and is closely linked to the delivery of 
our strategic objectives. Emerging risks and 
opportunities will continue to be identified 
through 2025 as we consider new developments 
in the external and internal environment.
Changing stakeholder expectations 
Changing stakeholder expectations remains 
relevant due to the uncertainty and velocity 
of changes. Rotork’s traditional markets may 
change over the longer term as the world 
transitions to new energy sources. This transition 
is likely to be a net opportunity for Rotork. 
A rapid shift of expectations by a wide range of 
stakeholders for Rotork to no longer serve those 
traditional markets, may lead to a range of risks 
materialising due to the speed of the transition. 
Currently, Rotork is well positioned to help 
customers drive efficiency improvements, 
reduce emissions and take advantage of 
new and growing markets such as hydrogen.
Horizon scanning 
Horizon scanning is a technique of viewing 
risks and opportunities over the medium to 
longer term and allows the Group to look 
beyond the short term and evaluate its strategy 
against possible future realities which are then 
used to inform future business planning. During 
2024, the Board conducted a horizon scanning 
exercise to review key strategic risks against 
potential future horizons. 
Principal risks and uncertainties
Our risk management processes are dynamic. We continue to assess and prioritise the risks related 
to our strategic objectives and their impact on the principal risks. The principal risks identified are 
the result of a robust top-down and bottom-up risk assessment process.
Division: CPI 
Segment: Target 
Sector: Hydrogen  
Region: EMEA
Hydrogen has an important role to play in 
decarbonising steel production, widely 
viewed as a difficult to decarbonise industry. 
An innovative plant in Sweden has switched 
to fossil-free hydrogen to heat steel at its 
rolling mill, reducing GHG emissions to 
almost zero. The hydrogen is produced 
on-site by a 20MW electrolyser, the largest 
in Sweden. Rotork’s actuators were chosen 
by the customer for its local service capability 
and market leading high-quality products.
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Update on 2024 principal risks 
It was determined that the risk previously 
titled 'decline in market confidence' should 
be consolidated with the existing ‘increased 
competition’ risk. As noted in the emerging risks 
and opportunities section, technology and 
artificial intelligence were moved to be managed 
as part of existing principal risks.
The risk landscape has continued to be complex, 
with many risks interconnected. The Board 
reviewed the links and connections between 
risks to further understand how Rotork’s risks 
may impact each other. For instance, if a 
geopolitical risk were to materialise, it could 
have a significant impact on our supply chain, 
which could in turn impact our customers or 
reputation. Tracing through these impacts 
and understanding where the key mitigating 
activities exist allows Rotork to improve the 
resilience of the business by focusing efforts 
on those key mitigating activities. 
2024 principal risk movements 
During 2024, the Board has continued to assess 
the principal risks and uncertainties and has 
reviewed the effectiveness of mitigations and 
responses to risks. The ‘increased competition’ 
risk increased moderately as a result of the 
consolidation of other risks into one. ‘Supply 
chain disruption risk’ has decreased as Rotork 
has not experienced the same level of disruption 
or uncertainty as was present in previous periods. 
‘Business change management’ risk is reported 
as reduced due to the mitigations put in place 
by the business to deliver Growth+. 
Key risk indicators (KRIs) were kept under review 
during 2024. A KRI dashboard is presented twice 
a year to the Board. Our KRI dashboard is an 
Principal risks and uncertainties continued
important tool to measure the effectiveness 
of management actions. More details on the 
Board's oversight of audit, risk and internal 
controls are set out in the Corporate Governance 
Report on page 115.
Climate change 
The Group has embedded the identification of 
climate-related risks and opportunities into the 
Group’s risk management framework. Climate‑related 
risks and opportunities remained as a specific 
agenda item in every functional risk workshop 
held in the business. The output of this work 
is described in more detail in the TCFD section 
of this report on pages 79 to 85. Risks are also 
identified throughout the normal course of 
business and captured in detailed risk registers. 
This includes an assessment of the physical risks 
of climate change and the risks and opportunities 
related to the transition to a low-carbon economy. 
For many climate-related risks, either the severity 
of the impact or the likelihood may be uncertain, 
and typically these risks may materialise over 
longer-term time horizons than more traditional 
business risks. To account for this, we use a 
horizon risk scanning methodology to assess 
those risks that are more uncertain or intangible, 
such as climate change. This uses a wider 
timeframe than typically used, with short term 
as 0–10 years, medium term as 10–25 years and 
long term as 25 years and beyond. Each transition 
and physical climate risk or related opportunity 
has been qualitatively assessed and scored based 
on the potential financial impact. The level of 
potential financial impact is a function of three 
criteria including vulnerability (consisting of level 
of exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity), 
likelihood and magnitude. We also assessed 
opportunities in terms of the size of opportunity 
and ability to execute. 
The risk and opportunity assessment results 
(see pages 79 to 85 were used to inform the 
next stage of the climate risk assessment – the 
quantification of potential financial impact for 
some of the most material risks. This will be used 
to further develop the continual improvement 
of risk management responses for incorporation 
into our climate transition plan. 
In 2024, Rotork undertook an assessment of our 
physical risks across our sites. In 2025, the results 
of this work will be used to assess the quality 
of the mitigating actions in place in each site 
to address key risks. An assessment of Rotork’s 
transition risks and opportunities also took place. 
For more information see pages 79 to 85.
The Safety and Sustainability Committee has 
maintained strategic oversight of the development 
of our safety and sustainability strategies, including 
the risks associated with climate change. 
For more information see pages 117 to 120. 
Focus for 2025 
In 2025 we will continue to build on the 
work performed in 2024 which will include 
continual assessment of our emerging risks and 
opportunities and how risk appetite is applied 
to business decisions. 
The updated 2024 UK Corporate Governance Code 
applies to Rotork with effect from 1 January 2025. 
During 2024 we commenced our plans to 
comply with the new Provision 29 of the Code, 
which will become effective for Rotork from 
1 January 2026. We have begun the alignment 
of what is a material risk and a material control 
and, throughout 2025 testing will be conducted 
across the material controls identified. The Audit 
Committee is leading the process and is fully 
engaged with the detailed plans. The changes to 
the Code are providing the opportunity to have 
a fresh look at our key risks and mitigations. 
The Board receives regular progress reports from 
the Audit Committee and provides direction as 
required. Risk appetite remains an important 
part of discussions and the advancements in 
risk appetite made during 2024 will continue 
to inform our assessment of material risks 
during 2025. 
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Principal risks
Economic and market conditions
1.	 Increased competition
2.	 Geopolitical uncertainty
Environment, Social and Governance
3.	 Health & safety
4.	 Compliance with laws and regulations
5.	 Climate commitments
6.	 People
Product quality and reliability
7.	 Major in-field product failure
Resilience
8.	 Supply chain disruption
9.	 Critical IT system failure and cybersecurity
Change management
10.	Business change management
	Low	
Medium	
High
Net impact
Net likelihood
Low
Medium
High
Change management
Economic and market conditions
Environment, Social and Governance
Product quality and reliability
Resilience
2
9
6
3
4
1
5
10
7
8
Principal risks and uncertainties continued
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1. Increased competition
Risk owner: End Market Managing Directors
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
 
1.	
Revenue decline
2.	
One-off costs
Medium
Medium
Description
Increased competition on price, product or technological offering leading to a loss of sales globally or market share.
Update
This risk is reported as increasing as, following the Board’s review of the principal risks, it was decided to combine 
the risk which was titled ‘decline in market confidence’ with this risk. The consolidation as well as transitioning the 
emerging risks associated with technology and artificial intelligence into the principal risks, led to the 'increased 
competition' risk increasing moderately. In terms of the underlying risk, demand remains strong, and the Growth+ 
strategy is delivering on the identified key areas of focus for the Group.
Key mitigating actions
•	 R&D investment and organic product development, or acquisition of companies with new products, to maintain 
differentiation from the competition both in terms of the features and quality of our products and the services we provide. 
•	 Product development and innovation to address new markets and new applications in existing markets. 
•	 Geographic and end market diversification provides resilience to a reduction in any one geographic area but may 
not fully mitigate a change in the larger end markets. Rotork has production or sales and service operations in many 
low-cost countries.
•	 Small to mid-sized orders are generally less likely to come under pressure during uncertain economic times. 
We estimate that 75% of Rotork orders by value are small to mid-sized, i.e. less than £100k. 
•	 Increased focus on service offerings to capitalise on increased demand for product maintenance.
•	 Global supply chain team continually works with supply partners and secures lower prices and efficiencies. 
Risk appetite statement
We will invest in R&D, customer service and technology in order to retain a differentiated product portfolio. 
We will support this by providing a leading service solution to our customers.
Focus for 2025
As outlined in our Growth+ strategy, we will: 
•	 Continue our investment in innovative products and services. 
•	 Further develop global key account management. 
•	 Develop the strategic partnerships created with supply chain partners. 
•	 Deliver on the initiatives within the customer value element of our Growth+ strategy.
•	 Understand how AI and advancements in technology can support our customer offering.
•	 Identify opportunities to support our customers to increase efficiency, aligned to the ‘electrification of everything’ trend.
2. Geopolitical instability
Risk owner: Chief Financial Officer
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
 
1. Revenue decline
2. One-off costs 
3. Loss of profitability
High
High
Description
Increasing social and political instability results in disruption and increased protectionism in key geographic markets. 
Business disruption could impact our sales and might ultimately lead to loss of assets located in the affected region.
Update
This risk is unchanged since the prior year. The impact of geopolitical instability could possibly cause issues within 
our supply chain or customer base. Rotork continues to monitor geopolitical events closely and develop strategies 
to remain resilient.
Key mitigating actions
•	 Regular review of global markets considering social and political risks and contingency plans. Market exit strategies 
developed and implemented as required. 
•	 Key risk indicator monitoring the percentage of revenue from high-risk markets is reported to the Board. 
•	 The geographic spread of Rotork’s operations and customers limits the impact of any one market on the results 
of the Group as a whole. 
•	 Cash limits established for overseas businesses, managing our exposure to any one market in line with risk appetite. 
Risk appetite statement
We will continue to operate a geographically diverse business and actively pursue opportunities and efficiency within 
our global supply chain.
Focus for 2025
•	 Further develop scenario testing plans to deal with the impact of geopolitical tensions in the territories we do business in.
Strategy key : 
 Target segments 
 Customer value 
 Innovative products & services	
Trend key: 
 Increasing 
 Unchanged 
 Decreasing
Economic and market conditions
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Environmental, Social and Governance
3. Health & safety
Risk owner: Operations Excellence Director
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
2. One-off costs 
Medium
High
Description
The nature of Rotork’s core business and geographical locations involves potential risks to the health and safety of our 
employees or other stakeholders.
Update
Health and safety risk is unchanged since the prior year as Rotork continued to embed a safety conscious culture. 
The health, safety and well-being of our colleagues and customers remains of paramount importance. The positive 
results in TRIR and other measures such as the number of safety spots recorded are encouraging and maintaining 
those results is a key focus for our health and safety teams globally as we work towards our vision of zero harm.
Key mitigating actions
•	 Compliance with relevant legislation and codes of best practice. 
•	 Robust Health and Safety Policy and training included in all staff inductions, in addition to regular refresher training. 
•	 Refresh of the global health and safety standards. 
•	 Regular health and safety audits, site checks and reporting. 
•	 Appropriate training is provided for known safety risks. 
•	 Regular communications about accidents at work and visible key risk indicators. 
•	 Engagement of a third party to provide international support and travel advice in all markets and geographies. 
•	 Proactive culture of ‘safety spots’ introduced to help reduce safety issues. 
•	 Internal assurance reviews conducted during the year. 
Risk appetite statement
We are fully committed to ensuring the health and safety of all our employees and other stakeholders.
Focus for 2025
Alongside the continuation of our existing key mitigating actions we will: 
•	 Continue to roll out specific training to colleagues to enhance their competencies and safety awareness against our 
highest risks including a refresh of our induction process.
•	 Make continual improvements of our compliance audit programme to deliver assurance over key risk themes and topics.
4. Compliance with laws and regulations
Risk owner: Group General Counsel & Company Secretary
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
2. One-off costs 
Low
Medium
Description
Failure of our people or third parties who we do business with to comply with laws or regulations or to uphold our 
high ethical standards and values.
Update
This risk is unchanged since the prior year. Legal and ethical compliance teams across the Group have implemented a 
range of risk mitigations that reduce the likelihood of the risk. In 2024, the Code of Conduct was refreshed and launched. 
Key mitigating actions
•	 We are committed to reduce our environmental impact and to comply with all legal and regulatory requirements. 
•	 A ‘no tolerance’ culture, supported by a tone from the top, reinforcing our high ethical standards and values. 
•	 A training programme providing appropriate learning and awareness on a range of compliance topics to relevant staff. 
•	 Due diligence procedures in place for channel partners and acquisition targets before engaging in business relationships. 
•	 Availability and promotion of the Speak Up Policy and hotline; no retaliation policy with concerns raised 
being investigated. 
•	 Monitoring of changes in legislation, including sanctions, with appropriate safeguards put in place. 
•	 Mandatory annual confirmation statement confirming compliance with the Code of Conduct, associated policies, 
training and conflicts of interest. 
•	 Ongoing assessment of the modern slavery risks arising in our business against specific KPIs. 
•	 Template contract terms include requirements on third parties to comply with applicable laws.
Risk appetite statement
We have no tolerance for non-compliance with relevant laws and regulations in the markets in which we operate.
Focus for 2025
Alongside the continuation of our existing key mitigating actions we will: 
•	 Deliver training to all Rotork employees on our refreshed Code of Conduct.
•	 Launch the revised fair competition policy, manual and accompanying employee training.
•	 Continue to enhance our third party risk management programme.
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Environmental, Social and Governance continued
5. Climate commitments
Risk owner: Chief Executive Officer
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
 
1. Revenue decline
2. One-off costs 
3. Loss of profitability
Low
Low
Description
We do not deliver against our commitment to enable a sustainable future and Rotork is not recognised by our 
stakeholders as being part of the solution, leading to reputational damage.
Update
Rotork is committed to enabling a sustainable future and continues to assess new and upcoming regulations, 
identifying those that are relevant for Rotork. The use of renewable energies has increased across global operations, 
as has the work to assess our suppliers’ readiness to set science-based targets.
Key mitigating actions
•	 Safety and Sustainability Committee sets Rotork’s sustainability strategy and provides oversight. 
•	 Our Annual Report outlines and updates stakeholders on progress against delivering against stated targets. 
•	 Net-zero commitment published. 
•	 Compliance with TCFD guidelines and requirements. 
•	 Science-based targets defined and monitored.
Risk appetite statement
Rotork is committed to enabling a sustainable future. We are responsible for our own operations and supporting our 
suppliers and customers to operate responsibly and sustainably.
Focus for 2025
•	 Continue preparation to comply with new sustainability reporting regulations including the EU’s Corporate Sustainability 
Reporting Directive.
•	 Conduct further environmental lifecycle assessments of products.
•	 Further engagement with suppliers on emissions measurement.
6. People
Risk owner: Chief Human Resources Officer
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
 
2. One-off costs 
Medium
Low
Description
Our people are critical to delivering our success and growth. An inability to attract, retain and develop key and diverse 
talent could mean we fail to successfully deliver our strategic goals.
Update
Our people risk is unchanged since last year. Rotork continues to see meaningful progress across our learning and 
training, talent management and culture workstreams.
Key mitigating actions
•	 A continued focus on building early careers talent pools through graduate, intern and apprenticeship programmes 
to support our future talent.
•	 Introduction of our new performance management system to support our people managers and employees 
through our annual performance cycle. 
•	 A global network of Mental Health First Aiders, and a global wellbeing and employee assistance programme is 
offered 24/7 in all local languages. 
•	 Ongoing leadership development to build our leadership capabilities
•	 We publish our ethnicity pay as well as our gender pay report. We have a fair pay framework covering all employees 
globally and have been a real living wage employer since 2020. 
•	 An annual employee engagement survey to develop local action plans and listen to our employees and understand 
where we can make improvements. 
•	 We have a talent review process including succession planning to identify talent around the business with oversight 
from the Board.
•	 The Rotork Benevolent Support Fund offers support to employees and ex-employees and their families facing hardship.
Risk appetite statement
We will invest in ensuring that we have the right people, with the right skills to deliver our strategy. This will include 
ensuring that we maintain appropriate succession plans and develop and attract the right talent.
Focus for 2025
•	 Continue to evolve our culture and employee value proposition.
•	 Further development of Rotork's approach to talent and performance management.
•	 Launch our global people manager development programmes to support our culture and underpin key behaviours 
within our business.
Strategy key : 
 Target segments 
 Customer value 
 Innovative products & services	
Trend key: 
 Increasing 
 Unchanged 
 Decreasing
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Product quality and reliability
Resilience
7. Major in-field product failure
Risk owner: Operations Excellence Director & Chief Technology Officer
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
3. Loss of profitability
Low
Medium
Description
Major in-field failure of a new or existing Rotork product potentially leading to a product recall, major on-site warranty 
programme or the loss of an existing or potential customer.
Update
This risk is unchanged since last year. Rotork is committed to continue working with suppliers to drive quality and to 
continually improve manufacturing processes that minimise the risk of in-field product failures. 
Key mitigating actions
•	 An established product design review process pre-launch, using Rotork’s extensive product launch experience. 
•	 Fitting and commissioning products wherever possible by Rotork engineers to ensure correct operation when 
first used. 
•	 Comprehensive set of quality control procedures over suppliers. These include supplier visits, audits and a scorecard 
system to measure their performance. 
•	 Global service coverage ensures that any product failure issues will be dealt with quickly and efficiently to minimise 
any reputational impact.
•	 Intelligent Asset Management (iAM) analytics provide actionable insight into valve conditions and help select 
appropriate maintenance strategies.
Risk appetite statement
We will maintain robust quality control procedures over components purchased and over our finished products in all 
of our manufacturing locations.
Focus for 2025
Alongside the continuation of our existing key mitigating actions we will: 
•	 Continue to improve the quality procedures throughout the product lifecycle.
8. Supply chain disruption
Risk owner: Operations Excellence Director
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
 
1. Revenue decline
2. One-off costs 
Medium
Medium
Description
Supply chain disruption which may arise such as a tooling failure at a key supplier, logistics issues, severe weather 
events impacting key suppliers which would cause disruption to manufacturing at a Rotork factory.
Update
Rotork continued to see improvements in the availability of key components and less uncertainty within our supply 
chains. As a result of this we reduced our supply chain disruption risk. We continue to forecast our component 
requirements and proactively work with our supply chain partners.
Key mitigating actions
•	 Dual sourcing for key components wherever possible provides mitigation for key suppliers or a tooling failure. 
•	 A key risk indicator measures single sourced critical components and is reported quarterly to the Board. 
•	 Maintaining safety stock levels sufficient to protect against short-term disruption. 
•	 Regular monitoring and replacement of our tooling at all suppliers reduces the risk of a tooling failure. 
•	 Identification of our critical suppliers and components, and improvements in supply. 
•	 Supply chain due diligence and monitoring of supplier quality. 
•	 Strengthening of our risk monitoring processes, including the ways we identify and respond to early warning 
signs of potential supplier failure. 
•	 Building tactical inventories and increasing direct purchasing of key components.
Risk appetite statement
We will manage any disruption to our supply chain utilising a range of strategies dependent on the component and 
risk. We will focus our mitigations on critical components and will consider geopolitical factors in decision making. 
We expect our suppliers to adhere to our Supplier Code of Conduct.
Focus for 2025
Alongside the continuation of our existing key mitigating actions we will: 
•	 Develop our cost engineering strategy focused on key risk areas.
•	 Review our geographical supply chain risk and supplier base.
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Strategy key : 
 Target segments 
 Customer value 
 Innovative products & services	
Trend key: 
 Increasing 
 Unchanged 
 Decreasing
Resilience continued
Change management
9. Critical IT system failure and cybersecurity
Risk owner: Chief Information Officer
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
1. Revenue decline
2. One-off costs 
Medium
High
Description
Failure to provide, maintain and update the systems and infrastructure required by the Rotork business. Failure to protect 
Rotork operations, sensitive or commercial data, technical specifications and financial information from cybercrime.
Update
This risk is unchanged from last year. The Group continues to invest in risk mitigation and preventative controls. 
Cyber risk continues to evolve, and the risks associated with artificial intelligence have been considered, moving from 
our emerging risks. Threat intelligence and patching plays a key role in the mitigation of this risk.
Key mitigating actions
•	 Established security controls, policies and procedures. 
•	 Dedicated security team using monitoring and defence tools. 
•	 Third party cyber maturity assessments performed regularly. 
•	 Continuously raising cybersecurity awareness through regular training and simulated phishing attacks. 
•	 All new IT services are designed with a ‘cloud first’ approach to improve security, resilience and availability. 
•	 All IT services are patched in accordance with vendor support contracts and external advice. 
•	 A disaster recovery solution (supported by third party service level agreements) is in place for all critical systems. 
•	 Increased security and authentication controls implemented for all IT users. 
•	 Key risk indicators and cybersecurity updates are reported to the Board.
Risk appetite statement
We will continue to review current external and internal cyber threats and respond to them to ensure that we have 
appropriate technology processes and controls in place.
Focus for 2025
Alongside the continuation of our existing key mitigating actions we will: 
•	 Drive the execution of our cybersecurity strategy in full alignment with internationally recognised standards, 
strengthening protection, resilience and recovery against an increasingly complex and evolving threat landscape.
•	 Continue to deliver our obsolescence plan, focusing on proactively replacing and upgrading key infrastructure 
components and upgrading of all user devices to maintain confidentiality, integrity, and availability of our data 
and services.
10. Business change management
Risk owner: Business Transformation Director
Link to strategy
Link to viability scenario
Likelihood
Impact
Trend
 
 
1. Revenue decline
2. One-off costs 
3. Loss of profitability
Low
Medium
Description
The delivery of our strategic initiatives relies upon our ability to deliver a series of key change programmes without 
causing business disruption or having a negative impact to our day-to-day operations.
Update
This risk is reported as decreasing due to the increase in maturity of the mitigating actions to deliver our various 
Growth+ programmes. This risk tracks the key change programmes underway in Rotork, such as the global roll-out 
of an ERP system, as the management team is focused on the delivery of the key aspects of our Growth+ strategy.
Key mitigating actions
•	 A dedicated function was established to focus on delivery of our key change programmes spanning finance, 
IT and commercial. 
•	 A dedicated project management office is in place to manage key deliverables with a mix of both operational 
and specific project management experience. 
•	 Outcomes are monitored and tracked against the initial objectives of each initiative. 
•	 Metrics are in place to indicate and manage any impact on day-to-day operations. 
•	 Regular governance forums are in place to report on risks and deal with issues in a timely manner.
•	 A resource model is in place to deliver Growth+.
Risk appetite statement
We will ensure that our change management capacity is sufficient to implement our strategy and that the business 
decisions do not negatively influence our day-to-day business.
Focus for 2025
•	 Deliver customer value and innovative products and services.
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Assessment of Prospects
The Group’s Growth+ strategy (see pages 17 
to 23) and principal risks (see pages 70 to 77) 
are well documented. The Group works closely 
with its customers who have projects ranging 
from several weeks to several years, discussing 
operational plans and their longer-term capital 
expenditure programmes. 
Whilst the Board has no reason to believe the 
Group will not be viable over a longer period, 
the directors have assessed the viability of the 
Group over a three-year period taking account 
of the Group’s current position and the potential 
impact of the principal risks. 
Three years is considered an appropriate period 
over which a reasonable expectation of the 
Group’s longer-term viability can be evaluated 
and is aligned with our planning horizon at both 
Group and divisional level. The Board has considered 
whether it is aware of any specific relevant 
factors beyond the three-year horizon and 
confirmed that there are none. 
Assessment of Viability
A robust assessment of the principal and 
emerging risks facing the business was 
conducted through the year with the review of 
the risk appetite framework and risk dashboards 
contributing to a fuller consideration of those 
risks which might impact the business model 
or future performance. The directors have 
considered each of the remaining principal risks, 
individually and some in combination, and the 
potential impact they could have in severe but 
plausible scenarios. The scenarios contained 
significant one-off financial shocks and 
significant profit erosion impacting the Group’s 
revenue. In particular, the scenarios cover different 
potential impacts associated with geopolitical 
instability, disruption to supply chain or to 
logistics, whatever the source of that disruption, 
increasing political protectionism in respect of 
trade tariffs and lower investment in the oil and 
gas markets. These events occurring individually 
or at once have been considered in the 
modelling of the different scenarios.
Financial scenario modelling was carried out to 
assess the impact of these risks on the Group’s 
three-year plan, including a reverse stress test. 
Assumptions were made concerning market 
activity levels, the impact of the scenarios on 
working capital cycles and the mitigating actions 
that could be taken to reduce the cash and 
financial impact of the stress-test scenarios. 
Further mitigating actions not modelled that 
could be taken if needed include curtailment 
of dividends or capital asset investment. 
In coming to this view, the Board has considered 
the current level of geopolitical instability, inherent 
volatility in exchange rates and oil and other 
commodity prices, the current inflationary 
environment, and the nature of the industry 
and the business cycles involved. 
Given the current position of the Group and 
the likely effectiveness of any mitigating actions, 
the Board has assessed the impact these would 
have on the business model, future performance, 
solvency and liquidity over the period and have 
a reasonable expectation that the Group will 
be able to continue in operation and meet its 
liabilities as they fall due over a three-year period. 
Scenario modelled
Link to principal risks
Scenario 1: Revenue decline. 
•	 4% decline in revenue by year three.
•	 The Board considered events that would result in a 
gradual erosion of revenue and gross margin which 
would ultimately reduce operating cash generation.
•	 Geopolitical instability
•	 Increased competition
•	 Major in-field failure
•	 Climate commitments
•	 Critical IT system failure and cybersecurity
•	 Business change management
•	 Supply chain disruption
Scenario 2: One-off costs and no revenue growth.
•	 £50m one-off costs in year one and no growth 
in revenue from current levels.
•	 Impact of a one-off cost due to a specific issue, 
accompanied by a reduction or downturn in 
forecast revenue due to an interruption to 
production, supply chain disruption or disruption 
to a specific end market. 
•	 Geopolitical instability
•	 Supply chain disruption
•	 Increased competition
•	 Health & Safety
•	 Compliance with laws and regulation
•	 Major in-field product failure
•	 Business change management
•	 Climate commitments
•	 People
•	 Critical IT system failure and cybersecurity
Scenario 3: One-off costs and revenue decline.
•	 £50m one-off costs in year one and a 12% 
decline in revenue by year three.
•	 One-off cash costs as a result of a specific issue 
and a permanent loss of subsequent profitability 
which affects operating cash generation. 
•	 Geopolitical instability
•	 Major in-field product failure
•	 Business change management
•	 Climate commitments 
Scenario 4: Reverse Stress Test. 
•	 £100m one-off costs in year one and a 14% 
decline in revenue from 2024 by year three. 
•	 There is no reasonably possible scenario that would 
lead to the conditions modelled in the reverse 
stress test.
•	 Multiple concurrent risks
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2024 TCFD Report
Governance 
Introduction
The following sections report on our implementation of the recommendations of the Task Force on 
Climate-related Financial Disclosures. We support the purpose of TCFD, to standardise climate-related 
disclosures that will enable financial and other partners to gain a clear view of which companies will 
endure or even flourish as the environment changes, regulations evolve, new technologies emerge 
and customer behaviour shifts. Better information about climate risks and opportunities will then 
also flow into companies’ risk management and strategic planning processes. As this occurs, companies’ 
and investors’ understanding of the financial implications associated with climate change will grow, 
empowering the markets to channel investment to sustainable and resilient solutions, opportunities, 
and business models.
TCFD and CFD Statement of Compliance 
Rotork is disclosing in accordance with the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) UK Listing Rule 
6.6.6R(8) and the Companies (Strategic Report)(Climate-related Financial Disclosure) Regulations 
2022. The main disclosures are set out here, within the TCFD report, on pages 79 to 85. 
There are additional disclosures on pages 41 to 47 and 52 to 56. Of the TCFD’s 11 disclosure 
recommendations, we are compliant with ten, and we explain the status of the remaining 
recommendation below.
TCFD recommendation
Status
Strategy
(b) Describe the impact of climate-related 
risks and opportunities on the organisation’s 
businesses, strategy and financial planning
To fully align with this recommendation, the reporting 
company must publish a transition plan. As transition 
plans are also an anticipated requirement of forthcoming 
reporting regulations, Rotork has decided to delay the 
drafting of the formal document until the respective 
requirements for these schemes have been published.
However, Rotork already discloses many of the likely 
requirements including its greenhouse gas emissions, 
progress against science-based targets, TCFD scenario 
analysis results, and climate-related remuneration target.
Recommendation (a): the Board’s 
oversight of climate-related risk 
and opportunities
Strategy
The Board supports the ongoing development of 
Rotork’s business strategy. This year, the Board 
has been particularly focused on the roadmap 
to achieving our scope 1 and 2 reduction target 
and future ESG reporting requirements. 
Performance
The Board monitors the Group’s performance 
against five key financial and two non-financial 
performance indicators, including the reduction 
in scope 1 and 2 emissions. Performance against 
these measures is evaluated by the Board, the 
Safety and Sustainability (S&S) Committee and 
Remuneration Committee. The Audit Committee 
retains oversight of the assurance of the 
reporting and disclosures of relevant 
sustainability data.
Updates: the Board met regularly during the year 
and received updates from the S&S Committee 
Chair following each S&S Committee meeting. 
Each update included coverage of climate-related 
matters. The S&S Committee met three times 
during the year and received regular reports 
from our CEO and wider senior management 
on the Group’s progress towards science-based 
emissions reduction targets and the related 
long-term incentive targets, which underpin our 
ultimate net-zero commitment. In 2024, each 
S&S Committee meeting included climate-related 
matters (see the S&S Committee Report on 
page 117 for further details); these updates are 
prepared by the ESG, HSE and Group Supply 
Chain teams.
Climate risk assessment: the Board reviews and 
assesses current and emerging climate and 
environment-related risks at Group Risk Review 
meetings held twice a year. The Board provides a 
top-down view of climate risks and assesses how 
risks are being responded to by management. 
Recommendation (b): management 
team’s role in assessing and managing 
climate-related risks and opportunities
As part of the overall risk management process, 
management reviews and assesses current and 
emerging climate and environment-related risks 
at Group Risk Review meetings held twice a 
year. The outcomes of these assessments are 
reported to the Board.
Targets: climate strategy and targets are 
proposed by the Rotork Management Board, 
with support from the ESG and Sustainability 
team, and are approved by the S&S Committee 
and the Board. Our science-based greenhouse 
gas (GHG) emissions reduction targets cover 
scopes 1, 2 and 3.
Remuneration: in 2024, remuneration from ESG 
performance metrics included a scope 1 and 2 
emissions reduction measure in the LTIP. The 
2025 LTIP includes a further scope 1 and 2 
reduction measure. 
Individuals
•	 Chief Executive Officer: responsible for 
overseeing integration of climate considerations 
within the corporate strategy and M&A-related 
activity and reports directly to the Board. 
•	 Chief Financial Officer: responsible for climate 
reporting and compliance with disclosure 
requirements.
•	 Chief Technical Officer: responsible for 
realising product efficiency opportunities 
within new product development and 
overseeing continuous improvement and 
innovation in product design to manage 
our demand on resources and limit our 
environmental impact. 
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Governance continued
Strategy
Recommendation (b): management 
team’s role in assessing and managing 
climate-related risks and opportunities 
continued
Individuals continued
•	 Operations Excellence Director: responsible 
for the HSE and global supply chain teams, 
which respectively i) oversee the implementation 
of environmental and energy efficiency 
projects at our manufacturing sites to deliver 
energy, waste and water reduction targets, 
and ii) oversee emissions reduction 
opportunities in the upstream value chain, 
including engaging with suppliers to set 
science-based targets.
•	 Other members of the management team: 
responsible for supporting the individuals 
above and meeting their own emissions 
reduction mandates. For example, our Chief 
Human Resources Officer is responsible for 
the development and implementation of our 
fleet strategy to reduce associated emissions. 
The management team is led by our CEO.
Teams
•	 ESG team: responsible for developing the ESG 
and climate strategy and delivering related 
communications and reports. Reporting to 
the Chief Financial Officer, its responsibilities 
also include (i) monitoring and addressing 
stakeholder expectations in relation to 
climate issues, (ii) monitoring broader ESG 
and climate-related policy developments, 
and (iii) monitoring our exposure to 
climate‑related risks and opportunities 
to ensure awareness of the management 
team and to meet disclosure requirements. 
•	 Health, Safety and Environment (HSE) team: 
responsible for setting and adhering to 
environmental standards for our operations 
and collating environmental performance 
data. Reporting to the Operations Excellence 
Director, it is also responsible for overseeing 
the implementation of the operational 
components of the climate strategy set 
by the Board.
•	 Global Supply Chain team: responsible for 
supplier engagement on climate issues and 
engaging suppliers to set science-based 
targets. Reporting to the Operations 
Excellence Director, the team is additionally 
responsible for analysing and responding to 
ESG risks and opportunities in our supply 
base, including climate-related risks.
Recommendation (a): climate-related 
risks and opportunities over the short, 
medium and long‑term
Our approach to scenario analysis
Over 2021-23, Rotork undertook an initial set of 
scenario analyses. The physical risk assessment 
modelled risks to our four largest assembly facilities 
using the IPCC Shared Socioeconomic Pathways 
(SSPs), and the transition risk assessment modelled 
scenarios with data from the Network for Greening 
the Financial System (NGFS) and the IEA World 
Energy Outlook (WEO).
In 2024, we engaged specialists from the Marsh 
Climate and Sustainability team to refresh our 
quantitative climate scenario analyses. Our latest 
physical risk assessment includes all Rotork 
facilities in an initial risk screening to identify 
facilities with potential exposure to climatic 
hazards, and all assembly facilities were included 
in the subsequent scenario analysis risk modelling. 
Our latest transition risk assessment uses two 
NGFS transition scenarios, incorporating findings 
from the previous analyses.
Quantification of financial impacts
The physical risk modelling quantified the 
annual impact on net profit of future climate 
scenarios against a 2020 baseline for property 
damage (before any insurance coverage) and 
productivity loss.
The transition risk modelling included 
quantification of direct greenhouse gas 
emissions costs (annual impact on net profit). 
The transition opportunity modelling quantified 
the incremental revenue from new market 
opportunities (net present value for the 
period 2024–2050).
Time horizons
Our scenario analyses assess physical climate 
risks using modelled timeframes of 2020–2100 
(by decade) and transition risks for 2025–2050 
(at 2025, 2030 and 2050).
These analyses align with our enterprise risk 
management timeframes:
•	 Short-term (0–5 years): The five-year 
timeframe aligns with our five-year strategy 
and related strategic planning.
•	 Medium-term (5–10 years): The 10-year 
timeframe aligns with our approach to 
innovation and service development.
•	 Long-term (10–25 years): The 25-year 
timeframe aligns with (i) the timeframe we 
apply in macro and megatrend risk scenarios, 
see pages 4 to 5, and (ii) our net-zero 
target timeframes.
The scenarios and their parameters
Physical risk scenarios
IPCC RCP 2.6 is a low-emissions scenario where 
global warming is likely limited to below 2°C.
IPCC RCP 8.5 is a high-emissions scenario where 
global warming may exceed 4°C.
Global average temperatures across these two 
scenarios are not expected to diverge until 
c.2040. Climate risk was modelled using the 
XDI climate model, which assesses the risk of 
physical damage and operational disruption 
posed by natural hazards. The model does not 
incorporate site-specific protections. 
Physical risks assessed
(i) Surface water flooding, (ii) Riverine flooding, 
(iii) Coastal inundation, (iv) Soil movement,  
(v) Extreme wind, (vi) Forest fire, (vii) Freeze 
thaw, (viii) Extreme heat.
Transition risk scenarios
NGFS Net Zero 2050: a high-ambition 
scenario which limits global warming to 
1.5°C, achieving net-zero by 2050 through 
significant, coordinated global climate 
policies and cross-sectoral innovation.
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Strategy continued
Recommendation (a): climate-related risks and opportunities over the short, 
medium and long-term continued
Our approach to scenario analysis continued
The scenarios and their parameters continued
Transition risk scenarios continued
NGFS Fragmented World: a scenario with delayed, unaligned climate policies, resulting in 2.4°C 
of warming and significant exposure to both physical and transition risks. Countries with net-zero 
targets achieve 80% of ambition and those without continue current policies. This scenario was 
chosen for comparison as it is more reflective of the current policy environment.
Transition risk and opportunity categories assessed
(i) Carbon pricing, (ii) Energy technology (transition-related costs), (iii) Market shifts, (iv) Reputation, 
(v) Liability, (vi) Investor sentiment
Determining climate-related materiality
A substantive financial or strategic impact on our business is defined by our risk management 
process as:
•	 Financial: effect on net profit of >£8m and a probability of occurrence above >25%.
•	 Strategic: an event in the future that may limit our ability to deliver against our strategic goals.
Climate risks and opportunities
Physical risks
ID
Impact
Description
Category
Financial impact in 2050
Scope of 
assessment
Risk management
R1
Increased risk of property 
damage from climate-
related natural hazards 
at our operational sites
Losses from physical damage to 
Rotork sites. The modelled impact 
is modest. Site-specific protections 
are not considered by the model.
Acute 
and chronic
 RCP 2.6  
(2°C warming)
 RCP 8.5  
(4°C warming)
100% of 
global sites
•	 Rotork assets are insured against natural 
hazards and business interruption.
•	 Asset-specific business continuity plans are in 
place. Our largest operations are in the UK, 
China, USA and Italy.
R2
Increased risk of productivity 
loss from climate-related 
natural hazards at our 
operational sites
Losses from downtime days at 
Rotork sites. The modelled impact 
is modest. Site-specific protections 
are not considered by the model.
Acute 
and chronic
 RCP 2.6  
(2°C warming)
 RCP 8.5  
(4°C warming)
100% of 
global sites
Transition risks
ID
Impact
Description
Category
Financial impact in 2050
Scope of 
assessment
Risk management
R3
Direct GHG  
emissions costs
Additional costs from carbon taxes 
and fees on scope 1 and 2 emissions.
Policy 
and legal
 Net Zero 2050
 Fragmented World
100% of 
global sites
•	 Rotork is proactively reducing scope 1 and 2 
emissions and has nearly achieved its 2030 
science-based reduction target.
R4
Reputation and  
perception risk
Effect of investors' and customers' 
perception of the sustainability 
of Rotork's business, operations 
and products.
Reputation
Qualitative analysis
Group level
•	 Reputational risk is evaluated as part of the 
Group risk management process.
•	 Rotork regularly engages with its stakeholders.
Impact thresholds (key):  Negative exposure: 
 <£3m 
 £3–5m 
 £5–10m 
 £10–20m 
 >£20m
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Strategy continued
Recommendation (a): climate-related risks and opportunities over the short, 
medium and long-term continued
Climate risks and opportunities continued
Practical limitations when quantifying future risks
Please note that these quantifications are forward-looking projections which can only provide 
an indicative value at risk. Physical risk values are based on place-based assumptions concerning 
likelihood, magnitude and asset vulnerability which vary between future climate scenarios.
2024 updates to transition risk disclosure
•	 Indirect GHG emissions costs (change in our energy costs): when reassessed in the 2024 analysis 
(as part of the ‘Energy technology’ assessment), these costs are not projected to be material. 
•	 Indirect GHG emissions costs (policy & legal): While the impact of CBAM schemes was considered 
in this analysis, Rotork’s exposure is not currently assessed to be material.
Transition opportunities
ID
Impact
Description
Category
Revenue impact (NPV)
Scope of 
assessment
Opportunity management
O1
Incremental revenue from 
new market opportunities
Decarbonisation activities offer 
increased demand for Rotork 
products in key transitional 
sectors including:
•	 CCUS
•	 Battery storage
•	 Hydrogen
Markets
 Net Zero 2050
 Fragmented World
Global
•	 As part of our Growth+ strategy, we have 
identified Target Segments where we see 
significant profitable growth opportunity 
(including decarbonisation and HVAC) and 
have established business development teams 
to secure these opportunities.
Impact thresholds (key):  Positive exposure: 
 <£3m 
 >£20m
2024 updates to opportunity disclosure
•	 Avoided risk from mitigation: in the previous analysis, the cost savings from scope 1 and 2 emissions reductions were noted as a potentially material opportunity. While we remain fully committed to 
our net-zero and carbon reduction targets, the latest 2024 analysis found that – as an organisation with relatively low operational emissions – the financial savings from these reduction initiatives do not 
meet our materiality thresholds. 
Recommendation (b): the impact of climate related risks and opportunities on 
businesses, strategy, and financial planning
Integration into financial planning 
The opportunities and risks (net of any insurance cover) of climate change are integrated into our 
financial planning, to the extent that the likelihood of occurrence is probable. 
•	 The expected cost of taxes (including environmental taxes), energy and capital expenditure 
(including energy-saving and renewable energy projects) are incorporated into our 
budgeting process.
•	 The revenue and anticipated revenue from our eco-transition portfolio factors into our financial 
forecasts, including climate-related opportunities like oil and gas customers purchasing electric 
actuators as part of decarbonising upstream operations.
•	 As part of our budgeting process, we incorporate the cost of performing risk assessments and 
undertake mitigations to reduce the impact of physical risks. We purchase insurance to further 
mitigate the risk of property damage from extreme weather events.
•	 Reputational risk is managed through our ‘climate commitments’ principal risk (p. 75), which is 
incorporated within our viability assessments.
The viability assessment (p. 78) considers risks where the likelihood of risk occurrence is more 
remote. The likelihood of risks occurring is monitored through our Group risk management process.
Incorporation into business strategy
Our 'enabling a sustainable future' initiative underpins the Growth+ strategy. To monitor transitional 
opportunities, we began reporting on our eco-transition portfolio in 2021. 
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Strategy continued
Risk management 
Recommendation (a): identifying and assessing climate-related risks 
Risk management framework 
Climate-related risks and opportunities are assessed and managed using the Group’s overarching 
risk management framework (see pages 67 to 69 for more information). Our established risk 
management framework incorporates both ‘bottom-up’ and a ‘top-down’ risk identification and 
review processes. The bottom-up process is carried out at functional, divisional and regional levels 
and the top-down process is performed at the management and Board level. 
Horizon risk methodology 
For many climate-related risks, either the severity of the impact or the likelihood may be uncertain, 
and typically these risks may materialise over longer-term time horizons than more traditional 
business risks. To account for this, we use a ‘horizon risk methodology’ to assess those risks that 
are more uncertain or intangible, such as climate change. This uses a wider timeframe than typically 
used, with short term as 0–10 years, medium term as 10–25 years and long term as 25 years 
and beyond. 
Climate risk identification
Climate-related risks are identified, monitored and managed through risk workshops held with 
all key functions at least twice a year. Since 2022, in addition to the established risk management 
process, additional cross-function workshops were convened to identify and contextualise 
climate‑related risks and opportunities that affect different functions. The potential impacts 
were discussed and ranked based on perceived business importance. 
Climate risk assessment 
In accordance with the TCFD recommendations, our assessment primarily focused on understanding 
the potential financial impact of these risks. To achieve this, each transition and physical climate risk 
or opportunity has been qualitatively assessed and scored based on the potential financial impact. 
The level of potential financial impact is a function of three criteria including vulnerability (consisting 
of level of exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity), likelihood and magnitude. We also assessed 
opportunities in terms of the size of opportunity and ability to execute. The risk and opportunity 
assessment results were used to inform the next stage of the climate risk assessment – the 
quantification of potential financial impact for some of the most material risks. 
We currently define financial materiality as affecting net profit by over £8m and probability greater 
than 25%. This will be used to inform the continued development of risk management responses 
for incorporation into our Climate Transition Plan.
Recommendation (b): the impact of climate-related risks and opportunities on 
businesses, strategy, and financial planning continued
Incorporation into business strategy continued
The role Rotork can play in a green economy and a cleaner, more sustainable future featured 
highly in our recent materiality assessments. Our products can enable the transition to a low-carbon 
world, with applications in low-carbon fuels, hydrogen, carbon capture, usage and storage, and 
battery materials. 
In addition, there are considerable opportunities to assist our oil and gas customers in delivering 
against their ambitious net-zero commitments, including through providing products and services 
that deliver reliable, energy-efficient solutions that minimise environmental impacts (for example, 
through lower emissions, energy consumption and water usage). Similar opportunities present 
themselves in the power, water and industrial markets. Our products have applications in the rollout 
and modernisation of critical infrastructure. Water scarcity is resulting in a greater need for recycling 
and desalination, and rising sea levels are necessitating flood defence investment. 
Case studies illustrating the role we can play are set out on pages 52 to 56.
Recommendation (c): the climate resilience of our strategy 
The scenario analysis indicates that Rotork is resilient to both the transition to a low-carbon economy 
and to the more frequent, severe weather events that would accompany climate scenarios with 
greater levels of warming. Our continued progress against our science-based scope 1 and 2 target 
demonstrates our ability to manage the risk of future carbon taxes. Likewise, the risk of disruption 
from climate-related natural hazards is assessed as 'low' with management procedures in place. 
Likewise, through our ability to supply technologies that enable the transition – including hydrogen 
production and electrification of oil and gas operations – we are positioned to benefit from the 
transition to a 2°C scenario. For further examples of our products’ use in low-carbon technologies, 
see pages 52 to 56.
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Recommendation (b): managing climate-related risks 
Risk control and management
When risks are identified, a risk owner is assigned who is accountable for monitoring and managing 
the risk. In some cases, climate-related risks identified may already sit as risk drivers to an existing risk. 
Where a new response is required to manage a risk, an action owner is assigned who is accountable 
for the delivery of the action, with support from the Risk and Compliance team. An appropriate 
action could be to perform further analysis, to put in place controls and mitigations, or to address 
the risk by identifying other opportunities.
Recommendation (c): how identifying, assessing and managing climate‑related 
risks are integrated into enterprise risk management
The Board is responsible for determining the nature and extent of the risks it is willing to take in 
achieving our strategic objectives. Our Group risk appetite statement sets the tone from the top and 
supports decision making to mitigate, control or accept risks. Rotork’s purpose, ‘keeping the world 
flowing for future generations’, is embedded in the way we assess risks. 
The Board considers climate issues in strategic and financial planning throughout the year; however, 
a formal review process is conducted twice yearly. It is assisted in the assessment of climate-related 
matters by the S&S Committee, the Audit Committee, and the Rotork Management Board. 
Our Group risk management process reviews those risks that could have an immediate or longer-term 
impact. One of our principal risks is ‘Climate Commitments’. Our Climate Commitments risk is driven 
by the Group’s commitment to enable a sustainable future, and our understanding of the challenges 
that are posed in delivering our targets, both internally and externally to align with the climate 
science. Sustainability is a key pillar of our strategy, and we are well-positioned to support the 
transition to a low-carbon economy and sustainable future. This is further outlined in our Growth+ 
strategy on page 17. We recognise that as a company we must live up to our promises and deliver 
on the targets we have set. This risk demonstrates that we understand that operating responsibly 
is important for Rotork and our stakeholders. For more information see pages 106 to 111. 
Climate-related risks and response options are managed using the Group’s Risk Management 
Framework which incorporates both a bottom-up and top-down assessment. Climate change is a 
standing agenda item at risk workshops held at least twice a year. Given the unique characteristics 
of climate-related risks, we use our horizon risk methodology to assess risks against longer-term time 
horizons relevant to climate change. Risk owners are assigned to the most material risks and appropriate 
control measures are decided based on the perceived materiality and the agreed risk appetite.
Recommendation (a): climate risk and opportunity metrics
For Rotork’s 2024 update on sustainability performance, please see the Sustainability Review on 
pages 34 to 66. 
ID
Risk
Metric
2024
2023
2022
R1
Property damage
Number of 
natural 
catastrophe 
events resulting 
in a significant 
financial impact
—
—
—
R2
Operational 
disruption
R3
Direct GHG 
emissions costs
Scope 1 and 2 
emissions (tonnes, 
market based)
5,877
6,310
7,052
R4
Reputation and 
perception risk
MSCI ESG rating
AAA
AAA
AA
ID
Opportunity
Metric
2024
2023
2022
O1
Incremental 
revenue from 
new market 
opportunities
% revenue from 
eco-transition 
portfolio1
30%
30%
28%
1	
Our ‘eco-transition portfolio’ includes: ‘Water & wastewater’, ‘Methane emissions reduction’ and ‘New energies & technologies'. 
These include products and services that (i) reduce (if not eliminate) methane emissions through the electrification of the 
upstream oil & gas sector, (ii) enable the energy transition through applications in LNG, carbon capture and storage, biofuels, 
hydrogen and offshore wind, and (iii) manage water and wastewater distribution and treatment.
Metrics and targets
Risk management continued
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Metrics and targets continued
Recommendation (b): scope 1, 2 and 3 greenhouse gas emissions and 
related risks
Our full Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR) disclosure is available on pages 41 to 42.
Recommendation (c): climate-related targets 
Rotork is committed to net-zero for scope 1 and 2 by 2035 and for scope 3 by 2045. Our near-term 
emissions reduction targets for scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions have been validated by the SBTi. The baseline 
year for all targets is 2020. 
Rotork set a market-based target to reduce scope 1 and 2 emissions by 42% by 2030 compared with 
2020. This is an absolute reduction target, aligned to a 1.5ºC pathway. Market-based emissions are 
reported on page 41, and Rotork aims to achieve our target through renewable energy procurement, 
use of on-site solar photovoltaic generation, energy efficiency projects across our estate and our 
fleet emissions reduction strategy. We are currently on track to achieve this target, with a 37% 
emissions reduction in 2024 versus our 2020 baseline.
For scope 3, Rotork also set an absolute reduction target for emissions associated with the use of 
sold products. Our target is to reduce emissions by 25% by 2030, in line with a well-below 2ºC 
pathway. We will achieve this target through incorporating energy performance improvements into 
the new product development process and through assessing energy saving opportunities of existing 
products. Our ambition will also be supported by the progressive ‘greening of the grid’, as over time 
our products will be powered by an increasing proportion of renewable energy during their use. 
We are on track with programme delivery, see further details on page 45.
In addition, we have set a supplier engagement target for emissions associated with purchased 
goods and services. We are engaging with suppliers representing 25% of supply chain emissions 
to set science-based targets by 2027, see further details on page 47.
In 2023, 2024 and 2025, the executive LTIP awards include a measure targeting reductions in scope 
1 and 2 emissions. 
GHG emissions 
Tonnes CO2e (2024)
Associated climate-related risks 
Scope 1 
Scope 2
(market-based)
3,533
2,344
(Limited assurance)
•	 Direct GHG emissions costs
Scope 3 
70,861 
Purchased goods 
and services
253,939 
Products in use
17,153 
Rest of scope 3 categories
Total GHG emissions
347,830
347,830
2024 GHG emissions 
(tCO2e)
341,953
2024 Scope 3 
emissions (tCO2e)
 Scope 1 
 Scope 2
 Scope 3 
 Purchased goods and services 
 Products in use 
 Rest of scope 3 categories
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The Non-Financial Reporting Requirements in Sections 414A and 414CB of the Companies Act 2006 are addressed in this 
statement using cross references to indicate pertinent sections within this report 
This report refers to a range of policies that support our performance across Environment, Social and Governance topics.  
ESG policies are located on our website: www.rotork.com/en/environmental-social-governance/esg-reports-and-policies.
Environmental information
Where material information can be found in the strategic report
Material policies
How we monitor the effectiveness of policies
Our approach to managing our environmental impacts is set out 
on pages 34 to 66. Our TCFD report, prepared in accordance with 
UK Listing Rule 6.6.6R(8) and the Companies (Strategic Report) 
(Climate-related Financial Disclosure) Regulations 2022, is set out on 
pages 79 to 85. We work to measure and reduce our environmental 
impact and report progress in our Annual Report, and in our separately 
published GRI table.
Environmental Policy 
This sets out our commitment to protecting the environment, 
ecosystems and biodiversity; continually improving our 
environmental and energy performance; and complying with 
all applicable environmental and energy regulations. It applies 
to the whole Group, including subsidiaries. 
We measure performance against key environmental 
metrics and report this publicly. We also include environmental 
obligations in our agreements with suppliers and monitor 
performance. See the non‑financial performance KPIs on 
page 15 for the reductions in scope 1 and 2 emissions 
in 2024 versus our 2020 baseline.
The Company’s employees
Where material information is located 
Material policies
How we monitor the effectiveness of policies
Our approach to People and Culture is set out on pages 58 to 61. 
Our employee engagement approach is also covered in our Section 
172(1) statement on pages 106 to 111 and our workforce engagement 
section on pages 112 and 113. Related principal risks, on pages 70 
to 77, are Health & Safety, People and Business Change Management.
Board Diversity & Inclusion Policy
Sets out the Board’s approach to diversity and inclusion and 
provides the framework for the Board’s approach to diversity 
and inclusion in senior management roles. 
Code of Conduct 
Our Code, together with our values, sets out the standards of 
behaviour we expect of our employees and provides guidance 
about how to make ethical decisions. 
Health & Safety Policy 
Sets out our commitment to the planning and management 
of health and safety for reducing accidents and cases of 
work-related ill-health. It applies Group-wide, including 
to all our subsidiaries and persons working for or on behalf 
of the Company. 
Speak Up Policy
Outlines our commitment to conducting our business with 
openness, integrity and fairness, and encouraging people to 
report suspected wrongdoing as soon as possible and without 
fear of detrimental treatment as a result of raising a concern. 
It applies to all individuals working within, for, or with Rotork, 
including suppliers.
Our regular employee engagement assesses employees’ 
engagement and their views of Rotork as a place to work. 
Surveys include questions on diversity and inclusion and 
the pace of change. We conduct regular audits of our 
health and safety system. We track colleague diversity at 
different levels within the organisation, reviewing gender, 
ethnic and age diversity among others. We also monitor 
the number of contacts made through our whistleblowing 
lines and the outcomes of any investigations. The Total 
Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) is one of our two key 
non-financial performance indicators. Performance in 2024 
and trends over time are set out on page 40. 
Our Annual Confirmation Statement process, launched in 
January each year, requires employees to confirm that they 
have read the Code of Conduct and associated policies, 
completed any mandatory training and declare any 
conflicts of interest. 
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Social and community matters 
Where material information is located 
Material policies
How we monitor the effectiveness of policies
Our contribution to the communities in which we operate, 
including charitable giving, is covered on pages 62 and 63. 
Our approach to supplier management is on pages 47 and 48 
and 110 and 111.
Supplier Code of Conduct 
Our Supplier Code of Conduct sets out our minimum 
expectations regarding ethical behaviours and compliance with 
applicable laws, including promoting equal opportunities, human 
rights, freedom of association, labour rights, good environmental 
practices, and our zero-tolerance approach to bribery and 
corruption. It applies to all Suppliers globally and is published on 
our website. Rotork also expects suppliers to apply our Code to 
their own supply chains. We assess potential slavery and human 
trafficking risks arising from supplier relationships using a number 
of different methods. These include assessing new and existing 
suppliers and conducting supplier site visits. In the event that an 
issue is identified, we will undertake appropriate remedial action. 
This might include placing appropriate contractual obligations on 
a supplier, working together with a supplier on a corrective 
action plan, or ceasing to work with a supplier altogether.
Worldwide Charity Support Policy 
This policy sets out how we implement charitable giving, in 
line with our corporate responsibility aims. Every location has 
authority to spend 0.1% of its prior year’s profit before tax on 
charitable or good cause activities chosen by the employees of 
that location.
Group Tax Strategy 
Our overall tax strategy is for full disclosure and co-operation 
with all tax authorities. We consider reputational, financial 
and operational risks in our approach to tax planning. We are 
committed to creating an open and transparent working 
relationship with tax authorities in the jurisdictions in which 
we operate, and to abiding by all applicable laws.
We capture and report data on our charitable giving and 
assess the impact we have made. We audit high-risk 
suppliers, as required, to ensure compliance with our 
Supplier Code of Conduct.
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Respect for human rights 
Where material information can be found in the strategic report
Material policies
How we monitor the effectiveness of policies
Our approach to diversity and inclusion and respect for human rights 
is covered on pages 48 to 51 and 59 to 61. Our Modern Slavery 
Statement is published on our Group website at www.rotork.com.
Our Code, together with our values sets out the standards of 
behaviour we expect of our employees and provides guidance 
about how to make ethical decisions. In 2024, we updated the 
format and content of our Code of Conduct and published it on 
our external website.
Modern Slavery Statement
Provides an update on our progress with strengthening our 
modern slavery risk management framework and explains the 
steps we aim to take in the coming year. 
Modern Slavery Policy
Our Modern Slavery Policy provides guidance on how to 
detect, prevent and report modern slavery concerns. It includes 
key performance indicators to measure the effectiveness of our 
control measures. 
Code of Conduct 
Outlines the standards of behaviour we expect from employees, 
including a section covering the protection of human rights 
and empowering staff to ‘Speak Up’ if they have a concern. 
Respect at Work and Equality of Opportunity 
Sets out our commitment to the principle of equal opportunities 
to ensure that no employee or job applicant receives less 
favourable treatment based on their age, race, nationality, 
ethnic origin, disability, sex, sexual orientation, religion or 
belief or marital status.
Conflict Minerals Policy 
This policy sets out the Company’s commitment to not using 
tantalum, tin, tungsten and gold that directly or indirectly 
finances or benefits armed groups in the Democratic Republic 
of the Congo, adjoining countries, and other conflict-affected 
and high-risk areas (CAHRAs). 
We deliver a range of mandatory training courses, including 
Code of Conduct and Speak Up training, which include 
a module on modern slavery and human trafficking. 
We monitor completion status and follow up with those 
who have not completed training by its due date. 
We also introduce new joiners to our values during 
their induction sessions. 
We review our suppliers for modern slavery risks. 
We engage an independent intelligence provider to 
help analyse our supply base. We follow up with audits 
when necessary.
We monitor the number of reports of suspected 
wrongdoing received. We investigate all concerns and 
analyse the outcomes for any trends or risk indicators. 
We exercise due diligence based on the ‘Responsible 
Minerals Initiative’ guidance, by mapping our supply chain 
using their reporting templates for tantalum, tin, tungsten 
and gold, and following up any concerns raised via a 
corrective action management process.
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Anti-bribery and corruption 
Where material information is located 
Material policies
How we monitor the effectiveness of policies
Sustainability Review – culture, ethics and 
governance section (pages 49 to 51), 
Sustainability Review – people and culture 
section (pages 58 to 63), Governance 
Report (from page 90)
Code of Conduct
This sets out our zero-tolerance approach to bribery and corruption and the standards of 
behaviour expected to minimise the risk of bribery, including in relation to gifts and hospitality.
Anti-bribery and Corruption Policy 
We take a zero-tolerance approach to bribery and corruption. Our policy and related guidance 
help employees understand how bribery can impact individuals and the Company and how 
to report a potential breach. 
Gifts and Hospitality Policy
Provides guidance on the rules relating to the offering and acceptance of gifts and hospitality. 
Additional situational guidance and FAQs are available on our Gifts & Hospitality Sharepoint site.
Supplier Code of Conduct 
Outlines our zero-tolerance policy to extortion, bribery and corruption and to offering, paying, 
soliciting or accepting bribes in any form. 
In addition to mandatory Code of Conduct and 
Speak Up training, employees are required to 
complete anti-bribery and corruption courses on 
a regular basis. We track training completion rates.
See page 49 for more information.
We investigate all concerns raised and remain alert 
to risk indicators.
We have an automated approval request process. 
Gifts and hospitality must be approved and recorded 
in the register where they meet the approval levels 
set out in the policy.
We also submit responses to the CDP Climate 
and Water Security questionnaires annually. 
Our sustainability reports and policies are 
published at the following address: https://www.
rotork.com/en/investors/diversity-and-inclusion 
and www.rotork.com/en/environmental-social-
governance/esg-reports-and-policies.
Non-financial information 
Non-financial 
information 
Section
Pages
Business 
model 
•	 Business model
•	 Viability Statement 
6–7
78
Key non-
financial 
performance 
indicators
•	 Key performance 
indicators 
•	 Sustainability Review
14–15
34–66
Information for funds applying 
the Sustainable Finance Disclosure 
Regulation (SFDR)
Our end markets 
In 2024, 47% of our sales were into Oil & Gas, 
27% into Chemical, Process & Industrial and 
26% into Water & Power. The most common 
application of Rotork’s products and services 
– across all end markets – is the control and 
management of water, including for water 
recovery, recycling and treatment processes.
Rotork’s products are an essential component 
in processes for new energies and technologies 
that enable climate change mitigation and 
adaptation. They also contribute positively to 
the sustainable use of water resources, as well 
as having applications in flood protection. 
Our ‘eco-transition portfolio’ includes three 
portfolios: ‘water & wastewater’, ‘methane 
emissions reduction’ and ‘new energies and 
technologies portfolio’ as well as other applications 
such as process water management and 
gasification. We estimate that these three 
portfolios represented around 30% of sales in 
2024, with other applications also material but 
difficult to estimate. Eco-transition portfolio 
sales promote environmental or sustainability 
characteristics, specifically methane emissions 
elimination, water preservation, carbon capture 
and new capacity renewable energy generation. 
See pages 52 to 56 for case studies. For the 
avoidance of doubt, Rotork does not produce 
nuclear power, own fossil fuel reserves, produce 
or sell tobacco or military or other weapons or 
operate in the gambling sector.
Our business 
•	 ESG ratings: Rotork is highly ranked by 
numerous ESG ratings agencies, including 
MSCI, Sustainalytics, S&P Global and CDP. 
See page 35 for details. 
•	 Alignment to the 2015 Paris Agreement: 
Rotork has set science-based emissions 
reduction targets across scopes 1 and 2 and 
scope 3. We have also committed to target 
net-zero by 2035 for scopes 1 and 2 and by 
2045 for scope 3. See page 41 and 42 for details. 
•	 UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: 
As part of Rotork’s sustainability framework, 
launched in 2021, we are targeting progress 
for UN SDGs 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12 and 13. Rotork 
was also an early signatory of the UN Global 
Compact. See page 35 for details. 
Further details of our ESG performance, 
including on metrics such as TRIR, gender 
pay gap, human rights policy, anti-corruption 
practices and whistleblowing are set out in the 
Sustainability Review on pages 34 to 66.
Approval and signing of the Strategic Report
The Strategic Report was approved for issue by 
the Board on 10 March 2025 and signed on its 
behalf by:
Kiet Huynh
Chief Executive Officer
10 March 2025
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In this section
91	
Chair’s governance overview 
94	
Board of directors 
96	
Governance highlights
98	
Corporate governance report, including 
our Section 172(1) statement
117	
Safety and Sustainability 
Committee report
121	
Audit Committee report
126	
Nomination Committee report
131	
Directors’ Remuneration report
159	
Directors’ report
163	
Statement of directors’ responsibilities
Corporate 
governance
The Rotork Board remains 
committed to the highest 
standards of governance 
and stakeholder engagement.
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In a similar fashion, the Board and I were also 
pleased with the progress made during 2024 
on the evolution of Rotork’s culture. My fellow 
directors and I have been closely monitoring this 
project and have been actively involved in 
engagement with our employees, as Rotork’s 
cultural DNA is evolving within the organisation. 
More detail about this is set out on pages 58 to 
59 and 104 to 105. 
Alongside our involvement in evolving Rotork’s 
culture, during the year my fellow Board members 
and I engaged with Rotork’s employees during 
our various site visits. We all received a warm 
welcome at each site and found the opportunity 
to listen to, and digest, employees’ views and 
feedback highly valuable. The directors and 
I would like to thank each of the employees 
we met for this. 
Board activities in the year
A key focus for the Board this year was to 
monitor the progress being made by the business 
in continuing to deliver our Growth+ strategy. 
To support this we have reviewed, through deep 
dives, our Target Segments and key markets as 
well as monitoring the opportunities and risks 
in depth. Our deep dives are supplemented by 
a detailed update from the relevant Rotork 
Management Board member at our Board 
meetings. These sessions provide valuable 
insight into the opportunities and risks for 
the Company’s end markets, functions and 
operations. The Target Segments approach 
contained within the Growth+ strategy has 
allowed us to identify new market areas and 
the success of this approach is evident in the 
8.2% year-on-year organic constant currency 
(OCC) sales growth delivered during 2024. 
Sustainability remains an ongoing focus for 
Rotork. The Safety and Sustainability Committee, 
chaired by Andrew Heath since 1 May 2024, 
maintains detailed oversight of the implementation 
of Rotork’s sustainability strategy on behalf of 
the Board and has kept the Board updated 
during the year. 
On behalf of the Board, I am 
pleased to introduce Rotork’s 
Corporate Governance Report 
for 2024. 
The aim of this report is to provide a clear 
explanation of Rotork’s governance framework 
and the practical application of the principles of 
best practice corporate governance within the 
business during the year.
Introduction
I am pleased to introduce my second report to 
you as Chair of the Rotork Board. My report 
describes the key activities undertaken by the 
Board during 2024, within the context of our 
governance arrangements. 2024 was another 
successful year for the Company, as we continued 
to implement the Growth+ strategy against the 
backdrop of our overarching purpose and 
sustainability vision to keep the world flowing 
for future generations.
This purpose is a powerful motivator in all that 
we do and underpins the Growth+ strategy. As 
is evident within the Strategic Report set out on 
pages 1 to 89, the strategy continues to deliver 
positive results with strong momentum across 
all three of its strategic pillars, Target Segments, 
Customer Value and Innovative Products & Services. 
During 2024, the Company’s strategic ambitions 
continued to be fulfilled within our strong governance 
framework. The Board and I continue to be 
pleased with the extent to which Rotork is 
focused on sustainability, which was clear on our 
site visits during the year, in our conversations 
with Rotork’s employees and at a more strategic 
level within the boardroom and our discussions 
as a Board, particularly during our annual off-site 
strategy meeting in June 2024.
Applying the principles of the UK Corporate Governance Code 2018 (the 2018 Code)
Dorothy Thompson, CBE 
Chair
“As a Board, we consider that effective governance underpins the 
successful management of the Group and enables us to focus on the 
key strategic issues.”
Dorothy Thompson, CBE 
Chair
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Board activities in the year continued
The new manufacturing facility in China was 
designed with sustainability as a key priority 
and this was acknowledged by the LEED Gold 
certification it achieved. The Board has monitored 
the progress being made to reduce the Group’s 
greenhouse gas emissions in line with our 
net-zero goals and has kept a keen interest in 
reviewing the engagement being undertaken 
with our customers and suppliers on their own 
sustainability activities. In recognition that we 
have an important role to play in new technologies 
that will support the transition to a low-carbon 
economy, the Board also took time to review 
how we might play our part through investment 
in new product development in driving the 
transition to a sustainable future where 
resources are used responsibly. 
As part of the Board Committee composition 
changes during the year, we were keen to 
ensure relevant knowledge sharing between 
the Committees as appropriate on sustainability-
related matters. Both Andrew Heath and 
Karin Meurk-Harvey, who are Chair and member 
respectively of our Safety and Sustainability 
Committee, are also members of our Remuneration 
Committee. This assists the Remuneration 
Committee during its consideration of the 
sustainability targets within executive director and 
senior management remuneration opportunities. 
Janice Stipp, Chair of the Audit Committee, is 
also now a member of the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee. This link will further assist both 
Committees as the business prepares for the 
EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive 
(CSRD), the requirements of which Rotork is 
expecting to be required to align with. 
Following on from the achievements made in 
2023, during 2024 the Board continued to focus 
on oversight of the acceleration of Rotork’s 
business transformation through implementing 
and integrating common systems and processes 
across the Group, which are supported by a 
new enterprise resource planning (ERP) system. 
This transformation will drive improved lead 
The Board is always keen to understand and 
respond to the views, concerns and challenges 
of our people. The Board recognises that a 
strong and cohesive culture underpins the 
Growth+ strategy as a critical enabler for 
sustainable growth, and the importance of 
ensuring that the chosen culture is properly 
embedded within the organisation. The Board 
carefully reviewed the work underway to evolve 
the Company’s culture to support its strategy. 
More details about the culture initiatives, 
including the engagement sessions I attended 
with employees in September, are set out on 
pages 104 to 105, 108 to 109 and 112 to 113. 
The positive feedback received as part of these 
sessions, the increased focus on bottom-up 
engagement and the wider positive changes 
under Kiet Huynh’s and the Rotork Management 
Board’s leadership have been appreciated. The 
outcomes of the enhanced employee engagement 
survey undertaken during 2024 were reviewed 
by the Board, alongside the initiatives being 
taken by management in the areas of leadership 
and talent and performance development. We 
consider these critical to ensuring retention and 
having motivated, well-led and productive teams 
which are able to deliver the Growth+ strategy. 
A summary of the key Board activities during the 
year can be found on page 96 and the timeline 
on page 100. 
Board composition
The Nomination Committee, which I chair, keeps 
the balance of skills, knowledge and experience 
on the Board under regular review and is 
mindful of the best practice requirements under 
the UK Corporate Governance Code 2018 and 
the requirements in UK Listing Rule 6.6.6R(9). 
There were several changes to the Board over 
the course of 2024. Whilst I was sorry to lose the 
expertise of those directors who stepped down 
this year, I have been delighted by the fresh 
perspectives and insights brought by our new 
Board members. The comprehensive induction 
programmes undertaken by the directors who 
times and enhanced customer experience, both 
of which are important deliverables under the 
Customer Value pillar of the Growth+ strategy. 
The Board has been monitoring progress during 
2024 and the planned deployments during 2025 
and beyond. 
The Board has closely monitored innovation within 
Rotork as a component of the Innovative Products 
& Services pillar of the Growth+ strategy. The 
Board reviewed the fully Integrated Ethernet 
functionality for the IQ3 Pro range of electric 
actuators, prior to their launch to market, the 
modular electro-hydraulic actuators and the 
new Rotork website prior to its publication. 
The Board regularly reviews its capital needs in 
line with our disciplined capital allocation policy. 
The Board’s capital deployment priorities remain 
that of organic investment in the business, a 
progressive dividend policy, acquisitions and a 
return of cash to shareholders. The £50m share 
buyback programme that was launched in 
March 2024 and completed in December 2024 
is illustrative of this. Alongside our intention 
to undertake a further £50m share buyback 
programme during 2025. With our strong 
balance sheet, healthy net cash position and 
good cash generation, the Board is recommending 
a final dividend for 2024 of 5.0p per ordinary 
share, bringing the total dividend for 2024 to 
7.75p per ordinary share, a 7.6% increase on 
2023. We remain active in assessing M&A 
opportunities in line with our targeted M&A 
strategy with the Board reviewing the M&A 
strategy, pipeline and potential opportunities 
throughout the year. In line with our M&A 
strategy, on 10 March 2025, Rotork agreed to 
acquire NOAH Actuation Co., Ltd., a leading 
South Korean manufacturer of electric actuators.
Recognising the importance of understanding 
the Company’s risk profile and appetite, the 
Board held a number of discussions during 2024 
on risk and compliance matters, with comprehensive 
enterprise risk reviews including cybersecurity 
and litigation risk reviews. 
have joined the Board over the last year have 
allowed them to get up to speed and start 
actively contributing to strategic Board discussions 
quickly. Further details are set out on page 128.
Jonathan Davis, who had served as Group 
Finance Director since 2010, retired after 
21 years with the Company, formally stepping 
down from the Board on 30 April 2024. During 
Jonathan’s tenure, he made a very significant 
contribution to the Company and the Board and 
I would like to thank him for his valued efforts. 
Ben Peacock was appointed as Chief Financial 
Officer on 11 March 2024 and has settled in 
well since, making a strong contribution to the 
executive team, the Board and the wider business 
during his inaugural year. Tim Cobbold stepped 
down from the Board on 31 December 2024, 
after six years with the Company, to become 
Board Chair at Spirax Group plc. 
Tim made a significant contribution to the 
Board during his tenure, most recently in his roles 
as Senior Independent Non-executive Director, 
Chair of the Remuneration Committee and 
designated Non-executive Director for Workforce 
Engagement, and the Board and I, personally, 
thank Tim for all his input. Following Tim’s 
decision in May to step down from the Board 
at the end of 2024, the Nomination Committee 
initiated a thorough search for a new non‑executive 
director during the latter part of 2024. As a 
result, Svein Richard Brandtzæg was appointed 
to the Board on 20 November 2024 and will 
stand for election at our upcoming 2025 AGM. 
Svein Richard brings with him experience gained 
whilst leading a global industrial listed group and 
previous non-executive roles. From 1 January 
2025, Svein Richard Brandtzæg succeeded Tim 
as Chair of the Remuneration Committee and 
became a member of the Audit Committee.
Following a search process in 2023 (led by the 
Nomination Committee) Andrew Heath and 
Vanessa Simms were appointed to the Board 
with effect from 1 April 2024 and 21 June 2024 
respectively. Andrew and Vanessa have both 
brought their extensive experience in strategic 
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leadership, in leading change and in delivering 
organic and inorganic growth within the listed 
environment to the Board since their appointments. 
Andrew was appointed as Chair of the Safety 
and Sustainability Committee from 1 May 2024, 
as well as becoming a member of the Remuneration 
and Nomination Committees. Vanessa became a 
member of the Audit Committee and Safety and 
Sustainability Committee from the date on which 
she joined the Board. Andrew and Vanessa’s 
contribution to the Board was further augmented 
from 1 January 2025, when Andrew succeeded 
Tim Cobbold as our Senior Independent Non-executive 
Director and Vanessa became our designated 
Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement. 
New appointments remain subject to a formal, 
rigorous and transparent process, led by the 
Nomination Committee, and further details on 
the procedures taken for these recent appointments 
can be found on pages 127 to 128. 
As I confirmed in last year’s report, Ann Christin 
Andersen did not seek re-election at the Company’s 
2024 AGM, retiring from the Board on 30 April 
2024 in light of her appointment as CEO of 
Norwegian Energy Partners. I would like to thank 
Ann Christin for her contribution during her tenure. 
Diversity and inclusion
Diversity, both in the boardroom and throughout 
the entire Group, is taken seriously by the Board 
as part of our stated commitment to nurture an 
inclusive and respectful culture. The Board is 
committed to ensuring that its membership 
reflects diversity in its broadest sense. We believe 
that in order to provide a range of perspectives, 
insights and challenge in support of good decision 
making and to enable achievement of strategic 
objectives, a combination of skills, experience, 
ethnicity, age, gender, educational and 
professional background, thinking and other 
personal attributes is required. The importance 
of this area forms the basis for the Board’s 
succession planning. You can read more about 
our overall approach to diversity and inclusion 
across the Group on page 60. 
Stakeholders
The Board takes account of the impact of its 
decisions on all our stakeholders, whether they 
are our investors, customers, employees, suppliers 
or the communities in which we operate, while 
taking steps to secure the Group’s longer-term 
success. As a trusted partner, working together 
with all our stakeholders to understand their 
different perspectives remains a focus for the 
Board. There has been a regular two-way 
dialogue with our stakeholder groups during 
2024 and, on behalf of the Board, I would like to 
thank them for their partnership during the year. 
Our people continue to be fundamental to 
Rotork’s success. As the designated Non-executive 
Director for Workforce Engagement during 2024 
Tim Cobbold ensured employees’ views were 
represented and their interests were considered 
at the strategic level as part of the Board’s decision 
making. As I mentioned above, Vanessa Simms 
took over this role from Tim from 1 January 2025, 
having already been involved in employee 
engagement activities during 2024. More details 
about Tim’s, Vanessa’s and the wider Board’s 
engagement activities undertaken during the 
year are set out on pages 112 to 113. 
Details of how the Board considered the impact 
of its strategic decision making on various 
stakeholder groups during the year and how the 
Board engaged with stakeholders to understand 
their views can be found on pages 106 to 111. 
A statement on how the directors had regard 
to the matters set out in Section 172(1) of the 
Companies Act 2006 can be found on page 9.
Board performance review
Pursuant to the 2018 Code, there is a requirement 
to undertake an externally facilitated Board 
evaluation every three years. Given that our last 
external review was undertaken in 2023, this 
year we conducted an internal evaluation of the 
Board and its Committees. As part of the internal 
evaluation, we sought feedback from the 
directors on whether the recommendations 
arising from the 2023 evaluations had been 
addressed during the year. The results of the 
2024 internal evaluation concluded that Rotork’s 
Board, and its Committees, continue to operate 
effectively. The Board and I together agree 
that we have an appropriate balance of skills, 
experience, capability and diversity on the Board 
and that we each have sufficient time to commit 
to our roles. Notwithstanding this, we are not 
complacent and we have identified some priorities 
for the Board and its Committees for us to take 
forward during 2025 as a way of continual 
improvement. Details of this can be found on 
page 114.
Governance
Throughout the year, we have applied the 
principles of the 2018 Code to our decision 
making and have ensured that there is good 
co-operation within the Group to enable us 
to discharge our governance responsibilities 
effectively. The application of the principles of 
the 2018 Code are described throughout this 
report, together with explanations and signposts 
providing direction to the relevant page where 
more detail can be found. 
The Company’s 2018 Code corporate governance 
compliance statement for 2024 is set out on 
page 96.
On behalf of the Board, I would like to thank all 
Rotork’s employees for their hard work during 
2024. Rotork is a world class business, which 
remains well placed to build on its existing 
strengths and continue to deliver sustainable 
growth over the coming years.
Dorothy Thompson, CBE
Chair
10 March 2025
Focus for the Board during 2025
Continued implementation of the 
Growth+ strategy
Continued Board oversight of the delivery 
of mid to high single-digit revenue growth 
and mid-20s adjusted operating margins 
over time in line with the Growth+ strategy. 
Business transformation and ERP rollout
Strategic oversight of business 
transformation through the implementation 
and integration of common systems and 
processes throughout the Group.
People and culture initiatives 
Continued strategic direction and support 
of the learning and development and 
leadership programmes together with 
cultural initiatives, which shall enhance 
our evolving culture to support the 
Company’s delivery of strategic goals 
and long-term success. 
Board composition continued
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A Board with experience
A   Audit Committee
N   Nomination Committee
R   Remuneration Committee
S   Safety and Sustainability Committee
  Denotes Committee Chair
Committee composition and Board roles held 
are as at 1 January 2025.
Oversight of strategy, 
promoting the 
long‑term sustainable 
success of the Company 
and generating value 
for stakeholders 
continues to be the 
focus of the Board. 
N
N
R
S
Dorothy Thompson, CBE (64)
Chair
Kiet Huynh (46)
Chief Executive Officer
Ben Peacock (50)
Chief Financial Officer
Andrew Heath (61)
Senior Independent  
Non-executive Director
Appointed to the Board
December 2022
Skills, competencies and experience
Dorothy was previously Chief Executive 
Officer of Drax Group plc, the UK 
renewable power business, from 2005 
to 2017, and since then has built 
extensive experience in a non-executive 
capacity across public and private 
company boards and the UK’s central 
bank. She is currently a non-executive 
director of Eaton Corporation plc, a 
leading global power management 
company listed on the New York 
Stock Exchange, and of InstaVolt Ltd, 
a provider of electric vehicle 
charging infrastructure. She is also 
non-executive Chair of Statera Energy 
Ltd, a UK energy company which 
provides grid-balancing support. 
Dorothy retired as Senior Independent 
Director of the Bank of England in 
July 2022, where she had been on the 
Court since 2014. From 2018 to 2021 
she served as the non-executive 
Chair of Tullow Oil plc and was a 
non-executive director of Johnson 
Matthey plc from 2007 to 2016.
External appointments
Non-executive director of Eaton 
Corporation plc
Appointed to the Board
January 2022
Skills, competencies and experience
Kiet joined Rotork in 2018 as 
Managing Director responsible for 
the Instruments division. Following 
the Group’s divisional realignment in 
2019, he has led both the Chemical, 
Process & Industrial and the Water & 
Power divisions. Kiet has more than 
17 years’ experience working as a 
senior executive for world-leading 
industrial companies, beginning his 
career at IMI plc before moving on 
to Trelleborg. He has a Master’s in 
Mechanical Engineering from the 
University of Birmingham. Kiet was 
appointed as CEO on 10 January 2022 
and has been instrumental in curating, 
launching and now implementing 
Rotork’s Growth+ strategy. 
External appointments
None
Appointed to the Board
March 2024
Skills, competencies and experience
Ben was appointed in March 2024, 
bringing extensive experience in 
financial leadership, strategic planning 
and corporate governance. Prior to 
joining Rotork, Ben played a key role 
at The Weir Group PLC for 10 years, 
most recently as Vice President, 
Finance & IT for the Minerals Division. 
In this role, Ben was instrumental in 
shaping financial strategy, optimising 
operational efficiency, and driving 
digital transformation initiatives to 
enhance business performance. Prior 
to his tenure at Weir, Ben held finance 
roles at Vodafone Group plc and Intel 
Corporation. Ben is CIMA qualified 
and a Fellow of The Association of 
Corporate Treasurers.
External appointments
None
 
Appointed to the Board
April 2024
Skills, competencies and experience
Andrew was appointed Senior 
Independent Non-executive Director 
from 1 January 2025 after originally 
joining the Board in April 2024. 
Andrew brings a wide range of 
experience in delivering transformation 
and shareholder value in technology-
driven businesses. He is currently  
Chief Executive Officer of Spectris plc. 
From 2016 to 2018, he was CEO of 
Imagination Technologies Group plc, 
having previously served as a 
non-executive director of that 
company from 2012. From 2015, 
he was CEO of Alent plc. Andrew 
began his career at Rolls-Royce and 
has an engineering degree from 
Imperial College and an MBA from 
Loughborough University.
External appointments
Chief Executive Officer of Spectris plc
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Board of directors
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Svein Richard Brandtzæg (67)
Non-executive director
Karin Meurk-Harvey (59)
Non-executive director
Vanessa Simms (49)
Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement
Janice Stipp (65)
Non-executive director
Tim Cobbold (62)
Previous non-executive director1
Appointed to the Board
November 2024
Skills, competencies and experience
Svein Richard brings a strong 
commercial and strategic background 
in the industrial sector to Rotork having 
been Chief Executive of Norsk Hydro 
ASA, a Norwegian aluminium and 
renewable energy company, from 
2009 to 2019. Svein Richard is currently 
Chair of dormakaba Holding AG and a 
non-executive director of Mondi plc. 
He is also Chair of the Council on 
Ethics for Norwegian Bank Investment 
Management. He has previously held a 
number of non-executive positions, 
including Chair of Veidekke ASA, 
Vice Chair of Den Norske Bank ASA 
and Vice Chair of Swiss Steel Holding 
AG. Svein Richard holds a PhD in 
Chemistry from the Norwegian 
University of Science and Technology 
and is a fellow of the Norwegian 
Academy of Technological Sciences.
External appointments
Chair of dormakaba Holding AG 
Non-executive director of Mondi plc 
Chair of the Council on 
Ethics for Norwegian Bank 
Investment Management
Appointed to the Board
September 2021
Skills, competencies and experience
Karin has an international background 
in engineering, technology and 
telecoms spanning over 30 years, 
adding commercial expertise to Rotork’s 
Board, particularly in high-growth 
technology/digital markets. Karin is 
currently Chief Commercial Officer of 
Smart DCC Ltd, a provider of smart 
meter communication network 
solutions. Between 1996 and 2013, 
Karin held a number of senior roles 
with Ericsson and has also served 
as a non-executive director of 
Korala Associates Ltd, a privately 
owned ATM software business. 
External appointments
Chief Commercial Officer of Smart 
DCC Ltd
Appointed to the Board
June 2024
Skills, competencies and experience
Vanessa brings extensive financial 
expertise to the Rotork Board, 
together with experience across a 
diverse range of industries, including 
real estate, renewable power 
generation, medical devices and 
telecommunications. Vanessa is 
currently Chief Financial Officer at 
Land Securities Group plc and was 
formerly Chief Financial Officer at 
Grainger plc. Prior to this Vanessa was 
Deputy Chief Financial Officer at Unite 
Group plc and UK Finance Director at 
SEGRO plc. Most recently, Vanessa 
was an independent non-executive 
director at Drax Group plc. Vanessa 
is a Chartered Certified Accountant.
External appointments
Chief Financial Officer of Land 
Securities Group plc
Appointed to the Board
December 2020
Skills, competencies and experience
Janice brings highly relevant sectoral 
and financial expertise to the Rotork 
Board, together with a global 
perspective, particularly US and Asia. 
Janice is currently non-executive 
director and Audit Committee Chair 
of Diploma PLC, a distribution 
group. She is also non-executive 
director of ArcBest Corporation. 
Janice was formerly Senior Vice 
President and Chief Financial Officer 
of Rogers Corporation, a US 
speciality engineered materials 
technology and manufacturing 
company. Prior to this, Janice held 
senior financial positions in various 
international manufacturing and 
engineering companies. Janice is a 
member of the American Institute 
of Certified Public Accountants. 
External appointments 
Non-executive director and Audit 
Chair of Diploma PLC
Non-executive director of 
ArcBest Corporation
Board tenure
December 2018 – December 2024
Skills, competencies and experience
Tim served as a director throughout 
2024 and stepped down from the 
Board on 31 December 2024. During 
2024, Tim was Rotork’s Senior 
Independent Non-executive Director, 
Chair of the Remuneration Committee 
and the designated Non-executive 
Director for Workforce Engagement. 
Tim has extensive experience in leading 
large, complex international listed 
businesses, having previously served as 
the Chief Executive Officer of Chloride 
Group plc, De La Rue plc and, more 
recently, UBM plc. Prior to this, Tim 
held senior management positions at 
Smiths Group/TI Group for 18 years. 
He was a non-executive director at 
Drax Group plc until September 2019. 
External appointments
Non-executive Chair of TI Fluid 
Systems plc
Non-executive Director and Chair 
Designate of Spirax Group plc
1	
Tim Cobbold stepped down from the Board 
on 31 December 2024.
A
S
R
S
A
N
S
A
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Board of directors continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Key Board activities during 2024
UK Corporate Governance Code 2018 – corporate governance compliance statement
It is the Board’s view that for the financial 
year ended 31 December 2024, the 
Company complied with the principles of 
the UK Corporate Governance Code 2018 
(the 2018 Code), with the exception of a 
brief c. seven week period during which the 
Audit Committee had two members rather 
than the three required by Provision 24 of 
the 2018 Code. No business of the Audit 
Committee was required to be discussed 
during that period. Further details are 
included within the Audit Committee Report 
on page 123. 
The Company’s auditor, KPMG LLP, is required 
to review whether this statement reflects the 
Company’s compliance with the provisions of 
the 2018 Code specified for its review by UK 
Listing Rule 6.6.20R and to report if it does 
not reflect such compliance. No such report 
has been made.
The 2018 Code is publicly available on the 
website of the Financial Reporting Council 
at www.frc.org.uk.
The Board notes that the UK Corporate 
Governance Code 2024 applies to the 
Company from 1 January 2025.
Progressing the 
Growth+ strategy
Deep dives into Target 
Segments and key 
business functions
Overseeing the 
progress of our 
sustainability 
framework
Ensuring strong succession and 
comprehensive onboarding of newly 
appointed directors
Promoting diversity 
and inclusion
Oversight of cultural 
initiatives and 
employee engagement
Continued oversight and 
monitoring of the 
implementation of 
Rotork’s Growth+ 
strategy, which is 
designed to drive growth 
through a focus on 
Target Segments, 
Customer Value 
and Innovation.
In addition to the annual 
off-site strategy meeting, 
the Board undertook 
focused deep dive 
reviews into each of the 
Target Segments (a key 
pillar within the Growth+ 
strategy) and also the key 
business functions that 
support the delivery 
of the strategy.
Overseeing the continued 
implementation of 
Rotork’s sustainability 
strategy, including the 
implementation of 
energy efficiency projects 
and investment in on-site 
renewable energy. 
Welcomed Ben Peacock as Chief Financial 
Officer in March 2024 and approved the 
appointment of three non-executive directors: 
Andrew Heath (April 2024); Vanessa Simms 
(June 2024) and Svein Richard Brandtzæg 
(November 2024). Ensured the inductions 
for Ben, Andrew, Vanessa and Svein Richard 
were tailored and comprehensive. The Board 
continues to recognise the advantages of 
having diversity of gender, social and ethnic 
backgrounds and experience and cognitive 
and personal strengths on the Board and 
senior management. 
Committed to 
maintaining a diverse 
and inclusive culture 
on the Board and 
working to achieve a 
diverse executive and 
leadership composition.
Involvement in the 
cultural initiatives 
underway with our 
employees and continued 
engagement with our 
people on a wide range 
of matters to ensure 
the Board understands 
their views through site 
visits, webinars, direct 
two-way communication 
and all‑employee surveys. 
Revenue growth in 2024 
(OCC): 
8.2%
Deep dive sessions at 
Board meetings: 
10
Commitment to net-zero 
by: 
2045
2030 target to reduce scope 
1 and 2 emissions by: 
42%
Average non-executive director tenure: 
2.4 years
Board female 
representation as at 
31 December 2024: 
44.44%1
Board ethnicity as at 
31 December 2024: 
22.22%2
Director site visits: 
8
1	
From 1 January 2025, after Tim Cobbold had stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024, the female Board representation was 50%.
2	
Rotork exceeds the Parker Review recommendations for FTSE 250 companies. From 1 January 2025, after Tim Cobbold had stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024, the Board ethnic representation was 25%.
Task Force on Climate-related 
Financial Disclosures – statement 
of compliance
Rotork’s statement of compliance in implementing 
the recommendations of the Task Force on 
Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), 
required to be made under UK Listing Rule 
6.6.6R(8), is set out on page 79.
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Governance highlights
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Director changes 
•	 Ben Peacock joined the Board as executive 
director and Chief Financial Officer on 
11 March 2024 to succeed Jonathan Davis, 
who stepped down from the Board on 
30 April 2024. 
•	 Ann Christin Andersen stepped down from 
the Board on 30 April 2024.
•	 Andrew Heath was appointed as a non-executive 
director with effect from 1 April 2024.
•	 Vanessa Simms was appointed as a 
non‑executive director with effect from 
21 June 2024.
•	 Svein Richard Brandtzæg was appointed as a 
non-executive director on 20 November 2024.
•	 Tim Cobbold stepped down from the Board 
and the positions of Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director and designated 
Non-executive Director for Workforce 
Engagement on 31 December 2024.
•	 Andrew Heath was appointed Senior 
Independent Non-executive Director with 
effect from 1 January 2025.
•	 Vanessa Simms was appointed designated 
Non-executive Director for Workforce 
Engagement with effect from 1 January 2025.
Board gender identity or sex as at 
31 December 2024
Board composition
 Male – 55.56%
 Female – 44.44%
Board ethnic background as at  
31 December 2024
 White British or other 
White (including minority- 
White groups) – 77.78%
 Asian/Asian British 
– 22.22%
Independence/skills and experience 
Kiet 
Huynh
Ben 
Peacock
Dorothy 
Thompson 1
Andrew 
Heath
Svein Richard
Brandtzæg 
Karin 
Meurk-Harvey 
Vanessa 
Simms
Janice 
Stipp
Tim 
Cobbold2
Independence
Listed CEO/CFO experience
Sector experience3 
Engineering and innovation
Operations
International 
Health and safety
Finance and banking
Strategy and M&A
Sustainability
Digital, cyber and technology
1	
Dorothy Thompson was considered independent upon appointment.
2	
Tim Cobbold stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024. 
3	
Sector experience means experience in the flow control sector together with the oil and gas, chemical, process and industrial, 	
	
and water and power sectors, being Rotork plc’s end markets.
Directors’ skills and experience matrix
The matrix below details the directors who were considered independent and the skills and 
experience that the directors, who were appointed as at 31 December 2024, brought to the 
boardroom table in driving Rotork’s long-term success and supporting its purpose and sustainability 
vision of keeping the world flowing for future generations. Complementary to such skills is diversity 
in approach and thinking styles, which results from the varied backgrounds and experiences of the 
directors. This is covered more fully in the individual biographies on pages 94 and 95.
Name
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
Dorothy Thompson
Janice Stipp
Karin Meurk-Harvey
Andrew Heath
Vanessa Simms
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
Tim Cobbold1 
Chair and non-executive director Board tenure as at 31 December 2024
Board at a glance
Asian/Asian British representation was 22.22% as at 
31 December 2024 and exceeded the Parker Review 
recommendation for FTSE 250 companies for at least one 
ethnically diverse Board member by 2024. From 1 January 2025, 
after Tim Cobbold had stepped down from the Board on 
31 December 2024, 25% of the Board were represented by 
this category.
Female Board representation was 44.44% as at 31 
December 2024 and exceeded the target set under the UK 
Listing Rules and DTRs of 40% female representation on 
boards by 2024. From 1 January 2025, after Tim Cobbold 
had stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024, 
the female Board representation was 50%.
1	
Tim Cobbold 
stepped down 
from the Board on 
31 December 2024.
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Governance highlights continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Board Committees1
The Board is supported by its principal Board Committees, each of which is responsible for overseeing and making recommendations to the Board on their respective specialist areas, 
as set out below and within their respective Committee reports.
Our governance framework – the Board, Board Committees and Rotork Management Board
1	 In addition, the Disclosure Committee of the Board oversees the disclosure of market sensitive information and other public announcements.
The Board 
The Board is accountable to shareholders for the long-term sustainable success of the Group. This is achieved through setting Rotork’s strategy and priorities and overseeing their delivery in a way that 
enables sustainable long-term growth, whilst maintaining a balanced approach to risk within a framework of effective internal controls and taking into consideration the interests of our diverse range 
of stakeholder groups. Oversees alignment of Rotork’s purpose, vision, values, evolving culture and risk with the Growth+ strategy.
Rotork Management Board 
Led by Kiet Huynh, Rotork’s Chief Executive Officer, the Rotork Management Board is the executive committee of Rotork below Board level.
Audit Committee
Janice Stipp, Chair
To assist the Board with the discharge of its 
responsibilities in relation to financial reporting, 
including reviewing the Group’s annual and 
half-year financial statements and accounting 
policies, internal and external audits and risk 
management and controls.  
 Read more in the Audit Committee report 
on page 121
Nomination Committee
Dorothy Thompson, Chair
To keep under review the composition, structure 
and size of, and succession to, the Board and its 
Committees. To oversee succession planning for 
senior executives and the Board, leading the 
process for all Board appointments. To evaluate 
the balance of skills, knowledge, experience and 
diversity on the Board.
 Read more in the Nomination Committee report 
on page 126
Remuneration Committee
Svein Richard Brandtzæg, Chair
To recommend the Group’s policy on executive 
remuneration, determining the levels of 
remuneration for executive directors, the Chair 
and the Rotork Management Board. To oversee 
remuneration and workforce policies and take 
these into account when setting the policy for 
directors’ remuneration.
 Read more in the Directors’ Remuneration report 
on page 131
Safety and Sustainability Committee
Andrew Heath, Chair
To oversee the implementation of Rotork’s 
safety and sustainability strategies in line with 
its purpose and sustainability vision of keeping 
the world flowing for future generations.  
 
 
 Read more in the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee report on page 117
Responsibilities 
The Rotork Management Board is responsible for facilitating and ensuring the development, implementation and execution of the Growth+ strategy (set by the Board) through the day-to-day operational 
and functional management of the business.
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Corporate governance report
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

1	 Tim Cobbold held the role during 2024 until 31 December 2024 when Tim stepped down from the Board.
The Board 
The Board is comprised of the Chair, executive directors and independent non-executive directors all supported by the Group General Counsel & Company Secretary.
Non-executive Chair
Dorothy Thompson
Leads the Board and sets its agenda; facilitates 
constructive Board relations; promotes a culture 
of openness and debate; sets high standards of 
integrity and ensures effective governance is 
maintained; supports and guides the CEO; 
oversees Group performance; represents the 
Group and leads relations with shareholders 
to understand their perspectives. 
Senior Independent Non-executive Director 
Andrew Heath
Provides a sounding board for the Chair and 
acts as an intermediary for other directors and 
shareholders; leads the annual performance 
evaluation of the Chair; and ensures the orderly 
succession of the Chair’s role. 
Chief Executive Officer 
Kiet Huynh 
Overall management of the Group and 
leadership of the Rotork Management Board; 
delivers the Group strategy; leads operational 
management, business development and 
growth opportunities; influences and develops 
succession plans; and manages investor relations.
Chief Financial Officer
Ben Peacock 
Reports to the Board on the Group financial 
performance; supports the CEO in delivering the 
Group strategy and in managing investor 
relations; implements Board decisions; oversees 
the application of the capital allocation policy of 
the Group; and is responsible for compliance 
with financial policy and controls.
Non-executive directors 
Provide independent oversight, judgement and challenge to the executive directors on delivery 
of the Company’s strategy within the agreed control framework and governance structure 
and ensure balance in the Board’s decision-making process. 
Svein Richard Brandtzæg  
Andrew Heath  
Karin Meurk-Harvey 
Vanessa Simms  
Janice Stipp
Designated Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement
Vanessa Simms1
Provides an effective engagement mechanism 
for the Board to understand the views of the 
workforce; brings the views and experiences of 
the workforce into the boardroom; and ensures 
that the views of the workforce are considered 
in the Board’s decision making.
Group General Counsel 
& Company Secretary
Stuart Pain 
Advises the Board on legal and corporate 
governance matters and supports the Board in 
applying the Code, complying with UK listing 
obligations and other statutory and regulatory 
requirements; and ensures Board members 
have access to the information they need.
Rotork Management Board
Members of the Rotork Management Board attend Board meetings by invitation to provide updates to the Board on operational matters and liaise with the Board outside of the formal meetings. 
The current members of the Rotork Management Board are listed below.
Kiet Huynh – Chief Executive Officer
Ben Peacock – Chief Financial Officer 
Keith Barnard – Managing Director, Oil & Gas
Paul Burke – Chief Information Officer
Metin Gerceker – Managing Director, Water & Power
Chris Klasner – Operations Excellence Director
Xin Man – Managing Director, Chemical, Process & Industrial
Lyndsey Norris – Business Transformation Director
Beatriz Rodriguez Gomez – Chief Human Resources Officer
Stuart Pain – Group General Counsel & Company Secretary
Ross Pascoe – Chief Technology Officer
Mike Pelezo – Director, Rotork Service
Our governance framework – roles of directors on the Board and the Rotork Management Board
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Corporate governance report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

The Board is responsible for determining the 
Company’s strategy, purpose, culture and values, 
reflecting in particular the generation of 
long-term value for shareholders and Rotork’s 
role in ensuring a sustainable future. It oversees 
the execution of the Growth+ strategy by 
management and the governance and control 
framework underpinning the Company. 
The Board is assisted by its principal Board 
Committees (Audit, Nomination, Remuneration, 
and Safety and Sustainability), each of which 
is responsible for reviewing and dealing with 
matters within its terms of reference. The 
activities and decisions made at each of the 
Committee meetings are reported to the 
subsequent Board meeting. 
This year’s strategy meeting was held in June 
at our site in Rochester (New York, US), during 
which the Board reviewed in detail the ongoing 
progress of the implementation of Rotork’s 
Growth+ strategy, which completed its third full 
year of implementation in 2024. The feedback 
received during the internal Board evaluation 
in 2024 was that the strategy meeting was 
considered valuable and productive by the 
directors. More details on the Growth+ strategy 
and Rotork’s business model are covered on 
pages 1 and pages 6 and 7 of the Strategic 
Report. The Board remains confident that the 
necessary resources are in place for the business 
to continue to meet its strategic objectives.
The Board is also responsible for the review and 
oversight of the effective management of risk, 
whilst delegating oversight of the controls 
framework to the Audit Committee. The Board 
has been kept fully updated on the detailed 
work being undertaken by the Audit Committee 
as part of the Company’s preparation for Provision 
29 of the 2024 Corporate Governance Code 
becoming effective from next year. The Board 
rigorously challenges strategy, performance, 
responsibility and accountability to ensure that 
decisions are made effectively and in the 
long-term interests of the business. 
In its duty to promote the long-term success of 
Rotork, the Board recognises that its responsibilities 
extend not only to the creation of value for its 
shareholders but also to the Company’s wider 
stakeholders, including employees, customers, 
suppliers and communities in which it operates. In 
doing so, the Board actively sought to understand 
the views of these key stakeholder groups and 
the impact of its decisions on stakeholders. 
Pages 106 to 111 describe how their interests 
have been considered at Board-level discussions. 
Division of responsibilities
All the non-executive directors have the appropriate 
skills, experience in their respective disciplines and 
characteristics to bring independence and objective 
judgement to Board discussions. As well as acting 
as Board Chair, Dorothy Thompson chairs the 
Nomination Committee. As the Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director throughout 2024, Tim 
Cobbold provided a sounding board for the Chair 
in addition to acting as an intermediary for other 
directors and shareholders, a role now held by 
Andrew Heath since 1 January 2025. In December 
2024, as per the annual Board evaluation exercise, 
the remaining non-executive directors met with 
the Senior Independent Non-executive Director, 
without the Chair present, to appraise the 
Chair’s performance. Further details of the review 
can be found on page 114. 
Janice Stipp chairs the Audit Committee. Andrew 
Heath has chaired the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee from 1 May 2024, taking over from 
Ann Christin Andersen who retired from the 
Board on 30 April 2024. From 1 January 2025, 
Svein Richard Brandtzæg chairs the Remuneration 
Committee, a role held by Tim Cobbold during 
the course of 2024. Vanessa Simms became 
the designated Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement on 1 January 2025, 
succeeding Tim Cobbold, who held the role 
during the course of 2024. Details of the work 
undertaken by Tim Cobbold in fulfilment of this 
role during 2024, alongside the employee 
engagement activities of other Board members, 
can be found on pages 108 to 109 and 112 
to 113. 
Private meetings of the non-executive directors 
are held at each Board meeting and each year 
the Chair and the non-executive directors meet 
outside of the formal meeting structure, and 
without the executive directors present, to 
scrutinise and hold to account the performance 
of management and individual executive directors.
The roles of the Chair, Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director, Chief Executive Officer 
and Chief Financial Officer as well as the members 
of the Rotork Management Board are set out 
in the governance framework on 98. 
Board leadership
Board and Board Committee meetings and Rotork’s financial calendar in 2024
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Board and Board 
Committee meetings
Remuneration 
Committee 
Safety and 
Sustainability 
Committee
Board meeting 
Audit Committee 
Nomination 
Committee
Board meeting 
Nomination 
Committee 
Safety and 
Sustainability 
Committee
Annual Board 
strategy meeting
Nomination 
Committee
Remuneration 
Committee 
Board meeting 
Audit Committee
Board meeting 
Audit Committee 
Nomination 
Committee 
Remuneration 
Committee
Safety and 
Sustainability 
Committee
Board meeting
Nomination 
Committee
Board meeting 
Audit Committee 
Nomination 
Committee
Remuneration 
Committee
Financial calendar 
2023 full-year results
Commenced £50m 
share buyback
2024 Annual 
General Meeting
Q1 trading update 
2023 final 
dividend paid
2024 half-year results 2024 interim 
dividend paid
Q3 trading update
Completed £50m 
share buyback
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Financial statements

Non-executive director independence 
The Chair is committed to ensuring that the 
Board comprises a majority of independent 
non-executive directors who objectively support 
and challenge management on the execution of 
the Company’s strategy.
The Company maintains clear records of the 
terms of service of the Chair and non-executive 
directors to ensure they meet the requirements 
of the 2018 Code. Neither the Chair nor any 
non-executive director has exceeded their 
nine-year recommended term of service. Charts 
illustrating which directors are considered to be 
independent and the tenure of the Chair and 
each non-executive director are set out on 
page 97. 
The Board considers all non-executive directors, 
Svein Richard Brandtzæg, Andrew Heath, Karin 
Meurk-Harvey, Vanessa Simms and Janice Stipp, 
to be independent. Dorothy Thompson, Chair, 
was considered to be independent on her 
appointment. Tim Cobbold and Ann Christin 
Andersen were both considered to be independent 
throughout their tenure during the year. 
Board effectiveness
Composition
The Board currently consists of eight Board 
members, six of whom are non-executive 
directors. As at 10 March 2025, female 
representation on our Board was 50% with 
ethnic diversity representation being 25%. 
The Board members come from a variety of 
professional backgrounds including engineering, 
manufacturing and finance, and collectively 
possess significant managerial experience, as 
well as experience of being executive directors 
of other public limited companies. A more 
detailed analysis of Board composition, skills and 
experience can be found on pages 94, 95 and 
97. In line with Provision 18 of the 2018 Code, 
each director who is continuing in service is 
subject to annual re-election at the AGM. 
Information and support
All non-executive directors are entitled to unfettered 
access to information and management across the 
Group. Rotork’s executive directors understand 
the distinction between their roles as executive 
managers and as Board directors.
The Board has a procedure for directors, if deemed 
necessary, to take independent professional advice 
at the Company’s expense in the furtherance of 
their duties. All directors have access to the advice 
of the Group General Counsel & Company 
Secretary who supports the Board on legal and 
corporate governance matters, including compliance 
with the Company’s obligations under the UK 
Listing Rules and other regulatory or statutory 
requirements. Together with the CEO and the 
Group General Counsel & Company Secretary, 
the Chair ensures that the Board is kept properly 
informed and is consulted on all issues reserved 
for it. Board papers and other information are 
distributed in a timely fashion to allow directors 
to be properly briefed in advance of meetings. 
In accordance with the Company’s Articles of 
Association, directors, as well as the Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary, have 
been granted an indemnity by the Company to 
the extent permitted by law in respect of liabilities 
incurred as a result of their office. The indemnity 
would not provide any coverage where they are 
proved to have acted fraudulently or dishonestly. 
The Company has also arranged appropriate 
insurance cover in respect of legal action against 
its directors and officers. 
Induction and ongoing 
professional development
Following appointment, each director receives a 
comprehensive and formal induction to familiarise 
them with their duties and Rotork’s business 
operations and risk and governance arrangements. 
As new directors they need to quickly absorb a 
great deal of information about the business if 
they are to fulfil their roles effectively from the 
start. Our tailored inductions offer a swift and 
thorough way to help them understand our 
strategy, business, markets, products, culture 
and relationships and to establish a link with 
our senior management and wider workforce. 
Through these interactions, they are able to gain 
an insight into the Rotork culture and values. 
More detail about the tailored inductions 
received by Ben Peacock, Andrew Heath, 
Vanessa Simms and Svein Richard Brandtzæg 
upon joining the Board during 2024 is set out 
in the Nomination Committee Report on page 128. 
In order to facilitate continued awareness and 
understanding of Rotork’s business and the 
environment in which it operates, directors 
are given regular updates on changes and 
developments in the business, with each 
member of the Rotork Management Board 
presenting on their area of responsibility at 
Board meetings at least annually and the Board 
members undertaking eight site visits during 
2024. Over the course of the year, directors will 
continually update and refresh their skills and 
knowledge and are able to seek independent 
professional advice when required.
Conflicts of interest
Procedures are in place to identify and manage 
declared actual and potential conflicts of interest 
which directors (or their connected persons) may 
have and are obliged to avoid under their 
statutory duties and the Company’s Articles of 
Association. The Board considers each director’s 
situation and decides whether to approve any 
conflicts based on the overriding principle that 
a director must at all times be able to consider 
and exercise independent judgement to promote 
the success of the Company. This procedure 
has operated effectively throughout the year. 
Authorisations given by the Board are reviewed 
on an annual basis. No director has declared any 
material conflicts of interest.
Responsibilities of the Board
The Board delegates certain matters to specific 
Committees for more in-depth consideration, 
including to the Audit, Nomination, Remuneration, 
and Safety and Sustainability Committees. Each 
Committee has formal, written terms of reference 
which are available to download from the Rotork 
website at www.rotork.com/en/investors/committees 
and which are reviewed annually. All Committees 
have at least three independent non-executive 
directors within their composition. The Company 
also has a Disclosure Committee. The Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary acts as 
secretary to all the Committees. The number 
of Board meetings and Audit, Nomination, 
Remuneration, and Safety and Sustainability 
Committee meetings held during the year can 
be found on page 102.
Time commitment
All directors are expected to attend all meetings 
(whether pre-planned or ad hoc) of the Board and 
any Committees on which they serve, alongside the 
Board strategy days and AGM. Directors are also 
expected to devote sufficient time to prepare for 
each Board and Committee meeting, in order to 
contribute effectively to discussions. 
By accepting their appointment each non-executive 
director has confirmed that they are able to allocate 
sufficient time to the Company to discharge their 
responsibilities effectively. In accordance with the 
2018 Code and the Company’s External Board 
Appointments Policy, directors are also required to 
seek prior approval from the Board before accepting 
additional external appointments. 
The Chair, through the Nomination Committee 
under its terms of reference, monitors the time 
commitment of the non-executive directors in 
the context of both the roles held internally and 
external appointments, with no issues having 
been identified during the year. The 2024 
internal Board evaluation captured feedback 
specifically on time commitments, meeting 
preparedness and contributions by directors. 
No issues were identified. 
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Board effectiveness continued
Board meetings
The Board meets regularly during the year as well 
as on an ad hoc basis, as business needs dictate. 
The Board met formally seven times during the 
year, with video calls held in other months for 
updates on key matters relating to trading and 
financial performance. Attendance at each of the 
Board and Board Committee meetings during the 
year are shown opposite. The Chair, Chief Executive 
Officer and Group General Counsel & Company 
Secretary agree a structured agenda in advance of 
each Board meeting. Board activities are structured 
to help the Board achieve its goals and to provide 
support and advice to the executive management 
team on the delivery of strategy within a robust 
governance framework. Throughout the year, the 
Board has received regular in-depth progress 
reports and presentations on current trading and 
financial performance and presentations from the 
Chief Executive Officer, the Chief Financial Officer 
and the wider executive management team, 
particularly regarding implementation updates 
on our Growth+ strategy and the three pillars 
contained within it, our business systems and 
cultural initiatives and the development of our 
people. Other regular reports have included health 
and safety, litigation, ethics, compliance and 
governance updates, investor relations activities, 
tax and treasury updates, environmental and 
sustainability issues, risk management reviews and 
cybersecurity updates. Board papers are circulated 
in advance of meetings, to ensure that the directors 
have sufficient time to consider their content prior 
to the meeting. If a director is unable to attend a 
meeting due to exceptional circumstances, they still 
receive the papers in advance of the meeting and 
would have the opportunity to discuss with the 
relevant Chair any matters on the agenda they wish 
to raise. Feedback is provided to the absent director 
on the decisions taken at the meeting. 
The Chair meets privately with the Senior 
Independent Non-executive Director and with 
the non-executive directors on a regular basis.
Responsibilities of the Board continued
Board and Board Committee meeting attendance in 2024
Board director
Board 
meetings
Audit 
Committee 
meetings
Nomination 
Committee 
meetings
Remuneration 
Committee 
meetings
Safety and 
Sustainability 
Committee 
meetings
Number of meetings 
7
Number of meetings 
4
Number of meetings 
6
Number of meetings 
4
Number of meetings 
3
See Audit 
Committee Report 
from P.121
See Nomination 
Committee Report 
from P.126
See Remuneration 
Committee Report 
from P.131
See Safety and 
Sustainability 
Committee Report 
from P.117
Current directors: 
Board member since
Dorothy Thompson,  
Chair
December 2022
7/7
—
6/6
—
—
Kiet Huynh,  
Chief Executive Officer
January 2022
7/7
—
—
—
—
Ben Peacock,  
Chief Financial Officer
March 2024
6/6
—
—
—
—
Andrew Heath, Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director 1
April 2024
6/6
—
—
3/3
1/1
Svein Richard Brandtzæg,  
non-executive director
November 2024
1/1
—
—
—
—
Karin Meurk-Harvey,  
non-executive director
September 2021
7/7
—
2/2
4/4
3/3
Vanessa Simms,  
non-executive director
June 2024
5/5
3/3
—
—
1/1
Janice Stipp,  
non-executive director 
December 2020
7/7
4/4
6/6
1/1
—
Former directors:
Board member up to
Jonathan Davis, 
Group Finance Director
April 2024
2/2
—
—
—
—
Ann Christin Andersen,  
non-executive director 2
April 2024
1/2
1/1
1/2
1/1
2/2
Tim Cobbold, 
non-executive director 1
December 2024
7/7
4/4
6/6
4/4
2/2
1	
Tim Cobbold was the Senior Independent Non-executive Director up to 31 December 2024 (stepping down from the Board on this date). Andrew Heath was appointed as Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director from 1 January 2025. 
2	
Ann Christin Andersen stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2024. Ann Christin was unable to attend the March Board and Nomination Committee meetings due to an unforeseen and 
unavoidable commitment. She received the papers in advance and provided feedback to the Board Chair which was shared at the meeting. The Board Chair then briefed her on deliberations 
and outcomes following the meeting.
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Strategy and sustainability 
Financial 
Operational
People and organisational
Risk, governance, legal, compliance 
and investor relations
Key Board 
activity
•	 Regular deep dives into Growth+ 
strategic initiatives with focus on 
target markets 
•	 M&A strategy
•	 Acquisition pipeline and proposals
•	 Opportunities to accelerate growth
•	 Off-site strategy meeting
•	 Progression of sustainability strategy 
in line with Rotork’s three pillars
•	 Regular financial 
performance updates
•	 Full-year, half-year and 
trading updates
•	 2025 budget
•	 Cash flow, liquidity, going 
concern and long-term viability 
•	 Use of cash/capital 
allocation, including share 
buyback considerations
•	 Health and safety
•	 Divisional and functional reviews
•	 Supply chain and geopolitical 
risk assessment
•	 ERP platform rollout update
•	 Capital expenditure and investment
•	 New product development
•	 Tour of Rochester (NY) facility and 
the research and development 
facility in Bath
•	 People and culture update
•	 Employee engagement surveys
•	 Succession planning
•	 Board Diversity and Inclusion 
Policy update
•	 Gender pay gap
•	 Employee voice in the boardroom
•	 Full and half-year risk reviews, including principal 
and emerging risks 
•	 AGM matters, including share allotment authority 
resolutions and director re-elections
•	 Updated Code of Conduct 
•	 ‘Speak Up’ reports
•	 Legal, Ethics and Compliance functional review
•	 Modern Slavery Statement
•	 Internal Board evaluation
•	 Annual review of Committee’s terms of reference 
and matters reserved for the Board
•	 Investor Relations updates and functional review
•	 Consideration of 2024 UK Corporate 
Governance Code and regulatory updates
Outcomes
•	 Effective monitoring and oversight 
of the implementation of the 
Growth+ strategy and awareness 
of end-market development
•	 Investment in growth initiatives
•	 Continued monitoring of our 
science-based emissions reduction 
targets according to current 
agreed methodology 
•	 Agreed to acquire NOAH 
Actuation Co., Ltd. in March 2025
•	 Continued active dialogue and 
relationship building with investors 
and investment community
•	 Publication of Annual Report 
and Accounts
•	 Progressive final and 
interim dividends
•	 New uncommitted revolving 
credit facility
•	 £50m share buyback programme 
completed in 2024, with the 
intention to undertake an 
additional £50m share buyback 
programme during 2025 
•	 Reaffirmation of capital allocation 
policy and funding position
•	 Publication of tax strategy
•	 Effective Board oversight of 
operations and execution of 
Growth+ strategy with feedback 
to management 
•	 Use of TRIR as a KPI in place 
of LTIR
•	 Approval of the continued 
deployment of the ERP across 
the Group on a phased basis
•	 Action plan to de-risk geopolitical 
exposure to supply chain
•	 Greater understanding of new 
product development process 
and pipeline
•	 Launch of IQ3 Pro and 
Ethernet products
•	 Strategic direction and 
culture initiatives
•	 Use of TRIR as a KPI in place 
of LTIR
•	 Board endorsement of people 
strategy with continued investment 
in learning, career development 
and leadership development
•	 Rollout of leadership development 
programme and manager 
development programme
•	 Gender and ethnicity pay review
•	 Continued support for employee 
share ownership
•	 Oversight of risk appetite for all risks and approval 
of the principal and emerging risks and risk 
appetite for inclusion in the 2024 Annual Report 
•	 Continued active dialogue with our shareholders 
and investment community
•	 All AGM resolutions approved in the range 
of 92.54% to 99.99%
•	 Rollout of updated Code of Conduct to 
the organisation 
•	 Board oversight of functional support to 
the business operations
•	 Publication of annual Modern Slavery Statement
•	 Focus areas from 2024 internal Board 
evaluation identified 
•	 Updated Committee terms of reference published 
on website 
•	 Oversight of the Audit Committee’s preparation 
for Provision 29
Key 
stakeholder 
groups 
considered
CU  I
 E  S  CO
CU  I
 E  S  
CU  I
 E  S  
I
 E  
CU  I
 E  S  CO
Links to 
strategy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Insight into the boardroom
Key stakeholder groups
CU   Customers 
I   Investors 
E   Employees 
S   Suppliers 
CO   Communities
An insight into the breadth of matters discussed by the Board during the year are set out below:
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A focus on culture
The Board recognises the 
importance of there being a 
healthy and positive culture 
within Rotork, which guides 
responsible and ethical decisions, 
actions and success. 
The Board is responsible for defining and setting 
Rotork’s culture from the top and leading by 
example. The Board also takes an active interest 
in ensuring that Rotork’s desired culture is 
properly promoted throughout the Company 
and monitors this as part of its considerations at 
Board meetings. Our purpose, values and 
cultural DNA are embedded across the business 
and underpin our business model. Our new 
cultural DNA has evolved from our previous 
values and will guide us forward. Our cultural 
DNA is that: we value our customers, we grow 
together and we win as a team. These principles 
will shape how we lead, grow and engage. They 
are fundamental to the way we work with our 
employees, customers, suppliers and other 
stakeholders. They also guide the way that we 
engage with the wider community. 
The Board aims to ensure that our values are 
embedded and integrated into decision making 
and that policies and procedures, such as the 
Code of Conduct and our Anti-Bribery and 
Corruption Policy, maintain the behaviours we 
expect as part of our culture. Where this is not 
the case, the Board and management team take 
appropriate action. This is achieved through 
updates to the Board on, for example, compliance 
matters and reports received through our ‘Speak 
Up’ whistleblowing helpline. The regular employee 
engagement surveys also help evaluate the 
implementation of our values and culture.
We ensure our people, policies and systems are 
aligned with our values, which were selected 
by our people and are important in creating a 
culture that we can all be proud of. These values 
are aimed at engaging and motivating colleagues 
and protecting their rights. We strive to provide 
fair and equitable treatment, as well as 
opportunities to grow, learn and progress. 
The Board is satisfied that the Company’s 
purpose, values, strategy and culture are aligned 
and promote the long-term success of the 
Company, generating and protecting value 
to shareholders and other stakeholders.
Our purpose
Keeping the world flowing for future generations, 
through providing innovative, high-quality, 
engineered solutions and services for our 
customers, helps guide our culture alongside our 
values. We put quality and service at our heart.
Our Code of Conduct, which applies to all 
permanent employees, temporary workers and 
contractors, sets out the principles that underpin 
and guide the way we conduct business. A full 
version of the Code of Conduct is published on 
our corporate website at: www.rotork.com/en/
sustainability/esg-reports-and-policies/rotork-
code-of-conduct. 
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A focus on culture continued
How the Board monitors culture
Cultural indicators
Health and safety
We have a zero harm vision which applies to our broader agenda of health and 
safety, environment and product safety.
•	 0.22 total recordable incident rate for 2024 (2023: 0.26).
•	 0.08 lost time injury rate for 2024 (2023: 0.08).
Direct employee engagement
Tim Cobbold, who was Rotork’s designated Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement throughout 2024 (prior to the role being undertaken 
by Vanessa Simms from 1 January 2025), brought the employee voice into 
the boardroom through sharing updates on his engagement with employees. 
This is supplemented by Rotork site visits conducted by other non-executive 
directors during the year.
•	 Eight director site visits completed during 2024, two of which were whole 
Board tours, one of the research & development facility in Bath and one of 
the facility in Rochester (NY). In addition, individual non-executive directors 
completed six site visits. 
Employee engagement survey
During 2024, we introduced an externally managed engagement survey 
partnering with a third party to enable us to compare engagement with our 
peers. Feedback from the survey was shared and teams are working on action 
plans to drive improvements relevant to them ensuring both ownership and 
accountability. The results were reviewed by the Board, alongside a summary 
of key actions to build improvements.
•	 80% employee survey participation rate (2023: 79%).
Annual deep dive review of Rotork’s 
people, culture and social strategies
Covering workforce insights, organisational effectiveness and areas such as 
progress on diversity and inclusion, leadership and engagement, employee 
mental health and well-being, community engagement and support to 
external charities.
•	 7.14/10 employee rating of Rotork as a place to work in 2024.
Compliance with policies and 
procedures
With the assistance of its Committees, the Board oversees the effectiveness 
of a number of its policies, for example the Code of Conduct, Anti-Bribery 
and Corruption, Modern Slavery and Supplier Code of Conduct. 
•	 Employees must undertake mandatory training, including Code of Conduct 
and Speak Up, with training completion rates tracked. All employees must 
sign an annual confirmation of compliance.
‘Speak Up’ whistleblowing helpline
Enables anonymous reporting of improper behaviour to be investigated and 
appropriate action taken where necessary.
•	 The number of reports made through the whistleblowing hotline, any trends, 
and the outcomes of investigations are monitored and reported to the Board.
Diversity and inclusion
The Nomination Committee annually reviews the Company’s policy on 
diversity and inclusion, its objectives and linkage to Company strategy, 
how it has been implemented and the progress on achieving the objectives.
•	 44.44% Board gender diversity as at 31 December 2024 1.
•	 22.22% Board ethnic diversity as at 31 December 2024 1.
•	 51% Early careers programme diversity in terms of gender and ethnicity.
•	 17.6% mean gender pay gap in favour of females.
1	
From 1 January 2025, after Tim Cobbold had stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024, the Board gender diversity was 50% and the Board ethnic diversity was 25%.
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Our Section 172(1) statement
The Board confirms that during 2024 it has acted in the way that it considered, in good faith, would be most likely to 
promote the long-term success of the Company for the benefit of its members as a whole, and in doing so has had regard 
to the matters set out in Section 172(1)(a) to (f) of the Companies Act 2006.
Board engagement with stakeholders
The Board engages directly with our employees 
and shareholders; however, it is also kept 
apprised of the engagement with other 
stakeholder groups through a combination 
of reports from the executive directors and 
members of the Rotork Management Board 
to understand the views of key stakeholders on 
day-to-day operations. The information set out 
below and on pages 108 to 111 outlines the 
ways in which the Board and the Company have 
engaged with key stakeholders during the year, 
and the outcomes of that engagement.
Methods of engagement used 
by the Board
The main methods used by the Board to perform 
its duties include:
•	 Oversight of our purpose, strategy, values, 
and culture.
•	 Consideration of key risks to the business 
and mitigating actions taken.
•	 Oversight of employee well-being 
and resourcing.
•	 Dedicated section within Board papers 
setting out the likely impact of the proposed 
recommendation on relevant stakeholders.
•	 Review of engagement undertaken 
by the Rotork Management Board and 
Board members.
Whilst it is not always possible to meet the 
preferences of all stakeholders (whose interests 
may diverge), the Board aims to ensure that all 
relevant factors are considered before a decision 
is taken.
Other examples of how the Board has 
considered stakeholder interests and Section 
172(1) matters are included within the section 
detailing how the Board monitors culture on 
pages 104 to 105 and employee engagement 
on pages 112 to 113.
How the Board considered stakeholders’ interest as part of their key Board activities during 2024
Strategy and sustainability
•	 Consideration of the balance of differing stakeholders’ needs and expectations in delivering long-term sustainable value.
•	 Review of governance and oversight of Rotork’s sustainability strategy in the long-term interests of stakeholders.
Financial
•	 Investor engagement around full-year, half-year and trading updates, given interest in good governance to protect the long-term interests of all stakeholders.
•	 Consideration of employees’ interests.
Operational
•	 Consideration of stakeholders’ interests in the drive to improve efficiency and ultimately deliver an enhanced customer experience in a safety-conscious environment of ‘zero harm’.
•	 Consideration of geopolitical risks that impact the supply chain to protect stakeholders’ long-term interests.
People and organisational
•	 Employee engagement by management and taking account of the concerns and views expressed by our colleagues.
•	 Engagement with employees by our designated Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement and all other non‑executive directors.
•	 In setting the tone from the top, the consideration of employees’ interests and understanding the value of having a diverse workforce.
Risk, governance, legal, compliance 
and investor relations
•	 Review of the status of key risks to the business and mitigating actions taken to protect stakeholders’ long-term interests.
•	 Consideration of stakeholders’ interests while supporting Growth+ strategy, including direct engagement with shareholders to seek their views.
•	 Consideration of employees’ interests within the business and within the supply chain relating to preventing modern slavery.
•	 Consideration of best practice governance procedures to protect long-term interests of all stakeholders.
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Our Section 172(1) statement continued
Section 172(1) factor
Relevant disclosure
Annual Report  
page number
a. The likely 
consequences 
of any decision 
in the long term
•	 Chief Executive Officer’s Statement
•	 Chair’s Statement
•	 Business model
•	 Key performance indicators
•	 Investment case
•	 Insight into the boardroom
•	 Engaging with our stakeholders
•	 Sustainability Review
 See page 10
 See page 8
 See page 6
 See page 14
 See page 16
 See page 103
 See page 106
 See page 34
b. The interests of 
the Company’s 
employees
•	 Engaging with our stakeholders
•	 People and culture
•	 Diversity and inclusion
•	 Non-Financial and Sustainability Information Statement
•	 Chair’s Statement
•	 How the Board monitors culture
•	 Directors’ Remuneration Report 
 See page 106
 See page 58
 See page 59
 See page 86
 See page 8
 See page 104
 See page 131
c. The need to foster 
the Company’s 
business 
relationships 
with suppliers, 
customers 
and others
•	 Customer value 
•	 Sustainability Review
•	 Supply chain management
•	 Human rights and modern slavery
•	 Engaging with our stakeholders
•	 Making a positive social impact
•	 Non-Financial and Sustainability Information Statement
•	 Chair’s Statement
•	 Insight into the boardroom
 See page 20
 See page 34
 See page 47
 See page 50
 See page 106
 See page 57
 See page 86
 See page 8
 See page 103
Section 172(1) factor
Relevant disclosure
Annual Report  
page number
d. The impact of 
the Company’s 
operations on the 
community and the 
environment
•	 Engaging with our stakeholders
•	 Sustainability Review
•	 Making a positive social impact
•	 Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures
•	 Non-Financial and Sustainability Information Statement
•	 Chair’s Statement
•	 Safety and Sustainability Committee Report
 See page 106
 See page 34
 See page 57
 See page 79
 See page 86
 See page 8
 See page 117
e. The desirability 
of the Company 
maintaining a 
reputation for 
high standards of 
business conduct
•	 Refreshed Code of Conduct
•	 Business model
•	 Engaging with our stakeholders
•	 Risk management
•	 Making a positive social impact
•	 Non-Financial and Sustainability Information Statement
•	 Chair’s Statement
•	 Our governance framework
•	 Conflicts of interest
•	 Division of responsibilities
 See page 160
 See page 6
 See page 106
 See page 67
 See page 57
 See page 86
 See page 8
 See page 98
 See page 101
 See page 100
f. The need to act 
fairly as between 
members of 
the Company
•	 Relations with shareholders
•	 Engaging with our stakeholders
 See page 108
 See page 106
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Our Section 172(1) statement continued
Engaging with our stakeholders
We engage proactively with 
all our key stakeholder groups 
in the knowledge that our 
long‑term success is dependent 
on how we work with all 
our stakeholders. 
Our policy is to understand our stakeholder 
views, and to deal with issues with integrity 
should they arise. Like any business, we 
sometimes have to take decisions that adversely 
affect one or more of these groups and, in such 
cases, we always look to ensure that those 
impacted are treated fairly. 
This section describes our engagement with 
stakeholders and the Board’s engagement with 
stakeholders and forms part of our Section 
172(1) Statement, set out on page 9 of the 
Strategic Report.
Stakeholder group and relevant  
Section 172(1) clause
Stakeholder’s material issues
Why we engage
How we engage
CU 	 Customers
Our customers include those in 
the oil and gas, water and power, 
and chemical, process and 
industrial sectors in more than 
170 countries globally.
s.172(1)(c) The need to foster the 
Company’s business relationships 
with suppliers, customers 
and others.
s.172(1)(e) The desirability 
of the company maintaining a 
reputation for high standards 
of business conduct.
•	 Reliability and specification 
compliance of Rotork’s products.
•	 Clear and proactive 
two‑way communication.
•	 Product and service sustainability 
and safety challenges.
•	 Innovation and cutting-edge solutions.
•	 Dedicated lifecycle service and support 
and best in class customer service 
support throughout the life of 
Rotork’s products.
•	 Receiving the highest standard of 
customer order journey and Rotork’s 
responsiveness and clarity on delivery 
time frames.
•	 Digitalisation and the need for more 
data from end-user assets.
•	 Our customer value vision is to 
create a seamless and positive 
customer experience. 
•	 Placing customers at the heart of 
our business is key to delivery of 
our Growth+ strategy, the success 
of which is based on our ability to 
understand, support and respond 
to our customers’ and potential 
customers’ needs.
•	 We believe that by putting the value 
we provide to our customers at the 
forefront, we will earn a greater 
share of our customers’ spend based 
on our wide portfolio offerings.
•	 To ensure the best support is 
provided to customers from the 
earliest stages of our relationship. 
•	 Our teams liaise directly with our customers, and potential customers, with the 
aim of providing them with an improved customer experience. We also engage 
with customers globally through our expert field service engineers.
•	 Rotork Service (formerly called Rotork Site Services) team provides comprehensive 
service solutions throughout a product’s lifecycle. We are streamlining our 
business processes to allow us to quote quicker and be more responsive to our 
customers’ needs.
•	 In order to serve a wider variety of customers and markets we also supply to our 
customers via our channel partner network, which includes resellers and distributors.
•	 Our global supply chain programme aims to improve delivery and lead times 
and to respond quickly to any supply chain issues.
•	 Where applicable, our online portals enable us to provide information about 
Rotork Service and regular information updates to our customers.
•	 We work with our customers to ensure we develop the right products and services 
for future needs by understanding evolving market trends and customer needs.
•	 We has a feedback platform, within which we encourage customers to provide 
their feedback which is utilised internally by our teams. 
•	 We engage with our customers through our Voice of Customer surveys 
and regular feedback received from our sales team.
I 	 Investors
Rotork’s shareholders own the 
business and they range from large 
institutional investors to private 
individual (including employee) 
shareholders. All Rotork’s 
shareholders are treated fairly and 
have equal access to both Company 
information and our Board of 
directors. We also engage with the 
investment community, advisers 
and potential shareholders.
s.172(1)(f) The need to act fairly 
between members of the Company.
•	 Delivery of the Growth + strategy that 
aligns with Rotork’s vision, purpose, 
values and culture. 
•	 Creation of long-term and 
sustainable shareholder value 
and clear reporting on the 
Company’s performance.
•	 A return on investment, a clear 
and disciplined capital allocation 
framework and a progressive 
dividend policy. 
•	 Meaningful engagement with the 
Board and the upholding of good 
governance practices. 
•	 Reporting to investors on the role 
Rotork is playing in driving the 
transition to a cleaner future.
•	 The Board understands and values the 
importance of engaging with our 
shareholders and potential shareholders 
to ensure that they are kept updated on 
the Company’s performance, activities 
and investment case. 
•	 The two-way engagement enables the 
Board to take shareholder views into 
account within its wider strategic 
decision making. 
•	 We actively engage with the investment community through regular results and 
reporting, press releases, investor events, one-to-one meetings (either in person or 
virtually), roadshows, site tours, our corporate website and our AGM.
•	 Engagement is primarily led by our executive directors and Investor Relations Director.
•	 Ben Peacock (who became Rotork’s Chief Financial Officer in March 2024) met with 
investors (both current and potential) and the investment and analyst community. 
•	 The Board Chair hosted a number of face-to-face and virtual meetings with 
investors during the year. 
•	 Our 2024 AGM was held in Bath (UK) and provided an opportunity for 
shareholders to interact with the Board and have any questions answered. 
All Board members standing for election or re-election attended the 2024 
AGM in person, with Kiet Huynh delivering a presentation to shareholders.
•	 The Board Chair and Chairs of each of our Board Committees welcome engagement 
with shareholders on any matters within their remit. 
•	 We host an annual engagement webinar for our private individual investors, which 
includes a moderated Q&A session. The 2024 webinar was hosted by Kiet Huynh  
and our Investor Relations Director. 
•	 For our employee shareholders, we also offer internal communication channels.
E 	 Employees
We have around 3,500 employees, 
working worldwide through a 
network of offices and 
manufacturing facilities.
s.172(1)(b) The interests of the 
Company’s employees.
•	 Equality, fairness, recognition and 
reward in the workplace.
•	 Clear communications and 
engagement on business changes 
that may affect them.
•	 Career development and progression.
•	 A continued focus on well-being, 
health and safety and the 
working environment.
•	 Our people embody our culture and 
values, which are critical for the 
continued implementation of our 
Growth+ strategy.
•	 Safety of our people remains our 
priority and our vision for health 
and safety is to achieve zero harm.
•	 We ensure our employees are 
informed about business changes 
that may affect them.
•	 We continue to develop, attract 
and retain talented people.
•	 We communicate with our employees using a variety of channels that promote 
open discussion and feedback. These include our employee engagement survey, 
employee forums, town halls hosted by our Chief Executive Officer and other 
members of the senior management team, a colleague recognition portal, our 
Company intranet, the use of online collaboration tools, factory and product 
tours, annual personal development reviews and our working@rotork 
email channel. 
•	 Tim Cobbold, who was Rotork’s designated Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement during 2024, brought the views of employees into 
the boardroom. This included any direct suggestions that Tim had received 
via the Board’s engagement activities. Vanessa Simms has continued this since 
1 January 2025, when she took over from Tim as the designated Non-executive 
Director for Workforce engagement. 
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Corporate governance report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Our Section 172(1) statement continued
Outcomes of our engagement during 2024 
Board engagement 
Priorities for engagement 
during 2025
Measurements/ 
metrics
Further information
CU
•	 From customer engagement we appreciate that product downtime is a key customer concern and area where 
Rotork can provide support for customers. Rotork Service, our global service network that includes our Reliability 
Services and Connected Services programmes, differentiates us from our competitors. The Connected Services 
programmes include our Intelligent Asset Management predictive analytics system, which helps our customers 
reduce unplanned downtime.
•	 We have made good progress on our Customer Value pillar of our Growth+ strategy. We are implementing 
and integrating common systems and processes throughout the Group. This will improve efficiency and deliver 
improved lead times and a better customer experience. 
•	 Following the feedback from the Voice of Customer surveys, a Customer Responsiveness Project was initiated 
to establish a proactive and high-quality customer responsiveness culture within Rotork and make us easier 
to do business with. 
•	 Following the Voice of Customer feedback, the Customer Service Programmes team has implemented numerous 
different languages for our Intelligent Asset Management reports which better supports our global audience.
•	 We have stepped up our customer service training with ‘Brilliant Basics’ to our customer service, sales force 
and other functions. This global training started in 2024 and will continue in 2025. 
•	 We recently launched modular electro-hydraulic actuators and IQT/IQTF battery backup variant, which support 
our customers’ important decarbonisation initiatives and have been well received. 
•	 Our ‘Achieving Customer Excellence’ programme has driven a more streamlined production where the programme 
is implemented. The rollout of which is ongoing.
•	 We have made progress on reducing lead times across our assembly sites to ensure customers receive their 
orders expeditiously.
•	 We launched our Integral Ethernet-enabled actuators in 2024 to meet customer needs for enhanced networking 
and data acquisition.
•	 Some of our Board members, alongside many of the 
senior team, attended the Valve World exhibition, 
which took place in Düsseldorf (Germany), where 
they engaged directly with our customers and 
other stakeholders.
•	 Customer engagement, satisfaction and projects to 
improve the customer experience are key topics in 
Board discussions. 
•	 The Business Transformation Director presented the 
business transformation initiatives to the Board in 
the June 2024 meeting. The Board discussed the 
programme and agreed the next steps under it. 
•	 Continue with the 
implementation and investment 
in the business transformation 
programme, which will 
extend to more of our sites 
during 2025.
•	 Continue to embrace digital 
technology to drive 
increased efficiency.
•	 Continue to focus on enhancing 
the customer experience 
through a variety of 
customer-focused initiatives.
•	 Global customer 
service training with 
99% completion
•	 Invested £13.4m 
in research and 
development 
in 2024
•	 Silver Award 
under Britain’s 
Most Admired 
Companies 2024
•	 Recognised as one 
of the World’s 
Best Companies 
– Sustainable Growth
 Chief Executive Officer’s 
Statement: page 10
 Customer Value: page 20
 Sustainability Review: 
page 34
 Case studies 
and benefits our 
customers experienced:  
www.rotork.com/ 
en/casestudies
I
•	 In 2024, our Chair, Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer and Investor Relations Director attended over 100 
meetings with over 150 separate institutions globally. 2024 saw an increased number of meetings with institutions based 
in Continental Europe and the Middle East.
•	 Rotork returned £50m to shareholders via a share buyback programme, which ran from March 2024 to December 2024.
•	 Continued with the delivery of a progressive dividend policy, with the total dividend for 2024 being 7.75p per ordinary 
share, representing a 7.6% year-on-year increase. 
•	 The Growth+ strategy is delivering with revenue 8.2% higher year-on-year on an OCC basis and the Group order intake 
also increasing by 6.1% year-on-year on an OCC basis.
•	 The 2024 AGM saw all resolutions passed, with votes in favour ranging from 92.54% to 99.99%.
•	 We launched our new corporate website in 2024. 
•	 Our Chair, Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial 
Officer and Investor Relations Director regularly 
communicate with existing and potential shareholders. 
•	 The 2024 AGM provided an opportunity for the Board 
to interact with shareholders (including individual and 
employee shareholders) and to answer any questions 
they may have.
•	 The views expressed by shareholders, potential 
shareholders and the investment community are shared 
with the Board at Board meetings and with the relevant 
Committees, enabling the Board to take these views 
into account in its wider decision making. The Board 
understands shareholders’ need for return on investment 
and approved progressive interim and final dividends 
based on the Company’s profits.
•	 Market and shareholder perspectives studies were 
conducted, with the feedback presented to the Board 
for consideration. 
•	 Continue to offer an extensive 
investor engagement 
programme, covering our full 
range of shareholders. This will 
continue to include further 
information on the 
implementation of our Growth+ 
strategy and provide forums 
within which investors can have 
their questions answered and 
views heard.
•	 Continue to provide clear reporting 
on the Company’s performance.
•	 Consultation on a new Directors’ 
Remuneration Policy due in 2026.
•	 Over 100 investor 
meetings with 
over 150 separate 
institutions globally.
•	 Subject to 
shareholder 
approval of the 
2024 final dividend, 
the total dividend 
for 2024 will be 
7.75p per 
ordinary share. 
•	 £50m cash returned 
during the 
share buyback
 Chief Executive Officer’s 
Statement: page 10
 Financial Review: page 30
 Highlights of 2024: 
page 1
 The value we created 
in 2024: page 7
 Investment case: page 16
 Sustainability Review: 
page 34
 Corporate Governance 
Report: page 90
 Share register 
information: page 212
E
•	 During 2024, we introduced an enhanced employee engagement survey in partnership with a third-party provider, 
enabling us to compare our employees’ responses with our peers and measure engagement rather than 
satisfaction. Feedback from the survey was shared and teams are working on actions plans to drive improvements 
relevant to them ensuring both ownership and accountability.
•	 We are evolving our existing culture and as part of this we have engaged with 800 employees across 27 countries 
to understand our current culture and the vision for the future. 
•	 We maintained our ‘Fair Pay’ commitment and are accredited as a Living Wage Employer by the Living Wage Foundation.
•	 We continued our support of World Mental Health Day, signed the Global Mental Health Pledge and participated in 
International Well-being Week and we have approximately 100 Mental Health First Aiders globally. 
•	 We launched training on neurodiversity at work and managing neurodivergent colleagues.
•	 Our learning management system continues to provide 182 on-demand courses, 50 of which are in multiple languages. 
•	 We continue to enhance senior leaders’ skills, with nearly 100 leaders completing the Leadership Growth 
programme and relevant leaders undertaking a Business Manager programme. 
•	 Focusing on those in the early stage of their careers, we supported our inaugural group of ten apprentice field 
service engineers, who have progressed through The Rotork Service Academy Programme. Our first cohort of 
graduates completed the Graduate and Internship Programmes, with five new graduates joining in 2024.
•	 Our Board members actively engaged with employees 
across the Company:
	
— Dorothy Thompson engaged with employees to 
understand our current culture and how it should 
evolve to support growth. 
	
— Tim Cobbold, being the designated Non-executive 
Director for Workforce Engagement during 2024, 
brought the voice of employees to the boardroom.
	
— Vanessa Simms met with the Customer 
Service team.
	
— Karin Meurk-Harvey met with our graduates as 
part of our Graduate Programme. 
	
— Kiet Huynh hosted two all-employee webinars. 
•	 Board reports include updates on 
employee engagement.
•	 Continue to ensure that our 
colleagues are informed of our 
Growth+ strategy and their role 
in helping to deliver it. 
•	 Continue to progress with our 
cultural initiatives to enhance our 
culture to support the Company’s 
long-term success.
•	 Continue to progress action 
plans following the employee 
engagement survey results. 
•	 Conduct another engagement 
survey during 2025 to 
understand latest levels 
of employee engagement.
•	 Employees involved 
in cultural 
initiatives: 800
•	 Employee 
engagement survey 
response rate: 80%
•	 Rotork as a place 
to work: 7.1/10 
•	 TRIR 2024: 0.22
•	 Board site visits: 8 
•	 Enrolment to 
Graduate 
and Internship 
Programme: 5 
in 2024 cohort 
(19 in total)
 Workforce engagement 
in action: page 112
 Focus on culture: page 104 
 Gender Pay Gap Report: 
page 60
 Diversity statistics: 
page 61 
 People section in 
Sustainability Review: 
page 58
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Corporate governance report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Our Section 172(1) statement continued
Engaging with our 
stakeholders continued
Stakeholder group and relevant  
Section 172(1) clause
Stakeholder’s material issues
Why we engage
How we engage 
S 	 Suppliers
Our suppliers include all third 
parties that provide goods or 
services to the Group. This includes 
all suppliers, contractors, and 
consultants. We also appoint 
brokers and engage corporate 
advisers across a range of 
professional disciplines. 
s.172(1)(c) The need to foster the 
Company’s business relationships 
with suppliers, customers 
and others.
s.172(1)(e) The desirability 
of the Company maintaining a 
reputation for high standards 
of business conduct.
•	 Creating and maintaining mutually 
strong business relationships, via fair 
procurement, ordering and contracting 
processes and timely payments.
•	 Clear and accessible information 
about our required technical 
specifications, guidance, policies and 
standards. For example, the Supplier 
Code of Conduct and our terms and 
conditions for the purchase of goods 
and supply of services to us.
•	 Working together in a more 
collaborative way. For example, 
new product innovations, more 
economically efficient designs and 
achieving sustainability goals.
•	 A commitment to ensuring that we 
remain mutually vigilant to the risks 
related to modern slavery and human 
trafficking in the wider supply chain.
•	 Our suppliers play an integral role in our ability to continue to deliver 
products and services to our customers. We generally operate an 
assembly-only philosophy, meaning that the majority of the components 
in our products come from our suppliers. 
•	 We value strong working relationships with our suppliers and regular 
engagement ensures that these relationships are underpinned by clear and 
open communication. This facilitates a two-way understanding of issues that 
may arise and ease with which we can work together to solve them.
•	 Effective engagement with direct suppliers helps to facilitate a coherent supply 
chain, whilst also improving our cash conversion and inventory management.
•	 We work closely with suppliers in relation to our scope 3 emissions and 
support them in their own sustainability journeys. 
•	 Our products can have complex certification and compliance requirements. 
Granular engagement with suppliers ensures that they understand these 
requirements and deliver components to our specifications. 
•	 We constantly research and develop new or enhanced products. 
Where appropriate, we engage with our suppliers to drive innovation 
in a collaborative manner. 
•	 We carry out on-site audits of key and high-risk suppliers, which focus on 
their social, environmental, and ethical conduct, alongside their technical 
and operational capabilities. The audits form part of the Supplier Risk and 
Resilience Framework. 
•	 We engage centrally with our 
strategic suppliers with our regional 
and site level supply chain and 
procurement teams providing 
operational level engagement. 
•	 To help create better quality 
partnerships with suppliers, we 
provide improvement roadmap tools 
to them that clarify Rotork’s processes 
and ways of working. 
•	 We continue to engage with key 
suppliers in relation to our important 
net-zero target by 2045 for scope 3. 
We are guiding suppliers to improve 
their environmental performance 
through awareness letters, meetings 
and information on how to set 
and validate their own emission 
reduction targets. 
•	 Our Speak Up Policy applies to our 
suppliers and encourages suppliers to 
raise concerns with us and outlines our 
commitment to conduct our business 
with openness, integrity and fairness. 
CO 	 Communities
Our communities are made up 
by those who live in areas where 
we have a physical presence, such 
as local residents, businesses, 
schools, charities 
and surroundings.
s.172(1)(d) The impact of the 
Company’s operations on the 
community and the environment.
•	 Understanding the differing 
needs and priorities of our local 
communities and how we can 
best support them.
•	 Provide local employment 
opportunities and investment 
to help communities thrive.
•	 Create positive environmental 
and social impact enabling a 
sustainable future.
•	 Our purpose is ‘keeping the world flowing for future generations’. 
This recognises the role we play in making our world a greater place 
to live and the role we play in helping improve our communities.
•	 One of our sustainability framework pillars is to make a positive impact 
to support thriving, fair and resilient communities and operate responsibly 
within them. 
•	 Through our charity fundraising, our sites are able to make donations 
directly into the local community in which they operate to seek to make 
a difference.
•	 We make a positive social impact by being a good corporate citizen and 
are pleased to pay our taxes to contribute to society in the countries in 
which we operate.
•	 We understand the importance in recruiting and retaining diverse talent 
from our local communities.
•	 We engage positively with our local 
communities via investing in job 
creation, using local talent and supply 
chains where viable, paying our taxes 
and helping to support the wider 
communities in which we operate. 
•	 We consider the social impacts of our 
business decisions carefully, including 
potential social impacts. 
•	 We offer support through the Rotork 
Benevolent Support Fund, charitable 
giving, volunteering at community 
projects and raising mental health 
awareness. Rotork currently has two 
global charity partnerships, with Pump 
Aid and Renewable World. In addition, 
charity committees at Rotork’s sites 
support causes that are expressed as 
important to employees locally. 
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Our Section 172(1) statement continued
Outcomes of our engagement during 2024 
Board engagement 
Priorities for engagement 
during 2025
Measurements/ 
metrics
Further information
S
•	 We continued to undertake supplier audits against our Supplier Code of Conduct, which led to certain health and 
safety improvements of some suppliers.
•	 We engage with applicable suppliers at the design stage of our products’ manufacture. Certain suppliers simulate 
casting and plastic moulding processes and provide feedback, which is used by our engineering teams to refine the 
component designs, and for the supplier to design tooling that produces a high yield. This two-way engagement at 
an early stage reduces the likelihood of inherent design defects supporting the operational success of our products.
•	 We continuously review our global supply chain and operations to ensure that we are working to prevent modern 
slavery in these areas.
•	 During 2024, actions to reduce carbon emissions were added to the performance review agenda with our strategic 
suppliers. Rotork’s Supplier Risk and Resilience Framework was updated to incorporate suppliers’ actions to reduce 
carbon emissions.
•	 We continue to forecast our component requirements and proactively work with our supply chain partners to 
reduce our supply chain disruption risk.
•	 We work with suppliers to drive quality and to continually improve manufacturing processes that minimise the risk 
of in-field product failure.
•	 Interaction with suppliers remains an important topic 
in Board discussions (when relevant) especially in 
regions experiencing, or at risk of, geopolitical 
disruption and around creating a resilient supplier 
base. The Board receives updates on suppliers from 
the executive directors and RMB members.
•	 In March 2025, the Board was updated on the 
prevailing procedures and policies in place to prevent 
and detect modern slavery and human trafficking 
within our supply chain. As part of this, the Board 
approved the 2024 Modern Slavery Statement, 
which is available on our corporate website. 
•	 In October 2024, the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee reviewed the current Supplier Code of 
Conduct commitments and competitor practices and 
discussed further planned enhancements to the Code. 
•	 Rotork’s progress against scope 3 emissions reduction 
target and supplier engagement strategy on 
sustainability more widely were reported to the 
Safety and Sustainability Committee.
•	 Continue to strengthen 
relationships with existing and 
new suppliers and increase the 
number of our suppliers 
engaged under our long-term 
supplier agreements, to mitigate 
against the supply chain security 
points from Rotork’s perspective.
•	 Continue with our supplier 
engagement programme related 
to the measurement of their 
emissions and sharing such data 
with us. We are targeting that 
25% of suppliers (by estimated 
emissions) will have set 
science-based targets by 2027. 
•	 Continue to develop the 
application of our Supplier 
Risk and Resilience Framework.
•	 Provide global e-learning on 
our Supplier Code of Conduct. 
•	 Commence a global vendor 
performance rating project 
(initially with strategic suppliers) 
to champion meaningful 
relationships with suppliers and 
drive continual improvements.
•	 Supplier due 
diligence 
assessments 
undertaken: 162 
•	 Suppliers who 
completed our 
modules on supplier 
sustainability survey 
platform: 816
•	 We measure 
each supplier’s 
on-time delivery
•	 Spend with external 
suppliers: £364m
 Divisional Review: 
page 24
 Sustainability Review: 
page 34
 Our Supplier Code of 
Conduct: www.rotork.
com/en/about-us/terms-
and-conditions/suppliers/
supplier-code-of-conduct
 Rotork’s 2024 Modern 
Slavery Statement:  
www.rotork.com/en/
investors/modern-
slavery-statement
 Code of Conduct: 
www.rotork.com/en/
sustainability/esg-
reports-and-policies/
rotork-code-of-conduct
CO
•	 We have supported Pump Aid for many years. In 2024, we took meaningful steps to deepen our ongoing 
relationship with the charity, aligning with Rotork’s purpose of keeping the world flowing for future generations. 
We conducted a series of workshops with Pump Aid, bringing together diverse teams to better understand its 
challenges and explore ways our expertise, technical, strategic and other skills and resources could help address 
its challenges. These engagement sessions fostered mutual understanding, revealing synergies between our 
organisations, and built a strong foundation for our future collaboration. During 2025, we are confident that the 
groundwork laid as a result of the engagement in 2024 will enable us to develop plans that strengthen this 
relationship and support Pump Aid’s vital work in the future. 
•	 We endeavour to make a positive social impact across our global operations. Some examples include installation 
of a solar power plant at an emergency care and recovery centre in India, a donation to a school of disabled 
children in South Africa, providing school furniture in Malaysia and a donation to a local shelter for vulnerable 
people in Sweden. We sponsored Team Bath Racing Electric, a team from the University of Bath, to design and 
build an open wheel racing car, which competed at the internal Formula Student competition. 
•	 In India, we provided financial donations in support of freely accessible vaccination drives related to women’s 
health matters, provided a digital radiography system that was needed at a community hospital, completed 
maintenance projects in two government schools, sponsored midday meals at a government school, provided 
school furniture and provided donations to support a programme to upskill lower income and government college 
students for greater employment opportunities. 
•	 The Safety and Sustainability Committee assists the 
Board in overseeing the execution of the Company’s 
sustainability and social strategy and monitoring 
its progress. 
•	 The Safety and Sustainability Committee received 
updates from the Chief Human Resources Officer on 
the various social initiatives and actions across the 
Group. These covered areas such as employee 
well-being and mental health, charity support and 
community engagement. 
•	 The Committee reviewed and supported the 2024 
activities of the Rotork Benevolent Support Fund, 
which offers support to employees and ex-employees 
and their families facing financial hardship. 
•	 Rotork’s Board maintains an active interest in the 
health and safety aspects of the operational business, 
with the Chief Executive Officer providing regular 
reporting on health and safety to the Board. 
•	 The Safety and Sustainability Committee Chair 
updates the Board on the key issues covered 
following each Committee meeting.
•	 Continue to ensure our 
charitable partnerships have a 
positive social impact, aligned 
to our purpose and the UN 
Sustainable Development Goals 
we have identified to support. 
•	 Continue to support our 
employees in contributing to 
local causes close to their hearts. 
•	 Continue to help drive and 
demonstrate progress in 
our broader safety and 
sustainability agenda.
•	 Continue to strengthen the 
relationship with Pump Aid 
and support its vital work.
•	 Donations to our 
two global partner 
charities in 
2024: £160,000
•	 Total corporation 
tax paid in 
2024: £39m
 Sustainability Review: 
page 57
 Work with Pump Aid and 
Renewable World: pages 
62 and 63
 Sustainability Reports 
and policies: www.
rotork.com/en/investors/
diversity-and-inclusion
 Making a positive impact 
section of our website: 
www.rotork.com/en/
sustainability/social-impact
rotork.com
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Corporate governance report continued
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Corporate governance
Financial statements

Pursuant to his role as the Non-executive Director 
for Workforce Engagement, Tim helped to 
ensure our employees’ perspectives were 
represented in the Board’s decision-making 
process during 2024 by bringing their views 
and experiences to the boardroom and ensuring 
that colleagues’ experiences and opinions were 
considered as Board discussions took place 
and decisions were made.
Each year, a structured programme of activities 
involving as many Board members as possible is 
undertaken. The aim is to ensure sufficient direct 
engagement between Board members and 
colleagues outside the line of management, to 
create opportunities for feedback and provide a 
voice for any concerns to the Board, to deepen 
their understanding of the employee perspective 
and help them monitor how Rotork’s culture 
remains embedded within the organisation 
amongst our employees. 
The Non-executive Director for Workforce 
Engagement is responsible for developing the 
programme and reviewing progress during the 
year with the Chief Executive Officer and the 
Chief Human Resources Officer. During 2024, 
Tim provided ongoing updates to the Board and 
Vanessa is already doing the same during 2025.
In 2024, our approach was to increase 
engagement between the Board and employees 
on topics relevant to the Company and employees 
and direct face-to-face communication with 
employees in their work environment. Considering 
the global nature of Rotork’s workforce and the 
broad range of roles within that across all levels 
in the organisation, the framework for 2024 
comprised three streams:
•	 Topic-based structured meetings/engagement 
with colleagues conducted online to enable 
broad global participation.
•	 Face-to-face meetings with employees in 
their work environment to allow for more 
personal interactions.
•	 A review of data, including employee survey 
outcomes and whistleblowing.
Topic-based workforce engagement
To align with the Company’s focus on Customer 
Value and culture, we conducted virtual sessions 
with employee groups from multiple locations, 
encompassing various seniority levels and disciplines.
In September, our Board Chair, Dorothy Thompson, 
engaged with employees regarding our cultural 
initiatives. This engagement provided further 
insight to the Board’s ongoing oversight of 
culture within the Company. The objective was 
to gather employee perspectives and feedback 
on their participation in the overall process and 
to solicit their ideas on how Rotork’s culture 
could evolve to support long-term growth. 
The session revealed that employees universally 
found the experience positive and appreciated 
the transition from top-down to bottom-up 
engagement. They also observed that Rotork’s 
culture is already evolving positively under Kiet 
Huynh’s leadership as Chief Executive Officer and 
the guidance of the Rotork Management Board. 
Similarly, Vanessa Simms met with the team 
focused on Customer Responsiveness, a key 
component of the Customer Value pillar within 
the Growth+ strategy. In 2024, there has been a 
significant emphasis on training and development 
to enhance the skills of our customer service 
teams across the Company. Participants in this 
session included both the training programmes’ 
developers and the training recipients. 
The outcomes were impressive:
•	 Aligned strategy and engaged team: clear 
understanding of how Business Transformation’s 
focus on Customer Responsiveness supports 
Growth+, boosting team motivation.
•	 Effective training and expansion: achieved a 
99% training completion rate with positive 
feedback, leading the team to recommend 
an organisation-wide rollout of training and 
development initiatives in this area.
•	 Strong KPIs and process enhancements: 
implemented robust dashboards to track 
improvements and multiple process changes 
to enhance service quality.
In addition, recognising the importance of 
developing early career talent, our non-executive 
director Karin Meurk-Harvey met with a cross-section 
of employees at various stages of our Graduate 
Recruitment Programme – from those who had just 
started the programme to those concluding their 
third year. This session demonstrates that the 
programme is successfully equipping future talent 
with the skills and development needed for 
workplace success and that our graduates were 
fully motivated and engaged.
Face-to-face employee engagement 
with our Board 
Throughout 2024, our Board members actively 
engaged with employees across the Company 
through face-to-face interactions. At the Board’s 
annual strategy session at our facility in 
Rochester (USA), the Board toured the facility and 
engaged directly with employees from a variety 
of functions including sales, customer service, 
engineering and finance. The Board also toured 
the research & development facility in Bath, 
meeting with the engineering function. This 
year, in addition to the Board’s regular visits to 
our Bath site, our non-executive directors visited 
other Rotork sites. Individually, six site visits were 
undertaken by our non-executive directors. Tim 
Cobbold, Janice Stipp, Andrew Heath and Karin 
Meurk-Harvey visited Chennai (India), Winston-
Salem (USA), Shanghai (China), and Manchester 
(UK), respectively. During these visits, the 
directors toured the facilities with regional and 
local leaders and interacted with a broader 
group of employees through town halls and 
round tables. The Board found these site visits 
very valuable and the Board thanks all the 
colleagues we met for their warm welcome.
Activities of Rotork’s designated 
Non‑executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement 
Vanessa Simms was appointed as Rotork’s 
designated Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement on 1 January 2025. 
Prior to being appointed to the role, 
Vanessa was already involved in workforce 
engagement activities during 2024 and 
details about this are set out below. 
Workforce engagement in action
During 2024, Tim Cobbold held the position 
of designated Non-executive Director for 
Workforce Engagement, having held the role 
since its inception in 2019. This role helps to 
ensure an effective engagement mechanism 
between the Board and employees so that the 
voice and views of our employees continue to 
be represented within the boardroom and their 
interests are more fully considered at all levels 
of the Board’s decision making. 
The Board as a whole recognises that the success 
of Rotork relies on our positive culture, values 
and people. The Board knows that long-term 
performance is built by our teams worldwide 
and how our employees work together to deliver 
value for all the Company’s stakeholders. 
Vanessa Simms
Non‑executive Director  
for Workforce Engagement
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Face-to-face employee engagement 
with our Board continued
During these sessions, we committed to 
maintaining complete confidentiality and 
non-attributable feedback from employees, 
ensuring that all comments were only shared 
with management (when necessary) and 
discussed during Board meetings. Due to the 
nature of their work and roles, special attention 
was given to engaging with employees who may 
not be easily reached through other channels, such 
as email. After each meeting, Board members 
summarised the key themes in a report and provided 
debriefs to local or senior management to 
consider the insights and any resulting actions.
Overall, Board members praised the quality and 
dedication of our employees and noted the 
visible improvements across the Company. These 
engagements have reinforced our commitment 
to a transparent and inclusive culture, ensuring 
that all voices are heard and valued (including 
within the boardroom) as we continue to grow 
and evolve.
Data including employee surveys 
and whistleblowing 
Employee engagement is a crucial measure for 
the success of our organisation; receiving direct 
feedback from employees is essential to 
understand what is working well and where we 
should focus on improving. Every year, we ask all 
employees to anonymously provide their views 
and measure engagement scores and feedback 
across key areas.
In 2024, we moved from our previously used 
internal pulse survey to an externally managed 
engagement survey. This has enabled us to 
establish the benchmark of our engagement 
levels with other companies. We were pleased 
to see that the participation rate for the survey 
in 2024 was 80%, an increase versus the prior 
year. Our rating of Rotork as a ‘place to work’ 
remains largely consistent.
Whilst there is strong positivity about the future 
direction of the business, some helpful feedback 
themes emerged. Employees have expressed 
that Rotork will benefit from the increased clarity 
around processes and robust systems that we 
are implementing to support our customers 
effectively. This builds on our global ERP 
deployment programme, which reviews our 
global processes to support the implementation 
of the new systems. We are aware of the need 
to continue focusing on customer responsiveness, 
which has been a key initiative for us during 2024. 
Our employees also wanted further investment 
in the development of our people managers and 
leaders and their own career development and 
growth. In 2024, we ran the Business Manager 
Programme to support leaders across the world. 
As we move into 2025, our people strategy will 
focus further on developing our people managers, 
early years careers and ensuring a strong focus 
on individual performance management, 
development and career planning. 
The Board will continue to review employee-related 
data, including whistleblowing, through our 
confidential Speak Up line. 
Workforce engagement in action continued
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Annual Board evaluation
In accordance with the 2018 Code, the Board 
undertakes a formal and rigorous annual 
evaluation of its own performance and that of 
its Committees and directors. The purpose of 
the evaluation is to ensure key areas such as 
the Board’s composition, expertise, interaction, 
management, key decision-making processes 
and meeting focus and prioritisation continue 
to be assessed and developed.
2023 external Board evaluation
The areas identified for development during the 
previous year’s external evaluation process and 
the actions that we have taken during 2024 
to address them are set out below.
2024 internal Board evaluation
During 2024, Dorothy Thompson, as Board 
Chair, with the guidance and support provided 
by the Group General Counsel & Company 
Secretary undertook an internal evaluation of the 
performance and effectiveness of the Board and 
its Committees. The process was commenced in 
October, pursuant to which the Chair and Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary agreed 
on the appropriate key themes and topics and 
curated the tailored online and anonymous 
questionnaires for the Board as a whole and 
each Board Committee. The questionnaires also 
sought feedback on the focus areas that were 
agreed upon by the Board for implementation 
during 2024 following the external Board 
evaluation undertaken during 2023. The Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary collated 
and analysed the results and discussed them 
with the Chair. The Chair also sought informal 
feedback from each of the directors. Feedback 
and recommended focus areas for 2025 were 
presented to the December 2024 Board meeting 
for consideration. Subsequently, the Board 
agreed an action plan for implementation 
in the year ahead, as summarised below. 
Outcome and actions for 2025
The 2024 Board evaluation demonstrates that 
the Board and its Committees were operating 
effectively and were focused on the appropriate 
matters. The key areas identified by the internal 
evaluation for increased focus and development 
during the forthcoming year are set out below. 
Progress against these areas will be reviewed as 
part of the 2025 Board performance review 
and reported on in next year’s Annual Report:
•	 Investigate options for relevant training for 
the Board and its Committees on regulatory 
developments, legislative changes and 
reporting requirements (including assurance 
of sustainability-related data).
•	 Building upon the positive feedback from 
the June 2024 strategy session, ensuring 
a similarly effective and useful session is 
undertaken in 2025.
•	 A continued focus on the Board’s oversight of 
Rotork’s culture, and how the evolving culture 
is being embedded within the organisation.
•	 Continue to incorporate insights on customers 
and competitors in relevant Board papers. 
Chair’s performance evaluation 
Led by Tim Cobbold, as the Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director at the time, an internally 
facilitated review of the Chair’s performance was 
completed. Tim Cobbold and the Group General 
Counsel & Company Secretary worked together 
to agree the areas on which to focus and 
produced an online and anonymous 
questionnaire. The questionnaire was further 
supported by a private meeting held between 
Tim and the non-executive and executive 
directors. It was concluded that Dorothy 
Thompson’s performance and contribution 
remained strong during her second year as 
Board Chair. It was agreed that Dorothy 
continued to demonstrate overall effective 
leadership of the Board and continued to 
promote and facilitate constructive debate 
within the boardroom. Feedback from the 
evaluation was shared with Dorothy. The 
2025 Chair’s performance review will be 
conducted internally. 
Board evaluation
Focus areas identified 
Actions taken in 2024
Quality and value of the 
induction programme and 
integration process for new 
Board members
A comprehensive and tailored induction programme was provided 
during 2024 (and early 2025) to fully familiarise Ben Peacock, 
Andrew Heath, Vanessa Simms and Svein Richard Brandtzæg with 
Rotork’s business operations, sites, products, people and risk and 
governance arrangements, supplemented by regular formal and 
informal meetings with fellow Board members and members of 
the Rotork Management Board. The feedback provided as part 
of the 2024 internal Board evaluation was that the induction 
programmes were valuable and that the Board as a whole was 
cohesive and operating effectively. 
Focus on continued 
implementation of Growth+ 
The Board prioritised time during the year in overseeing and 
monitoring the execution of the Growth+ strategy through review 
and discussion of the issues reported in the regular updates at its 
meetings and through deep dives on key strategic initiatives.
Supporting the executive 
directors on the people 
and culture initiatives
The Board actively reviewed and supported the people and culture 
initiatives during the year. At the Board strategy session in June, 
a deep dive was undertaken on progress. The Chair and various 
non-executive directors became personally involved in various 
initiatives, both supporting the executive directors and in 
recognition that a strong and cohesive culture is a critical enabler 
for sustainable growth. 
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Audit, risk and internal control 
Whilst maintaining overall responsibility, the 
Board delegates the establishment of formal and 
transparent policies and procedures relating to 
independence and effectiveness of internal and 
external audit functions to the Audit Committee. 
The Audit Committee scrutinises the integrity of 
financial and narrative statements and considers 
whether the assessment of Rotork’s position and 
prospects is fair, balanced and understandable 
and then recommends these statements to the 
Board for approval.
A risk dashboard is presented to the Board on 
a biannual basis. This includes a set of key risk 
indicators which provide a means of monitoring 
the Group’s risk exposures, and highlights areas 
where the Group exceeds, or may potentially 
exceed, risk appetite. Biannual reporting is 
supplemented, as necessary, by more detailed 
reporting to the Board by the executive management 
team on new or evolving risks, the effectiveness 
of existing mitigations and plans to further 
strengthen mitigations.
The Risk and Compliance team, led by the 
Head of Risk and Compliance, monitors the 
effectiveness of risk management across the 
Group. During the year, in order to ensure 
appropriate monitoring of the implementation 
of controls within the ERP change programme, 
an experienced member of the Risk and 
Compliance team joined the programme. 
The Risk and Compliance team is responsible 
for supporting the Group to identify risks and 
put in place appropriate mitigations, promoting 
a risk-aware culture, adherence to risk appetite 
and reporting on the status of principal and 
emerging risks periodically. The Risk and 
Compliance team also operates a practice of 
peer internal financial control reviews whereby 
experienced professionals from across the 
business, who have received specialist training 
from the Risk and Compliance team, perform 
financial control reviews at different entities 
within the Group, the results of which are 
then reported to the Audit Committee. 
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) leads 
the Group’s third line of defence through 
the provision of an independent internal 
audit function. 
The Board is satisfied that the main roles and 
responsibilities of the Audit Committee, as set 
out in Provisions 25 and 26 of the 2018 Code, 
are captured within the Committee’s terms of 
reference. Further details of how the roles and 
responsibilities of the Audit Committee have 
been discharged during 2024 are set out on 
pages 121 to 125.
The Board is required to carry out a robust 
assessment of the Company’s emerging and 
principal risks. A summary of the assessment 
undertaken by the Board and a description of 
the principal risks and procedures in place to 
identify and manage the emerging risks can 
be found on pages 70 to 77. 
The Board notes that the UK Corporate 
Governance Code 2024 (the 2024 Code) applies 
to the Company from 1 January 2025, with 
Provision 29 of the 2024 Code applying to the 
Company from 1 January 2026. Preparation in 
order to comply with Provision 29 of the 2024 
Code commenced during 2024, a process led by 
the Audit Committee (reporting into the Board). 
Risk management and internal controls
The Board is responsible for Rotork’s system 
of risk management and internal controls. 
The Board’s annual review of the system’s 
effectiveness is completed with the assistance 
of the Audit Committee.
How the Board operates effectively
During 2024, the Board and Audit Committee 
regularly considered matters relating to the 
Group’s risk management and internal control 
systems. This year, areas which received 
particular focus were:
•	 The effectiveness of internal controls.
•	 The continued development of the Business 
Controls Framework and its integration 
with the ongoing deployment of the new 
ERP system.
•	 The finance transformation programme, 
including resourcing levels across the 
Finance function. 
•	 Oversight of preparation for the 2024 Code 
becoming effective.
Following the publication of the 2024 Code in 
January 2024, the Audit Committee reviewed 
updates from management on the Group’s 
preparedness for the 2024 Code, most notably 
Provision 29. Throughout the year the Audit 
Committee also received updates from the 
external and internal auditors and the Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary in 
relation to the changes included within the 
2024 Code.
During 2024, the Audit Committee maintained 
oversight of management’s implementation of 
enhanced controls in relation to the new ERP 
system as they were incorporated into the 
blueprint for future deployments. 
More broadly, the effectiveness of the risk 
management and internal control systems 
continues to be directed, monitored and 
reviewed by the Audit Committee. The Audit 
Committee has reviewed the effectiveness 
of the key elements of the Group’s systems 
of risk management and internal controls, 
which were in place for the year under review.
Main features of the Group’s risk 
management process
The Board is responsible for determining the 
nature and extent of the risks the Company 
is willing to take to achieve the Group’s 
strategic objectives. 
Rotork’s Risk Management Policy documents 
the Group’s risk management processes and 
the connections between such processes 
and the day-to-day operations of the Group. 
Each member of the executive team who is 
a designated risk owner has responsibility for 
producing and updating detailed mitigation 
plans to respond to the risks in accordance 
with risk appetite. Progress on response plans 
is reported to the Board, as part of the Board’s 
risk review and oversight process.
Risk appetite is expressed through a number 
of risk dimensions and risks are monitored and 
reported. A risk dashboard is presented to the 
Board twice a year. It constitutes a set of key risk 
indicators, which provide a means of monitoring 
the Group’s risk exposures and allows the Board 
to focus in more detail on risks where the Group 
exceeds, or may potentially exceed, risk appetite. 
An established divisional and functional risk 
review process results in a bottom-up 
assessment of enterprise-wide risks. These risks 
are consolidated before a top-down evaluation 
is performed by management, which is then 
presented to and reviewed by the Board. The 
bottom-up assessment process includes a review 
with all central functions and commercial and 
operations teams, a focus on risk mitigation 
reporting, and development of plans to respond 
to risks in accordance with the Board’s risk 
appetite. This process is formally completed 
twice a year. Further details of the Group’s 
internal control and risk management systems, 
the process for identifying, evaluating and 
managing the principal risks faced by the Group 
during 2024, emerging risks, and the Board’s 
risk appetite are set out on pages 70 to 77. 
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How the Board operates effectively continued
Main features of the Group’s internal 
control systems
Audit Committee papers and meeting minutes 
are made available to Board members who are 
not members of the Audit Committee, unless in 
the opinion of the Committee Chair it would be 
inappropriate to do so. The meeting papers detail 
the Audit Committee’s annual review of the 
assessment of the effectiveness of the Group’s 
risk management and internal control systems. The 
Chair and executive directors are invited to attend 
Audit Committee meetings with other members of 
the senior leadership team presenting or attending 
as necessary. In addition, a dedicated Board Risk 
Review session is held each year. 
Key elements of the control environment, which 
form part of the review of the effectiveness of 
risk management and internal control, and 
which enable Rotork to respond appropriately 
to all types of business risks, include:
•	 The Rotork values and behaviours.
•	 The Code of Conduct (and training on the 
Code) supported by Group-wide policies and 
procedures, including authority levels and 
division of responsibilities.
•	 Mandatory training provided to employees 
throughout the year on policies and 
procedures relevant to their roles.
•	 Ongoing monitoring of business 
performance, including key risk indicators.
•	 Annual Confirmation Statement confirming 
employees’ compliance with policies.
•	 Ongoing monitoring of internal audit and 
business control reviews.
•	 A formal schedule of reserved matters for the 
Board, including responsibility for reviewing 
Group strategy.
•	 A formal Whistleblowing Policy, with an 
external whistleblowing hotline, with key 
matters reported to the Board.
•	 Defined controls and assurance processes 
over, for example, financial reporting and 
health and safety procedures.
During the year, work on the finance 
transformation programme continued with 
good progress on the key areas being prioritised 
as follows:
•	 Deployment of the new ERP system 
continued with enhancements made as 
required and the implementation process 
commencing at several other sites.
•	 Updates to the Business Control Framework. 
As part of embedding the updated Business 
Control Framework within the Group, senior 
members of the Group Finance team visited 
key sites around the Group in order to provide 
in-person training to local management.
•	 Update and relaunch of the ‘Rotork Group 
Accounting Policies and Procedures’, providing 
further consistency and clarity, and alignment 
with the updated Business Control Framework.
•	 Work on other aspects of the Finance 
function’s target operating model will 
continue during 2025.
Remuneration
The responsibility for determining remuneration 
arrangements for the Chair, executive directors 
and senior management, as well as oversight over 
workforce remuneration, has been delegated to 
the Remuneration Committee, which was chaired 
by Tim Cobbold during 2024. Four meetings of 
the Remuneration Committee took place in 2024.
Svein Richard Brandtzæg was appointed as Chair 
of the Remuneration Committee with effect from 
1 January 2025, following Tim’s retirement from 
the Board on 31 December 2024.
Rotork’s remuneration policies and practices are 
designed to support its strategy and promote 
the long-term sustainable success of the Company. 
A description of the work undertaken by the 
Remuneration Committee in 2024 can be found 
on pages 131 to 158.
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Safety and Sustainability Committee report
Andrew Heath 
Chair of the Safety and Sustainability Committee
“I am pleased to present the annual report of the Committee for 2024 
following its inaugural year under its reconstituted responsibilities. Safety 
and sustainability remain major focus areas for Rotork. During the year, the 
Committee (on behalf of the Board) oversaw the implementation of Rotork’s 
safety and sustainability frameworks, which serve to promote the Company’s 
long-term sustainable success and vision of keeping the world flowing for 
future generations.”
Andrew Heath 
Chair of the Safety and Sustainability Committee
The current members of the Safety and Sustainability Committee are:
•	 Andrew Heath (Committee Chair) (member and Committee Chair since May 2024)
•	 Karin Meurk-Harvey (member since September 2021)
•	 Vanessa Simms (member since June 2024)
•	 Janice Stipp (member since January 2025)
Safety & Sustainability (S&S) Committee role and responsibilities
The main role of the Committee is to oversee 
the safety and sustainability strategy of the 
Company in order to promote its long-term 
sustainable success. On behalf of the Board, the 
Committee oversees the work being done within 
Rotork as we work towards our sustainability 
vision of keeping the world flowing for future 
generations and our health and safety vision of 
zero harm. 
At the beginning of 2024 the S&S Committee 
was reconstituted under its refreshed remit and 
the Committee meetings were structured to 
allow the Committee to undertake a deep dive 
into an important safety or sustainability focus 
area, at each of its meetings. The focus areas 
included: oversight of the Company’s health and 
safety strategy; progress being made against our 
Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) validated 
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction 
targets; a detailed strategic review of the 
Company’s approach to product sustainability; 
and considerations related to management of 
sustainability within the Company’s supply chain. 
The Committee’s responsibilities include:
•	 Oversight of the Company’s strategic safety 
and sustainability plans to ensure that 
progress continues to be made by the 
Company in working towards the UN 
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it 
seeks to align with.
•	 Overseeing the Company’s net-zero 
strategy. This includes oversight of 
workstreams to achieve the Company’s 
commitments, which are to target: 
reducing scope 1 and 2 emissions by 42% 
and scope 3 emissions by 25% by 2030, 
net-zero by 2035 for scope 1 and 2 and 
net-zero by 2045 for scope 3. 
•	 Providing guidance in the Company’s 
sustainability communication approach. 
Including reviewing the content of its 
sustainability-related disclosures, to ensure 
compliance with existing, and forthcoming, 
laws and regulations, and alignment with 
the Company’s strategic priorities.
•	 Liaising closely with the Remuneration 
Committee to identify safety and 
sustainability targets that are aligned with 
strategy and that have the potential to be 
included within incentive schemes. Thereby 
allowing the Remuneration Committee 
to discharge its responsibility in determining 
the performance targets, measures and 
metrics, and their related terms.
•	 Oversight of the Company’s approach to 
safety across its operations.
•	 Reviewing and recommending Company 
policies relevant to its scope to the Board 
for approval.
•	 Oversight of the Company’s social impact, 
including charitable activities.
Further reading:
 Sustainability Review: page 34
 Sustainability Reports and policies: www.rotork.com/en/sustainability/esg-reports-and-policies
 Sustainability case studies: pages 52 to 56
 The terms of reference for the Safety and Sustainability Committee were last reviewed in October 2024. A copy 
of the current terms of reference is published on Rotork’s website at: www.rotork.com/en/investors/committees
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Our sustainability framework
Rotork’s sustainability framework remains divided into three pillars, and each pillar is aligned with specific UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 
and targets relevant to Rotork’s business. The three pillars are summarised below and set out in more detail on pages 34 to 63.
Operating  
responsibly 
Our mission: to run safe, efficient 
and sustainable operations.
 Read more on page 38
Our commitments
SDG targets:
12.2, 12.5, 
12.6
We will maintain strong safety 
performance, measured through 
our total recordable incident rate 
(TRIR) as we strive for a zero 
harm workplace.
We will embed social, 
ethical and environmental 
considerations into our Global 
Supplier Excellence programme.
SDG targets:
13.1, 13.3
We will reduce our 
carbon emissions.
•	 Reduce emissions per £1m 
revenue year-on-year.
•	 To reduce scope 1 and 2 
emissions by 42% by 2030.
•	 To reduce scope 3 (use of 
sold products) emissions by 
25% by 2030.
•	 Net-zero for scope 1 and 2 by 
2035 and for scope 3 
by 2045.
Enabling a 
sustainable future
Our mission: to help drive the 
transition to a cleaner future, 
where environmental resources 
are used responsibly.
 Read more on page 52
Our commitments
SDG target:
6.4
We will enable sustainable 
management of water resources 
and greater water efficiency for 
our customers.
 
 
 
SDG target:
7.3
We will support customers’ 
energy and emissions reduction 
and enable them to incorporate 
renewable energy into 
their operations.
SDG targets:
9.1, 9.4
We will play our part to enable 
the global energy transition 
and support a cleaner, more 
sustainable future.
Making a positive 
social impact
Our mission: to support thriving, 
fair and resilient communities.
 Read more on page 57
Our commitments
SDG 
target:
5.5
We will develop and 
deliver greater gender 
and ethnic diversity.
 
 
 
 
SDG 
targets:
8.5, 8.7
We will contribute to a fairer 
society more broadly, including 
ensuring that 100% of our 
employees are covered by the 
fair pay framework.
How the Committee operates
The Committee is currently comprised of four 
independent non-executive directors, as set 
out on the previous page. The Committee was 
reconstituted during the course of the year. 
Firstly on 1 January 2024, when it was renamed 
the Safety and Sustainability Committee thereby 
embracing a refreshed remit from the Board. 
Secondly, to reflect the departure of Tim Cobbold 
and the appointment of new non-executive 
directors to the Company during the course 
of 2024. I was appointed as Committee Chair on 
1 May 2024, following Ann Christin Andersen’s 
retirement from the Board on 30 April 2024; 
and Vanessa Simms joined the Committee 
on 21 June 2024, the date on which she 
was appointed to the Board. Most recently, 
Janice Stipp, Chair of the Audit Committee, was 
appointed as a member of the Committee with 
effect from 1 January 2025, therein providing 
additional continuity between the Safety 
and Sustainability Committee’s reporting 
responsibilities and the Audit Committee’s 
responsibilities, for the assurance of sustainability 
reporting and disclosures.
The Committee met formally three times in 
2024. Details of each member’s attendance 
at the meetings is provided on page 102. 
Members of the Committee also hold 
discussions (as required) outside of the formal 
meetings. The Board Chair, the Chief Executive 
Officer, the Operations Excellence Director, the 
Chief Human Resources Officer, the Investor 
Relations Director, the Head of ESG & 
Sustainability, and the Global Head of HSE 
attended Committee meetings by invitation. 
The Group General Counsel & Company 
Secretary acted as secretary to the Committee. 
The Committee Chair reports to the Board on 
the key issues covered at each meeting.
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Activities of the Committee during 
the year
On behalf of the Board, the Committee oversaw 
the Company’s safety and sustainability plans, 
targets and related initiatives. The Committee 
received updates from the executive team on 
progress towards the aims of each of Rotork’s 
three sustainability pillars that sit within its 
sustainability framework. These meetings 
captured reviews of ongoing safety initiatives, 
emissions reduction plans, and community 
engagement and charitable initiatives across 
the Group. During 2024, the Committee also 
maintained oversight of preparatory workstreams 
to maintain compliance with evolving sustainability 
reporting regulations, such as the EU Corporate 
Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). The 
Committee members were kept updated on 
Rotork’s first double materiality exercise and plans 
for the requisite third-party assurance of the 
Group’s disclosures. The key areas of focus for the 
Committee during the year are described below.
Review of HSE strategy
The safety of our people, partners and visitors 
remains a key priority for the Board, as is our 
vision for health and safety is zero harm. 
At its February meeting, the Committee 
reviewed the health and safety strategy and 
its alignment to the overall Growth+ business 
strategy. The Committee was pleased to see the 
actions and projects undertaken in relation to 
health and safety across the regions (within 
which Rotork has an operational presence). 
Also the move towards the next phase of the 
programme, focusing on further enhancing 
and embedding a behavioural safety culture. 
Inherent within our health and safety vision for 
zero harm is ensuring the health and safety of 
our employees and visitors. In support of this, 
we are continually enhancing our ‘safety first’ 
culture, supported by training for all employees. 
At each meeting held during the year, the 
Committee received updates on the Group’s 
performance against the key safety metrics, that 
have been established for the Group within the 
safety strategy. This included a review of the 
Group’s TRIR for 2024, which was 0.22 (2023: 
0.26) and the lost time injury rate (LTIR) for 2024 
which was 0.08 (2023: 0.08). 
Net-zero commitments 
In 2021 we committed to target becoming 
net-zero for our scope 1 and 2 emissions by 
2035 and for our scope 3 emissions by 2045. 
Work towards achieving these targets continued 
during 2024. 
At each meeting held during the year, the 
Committee reviewed progress on Rotork’s scope 
1 and 2 targets and the operational workstreams 
being undertaken across the Group. The Committee 
reviewed the implementation of energy efficiency 
projects and investment in on-site renewable 
generation. The review included how we have 
taken the opportunity to enhance sustainability 
as part of the new manufacturing facility in 
China (which achieved LEED Gold certification) 
and work towards decarbonising heating at our 
Manchester (UK) facility. The Committee was 
pleased to note that, overall, excellent progress 
continues to be made, via the various pathways, 
to achieve the goal set out in the sustainability 
framework of achieving a 42% reduction in 
scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030. 
In terms of scope 3 emissions, and specifically 
addressing the purchased goods and services 
category, the Committee reviewed and supported 
the steps, being taken by management, to engage 
with suppliers on emissions measurement. A 
granular engagement process, which originally 
commenced in 2023, continued during the year. 
As part of this process, Rotork has been engaging 
with its supply chain on emissions measurement 
and target setting, in support of Rotork’s 
net-zero commitment. More details about the 
nature of this engagement are set out on pages 
47 to 48.
The Committee endorsed the steps being taken 
on product development to deliver efficiency 
and reduce emissions, whilst recognising that 
our path to net-zero is a long-term commitment. 
Further details of progress achieved during the 
year towards our SBTi validated targets can be 
found within the Strategic Report on pages 35 
to 51. 
Oversight of sustainability over the lifecycle 
of our products 
The Committee understands that initiatives 
to improve environmental performance must 
occur both upstream and downstream, through 
supporting and enabling both our customers 
and our supply chain to improve their own 
environmental performance. During the 
Committee’s three meetings in 2024, the 
Committee reviewed the supply chain compliance 
programme, current Supplier Code of Conduct 
commitments and also discussed further planned 
enhancements. A deep dive on this topic was 
undertaken by the Committee at its meeting 
in the autumn. 
The Committee noted the progress made to 
embed sustainability product requirements 
into new product development, which include 
requirements that will aim to reduce the 
carbon footprint associated with our products.
Annual bonus and long-term incentive 
schemes – safety and environmental 
performance measures 
Reflecting the importance that we attach to 
achieving our safety vision of zero harm and to 
achieving our net-zero targets, safety measures 
are captured within the annual bonus opportunity. 
Likewise scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions reduction 
targets are included within our senior team’s 
long-term remuneration arrangements. 
At the start of 2024, as part of the initiatives 
to achieve the safety vision of zero harm, the 
Committee approved, and made a recommendation 
to the Remuneration Committee, that the 
existing LTIR bonus metric (and non-financial 
health and safety KPI) should be replaced by 
the total recordable incident rate (TRIR). The 
Committee recommended this change because 
TRIR represents a tougher measure of health and 
safety performance, given that it measures 
incidents, whether or not they result in working 
time lost. The use of TRIR as a metric further 
aligns to industry best practice and supports the 
continuing drive to improve health and safety 
performance. Additionally, the Committee 
recommended that the environmental 
innovation measure, to support our ‘Enabling 
a Sustainable Future’ pillar, should be retained.
The Committee also reviewed the environmental 
performance measure for the 2024 long-term 
incentive award, which aligns with Rotork’s 
science-based scope 1 and 2 reduction targets. 
Satisfied that the proposed measure was in 
alignment with Rotork’s sustainability strategy, 
the Committee endorsed the Remuneration 
Committee’s determination of the environmental 
performance condition attached to the 2024 
long-term incentive awards. For further details, 
see page 150.
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Activities of the Committee during 
the year continued
Sustainability reporting and 
regulatory compliance 
As a Committee, we remain conscious of the 
fast-moving developments, and compliance 
requirements, within sustainability and climate-
related reporting. From the 2025 financial year 
onwards, Rotork is expecting to be required to 
align with the requirements of the EU Corporate 
Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and 
European Sustainability Reporting Standards 
(ESRS) and receive third-party assurance over 
material issues. However, the Committee notes 
the European Commission’s recent publication 
of its “omnibus package” and is currently 
reviewing the potential impact for Rotork.
The Committee supported the commencement 
of a double materiality assessment, with a view 
to determining Rotork’s material sustainability-
related impacts, risks and opportunities (IROs). 
Rotork had already undertaken materiality 
assessments in prior years, so had built a solid 
foundation from which to progress towards 
double materiality. Following a competitive 
tender, an external firm was engaged to assist us 
in carrying out the double materiality assessment. 
The Committee looks forward to reviewing and 
discussing the findings with management during 
the coming year. 
Rotork also undertook an assurance readiness 
review of its greenhouse gas emissions data and 
procedures. An external assurance firm reviewed 
Rotork’s current procedures, and controls, 
against the requirements of the International 
Standard on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 
3000 standard. In 2024 reporting, scope 1 and 2 
emissions have been assured against the ISAE 
3000 standard.
In 2024, Rotork also refreshed its Task Force on 
Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) 
climate scenario analyses for physical and 
transition risks, which are detailed on pages 79 
to 85. The Committee reviews the disclosures 
prior to them being recommended to the Board. 
Social 
During the year, the Committee received 
updates on the various social initiatives and 
workstreams across the Group. These covered 
areas such as employee well-being and mental 
health, charity support, and community 
engagement. The Committee was pleased to 
note management’s work with its global charity 
partnerships, including Pump Aid, which is 
further explained on page 62. The Committee 
also reviewed the 2024 activities of the Rotork 
Benevolent Support Fund, an independent charity 
which provides support to employees, and former 
employees, of Rotork and their families, who are 
facing financial hardship.
Safety and Sustainability 
Committee evaluation 
The Committee carried out an internally facilitated 
review of its performance, as part of the overall 
internal Board and Committee evaluation in 2024, 
and its findings were discussed by the Committee 
and the Board. It was concluded that the 
Committee continued to fulfil its duties effectively. 
The area identified for further emphasis, and 
development, by the Committee was the need 
for continual training with regard to the evolving 
regulatory and reporting requirements. 
Looking ahead
Oversight of the three sustainability pillars of 
Rotork’s sustainability framework remains the 
key strategic focus area for the Committee 
during 2025. The Committee will continue 
to help drive progress in our broader safety 
and sustainability agenda. As part of the 
Committee’s oversight of management’s 
preparation for the upcoming regulatory 
changes (including CSRD), the Committee 
will review the European Commission’s 
“omnibus package” and its application to 
Rotork together with the outcomes of the 
double materiality assessment. The Committee 
will continue to liaise with the Audit Committee, 
where required, in its role of overseeing the 
assurance of the reporting and disclosures 
of sustainability data in compliance with 
regulatory requirements. 
I have now been Chair of the Safety and 
Sustainability Committee for ten months, 
taking over from Ann Christin Andersen, 
who stepped down on 30 April 2024. I would 
like to extend my thanks to Ann Christin for 
all her efforts as Chair of the Committee and 
supporting Rotork’s safety and sustainability 
vision and strategy. I would also like to thank 
all our colleagues, across the business, for their 
support towards our safety and sustainability 
vision, and my fellow Board members, for their 
constructive inputs and personal commitment, 
to this important agenda throughout 2024 
and beyond. 
Andrew Heath
Chair of the Safety and Sustainability Committee 
10 March 2025
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Audit Committee report 
Janice Stipp 
Chair of the Audit Committee
“During 2024, the Audit Committee key activities included oversight of the 
change in external auditor and oversight of Rotork’s financial reporting, 
audit process, and the Company’s system of internal controls.”
Janice Stipp
Chair of the Audit Committee 
The current members of the Audit Committee are:
•	 Janice Stipp (Committee Chair) (member since December 2020 and Committee Chair since 
May 2021)
•	 Vanessa Simms (member since June 2024)
•	 Svein Richard Brandtzæg (member since January 2025)
Committee role and responsibilities
The principal responsibilities of the Audit 
Committee are to review and report to the 
Board on the:
•	 Integrity of financial and 
non‑financial reporting.
•	 Application of significant accounting 
policies and judgements.
•	 Internal audit programme, its remit, 
resourcing and effectiveness.
•	 Adequacy and effectiveness of the 
Group’s internal controls and risk 
management systems.
•	 Appointment, independence and 
remuneration of the external auditor.
•	 Effectiveness of the external audit process.
How the Committee operates
The Committee is currently comprised of three 
independent non-executive directors. Certain 
independent non-executive directors either 
retired from or were appointed to the Board 
of the Company during 2024 and consequently, 
the Committee was reconstituted during the 
year to reflect the changes. Janice Stipp and 
Vanessa Simms hold professional accounting 
qualifications and are deemed to have recent 
and relevant financial experience. All Committee 
members have experience of working in complex 
global industrial product businesses, a number 
of which share common end markets with 
Rotork. The biographies and skillsets of each 
member of the Audit Committee can be found 
on pages 94 and 95. 
The Committee is required to meet a minimum 
of three times in a year. During 2024, four 
formal meetings were held. Additional formal 
meetings would be held as required. Members 
of the Committee hold discussions outside 
of the formal meetings and meet with the 
external auditor and Head of Internal Audit 
without management present. Details of 
members’ attendance at each of the meetings 
are provided on page 102. The Chief Executive 
Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Group Financial 
Controller, Assistant Group Financial Controller, 
Head of Internal Audit and Head of Risk and 
Compliance also attend the Committee 
meetings by invitation. Representatives of 
the external auditor (including the lead audit 
partner) also attend meetings by invitation. 
The Group General Counsel & Company 
Secretary acts as secretary to the Committee. 
The Committee Chair reports to the Board 
on the key issues covered at each meeting.
Further reading:
 Risk management and internal controls – see pages 67 to 78 
 Audit, risk and internal control in the Governance Report – see page 115
 The terms of reference for the Audit Committee were last reviewed in October 2024. A copy of the current 
terms of reference is published on Rotork’s website at: www.rotork.com/en/investors/committees
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Key activities of the Audit Committee 
during the year
Financial reporting
•	 Reviewed the Annual Report and Accounts 
(including whether they are fair, balanced 
and understandable and climate-related 
disclosures), the Corporate Governance 
Report and results announcements.
•	 Challenged material judgements and 
estimates, going concern assumptions and 
the viability statement in the Annual Report 
and Accounts.
•	 Reviewed the half-year accounts including 
material judgements, estimates and half-year 
results announcement.
•	 Appraised the external auditor’s report on 
the year-end accounts and proposed full-year 
external audit scope, key risks, materiality and all 
matters associated with the financial year end.
Internal controls and risk management
•	 Reviewed processes and procedures for risk 
management and the effectiveness of the 
internal controls framework.
•	 Reviewed the continued development of the 
Business Control Framework and integration 
of this work with the design of the new 
ERP system.
•	 Reviewed the business control review plan.
•	 Reviewed significant internal control reports, 
findings and management responses.
•	 Ongoing monitoring of the compliance with 
Group policies.
•	 Reviewed and approved the Group risk 
management policy.
•	 Received updates on key matters related 
to the Whistleblowing policy.
External audit
•	 The Committee reviewed a revised 
confirmation of the objectivity and 
independence of Deloitte LLP, the Group’s 
former auditor, in relation to a prohibited 
non-audit service which was provided to 
three of the Group’s subsidiaries in prior 
years. The Committee was satisfied with the 
conclusion reached by Deloitte LLP that this 
was an inadvertent minor breach of the 
Ethical Standard and that the services provided, 
which were minor and administrative in nature, 
was such that they did not compromise its 
independence to conduct the audit of the 
Group in prior years. 
•	 Supported an effective transition of the 
external audit service provider from Deloitte 
LLP to KPMG LLP. 
•	 Actively monitored the external audit plan and 
scope of the work and considered whether 
there was any reason to provide further specific 
direction to the external auditor; the Audit 
Committee concluded that there was not and 
accordingly approved the plan.
•	 Considered and reported to the Board on 
the external auditor’s independence and 
objectivity and the effectiveness of the audit 
process including its approach to fraud.
•	 Reviewed the external auditor’s management 
representation letter. 
•	 Reviewed the external auditor’s views on the 
control environment.
•	 Reviewed and approved non-audit services 
undertaken by the external auditor and the 
policy on non-audit work.
•	 Considered audit fees and engagement terms.
Internal audit
•	 Reviewed and approved the internal 
audit programme.
•	 Reviewed the maturity and effectiveness 
of internal audit, its remit and resourcing.
•	 Reviewed the policy on the independence 
of the internal auditor.
•	 Approved the internal audit charter.
•	 Discussed and monitored progress on 
implementing recommended actions, 
including overdue actions.
•	 Evaluated the effectiveness of the internal 
audit process.
Additional matters
•	 Supported the effective transition to the 
new Chief Financial Officer.
•	 Reviewed the 2024 Corporate Governance 
Code and oversaw management’s 
preparations related to Provision 29.
•	 Reviewed progress of the finance 
transformation programme.
•	 Reviewed the Committee’s effectiveness 
and terms of reference.
•	 Approved the Audit Committee’s schedule 
of work for 2025.
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Audit Committee Chair’s statement 
I am pleased to present the report of the Audit 
Committee for the year ended 31 December 2024. 
This year the key areas of focus for the Audit 
Committee, in addition to its usual schedule 
of work, have been:
•	 Supporting the effective transition to the 
new Chief Financial Officer.
•	 Supporting the effective transition of the 
external audit service provider from Deloitte 
LLP to KPMG LLP.
•	 Reviewing progress of the finance 
transformation programme including the 
implementation and rollout of the new ERP 
system and the impact of the integrated 
controls which enhance the control environment 
and maintain consistency across the Group. 
Monitored management’s full implementation 
of enhancements, which were identified in 
2023, to the ERP control environment and the 
inclusion of these controls in the blueprint 
for future implementations.
•	 Reviewing progress with the proposals for 
UK corporate reform and reviewing the 2024 
Corporate Governance Code (which has 
applied to the Company with effect from 
1 January 2025). The Audit Committee 
reviewed and agreed management’s plan to 
implement the announced changes relating to 
UK corporate reform, most notably Provision 
29 of the 2024 Code, which will become 
effective for Rotork from 1 January 2026. 
Throughout the year the Audit Committee 
received updates from management and the 
external and internal auditors on how to 
ensure best preparedness for Provision 29 
of the 2024 Code.
Governance
The Audit Committee maintains an annual 
schedule of work, which is kept under review 
and forms the basis of its principal meetings 
throughout the year. The annual schedule is 
supplemented by consideration of specific 
matters as and when they arise.
The Audit Committee met four times during the 
year, with attendance of members shown on 
page 102. Details of those who were invited to 
attend the Committee meetings are set out on 
page 121. 
There was a brief c. seven week period in 
2024 before Vanessa Simms joined the Board 
on 21 June 2024 during which there were two 
members of the Committee, rather than the 
three members formally required by Provision 
24 of the 2018 Code. During this brief period, 
no Committee meetings were scheduled or held, 
nor was any relevant business required to be 
discussed by the Audit Committee. The Committee 
remained quorate throughout. Had a Committee 
meeting been required, one of the non-executive 
directors would have been co-opted as a member. 
As Chair of the Audit Committee, I hold 
additional regular meetings with the Chief 
Financial Officer, the external audit partner, 
the Head of Internal Audit, the Head of Risk 
and Compliance and other members of the 
management team. These meetings provide me 
with a better understanding of key issues and 
identify those matters which require meaningful 
discussion at Audit Committee meetings.
During the year, the Audit Committee received 
reports from management, the Risk and 
Compliance team, the internal audit team 
and the external auditor. Through face-to-face 
discussions and detailed written reports, the 
Audit Committee was able to challenge, 
scrutinise and ask questions where clarification 
or discussion is required. Regular meetings were 
also held during 2024 with the external auditor 
and the Head of Internal Audit without 
management present.
Financial reporting
A key role of the Audit Committee in relation 
to financial reporting is to review the quality and 
appropriateness of the half-year and year-end 
financial statements with a particular focus on:
•	 Accounting policies and practices.
•	 The clarity of disclosures and compliance with 
UK adopted International Financial Reporting 
Standards, UK company law and the 2018 UK 
Corporate Governance Code.
•	 Material areas in which significant judgements 
have been applied or where there has been 
discussion with the external auditor.
•	 Upon request of the Board, advising the 
Board on whether the Annual Report 
and Accounts are fair, balanced and 
understandable and provide the information 
necessary for shareholders to assess the 
Company’s performance. 
•	 Review and challenge of the judgements 
applied in the timing of revenue recognition 
in line with the requirements of IFRS 15 
Revenue from Contracts with Customers.
•	 Review of alternative performance measures 
to ensure that they are not given undue 
prominence and challenging the nature 
and value of significant adjusting items.
In order to assess the financial statements, the 
Audit Committee receives reports from members 
of the Group Finance team who are invited to 
attend meetings. Through face-to-face discussions 
and detailed written reports, the Audit Committee 
can understand and challenge the key judgements 
and estimates and how they are being recorded 
and disclosed in the financial statements. 
The Audit Committee also receives reports from, 
and holds meetings with, the external auditor. 
It uses these reports and meetings to help 
challenge management’s judgement and 
understand the quality and appropriateness 
of the financial reporting.
The principal matters of judgement and 
estimation considered by the Audit Committee 
in relation to the 2024 year-end accounts and 
how they were addressed were: 
Retirement benefit schemes: At 31 December 
2024, the Group operated two defined benefit 
retirement plans, both of which are now closed 
to future accrual. The valuations are prepared 
by an independent qualified actuary. During the 
year the UK Scheme purchased a bulk annuity 
covering the UK Scheme’s deferred pensioner 
liabilities. As a result, all liabilities under the 
scheme are now covered by bulk annuities 
and therefore the scheme has been accounted 
for as a buy-out with the movement in the 
valuation being recognised in the income 
statement. The Audit Committee considered 
the report from the Group Financial Controller 
and was satisfied that the assumptions used for 
determining the defined benefit obligation and 
the associated accounting treatment of the 
buy-in were appropriate. 
Alternative performance measures: The 
Group uses adjusted figures as key performance 
measures in addition to those reported under 
adopted IFRS, as management believes these 
measures provide additional useful information 
to assist in the comparison of the Group’s 
underlying results with prior periods and 
assessment of trends in financial performance. 
The Audit Committee reviewed the presentation 
and definitions of the alternative performance 
measures in the financial statements and were 
satisfied that they were not given undue 
prominence. The Audit Committee reviewed and 
challenged the report from the Group Financial 
Controller and was satisfied that the nature and 
value of significant adjusting items was appropriate.
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External auditor
KPMG LLP was formally appointed as the 
Group’s external auditor by the Company’s 
shareholders at the AGM on 30 April 2024, and 
the year under review marks its inaugural year. 
Huw Brown has acted as KPMG LLP’s lead audit 
partner for Rotork for the 2024 year-end. During 
the year, Huw and other members of the KPMG 
LLP Group audit team visited several key Rotork 
locations. They also effectively communicated 
with and supervised the broader team auditing 
across the Group.
The Audit Committee assesses the effectiveness 
of the external audit process, the scope of the 
Group audit and the quality of the audit work 
throughout the year, and the independence of 
the auditor. The assessment considers:
•	 Any issues encountered in conducting the 
prior year external audit.
•	 The proposed external audit plan, including 
identification of risks specific to Rotork.
•	 External audit scope and materiality threshold.
•	 Matters arising during the external audit 
and the communication of these to the 
Audit Committee.
•	 The independence and objectivity of the 
external auditor including the level of 
challenge provided to management.
•	 The FRC audit quality review report on 
selected audits undertaken by KPMG LLP.
Independence
KPMG LLP confirmed to the Audit Committee 
during the year that:
•	 The audit engagement team, and others in 
the firm as appropriate, KPMG, and where 
applicable, all KPMG network firms are 
independent of the Group and their 
objectivity is not compromised.
•	 It has no relationships with Rotork plc, its 
directors and senior management and its 
affiliates, and no other services provided to 
other known connected parties, that it considers 
may reasonably be thought to bear on its 
objectivity and independence, together with 
the related safeguards that are in place.
The Committee ensures the policy on non-audit 
services has been applied.
The Group has not employed former members 
of the audit team or KPMG LLP partners during 
the year.
Following each Audit Committee meeting the 
Audit Committee held private sessions with the 
external auditor, thereby providing the external 
auditor with a private forum to raise any issues 
it may deem to be of concern. The Chair of 
the Audit Committee also meets with the 
external audit partner and other senior 
members of the audit team ahead of each 
Audit Committee meeting.
Effectiveness
•	 Reviewing the external audit plan, identified 
risks and audit scope with KPMG LLP.
•	 Reviewing the experience and expertise 
of the audit team.
•	 Reviewing written reports prepared by 
KPMG LLP for the Audit Committee on key 
audit findings, financial reporting topics and 
the control environment. 
•	 Reviewing the nature and quality of the 
external auditor’s report. 
•	 Obtaining feedback from executive 
management and the Group Finance team 
on the quality and effectiveness of the audit, 
which in turn had canvassed the opinions of 
various Group entities using a questionnaire 
on audit quality.
•	 Discussing with executive management, the 
Group Finance team and KPMG LLP as to 
whether the audit has been delivered in line 
with the plan.
•	 Holding discussions throughout the year 
directly with the KPMG LLP lead partner and 
other senior members of the audit team to 
understand the work they have performed, 
their knowledge of the Group’s business and 
industry, and how they have maintained 
independence, demonstrated professional 
scepticism and challenged management’s 
assumptions. Notable examples of how the 
external auditor challenged management and 
demonstrated professional scepticism during 
the year include the audit of adjusting items 
and revenue recognition.
Having completed this review, the Audit 
Committee agreed that the audit process, 
independence and quality of the external 
audit were satisfactory.
External audit tender
The 2023 financial year was the tenth year-end 
Deloitte LLP had been appointed as external 
auditor. Therefore, in line with requirements, a 
competitive external audit tender process was 
undertaken during 2023. Following the competitive 
tender process, KPMG LLP was selected as 
external auditor for the 2024 year-end. KPMG 
confirmed its independence to the Committee 
from 1 July 2023 and was formally appointed as 
the external audit service provider for the 2024 
financial year, following shareholder approval 
at the Company’s 2024 AGM on 30 April 2024. 
Under current regulations the Group is required 
to retender the external audit no later than for 
the 2034 financial year.
Statement of compliance
The Company confirms that it has complied with 
terms of The Statutory Audit Services for Large 
Companies Market Investigation (Mandatory 
Use of Competitive Tender Processes and Audit 
Committee Responsibilities) Order 2014 
(the Order) throughout the year.
Non-audit services
In order to safeguard the independence and 
objectivity of the external auditor, the Board has 
adopted a policy on non-audit services, which 
restricts the work and fees available to the 
external audit firm. The Audit Committee 
reviews the policy annually to ensure that it 
remains appropriate. The policy reflects the 
FRC’s Revised Ethical Standard 2024 on 
permitted non-audit services.
The policy permits the use of the external 
auditor only for services identified on the list 
contained in the Revised Ethical Standard. Prior 
to commencing any activity the external auditor 
must assess whether it meets the requirements 
of their independence checks. If those checks 
are satisfied and the fee is £20,000 or less, 
authority is delegated to the Chief Financial 
Officer to approve this proposed non-audit work 
independently. However, should the fee be 
above £20,000 or the total non-audit services 
approved by the Chief Financial Officer exceed 
£80,000 during any financial year, approval must 
be approved by the Chair of the Audit 
Committee. Any work that is approved is 
reported to the Audit Committee.
An analysis of fees paid to KPMG LLP, including 
the split between audit and non-audit, is 
included in note 9 of the financial statements. 
The non-audit services provided relates to the 
interim review performed on the half-year results 
under ISRE 2410 and other services across 
subsidiaries where local law requires the 
statutory auditor to provide it. 
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Internal controls, internal audit and 
risk management
The Audit Committee has responsibility for 
reviewing and monitoring the effectiveness 
of the Group’s control environment, risk 
management and internal audit process.
As set out in the Strategic Report, the 
continuous improvement and execution of 
a comprehensive and robust system of risk 
management remains a key priority for Rotork. 
The Audit Committee received reports at each 
meeting on progress with the work. Plans for 
2025 were reviewed by the Audit Committee in 
December 2024 and progress will be monitored 
in the coming year.
The Head of Risk and Compliance leads a team 
that is responsible for risk management and 
financial compliance reviews across the Group. 
The core team is supplemented by Rotork’s 
Finance function from other parts of the Group 
who have been trained in the compliance review 
process. This combined team delivered financial 
and business control compliance reports for 
12 of our global locations during the year. 
Business control reviews were paused during the 
first half of the year whilst the Business Control 
Framework was reviewed and refreshed. Guidance 
is provided by the Audit Committee to the Risk 
and Compliance team on the nature and extent 
of testing to be undertaken. 
In the first half of the year Rotork’s Business 
Control Framework was updated by management 
and relaunched across the Group. Senior members 
of the Group Finance team visited key Rotork 
entities to provide in-person training on the 
Business Control Framework to local 
management. The Chief Financial Officer also 
presented on the importance of controls at 
Rotork to the senior leadership team at its 
annual conference held in early 2024. This 
formed part of workstreams to ensure that 
Rotork is continually improving risk management 
and internal controls. 
The Audit Committee receives reports on 
financial compliance review activity, any 
significant matters arising and the management 
responses. During the year, recommendations 
were made for improvement to controls, which 
management was charged with implementing, 
none of which related to significant failings or 
weaknesses. The status and effectiveness of 
actions are monitored by the Head of Risk 
and Compliance and regularly reported to the 
Audit Committee. As a result of such activities, 
increased accountability in respect of improvement 
actions arising from business control reviews 
is visible.
The Risk and Compliance team continues to 
manage the process for sites to confirm the 
operation of key financial controls. In the fourth 
quarter a confirmation process was deployed to 
confirm operation of key controls in advance of 
the year-end and to provide an update on the 
earlier Business Control Framework activity. 
The results of the assessment were shared 
with management and the Audit Committee.
Other means of assessing the internal control 
systems include the risk assessment process, 
the Audit Committee’s assessment of the 
effectiveness of risk management and annual 
letters of assurance from the divisional leadership 
team. These controls sit alongside our system 
of governance, including key Committees that 
monitor our processes and controls, such as 
the Audit Committee and Safety and 
Sustainability Committee.
Rotork’s Risk Management Policy documents 
the Group’s risk management processes and the 
connections between those various processes 
and the day-to-day operations of the Group. 
Each member of the executive team who is a 
designated risk owner has responsibility for 
producing and updating detailed plans to 
respond to risks in accordance with risk appetite. 
Progress on response plans is reported to the 
Board, as part of the Board’s risk review and 
oversight process.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC LLP) 
continued to provide internal audit services 
throughout 2024. The function is led by an 
experienced Head of Internal Audit from 
PwC LLP. Risk-based internal audit reviews 
have been completed during 2024 covering 
the following areas:
•	 Fourth-party logistics contract review.
•	 Governance of the business transformation 
programme which includes the Group-wide 
ERP implementation.
•	 Talent and performance management.
•	 Risk and compliance-led controls review.
The Audit Committee receives updates on 
internal audit activity, any significant matters 
arising and management responses. The status 
of actions is monitored by internal audit and 
regularly reported to the Audit Committee.
In selecting risk-based internal audits for the 
2024 plan, the team has focused on those risks 
where reliance on mitigations is most significant 
whilst ensuring a broad coverage of areas over a 
multi-year cycle. The Risk and Compliance team 
has determined the sites to be subject to review 
in 2025 based on a thorough risk assessment. 
The Audit Committee reviewed the 2025 
programme for risk and compliance and 
internal audit at its December meeting.
The Audit Committee confirms that it has 
undertaken its annual review of the effectiveness 
of the system of internal control as operated 
throughout the year ended 31 December 2024.
Audit Committee evaluation
In accordance with its terms of reference, during 
2024 the Audit Committee undertook an internally 
facilitated review of its own performance as part 
of the overall internal Board and Committee 
evaluation process and its findings were discussed 
by the Committee and the Board. As part of the 
process, the Committee reviewed how it had 
discharged its responsibilities. It was concluded 
that the Committee continued to fulfil its duties 
effectively and certain areas were identified for 
ongoing emphasis and development by the 
Committee during 2025. 
Throughout the year, the Audit Committee 
also considered relevant accounting and 
corporate governance developments, in addition 
to those in relation to risk and internal controls 
discussed above. 
Areas of focus for 2025
Key areas of focus for the coming year, in 
addition to the usual schedule of work are:
•	 To review the ongoing implementation of the 
ERP system and the impact of the integrated 
controls to enhance the control environment 
and drive consistency between locations.
•	 To review the implications for Rotork of 
developments in the external audit process 
and regulation landscape arising from wider 
corporate governance reform. 
•	 To ensure the Company’s preparedness 
for Provision 29 of the 2024 Code 
becoming effective. 
Janice Stipp
Chair of the Audit Committee
10 March 2025
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Nomination Committee report
Dorothy Thompson, CBE
Chair of the Nomination Committee
“2024 was an important year at Rotork from a Board succession 
perspective, with Ben Peacock joining the Board as Chief Financial 
Officer, alongside Andrew Heath, Vanessa Simms and Svein Richard 
Brandtzæg joining the Board as non-executive directors. We are 
well placed to look to the future, with a strong and cohesive Board 
of directors.”
Dorothy Thompson, CBE
Chair of the Nomination Committee
The current members of the Nomination Committee are:
•	 Dorothy Thompson (Committee Chair) (member since December 2022 and Committee Chair 
since April 2023)
•	 Janice Stipp (member since December 2020)
•	 Andrew Heath (member since January 2025)
Further reading:
 2024 internal Board evaluation process on page 114
 The mix of skills and experience of the current Board on page 97 
 Diversity and Inclusion Policy, which is published on our website: www.rotork.com/en/investors/
diversity-and-inclusion
 Gender Pay Gap Report, which is published on our website: www.rotork.com/en/investors/ 
diversity-and-inclusion 
 The terms of reference for the Nomination Committee, which were last reviewed in October 2024. A copy of 
the current terms of reference is published on Rotork’s website at: www.rotork.com/en/investors/committees
Committee role and responsibilities 
The main role of the Nomination Committee is to 
lead the appointment process for the Board and 
ensure that the Company maintains appropriate 
succession plans for the Board and applicable 
senior management to support the Company in 
delivering its strategy and meeting its business 
requirements. The Committee evaluates and 
examines the skills and characteristics required to 
ensure that the Board and senior management 
have the correct balance of attributes and 
knowledge to operate effectively as a whole and 
to be able to deliver the long-term success of 
the Company, whilst ensuring that business is 
conducted with the utmost integrity and in full 
alignment with the Company’s culture, purpose 
and values. Board and Committee composition 
are formulated to ensure that there is an 
appropriate range of diverse experience and 
expertise. The Committee keeps the succession 
requirements of the Company under regular 
review and, as part of this responsibility, ensures 
that appropriate processes are in place for 
nominating, training and evaluating directors 
and senior management.
The Committee’s responsibilities include:
•	 Leading the process for Board appointments 
and making recommendations for 
appointments to the Board.
•	 Ensuring that plans are in place for orderly 
succession to both the Board and senior 
management positions and overseeing 
the development of a strong and diverse 
pipeline for succession.
•	 Reviewing the structure, size and composition 
and balance of the Board. This includes 
an ongoing review of its balance of skills, 
diversity, knowledge and experience.
•	 Making recommendations to the Board as to 
the composition of the Board’s Committees.
•	 Annually assessing whether non-executive 
directors continue to be considered 
as independent. 
•	 Reviewing the time commitment expected 
from non‑executive directors.
•	 Reviewing the Company’s Board Diversity 
and Inclusion Policy, its objectives and 
linkage to strategy, how the policy has 
been implemented and progress made on 
achieving the objectives set out in the policy.
•	 Oversight of the annual Board 
evaluation process, including a review 
of recommendations arising from 
the evaluation.
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How the Committee operates
The Committee is currently comprised of three 
independent non-executive directors and has 
been comprised as such at all times throughout 
2024. Certain independent non-executive 
directors either retired from or were appointed 
to the Board of the Company during 2024, and 
consequently, the Committee was reconstituted 
during the year to reflect the changes. The 
Committee meets a minimum of three times in 
a year and would hold additional meetings for 
any ad hoc business requirements that arise, 
for example in relation to succession planning. 
Members of the Committee also hold discussions 
as required outside of the formal meetings. 
During 2024, the Committee met six times. 
Details of members’ attendance at each of the 
meetings are provided on page 102. The Chief 
Executive Officer and Chief Human Resources 
Officer also attend the Committee meetings 
by invitation. The Group General Counsel & 
Company Secretary acts as secretary to the 
Committee. The Committee Chair reports to 
the Board on the key issues covered at each 
meeting. The biographies and skillsets of each 
member of the Nomination Committee can be 
found on pages 94 and 95.
Key activities of the Committee during 
the year
•	 Oversight of the onboarding of Ben Peacock 
as Chief Financial Officer, following his 
appointment on 11 March 2024.
•	 Led the orderly succession planning process 
for the selection and recommended 
appointment of new non‑executive directors 
Andrew Heath, Vanessa Simms and Svein 
Richard Brandtzæg, who joined the Board 
on 1 April 2024, 21 June 2024 and 
20 November 2024 respectively.
•	 In parallel to the appointment of the Company’s 
new non-executive directors, the Committee 
reviewed, and then recommended to the 
Board, the reconstitution of membership of 
the Board Committees twice during the year. 
The Committee was keen to ensure that the 
skills and expertise of each non-executive 
director were best utilised to ensure the 
Committees continued to operate most 
effectively and that the interaction between 
each of the Committees remained effective. 
•	 Reviewed the talent management process, 
development and succession plans for 
Rotork’s senior leaders.
•	 Reviewed and approved Rotork’s UK Gender 
Pay (including ethnicity pay) Report made up 
to the April 2024 snapshot date.
•	 Reviewed an updated Board Diversity and 
Inclusion Policy and recommended the 
updated Policy to the Board for approval, 
and thereafter monitored performance 
against targets set out within the Policy.
Succession planning
Succession planning for the Board and senior 
management is continuous. During the year, 
the Committee considered the composition, 
structure and size of the Board and the need 
to maintain an appropriate range of skills, 
knowledge, diversity, independence and 
experience to ensure that the Board and senior 
management remain appropriately balanced and 
complementary. The mix of skills and experience 
of the current Board required to drive Rotork’s 
long-term success is set out on page 97. 
Additionally, the Committee reviewed the 
succession plans and leadership development 
programmes in place for members of the 
Rotork Management Board. 
Chief Financial Officer onboarding 
The process of recruitment and appointment 
of Rotork’s Chief Financial Officer, Ben Peacock, 
was reported fully in last year’s Nomination 
Committee Report. Ben was appointed as Chief 
Financial Officer on 11 March 2024, succeeding 
Jonathan Davis, who was previously Group 
Finance Director. Jonathan stepped down from 
the Board on 30 April 2024 but remained with 
the Company until 10 September 2024 to 
support a smooth and successful transition. 
Further details about Ben Peacock’s induction 
programme are set out on page 129. 
Non-executive director onboarding 
The process for the recruitment and appointment 
of non-executive directors Andrew Heath and 
Vanessa Simms, who joined the Board on 
1 April 2024 and 21 June 2024 respectively, was 
reported in detail within last year’s Nomination 
Committee Report. Upon joining the Board, both 
Andrew and Vanessa received a comprehensive 
and tailored induction programme, which is 
more fully described on the next page.
Non-executive director appointment
In May 2024, Tim Cobbold advised that he 
would be stepping down from the Board on 
31 December 2024. Tim was Rotork’s Senior 
Independent Non-executive Director, Chair of 
the Remuneration Committee and the designated 
Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement. 
From June onwards, the Committee determined 
the criteria for the prospective new appointment, 
looking at the Board’s requirements in the round, 
and then oversaw the selection process of a new 
non-executive director. The Committee engaged 
Lygon Group to act as Rotork’s search consultants, 
utilising their recent knowledge and experience 
of the Rotork Board given their engagement 
as search consultants for the recruitment of 
Andrew Heath and Vanessa Simms. Except 
for where they have undertaken previous 
recruitment processes (such as the recruitment 
of Andrew and Vanessa), Lygon Group do not 
have any other connection with the Company 
or its directors. They are a signatory of the 
Voluntary Code of Conduct for Executive 
Search Firms, which is a requirement of our 
Board Diversity and Inclusion Policy. 
The Committee considered a shortlist of 
potential candidates provided by the search 
consultants, taking into account the balance of 
skills, diversity and experience existing on the 
Board and required for the (to be) vacant roles, 
together with an assessment of the time 
commitment expected. Following the interview 
process, the Committee recommended to the 
Board the appointment of Svein Richard Brandtzæg 
as a non-executive director. We were pleased 
to welcome Svein Richard to our Board on 
20 November 2024. His expertise in leading a 
global industrial group, sustainability background 
and remuneration experience have maintained 
the diverse mix of skills and experience on 
the Board. Svein Richard’s other public 
commitments were disclosed and considered 
by the Committee prior to his appointment and 
they are disclosed on our corporate website at: 
www.rotork.com/en/about-us/rotork-plc-board. 
Furthermore, the Committee recommended to 
the Board that Andrew Heath was best placed 
to succeed Tim Cobbold as Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director from 1 January 2025. 
Latterly, the Committee recommended to the 
Board that Svein Richard succeed Tim as Chair 
of the Remuneration Committee and Vanessa 
Simms succeed Tim as designated Non-executive 
Director for Workforce Engagement, both from 
1 January 2025. Their other public commitments 
were considered by the Committee prior to their 
appointment to these roles. Along with Vanessa 
Simms, Svein Richard will stand for election by 
shareholders for the first time at the Company’s 
2025 AGM.
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New non-executive director and Board roles appointment process
The Committee followed the process set out below for the recruitment of a new non-executive director and other Board roles: 
Stage 1: 
Building the Brief
The Committee built a specification for the new non-executive director, considering the balance 
of skills, diversity and experience of the Board and for the required role(s).
This also applied to the roles of Senior Independent Non-executive Director and designated 
Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement.
Stage 2:
Candidate Search
The Committee appointed Lygon Group as the search consultancy, from a shortlist of firms, noting 
their recent knowledge of Rotork given their role as search consultants engaged during the search 
for Andrew Heath and Vanessa Simms.
Stage 3:
Review, Assess 
and Interview
Lygon Group provided a longlist, with the first stage interviews then conducted by the Chair. 
Meetings with other Committee members were also conducted with a shortlist of candidates 
to assess whether their skills and experience would be valuable to the Board as a whole.
Preferred candidates then met with other members of the Board.
Stage 4:
Committee 
Recommendation to the 
Board and Board Approval
The Committee discussed the feedback received and provided its proposal to the Board covering 
its recommendations for a new non-executive director, Senior Independent Non-executive Director 
and designated Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement.
The Board approved the appointment of Svein Richard Brandtzæg as a non-executive director 
with effect from 20 November 2024, Andrew Heath as Senior Independent Non-executive Director 
from 1 January 2025 and Vanessa Simms as designated Non-executive Director for Workforce 
Engagement from 1 January 2025. 
Stage 5:
Tailored Induction 
Programmes
Further details on the tailored induction delivered to Andrew, Vanessa and Svein Richard are set 
out in the adjacent box.
Non-executive director induction programmes 
Upon joining the Board, Andrew Heath, Vanessa Simms 
and Svein Richard Brandtzæg all received a comprehensive 
induction programme, which was designed to immerse the 
director in a wide range of Rotork’s activities, including 
strategy, culture, operations and governance framework. 
The programme included information on Rotork’s end markets 
and sales channels, product training and a briefing on research 
and development activities. 
The induction programmes were structured so as to provide 
the non-executive directors with an opportunity to establish 
relationships with Rotork’s senior personnel and gain a wide 
and detailed understanding of the Company. 
Alongside meetings with the Chair, the Chief Executive 
Officer, the Chief Financial Officer and the Group General 
Counsel & Company Secretary, the non-executive directors 
had detailed meetings with each of the members of the 
Rotork Management Board and relevant key advisers. 
The non-executive directors also undertook operational site 
visits to a factory facility and training on Rotork’s products, 
both of which also allowed them to meet with a range of our 
employees in person. In addition, new directors are provided 
with a range of documents and materials to supplement 
their understanding of the Company. Details relating to the 
ongoing development and support of all directors are set out 
in the Governance Report on page 101.
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Chief Financial Officer 
induction programme 
On formally joining the Board in March 2024, 
Ben Peacock commenced a robust and varied 
induction process aimed at familiarising him with 
the intricacies of the business. This included deep 
dive briefings on the Finance, Treasury and Risk 
and Internal Control functions, for which Ben 
became directly responsible. From the point of 
joining the Board Ben became fully immersed 
in the investor relations programme, allowing 
him to meet with shareholders alongside the 
wider analyst and investor community. In 
addition, Ben met his fellow Board members, 
received past Board papers and was briefed 
on Rotork’s governance framework. 
Ben’s wider induction included detailed briefings 
on all aspects of Rotork’s business model and 
Growth+ strategy, factory tours, product training, 
operational activities and locations, research and 
development, end markets, key stakeholders and 
sustainability activities. Alongside meeting his 
fellow colleagues, Ben met with Rotork’s principal 
corporate advisers, the audit partner at the 
external auditor and the Head of the Internal 
Audit function. Ben’s induction programme was 
bolstered by Jonathan Davis remaining with 
Rotork until September 2024, which enabled 
a thorough handover on all aspects of Ben’s 
responsibilities. The Committee is pleased with 
how well Ben settled in during 2024 and the 
wider impact that Ben has already had.
Diversity and inclusion 
The Board Diversity and Inclusion Policy 
provides a high-level summary of the Board’s 
approach to diversity and inclusion in senior 
management roles which is governed in greater 
detail through the Group’s policies. In April, the 
Committee reviewed and recommended to the 
Board that the updated policy be approved. The 
policy can be found on our corporate website at 
www.rotork.com/en/investors/diversity-and-inclusion 
and sets out the areas of activity and 
initiatives currently being undertaken and 
practised by Rotork, including the diversity-
related Sustainable Development Goals, 
reference to the FTSE Women Leaders Review 
and the Parker Review, alongside our continued 
commitment to the aims of the 30% Club. The 
Committee endorsed management’s initiatives 
and actions for increased focus on diversity and 
inclusion undertaken throughout the business 
during the year noting that, as part of our Early 
careers programme, at least 51% of participants 
are diverse in terms of gender and ethnicity. 
The Committee also reviewed and approved the 
publication of the Gender Pay Report figures as 
at the April 2024 snapshot date, which can be 
found on our website at: www.rotork.com/en/
investors/diversity-and-inclusion. Rotork also 
publishes its ethnicity pay figures, which are 
contained within the Gender Pay Report.
The Committee is pleased to report that 
Rotork continues to meet the requirements 
under the FCA’s UK Listing Rules and Disclosure 
Guidance and Transparency Rules (DTRs) 
covering diversity and inclusion reporting for 
UK listed companies, in particular the three 
specified targets: (i) at least 40% of the 
company’s board of directors be women; 
(ii) at least one of the company’s senior board 
positions (Chair, Chief Executive Officer, Senior 
Independent Non-executive Director or Chief 
Financial Officer) be held by a woman; and (iii) 
at least one member of the company’s board 
be from a minority ethnic background. 
As at 10 March 2025, Dorothy Thompson held 
office as Board Chair, female Board representation 
was 50% and ethnic representation on the 
Board was 25%. The numerical data on the 
gender identity and ethnic diversity of the Board 
and executive management is set out in the 
tables on the next page. The data has been 
collected through a voluntary survey request 
mechanism, and is self-reported against the 
categories set out in UK Listing Rule 6 Annex 1R. 
Internal Board evaluation process
During the year an internally facilitated 
evaluation of the Board, its Committees and 
the Chair was undertaken in line with the 
Committee’s terms of reference and provisions 
of the 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code. 
This was facilitated by the Group General 
Counsel & Company Secretary, working closely 
with the Board Chair, Chairs of the Board 
Committees and the Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director. As part of the process, 
the Committee reviewed how it had discharged 
its responsibilities. An independent external 
Board evaluation was undertaken in 2023, and 
more details in relation to the external evaluation 
can be found in the 2023 Annual Report. The 
next external Board performance review is due 
no later than 2026. Further details of the full 
evaluation process can be found on page 114. 
Nomination Committee evaluation
The Committee carried out an internally 
facilitated review of its performance as part 
of the overall internal Board and Committee 
evaluation in 2024 and its findings were discussed 
by the Committee and the Board. As part of the 
process, the Committee reviewed how it had 
discharged its responsibilities. It was concluded 
that the Committee continued to fulfil its duties 
effectively. The key focus area was the continued 
oversight of the operational effectiveness of the 
Board Committees, following their reconstitution 
from January 2025.
Election and re-election of directors
Led by the Committee Chair it was concluded 
that, based on an assessment of the individual 
skills, relevant experience, contributions and time 
commitment of the non-executive directors and 
taking into account their other offices and 
interests held, all those non-executive directors 
standing for election or re-election in 2025 
remain independent and committed to their role 
and continue to be highly effective members 
of the Board. The Board continues to be mindful 
of the number of external appointments held 
by directors. In August 2024, the Board External 
Appointments Policy was reviewed. Set within 
the context and expectations of the Code, it 
details the Company’s approach to external 
appointments for both Board and RMB 
members. The emphasis is on ensuring directors 
have sufficient time to meet their Rotork Board 
responsibilities, including during any periods of 
additional time requirements. All prospective 
external appointments for non-executive or 
executive directors require Board approval 
following prior consultation with, and the 
support of, the Chair or the Senior Independent 
Non-executive Director. 
The Board is recommending the election or 
re-election to office of all directors at the 2025 
AGM. As explained elsewhere in the Corporate 
Governance Report, Vanessa Simms and Svein 
Richard Brandtzæg will be standing for election 
for the first time. The biographical details of the 
newly appointed directors are set out in the 
AGM Notice and on pages 94 and 95. Details 
of the service agreements for the executive 
directors and letters of appointment for the 
non‑executive directors are set out in the 
Directors’ Remuneration Report on pages 
142 and 156.
Dorothy Thompson, CBE
Chair of the Nomination Committee
10 March 2025
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Gender identity or sex(ii) 
Gender identity or sex 
 Men: 55.56%
 Women: 44.44%
 Men: 83.33%
 Women: 16.67%
	
Ethnic background(iii)
Ethnic background 
 White British 
or other White 
(including 
minority-White 
groups): 77.78%
 Asian/Asian 
British: 22.22%
 White British 
or other White 
(including 
minority-White 
groups): 83.33%
 Asian/Asian 
British: 16.67%
Rotork plc Board as at 31 December 2024(i)
Executive management – the Rotork Management Board as at 31 December 2024(i)
Gender identity or sex of the Board and executive management as at 
31 December 2024(i)
Number of 
Board members
Percentage of 
the Board
Number of senior 
positions on the 
Board (CEO, CFO, 
SID and Chair)
Number in 
executive 
management
Percentage of 
executive 
management 
Men
5(ii)
55.56%(ii)
3
10
83.33%
Women
4
44.44%(ii) 
1
2
16.67%
Not specified/ 
prefer not to say
0
0%
0
0
0%
Ethnic background of the Board and executive management as at 
31 December 2024(i)
Number of 
Board members
Percentage of 
the Board
Number of senior 
positions on the 
Board (CEO, CFO, 
SID and Chair)
Number in 
executive 
management
Percentage of 
executive 
management
White British or other 
White (including 
minority-White groups)
7(iii)
77.78%(iii)
3
10
83.33%
Mixed/multiple 
ethnic groups
0
0%
0
0
0%
Asian/Asian British
2
22.22%(iii)
1
2
16.67%
Black/African/ 
Caribbean/Black British
0
0%
0
0
0%
Other ethnic group
0
0%
0
0
0%
Not specified/ 
prefer not to say
0
0%
0
0
0%
(i)	
Data self-reported against the categories set out in UKLR 6 Annex 1R. Rotork’s executive management is defined as the 
members of the Rotork Management Board.
(ii)	
After Tim Cobbold had stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024, the number of Board members identifying 
as men changed to four, meaning that from 1 January 2025 50% of the Board were represented by men and 50% by women.
(iii)	 After Tim Cobbold had stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024, the number of Board members identifying 
as White British or other White changed to six, meaning that from 1 January 2025 75% of the Board were represented 
as White British or other White and 25% of the Board were represented as Asian/Asian British.
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Directors’ Remuneration report
“I am pleased to present the 2024 Directors’ Remuneration report, which 
is my first report as Chair of the Remuneration Committee. The 2024 
Directors’ Remuneration report is the second falling under the Company’s 
current Remuneration Policy, which I was pleased to see received 98% 
support from shareholders at the Company’s 2023 AGM. We continue to 
operate under the framework of the approved Policy and remain confident 
that it continues to align the interests of Rotork, its shareholders and our 
other stakeholders and focuses executive directors on delivery of the 
Company’s strategic objectives.”
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
Chair of the Remuneration Committee
The current members of the Remuneration Committee are:
•	 Svein Richard Brandtzæg (Committee Chair, appointed on 1 January 2025) 
•	 Andrew Heath (member since May 2024)
•	 Karin Meurk-Harvey (member since September 2021)
Committee role and responsibilities
The main role of the Committee is to establish 
a remuneration policy for executive director 
remuneration and determine matters relating 
to the remuneration of the Company’s 
executive directors and the Rotork Management 
Board, which are aligned with the long-term 
success of the Company and its shareholders, 
and enable the Company to attract, retain and 
incentivise executive directors and the Rotork 
Management Board. 
The Committee’s responsibilities include: 
•	 Determining individual remuneration 
packages for the executive directors, the 
Chair and, on the advice of the Chief 
Executive Officer, the Rotork Management 
Board within the approved Policy.
•	 Selecting the measures and setting the 
performance criteria for the annual bonus 
and LTIP and, at the end of their performance 
periods, evaluating performance against 
the criteria and considering whether any 
discretion should be applied when 
determining the level of payment. 
•	 Agreeing the terms and conditions to be 
included in service agreements for executive 
directors, including termination payments.
•	 Selecting, appointing and setting the terms 
of engagement with any remuneration 
consultants who may advise the Committee. 
•	 Monitoring the principles and structures 
of remuneration across the Group and 
ensuring that there is consistency and that 
there are procedures in place to monitor 
fairness of application. The Committee 
reviews internal relativities, pay ratios and 
gender and ethnicity pay gaps, and invites 
the Chief Human Resources Officer to its 
meetings to provide a broader picture of 
workforce remuneration.
•	 Taking into account guidance issued by 
shareholders, their representative bodies 
and proxy agencies (including the 
Investment Association, Institutional 
Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis).
•	 Taking into consideration shareholders’ 
interests, any views expressed by 
shareholders during the year (including at 
the Company’s AGM) and encouraging an 
open dialogue with the Company’s largest 
shareholders. Major shareholders are 
consulted in advance about changes to the 
Policy or any significant proposed changes 
to the way in which it is implemented.
Rotork’s key remuneration principles 
The Remuneration Committee remains committed towards remuneration being:
•	 Performance driven, competitive and fair
•	 Motivating, affordable and proportionate
•	 Aligned to shareholders’ interests
•	 Globally relevant and transparent
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
Chair of the Remuneration Committee
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Financial statements

Annual statement by the Chair of the Remuneration Committee
•	 Implementing the arrangements described 
in last year’s report in relation to Jonathan 
Davis’ retirement as an executive director and 
Group Finance Director from the conclusion 
of the AGM on 30 April 2024. As set out 
in last year’s report, Jonathan remained an 
employee of Rotork and continued to provide 
support to Ben Peacock until his retirement 
date on 10 September 2024.
•	 A determination of the vesting levels for the 
LTIPs awarded in 2021. As previously, the 
Committee reaffirmed its decision that there 
should be no adjustments to the LTIP targets 
or in-flight LTIP awards. The Committee 
determined the overall vesting level for 
the 2021 LTIP awards to be 13.8%, and 
in the context of Rotork’s overall business 
performance, concluded that no exercise 
of discretion was required in relation to 
the formulaic vesting levels. 
•	 From 2023 onwards, an environmental 
measure was incorporated within the 
LTIP granted under the current approved 
Remuneration Policy, which accounted for 
10% of the maximum opportunity. The 
measure is an absolute reduction in scope 
1 and 2 CO2 emissions (2020 base year), 
with targets aligned to the accredited and 
published 2030 Science Based Targets 
initiative (SBTi) targets. Recognising that 
(at the point of its introduction) this was an 
immature measure, the Committee monitored 
the performance of in-flight awards to underpin 
confidence in the measure and the related 
systems and processes for generating and 
assuring performance data. In conjunction 
with the Safety and Sustainability and Audit 
Committees, the Committee continued to 
keep the measurement, and assurance of 
the targets, under review to ensure that they 
remained aligned with established protocols 
and standards in this evolving area. 
•	 During 2024, following consultation with 
the Safety and Sustainability Committee, the 
Committee took the decision to change the 
Dear Shareholder
On behalf of the Board, I am pleased to present 
the Remuneration Committee’s report for the 
financial year ended 31 December 2024. This is my 
first report to shareholders since being appointed 
as Chair of the Committee on 1 January 2025. 
Tim Cobbold was Chair of the Committee for 
the whole of Rotork’s 2024 financial year, 
stepping down on 31 December 2024. Tim had 
been Chair of the Committee since April 2019 and 
I would like to express my thanks to Tim for his 
diligent service as Committee Chair and his 
support in ensuring a smooth handover. 
2024 was another successful year for Rotork, 
during which it continued to build on the strong 
track record of recent years, and continued to 
implement the Growth+ strategy under Kiet 
Huynh’s leadership. Decisions on directors’ and 
senior managers’ compensation were taken 
thoughtfully during the year, having regard to 
wider workforce considerations and the overall 
employee experience. 
Rotork’s purpose of ‘Keeping the World Flowing 
for Future Generations’ is reflected in the 
Company’s strategy, Growth+. Rotork’s values 
and cultural DNA serve to guide the way in 
which the Company’s executive team and 
employees continue to drive the implementation 
of Growth+, and this has been reflected in the 
remuneration decisions taken during the year. 
My fellow Committee members and I believe 
that the current Remuneration Policy, which will 
remain in force until April 2026, continues to 
support the strategic goals of the business and 
aligns with market practice. 
Priorities and key activities for the 
Committee in 2024 included:
•	 Determining and approving the 
remuneration-related terms of Ben Peacock’s 
appointment as Chief Financial Officer in 
March 2024, and approving appropriate 
personal objectives for Ben, which formed 
part of his overall remuneration package. 
health and safety measure, which accounts 
for 50% of the ESG measure in the annual 
bonus target for 2024. To more closely align 
with industry reporting best practice for 
health and safety metrics, the existing lost 
time injury rate (LTIR) measure was replaced 
with the total recordable incident rate (TRIR). 
This decision was taken given the progress 
made by the Company to reduce the LTIR 
and (at management’s suggestion) it was 
felt appropriate to switch to the TRIR, as it 
represents a tougher measure of health and 
safety performance. This is because the TRIR 
measures incidents whether they result 
in working time lost or not (whereas LTIR 
is weighted to the duration of time lost 
following an event). The adoption of TRIR 
therefore supports the continuing drive to 
improve health and safety performance 
within Rotork. The ESG measures as a whole 
continue to represent 10% of the annual 
bonus opportunity and there continues to be 
no overlap between the ESG measures in the 
annual bonus opportunity and the LTIP. 
•	 As part of its ongoing responsibility to 
make decisions about the remuneration of 
executive directors and senior management 
in the context of the pay and benefits 
available to the wider workforce, the 
Committee undertook an annual review of 
employee pay and benefits. As part of this 
review, the Committee considered how 
Rotork balances the need to attract and 
retain talent through locally relevant pay 
and benefits offerings, whilst ensuring 
equity of benefits across the business. 
The Committee’s approach to 
remuneration in 2024
The Committee’s approach to remuneration 
in 2024 across Rotork in general and for the 
executive directors and senior managers, for 
whom the Committee is explicitly responsible, 
was guided by Rotork’s key remuneration 
principles. The approach was based on an 
ongoing sensitive appreciation of the business’ 
performance and the experience of shareholders 
and employees during the year. The Committee’s 
specific considerations are described below. 
Business performance
In the Committee’s view, as is evident in this 
Annual Report and Accounts, Rotork continued 
to perform well. On a reported basis 2024 
adjusted operating profit was £178.4m, 8.5% 
up on 2023. Whilst revenue was 4.9% higher. 
Adjusted operating margins were 70bps higher. 
The Committee noted that Rotork’s order intake 
increased by 2.8% against 2023. Overall, the 
figures demonstrate the underlying health of 
the business and the continued strong progress 
achieved in the delivery of the Growth+ strategy 
and target segment focus. 
Shareholder experience
Rotork’s share price was modestly up during 
2024 and a progressive dividend was delivered 
to shareholders. Rotork remains a highly 
cash-generative business and consistent with its 
capital allocation policy, the Company returned 
£50m of cash to shareholders as part of a share 
buyback programme which ran between March 
and December 2024.
Employee experience
Under the leadership of the Board and the 
Rotork Management Board, Rotork’s approach 
continues to be to protect the health (including 
mental health) and financial wellbeing of its 
employees, and remains mindful of obligations 
to other stakeholders. Whilst the cost challenges 
linked to globally high inflation rates cooled in 
many countries during 2024, we continue to 
monitor the cost of living for all our employees 
and the experience of our employees has again 
been considered by the Committee within its 
own decision making.
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Financial statements

In recognition of our responsibility to help reduce 
inequality and to contribute to a fairer society 
more broadly, Rotork committed to a Real Living 
Wage Policy in 2020 and, since then, has ensured 
any employee is paid above this level where a 
published rate exists in a country. Rotork is an 
accredited Real Living Wage Employer. 
Our Fair Pay Framework continues to guide 
Rotork’s reward policies, procedures, systems 
and decision making globally in support of the 
commitment to deliver fair and competitive 
remuneration in line with the remuneration 
principles. This provides assurance that processes 
are non-discriminatory and operate to help 
reduce any gender or ethnicity pay gaps. All new 
employees are made aware of the Framework in 
their global induction. Additional training is also 
provided to all decision makers within the business 
to ensure that the Framework is understood and 
decisions are also moderated by the HR function 
to ensure fair implementation. 
Overall, the Committee’s assessment of the 
employee experience is that Rotork has acted 
responsibly towards all employees and has 
proactively supported their health (including 
mental health) and their financial wellbeing 
during 2024. The Committee also believes that 
Rotork has maintained a pay culture, pay policies 
and frameworks that support wider societal 
views through 2024.
Remuneration outcomes for 2024
Salary review
As was the case in 2023, the salary review for 
the directors and the Rotork Management Board 
members was not brought forward to January 
2024 as it was for the wider workforce, and any 
changes for them took effect from 1 April 2024. 
In line with the arrangements made on his 
appointment (and detailed in the 2021, 2022 
and 2023 Remuneration Reports), Kiet Huynh’s 
salary as CEO was increased to £682,950, an 
increase of 50% of the difference between his 
salary and the former CEO’s salary plus an 
annual increase of 4.2%, which was lower than 
the average increase for the UK workforce 
(excluding promotions) of 4.4%. The Committee 
was aware that when both these elements were 
taken together this resulted in a total increase 
ahead of that for the wider workforce in the UK. 
However, as has been explained in previous 
Remuneration Reports, the Committee’s 
intention was that, following his appointment 
and subject to performance, Kiet’s salary would 
be increased, over a period of approximately two 
years, to the level of his predecessor’s salary in 
2021, indexed in line with increases to the other 
directors, with such increases being no higher 
than those awarded to the wider workforce. The 
Committee believes Kiet’s salary review was fully 
merited, given his strong performance. 
Ben Peacock joined Rotork on 11 March 2024 as 
Chief Financial Officer, with an annual starting 
salary of £430,000. As was explained last year, 
Ben’s first salary review was not intended to be 
before 1 April 2025 and details about this are set 
out on the following pages.
Jonathan Davis stepped down from his role as 
Group Finance Director and as an executive 
director following the conclusion of the AGM 
on 30 April 2024. Jonathan remained with the 
Company as an employee to ensure a smooth 
handover until he retired on 10 September 2024. 
Jonathan’s salary was increased by 4.2% 
(an increase lower than that of the average 
workforce increase in the UK) to £406,480 
with effect from 1 April 2024. 
The Chair’s fee was increased by 4.2%, from 
1 April 2024 onwards, in line with the executive 
directors’ increase, meaning this was also below 
the average workforce increase. The Board also 
determined that the non-executive director base 
fee should also increase by 4.2%. No increases 
were made to the supplementary fees payable 
to those directors with additional responsibilities 
during 2023; therefore, from 1 April 2024 
onwards a small increase in certain 
supplementary fees was made. 
Annual bonus
The annual bonus targets for 2024 were based 
on: adjusted operating profit performance 
(60% of opportunity); cash generation (15% of 
opportunity); ESG measures (10% of opportunity) 
including total recordable incident rate (TRIR), 
together with a mix of quantitative targets 
covering culture and engagement scores and 
qualitative targets focused on environmental 
and customer focused innovation; and individual 
personal objectives (15% of opportunity). For full 
details see pages 147 to 149.
Having reviewed performance against these 
targets, including the personal objectives, the 
Committee decided that the level of payout, 
expressed as a percentage of the maximum 
opportunity, should be 87.90% for Kiet Huynh, 
88.90% for Ben Peacock, and 87.90% for 
Jonathan Davis, with Ben’s and Jonathan’s 
bonuses both being pro-rated for time served, 
and with no need for discretion to be applied in 
any instance. In approving this level of payout 
for the executive directors, the Committee noted 
that at this level:
•	 The 2024 payout results in an award, as a 
percentage of the maximum opportunity, at 
an average of 9.0 percentage points lower 
than in 2023, compared to an adjusted 
operating profit increase of 8.5%.
•	 The payout results in an award for the CEO 
of 131.85% of salary compared to 146.3% 
for 2023. As the CFO joined the Company in 
March 2024, the bonus payout was pro-rated 
for time served and no 2023 comparative 
figure is available.
•	 The 2024 payout for employee groups in 
the wider workforce averaged 86% of the 
normal maximum opportunity. The normal 
maximum opportunity was exceeded because 
performance hit the stretch targets that are 
an element of the wider workforce bonus 
scheme. This represents an increase of 8.5 
percentage points on 2023, compared to an 
adjusted operating profit increase of 8.5%. 
Annual statement by the Chair of the Remuneration Committee continued
The Committee’s approach to 
remuneration in 2024 continued
Employee experience continued
In a similar way to the change made to the 
2023 annual salary review, the 2024 annual salary 
review, which would have ordinarily been due on 
1 April 2024, was brought forward to 1 January 2024 
for all employees below the directors and Rotork 
Management Board. The average pay increase for 
the UK workforce (excluding promotions) was 4.4% 
in 2024, and 4.9% globally.
Salary reviews for all directors and the Rotork 
Management Board remained effective from the 
usual date of 1 April 2024. As a matter of policy, 
normally salary reviews for executive directors 
will be no higher than the average increase for 
the wider workforce for the country in which 
they work. However, the Remuneration Committee 
retains the discretion to award higher increases 
where appropriate (for example, to reflect 
progression in the role or increased experience 
of the individual).
All employees in Rotork continue to participate in 
a discretionary bonus scheme with targets based 
on a combination of the performance of their 
local business and the performance of the Group. 
Bonus awards in respect of 2024, to be paid in 
2025, are at an average of 86% of maximum, 
reflecting our strong performance in 2024. 
The business continued to support the physical 
and mental health of employees through the 
global Employee Assistance Programme (EAP). 
Our independent charity, the Rotork Benevolent 
Support Fund, maintained support for employees, 
ex‑employees and their families suffering hardship. 
The employee response rate to the externally 
facilitated annual employee engagement survey 
was high, with 80% (2023: 79%) of employees 
participating in the survey, demonstrating good 
engagement levels. As in previous years, the 
survey included the question ‘how do you rate 
Rotork as a place to work?’. This question scored 
7.14/10 in 2024.
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Annual statement by the Chair of the Remuneration Committee continued
Remuneration outcomes for 2024 
continued
Annual bonus continued
The Committee was therefore satisfied that 
the bonus award to the executive directors 
was aligned with Rotork’s key remuneration 
principles and the performance of the business 
and was appropriate and fair in comparison with 
the wider workforce.
Under the Remuneration Policy, any annual 
bonus awarded to executive directors greater 
than 60% of maximum opportunity is deferred 
in shares for three years under the Deferred 
Annual Bonus Plan. Accordingly, in respect 
of the annual bonus award for 2024, 41.85% 
36.13% and 34.88% of salary (pro-rated 
for time served where relevant) for each of 
Kiet Huynh, Ben Peacock and Jonathan Davis 
respectively will be deferred in shares for three 
years under the Deferred Annual Bonus Plan.
LTIP 
The outturn for the 2022 LTIP award, which 
vests in March 2025, is based equally on growth 
in adjusted earnings per share (EPS), relative total 
shareholder return (TSR) over three years and the 
rate of growth in economic profit (a return on 
invested capital measure) over the three financial 
years to December 2024. 
The outcomes of each of the performance 
measures over the three-year period were as 
follows. Adjusted EPS grew by 41.2% over 
the period, exceeding the requirement of 35% 
growth for maximum vesting, resulting in 100% 
vesting for this part of the award. Rotork’s 
relative TSR ranking within its comparator group 
was insufficient for vesting of the TSR tranche. 
Economic profit (ROIC) was £190.3m, exceeding 
the target of £128.4m required for threshold 
vesting, resulting in 67.4% vesting for this part 
of the award. When taken together, this resulted 
in an overall level of vesting of 55.8% for the 
2022 LTIP award. Having reviewed share price 
movements in the three-year period, the 
Committee is satisfied that no windfall gains 
were made in relation to the 2022 LTIP. The 
Committee was also satisfied that no element 
of discretion needed to be applied against the 
formulaic vesting outcomes.
During the year, LTIP awards were made to the 
executive directors, a group of senior managers 
and a number of less senior, high-performing 
and talented employees. In accordance with 
Policy, the award levels granted were 200% of 
salary for the CEO and 175% of salary for the 
CFO. No LTIP award was granted to Jonathan 
Davis in 2024. The Committee will, at vesting, 
as part of its normal review of formulaic 
remuneration outcomes, explicitly look at the 
value of these awards relative to the shareholder 
and employee experience over the same period. 
All recipients accepted this in writing, as a 
condition of receipt of the award. 
Arrangements related to the 
appointment of Ben Peacock as 
Chief Financial Officer
As previously disclosed, certain elements of 
Ben Peacock’s remuneration from his previous 
employer were bought out as part of Ben 
being appointed as Chief Financial Officer on 
11 March 2024. The arrangements were all in 
line with the approved Remuneration Policy, 
and further details of such arrangements can 
be found on pages 143 and 144. 
Overall level of remuneration in 2024
The Committee carefully considered the extent 
to which the overall remuneration outturn for 
executive directors, taking the salary review, 
annual bonus and 2022 LTIP outturns together, 
reflected the substantive performance of the 
business and both the shareholder and employee 
experience during the year. The Committee 
was satisfied that the overall outcome was fair, 
appropriate and proportionate and in line with 
the pay culture and approach within Rotork. 
Full details of the targets and performance 
against those targets for both the Annual Bonus 
Plan and the 2022 LTIP are set out on pages 
147 to 150.
Looking forward to remuneration 
in 2025
The structure of remuneration in 2025 will be 
consistent with that of 2024 and in accordance 
with the current Remuneration Policy approved 
by shareholders on 28 April 2023.
2025 Salary review 
In reviewing the salaries of the executive 
directors and Rotork Management Board, the 
Committee was conscious that the average 
increase for the wider workforce in the UK 
(excluding promotions) was 3.9%. Following two 
consecutive years of wider workforce salary 
increases taking effect in January, the Company 
took the decision to revert back to prior practice 
and, therefore, any workforce salary increases 
will now take effect from 1 April 2025. This 
would re-align the timing of increases for the 
workforce with (any) increases awarded to the 
directors and Rotork Management Board. However, 
to compensate those in the workforce for the 
time re-alignment (but not directors or senior 
management), a one-off payment would be 
made in April 2025, in lieu of a notional salary 
increase for the first three months of the year. 
Kiet Huynh, Chief Executive Officer
Kiet Huynh will receive a basic salary increase 
of 3.9%, in line with the wider UK workforce 
increase (excluding promotions), taking his 
salary to £709,585, effective from 1 April 2025. 
Ben Peacock, Chief Financial Officer
Ben Peacock was appointed as CFO with effect 
from 11 March 2024, receiving an annual salary 
of £430,000 from that date. As set out in last 
year’s Remuneration Report, the Committee 
intended that the first salary review would be 
on 1 April 2025. Since appointment, Ben has 
developed and performed strongly in his role. 
The Committee was also very conscious that 
Ben’s starting salary was significantly below the 
mid-market level, when benchmarked. Therefore, 
the Committee has awarded Ben a basic salary 
increase of 6%, taking his salary to £455,800, 
effective from 1 April 2025. This is to ensure that 
Ben’s salary does not fall too far below the 
mid-market level. Following this increase, Ben’s 
salary will be just below the lower quartile salary 
level for CFOs of companies that have a similar 
market capitalisation to Rotork.
2025 Chair and non-executive 
directors’ fees
The Committee conducted a review of the 
Chair’s and non-executive directors’ fee levels 
against both relevant UK sector companies and 
UK listed companies with a similar market 
capitalisation to Rotork. As a result, the fee for 
the Chair will increase by 18% from 1 April 2025. 
The increase will bring the Chair’s fee to the 
mid-market level against UK listed companies 
with a similar market capitalisation to Rotork, 
but would still be below that of the mid-market 
level of relevant UK sector companies.
The non-executive director base fee and their 
fees for additional responsibilities (excluding the 
Senior Independent Non-executive Director fee) 
will increase by 3.9% (in line with the wider UK 
workforce increase (excluding promotions)) from 
1 April 2025, as approved by the Board. The fee 
for the Senior Independent Non-executive 
Director will increase by 13.3% from 1 April 2025, 
bringing the fee closer to the mid-market level of 
relevant UK sector companies and the mid-market 
level of UK listed companies with a similar 
market capitalisation to Rotork. The Chair’s 
and non-executive directors’ fees effective 
from 1 April 2025 are set out on page 158.
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2025 Chair and non-executive 
directors’ fees continued
Pensions
In Rotork, the UK basic rate of pension is 9% 
but as Rotork passes on savings in National 
Insurance (NI) from the sacrificed salary to 
employees, the majority pension contribution 
rate in the UK is 10.24% at current NI contribution 
levels. In accordance with the current Remuneration 
Policy, the pension allowance for the executive 
directors is aligned to the contribution available 
for the majority of the wider workforce. As at 
the date of this report, this is 10.24%. This rate 
will increase to 10.35% for both the executive 
directors and the wider UK workforce from 
1 April 2025, in line with the changes introduced 
to increase UK employer NI contribution levels.
2025 Annual bonus opportunity
In line with the current Remuneration Policy 
the maximum opportunity for Kiet Huynh and 
Ben Peacock will be 150% and 125% of salary 
respectively. The performance metrics, which 
are unchanged from 2024, will be:
•	 Adjusted operating profit performance (60% 
of opportunity) – the bonus plan is based on 
the 2025 budget approved by the Board. 
•	 Cash generation (15% opportunity) – the 
target to achieve the maximum outturn will 
remain at 110%, reflecting the importance of 
the sustained focus on cash generation.
•	 ESG (10% of opportunity) – measures will be 
aligned to the three pillars of the sustainability 
strategy, as set by the Safety and Sustainability 
Committee, but exclude environmental 
emissions reductions which will be part of the 
LTIP opportunity. Half of the opportunity will 
continue to be based on the TRIR health and 
safety measure, with a threshold set at 0.24 
and a maximum at 0.20. The other half of the 
opportunity will be split across quantitative 
targets set to cover culture and employee 
Annual statement by the Chair of the Remuneration Committee continued
engagement scores, and qualitative targets 
focusing on environmental innovation, 
particularly in relation to products.
•	 Strategic personal objectives (15% of 
opportunity) – these will be set for the 
executive directors with a focus on the 
continued strategic development and 
innovation of the business and delivery of the 
Growth+ strategy.
In accordance with the Remuneration Policy, any 
annual bonus payout in excess of 60% of the 
maximum opportunity will be deferred in shares 
under the Deferred Annual Bonus Plan. 
As is usual, executive directors will be invited to 
participate and must agree in writing to all the 
conditions pertaining to the Annual Bonus Plan, 
including those relating to malus and clawback 
and to the post-cessation of employment 
shareholding arrangements that will apply to the 
portion of the annual bonus deferred in shares.
2025 LTIP
In line with the current Remuneration Policy, the 
maximum opportunity for Kiet Huynh as CEO 
and Ben Peacock as CFO will be 200% and 
175% of salary respectively. 
The structure of the 2025 LTIP performance 
conditions and metrics (with a three financial year 
performance period) will be as set out below: 
•	 Adjusted EPS (30% of opportunity) – the 
threshold and maximum are set at 9% and 
35% growth over the 2024 adjusted EPS by 
the end of 2027 respectively.
•	 Relative TSR (30% of opportunity) – the 
maximum outturn will be achieved if TSR is 
in the top quartile relative to the constituents 
of the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and 
Services sector.
•	 Economic profit (ROIC) (30% of opportunity) 
– performance will be measured against the 
long-term plan for the business. Maximum 
award will require a growth rate over the 
period equivalent to more than 11.2% CAGR 
in profit after tax. 
•	 Absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 
emissions from a 2020 base (10% of 
opportunity) – maximum performance will 
represent a reduction of 50% by the end of 
2027 which is at least as demanding as the 
path required to meet the published 2030 
SBTi target. Threshold performance will 
represent a reduction of 46%.
The proportion of maximum earned at threshold 
performance is no more than 25% for all 
four measures.
The LTIP awards will attract dividend equivalents 
in the form of additional shares and will be 
subject to the same post-vesting holding period 
requirements. The awards will be made in the 
normal course following the publication of the 
full-year results and subject to the executive 
directors agreeing in writing to all the conditions 
under which the awards are made, including the 
appropriate malus and clawback and post-cessation 
of employment shareholding arrangements that 
will apply to these awards. 
Wider workforce remuneration matters 
Our key remuneration principles provide the 
foundation for a fair pay agenda at Rotork and 
this has been reflected in our approach to pay 
and remuneration during 2024. 
We look to apply the key remuneration 
principles, along with our Fair Pay Framework, 
consistently through the business and we seek 
to ensure that there is consistency in how we 
structure pay so that performance measures and 
incentives reinforce the right behaviours in the 
business. If specific actions are necessary to 
satisfy governance expectations or are required 
under the Remuneration Policy, these are made 
once the right remuneration structure for the 
business has been set. 
Our Fair Pay Framework helps ensure standards 
are met throughout our operations globally, 
including ensuring our approaches and decisions 
are non-discriminatory. 
The Committee keeps the business’ performance 
on any potentially discriminatory factors under 
regular review. Gender pay gap metrics are 
reviewed each year before they are published, as 
is the gender-based distribution of pay increases, 
promotions and bonus awards. We have also 
focused our attention on pay and ethnicity and 
the Committee now reviews these metrics in 
addition to gender-related metrics. We have 
again published our ethnicity pay gap alongside 
our Gender Pay Report.
Recruitment processes are reviewed to help 
remove potential bias in order to help the 
business have access to the whole talent pool 
and to help ensure that there is no bias against 
any potential employees. 
The Company considers employee participation 
in the success of the business to be a key part 
of the Company’s overall remuneration strategy 
which aligns the interests of employees and 
shareholders and helps to recruit, retain and 
motivate employees at all levels within the 
Group. The Company offers discretionary annual 
bonus opportunities to all employees, regardless 
of role, offers share ownership schemes where 
practicable and delivers a profit-sharing 
programme to the vast majority of employees. 
The Committee believes that this approach 
provides a meaningful and important incentive 
to employees in promoting share ownership at 
all levels in the Group.
Notwithstanding the considerable progress that 
has been made, we set ourselves high standards 
and will continue to review and update our 
approaches and continue to commit to doing 
the right thing. More details are provided in the 
‘Making a positive social impact’ section on 
pages 57 to 63.
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Annual statement by the Chair of the Remuneration Committee continued
How the Remuneration Committee 
operates and note of thanks
The Committee is currently comprised of three 
independent non-executive directors and was 
comprised as such at all times throughout 2024. 
Certain independent non-executive directors 
either retired from or were appointed to the 
Board of the Company during 2024, and 
consequently, the Committee was reconstituted 
during the year to reflect these changes. Andrew 
Heath joined the Committee on 1 May 2024 and 
has brought valuable insight. There is now a 
stronger link between the Committee and the 
Safety and Sustainability Committee, given 
Andrew’s role as Chair and Karin’s role as member 
of the Safety and Sustainability Committee.
I joined the Committee as Chair on 1 January 2025, 
succeeding Tim Cobbold, who stepped down 
from the Board on 31 December 2024. I would 
like to express my thanks on behalf of the 
Committee to Tim for his diligent work during 
his time on the Committee, especially during 
his tenure as Committee Chair since April 2019. 
The Committee meets a minimum of three 
times a year and would hold additional meetings 
for any ad hoc business requirements that arise. 
Members of the Committee also hold discussions 
as required outside of the formal meetings. 
During 2024, the Committee met formally four 
times. Details of members’ attendance at each 
of the meetings are provided on page 102. The 
Group General Counsel & Company Secretary 
acts as secretary to the Committee.
The Remuneration Committee is keen to ensure 
that its deliberations and decisions are undertaken 
in the fullest context of the business and taking 
into account how employees across the Group 
are rewarded, as well as ensuring that its 
decisions are made in the most transparent 
manner possible. To that end, the Committee 
invites the Chief Human Resources Officer to its 
meetings to provide this wider context and to 
ensure that all its decisions remain aligned with 
Rotork’s values and culture, which we seek to 
nurture within the business as it achieves the 
Growth+ strategy. 
The Board Chair is invited to attend meetings 
and provides input relating to the performance 
and remuneration of the Chief Executive Officer 
and Chief Financial Officer. The Chief Executive 
Officer and Chief Financial Officer are invited 
to attend parts of certain meetings but are 
not present when their own remuneration is 
considered. A representative from the Committee’s 
remuneration advisers, Korn Ferry, attends 
Committee meetings to provide independent 
remuneration and ancillary governance advice. 
I would like to note my thanks to Committee 
members, past and present, for their important 
contribution to the operation of the Committee 
throughout 2024 and to all our colleagues across 
the business for their hard work and support 
during the past year.
Remuneration Committee evaluation
The Committee carried out an internally facilitated 
review of its performance as part of the overall 
internal Board and Committee evaluation in 
2024 and its findings were discussed by the 
Committee and the Board. Upon joining the 
Committee as Chair at the start of the year, 
I was pleased to learn that as part of the review 
process, the Committee reviewed how it had 
discharged its responsibilities. It was concluded 
that the Committee continued to fulfil its duties 
effectively and had worked through issues in a 
focused and thoughtful way, whilst collaborating 
when necessary with the other Board Committees 
especially on matters such as financial performance 
and assurance of sustainability data relevant to 
remuneration arrangements. Some opportunities 
for continued improvement were identified as 
part of the Committee’s performance evaluation. 
The key areas of focus for 2025 are to ensure an 
effective and smooth handover of the Chair’s 
responsibilities and to ensure the continued quality 
of discussions in relation to remuneration matters.
The Terms of Reference for the Remuneration 
Committee were last reviewed in October 2024. 
A copy of the current Terms of Reference 
is published on Rotork’s website at:  
www.rotork.com/en/investors/committees.
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
Chair of the Remuneration Committee
10 March 2025
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Implementation of our Remuneration Policy in 2024 
Purpose
Element
Kiet Huynh (Chief Executive Officer) 
Ben Peacock (Chief Financial Officer) and Jonathan Davis (previous Group Finance Director)1 
Attract and retain high-calibre 
executive directors
Salary2
£666k 
Ben Peacock: £347k; Jonathan Davis: £131k 
Benefits
Benefits comprise a car allowance, personal accident and private medical insurance, cash amounts pursuant to the sale of any unused annual leave 
allowance and life assurance. Ben Peacock also received contributions towards relocation costs such as flights, temporary accommodation, use of a 
relocation company and shipping costs.
Pension
Fixed at rate available to the majority of the workforce in the country in which the director operates. As at the date of this report in the UK this is 
10.24% of salary. This rate will increase to 10.35% for the directors and the wider UK workforce from 1 April 2025, in line with the changes to 
increase UK employer national insurance contribution levels. 
Drive and reward short-term performance 
Annual bonus
150% of salary maximum (90% salary on target).
125% of salary maximum (75% salary on target).
Based on profit, cash generation, ESG and personal targets. There is a deferral of any annual bonus earned above 60% of the maximum opportunity 
for three years in Rotork plc shares.
Incentivise long-term value creation and provide 
alignment with shareholders
Long Term 
Incentive 
Plan (LTIP)
200% of salary performance share award.
For Ben Peacock only: 175% of salary performance share award.3
Based on adjusted earnings per share (EPS), relative total shareholder return (TSR), growth in economic profit assessed over a three-year performance 
period (ROIC) and absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 emissions with targets aligned to the accredited, published 2030 SBTi targets. A two-year 
post-vesting holding period applies, together with malus and clawback provisions. 
Provide alignment with shareholders
 
Shareholding 
requirements
350% of salary.
300% of salary.
Executive directors are required to build a shareholding equal to their variable pay opportunity within five years of appointment. A requirement to 
hold 200% of salary in shares will apply for two years after cessation of employment (but does not apply to shares held which were purchased with 
the executive’s own funds) subject to the shares having been acquired from share awards made after the approval of the 2020 Remuneration Policy. 
Total remuneration opportunity at on-target performance 
£1,756k
Ben Peacock: £1,025k
Actual total remuneration for 2024 
£2,242k
Ben Peacock: £1,150k; Jonathan Davis: £612k
1	
Ben Peacock was appointed as Chief Financial Officer (an executive director) on 11 March 2024 and received buy-out awards as part of his joining arrangements, which are explained on page 144. Jonathan Davis stepped down from his role as Group Finance 
Director (and as an executive director) following the conclusion of the AGM on 30 April 2024. Jonathan Davis remained with the Company as an employee, ensuring a smooth handover, until he retired on 10 September 2024.
2 	 The figure stated reflects the actual amounts received during the financial year. As at 31 December 2024, Kiet Huynh’s annual salary was £682,950 and Ben Peacock’s annual salary was £430,000. 
3	
Jonathan Davis did not receive an LTIP award during 2024.
Performance outcomes for the 2024 financial year
The table below sets out how the annual bonus and LTIP awards have vested for the financial year ended 31 December 2024 based on performance against target.
Award
Measure
Performance
Kiet Huynh
Ben Peacock and Jonathan Davis
2024 annual bonus
•	Profit (60%)
•	Cash generation (15%)
•	ESG (10%)
•	Personal and strategic (15%)
•	51.4% achieved
•	15.0% achieved
•	8.5% achieved
•	K Huynh: 13% achieved
•	B Peacock: 14% achieved
•	J Davis: 13% achieved 
•	87.9% of maximum awarded
•	88.9% of maximum awarded to 
Ben Peacock
•	87.9% of maximum awarded to 
Jonathan Davis
2022 LTIP award
•	EPS growth (33%) 
•	TSR (33%)
•	Economic profit (33%)
•	100% of maximum
•	0% of maximum
•	67.4% of maximum
•	55.8% of maximum vesting
•	Jonathan Davis: 55.8% of 
maximum vesting1
1	
Jonathan Davis’s 2022 LTIP award was also pro-rated for time served during the performance period. 
Remuneration at a glance
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Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

How our Remuneration Policy supports Rotork’s strategy
Our Remuneration Policy has been developed to enable Rotork to recruit and appropriately reward 
an executive team of the calibre required to lead our global business to deliver the superior outcomes 
for all our stakeholders. We aim to pay competitively against the talent pools from which we recruit 
with a significant proportion of pay linked directly to the performance of the business and delivered 
in Rotork’s shares to ensure strong long-term alignment with shareholders.
Our aim is to deliver strong and sustainable margins, consistent year-on-year growth in revenues and 
profit and a high return on capital which, combined with our asset-light model, delivers strong cash 
generation. The financial measures in our incentive plans reflect these priorities and our long-term 
financial objectives. The introduction of explicit ESG measures during 2023 reflects the strategic 
importance of ESG in Rotork.
Strategic priorities
Bonus
LTIP
Innovation
•	Strategic targets
•	Economic profit (ROIC) measure
Operational 
excellence
•	Cash generation measure and 
personal performance targets
•	Not applicable
Growth
•	Profit measure
•	Total shareholder return measure 
•	Earnings per share measure
Sustainability
•	ESG (including safety) measures
•	Deferral into shares
•	Malus and clawback provisions
•	Five-year time horizon (three-year performance 
period and two-year holding period)
•	Malus and clawback provisions
•	Absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 
emissions with targets aligned to the accredited, 
published 2030 SBTi targets
Remuneration at a glance continued
Performance measures
Performance measures are used to determine the extent of any awards made under the variable 
elements of the executive directors’ remuneration, both annual bonus and LTIP. The performance 
measures are selected because of their use as key performance indicators (KPIs) to assess Company 
performance and to align the interests of the directors to those of the shareholders. Non-financial 
KPIs constitute part of the annual bonus award and these are selected to ensure that performance 
measured by financial KPIs is not delivered at the expense of important non-financial considerations, 
specifically safety and sustainability. 
The measures currently used each fulfil a distinct purpose as set out below:
Measure
Used in
Purpose
Adjusted operating profit
Annual bonus
Maintains focus on annual profits.
Cash generation
Annual bonus
Maintains discipline on managing inventory and receivables.
ESG measures
Annual bonus
Focus on health and safety, employee engagement, 
diversity and product environmental impact.
LTIP
Absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 emissions (2020 
base year) with targets at least as demanding as the path 
required to meet the published 2030 SBTi target.
Strategic objectives
Annual bonus
Provides a balance to financial delivery which reflects 
activities that contribute to the longer-term success 
of the Group. These include environmental targets.
Adjusted earnings per share
LTIP
Adjusted EPS is a key measure for analysts who cover 
Rotork and reflects long-term growth in profits.
Relative TSR
LTIP
Reflects the long-term growth in the value of 
shareholders’ investment in Rotork. 
Economic profit (ROIC)
LTIP
Captures the cost of the capital required to operate the 
business and instils discipline around capital usage into 
financial decision making.
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Financial statements

Overview of the Remuneration Policy report
This section sets out a summary of Rotork’s 
Directors’ Remuneration Policy (the Policy), 
which was approved by shareholders in a 
binding vote at the AGM held on 28 April 2023 
and became effective on that date. The 
Committee’s intention is that the current Policy 
will operate for the three-year period up to the 
AGM held in 2026. The full Policy can be 
found in the 2022 Annual Reports and 
Accounts, which is available on the Company’s 
corporate website at the following location:  
www.rotork.com/en/investors/financial-
reporting-centre. 
Remuneration Policy report
Directors’ Remuneration Policy
Element of 
remuneration
Purpose and how it supports 
the strategy
How the element operates
Maximum amounts payable
Framework used to assess performance
Base salary
To attract and retain 
executive directors of the 
right calibre and provide 
a core level of reward for 
the role.
Salary levels (and subsequent salary increases) are set after taking into account 
the responsibilities of the role, the value of the individual in terms of skills, 
experience and personal contribution, Company performance, internal relativities 
and pay conditions, and external market data (benchmarked against companies 
of a similar size and complexity and other companies in the same industry sector). 
The Remuneration Committee also considers the impact of any increase to 
salaries on the total remuneration package.
Salaries are paid monthly and normally reviewed annually (salaries are normally 
reviewed in February, with any changes effective from 1 April).
Details of the current salaries of the executive 
directors are set out in the Annual Report 
on Remuneration.
Normally, future salary increases will be no higher 
than the average increase (as a percentage of 
salary) applied to the UK workforce. However, the 
Remuneration Committee retains the discretion to 
award higher increases if appropriate (for example, 
to reflect progression in the role or increased 
experience of the individual).
N/A
Benefits
To attract and retain 
executive directors of the 
right calibre by providing 
a market competitive level 
of benefit provision.
The range of benefits that may be provided is set by the Remuneration 
Committee after taking into account local market practice in the country where 
the executive director is based or has relocated from and suitable benefits, 
including compensation for increased taxation where an individual is relocating 
from one country to another.
Standard benefits for executive directors’ benefits comprise a car allowance, 
personal accident insurance, private medical insurance and life assurance. 
Additional benefits may be provided, as appropriate, including travel benefits 
for executives working away from their home country.
Executive directors are also entitled to participate in all-employee share plans 
on the same basis as other employees based in the same country.
Any reasonable business related expenses may be reimbursed (including any 
tax if determined to be a taxable benefit).
There is no prescribed maximum level, but the 
Remuneration Committee monitors the overall cost 
of the benefit provision to ensure that it remains 
appropriately proportionate.
N/A
Pension
To provide a market 
competitive remuneration 
package to enable the 
recruitment and retention 
of executive directors.
The Company may fund contributions to a director’s pension as appropriate. 
This may include contributions to a money purchase scheme and/or payment 
of a cash allowance where appropriate.
No higher than the percentage of salary available 
to the majority of the workforce for the country 
in which the executive director operates.
N/A
Key remuneration principles
The Remuneration Committee remains committed towards remuneration being:
•	 Performance driven, competitive and fair.
•	 Motivating, affordable and proportionate.
•	 Aligned to shareholders’ interests.
•	 Globally relevant and transparent. 
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Financial statements

Remuneration Policy report continued
Element of 
remuneration
Purpose and how it supports 
the strategy
How the element operates
Maximum amounts payable
Framework used to assess performance
Annual bonus
Drives and rewards 
performance against annual 
financial and operational 
goals which are consistent 
with the medium to 
long-term strategic needs 
of the business.
Bonus up to 60% of the maximum opportunity is paid in cash. Any bonus 
awarded in excess of 60% of the maximum is deferred into shares for three years.
Dividend equivalents may be paid on the deferred shares on vesting. The 
Remuneration Committee retains discretion to adjust the number of deferred 
shares in the event of a variation in the capital of the Company and/or to settle 
the award in cash.
The maximum annual bonus opportunity is 150% 
of salary.
Details of the current annual opportunity are set 
out in the Annual Report on Remuneration.
For each measure, normally a sliding scale of 
stretching targets is set by the Remuneration 
Committee. The threshold level of bonus under 
each financial measure varies but accounts for no 
more than one third of the maximum bonus 
opportunity under any single measure.
The annual bonus is focused on the delivery of 
strategically important performance measures. 
These include demanding financial and non-financial 
measures. Financial measures will account for 
the majority.
Under the terms of the bonus plan, the Remuneration 
Committee has the discretion, in exceptional 
circumstances, to amend previously set targets or 
to adjust the proposed payout to ensure a fair and 
appropriate outcome.
LTIP
To incentivise long-term value 
creation and alignment with 
shareholder interests.
The LTIP permits an award of shares to be granted which vests subject to 
performance and continued employment. The LTIP awards will be granted in 
accordance with the rules of the plan (which includes the ability to award 
dividend equivalents on shares that vest) which were approved by shareholders 
in 2019, and the discretions contained therein.
Awards under the LTIP may be granted in the form of conditional shares, 
forfeitable shares, nil-cost options or cash (where the award cannot be settled 
in shares).
Directors must retain any shares vesting (net of tax) until the fifth anniversary 
of grant.
The maximum LTIP opportunity is 200% of salary.
Details of the current award levels are set out in 
the Annual Report on Remuneration.
Awards under the LTIP are subject to performance 
conditions, measured over three financial years, 
currently being adjusted EPS, economic profit and 
TSR. Different measures may be used for future 
award cycles.
A sliding scale of targets is set for each measure 
with no more than 25% of the award (under each 
measure) vesting for achieving the threshold 
performance hurdle.
The performance targets are set prior to the grant 
of each award. Different measures, targets and/or 
weightings between measures may be set for 
future award cycles.
Under the LTIP rules approved by shareholders, 
the Remuneration Committee has the discretion 
to amend the targets applying to existing awards 
in exceptional circumstances providing the new 
targets are no less challenging than originally 
envisaged. The Remuneration Committee also has 
the power to adjust the number of shares subject 
to an award in the event of a variation in the capital 
of the Company.
Shareholding 
guideline
To provide alignment with 
shareholders by requiring 
executives to build and 
maintain a meaningful 
shareholding in Rotork.
The executive directors are also subject to a requirement during their period of 
employment to build and maintain a shareholding in Rotork equivalent to the 
combined annual award opportunity under their bonus and LTIP. It is expected 
that this requirement will be achieved within five years of appointment.
Following the cessation of their employment, executive directors are required 
to retain for a further two years any shares held that have vested to them under 
the Group’s share plans after 24 April 2020 (subject to a maximum holding 
requirement of 200% of final salary).
N/A
N/A
Directors’ Remuneration Policy continued
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Financial statements

Remuneration Policy report continued
Element of 
remuneration
Purpose and how it supports 
the strategy
How the element operates
Maximum amounts payable
Framework used to assess performance
Chair and 
non-executive 
directors’ fees
To attract and retain 
non-executive directors 
of the right calibre.
Fees for the Chair and non-executive directors are normally reviewed annually.
Non-executive director fees are determined by the Chair and the executive 
directors. The fees for the Chair are determined by the Remuneration Committee.
The fees for the non-executive directors comprise a basic Board fee, with 
additional fees paid to the Senior Independent Non-executive Director, 
Committee Chairs, the Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement, and 
other similar Board responsibilities. Additional fees may be paid for additional 
temporary responsibilities.
Any reasonable business-related expenses may be reimbursed (including tax 
thereon if determined to be a taxable benefit).
The maximum aggregate fee level is as specified 
in the Group’s Articles of Association 
(currently £1,000,000).
The fee levels are set by reference to rates in 
companies of comparable size and complexity. 
The fee levels are reviewed periodically taking into 
account the responsibilities of the role and the 
time commitment of the individual.
N/A
Malus and clawback
The payment of any bonus is at the ultimate 
discretion of the Remuneration Committee 
which also retains an absolute discretion to 
reclaim or withhold some, or all, of any annual 
bonus paid in exceptional circumstances, such 
as misstatement of results, an error in the 
calculation of the performance targets and/or 
award size, gross misconduct, reputational 
damage and unreasonable failure to protect 
the interests of employees and customers.
The Remuneration Committee has similar power 
in respect of the LTIP and may exercise discretion 
to reclaim or withhold some, or all, of a vested 
LTIP award in exceptional circumstances 
(the specified situations being the same as 
for the Annual Bonus Plan). 
Discretion 
The Remuneration Committee retains discretion 
under the Policy to operate the incentive plans 
in accordance with their detailed rules, to amend 
performance conditions of in-flight incentives 
and yet to be granted LTIP awards and future 
bonus awards. Annually, the Remuneration 
Committee will assess whether it feels the 
formulaic outcomes from the incentive plans 
reflect the Company’s underlying performance 
and retains the ability to alter those outcomes. 
Differences between the 
Policy Report and the policy 
on employee remuneration
We use the same principles (as set out at the 
start of this report) to determine pay for our 
executives and everyone else who works at 
Rotork. We recognise that it is appropriate for 
a significant proportion of executive directors’ 
remuneration to be contingent on the 
performance of the Group, and that such 
remuneration is at risk subject to the satisfaction 
of stretching performance conditions. Executive 
directors and other senior managers are invited 
to participate in the LTIP under which shares 
are awarded subject to performance conditions 
over a three-year period. We are also widening 
participation in our share-based long-term 
incentive schemes within the organisation. 
Executive directors and other senior managers 
are also invited to participate in the annual 
bonus scheme which will result in a bonus 
payment being made if targets are achieved, 
part of which for executive directors may be 
deferred in shares. Alternative or additional 
incentive plans may operate from time to time 
for senior managers and/or other employees.
Employees share in the success of the Group 
through a profit-based bonus plan which is 
linked to the performance of their business unit, 
Group performance and their own individual 
performance. This is coupled with the 
opportunity, for eligible employees, to receive 
free shares from the Company, paid from the 
Company’s profits.
Approach to recruitment remuneration
We recruit our most senior leaders from a global 
talent pool and our Policy provides the flexibility 
for such recruitment. Base salary levels for new 
executives are set after taking into account the 
experience and calibre of the individual and 
their existing remuneration package. It may be 
appropriate in certain circumstances to offer 
a salary which is initially lower than the market 
level but having a planned series of increases 
to such salary over subsequent years subject to 
individual performance. We will be clear as to our 
intentions with a candidate if we intend to adopt 
such an approach for a particular reward package. 
Benefits will generally be provided in accordance 
with the Policy. Where an executive is required to 
relocate in order to take up his/her role, we may 
offer relocation expenses and assistance and/or 
ongoing expatriate benefits (including tax 
equalisation), the nature of which would be 
determined by the individual circumstances.
The structure and level of the ongoing variable 
pay element will be in accordance with the 
Policy. Different performance measures may 
be set initially for the annual bonus, taking into 
account the responsibilities of the individual, 
and the point in the financial year that the 
executive joined.
In the case of an external hire, it may be 
necessary to buy out certain elements of 
remuneration from an executive’s previous 
employer which would be forfeited on leaving 
that employer. Where we do this, it will always 
be subject to the principal consideration that 
making such a buy-out is in the best interests 
of the Group. Any such payment would be 
structured to take into account the form (cash or 
shares), timing and expected value (i.e. likelihood 
of meeting any existing performance criteria) of 
the remuneration being forfeited. Replacement 
share awards, if used, may be granted using 
Rotork’s existing share plans to the extent 
possible, although awards may also be granted 
outside of these schemes if necessary and as 
permitted under the UK Listing Rules. 
Directors’ Remuneration Policy continued
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Remuneration Policy report continued
Service contracts and policy on 
payments for loss of office
Under the executive directors’ service contracts, 
up to 12 months’ notice of termination of 
employment is required by either party. Should 
notice be served, the executive directors can 
continue to receive salary, benefits and pension 
for the duration of their notice period, during 
which time the Company may require the 
individual to continue to fulfil their current duties 
or may assign a period of garden leave. The 
Company applies a general principle of mitigation 
in relation to termination payments and the 
service contracts expressly include the use of 
monthly phased payments following termination 
in lieu of notice which can be reduced to the 
extent that alternative remunerated employment 
is found.
The service contracts also enable the Company 
to elect to make a payment in lieu of notice 
equivalent in value to 12 months’ base salary only.
In the event of cessation of employment, the 
executive directors may still be eligible for a 
bonus at the discretion of the Remuneration 
Committee, on a pro-rata basis for the period of 
time served from the start of the financial year 
to the date of termination and not for any period 
in lieu of notice. Different performance measures 
(to the other executive directors) may be set for 
the bonus for the period up until departure, as 
appropriate, to reflect changes in responsibility.
Any unvested shares held under the deferred 
Annual Bonus Plan will ordinarily vest on the 
normal vesting date, save where the departure 
is as a result of summary dismissal, in which 
case the awards will lapse on cessation of 
employment. The Remuneration Committee may 
also determine that the shares shall vest on an 
earlier date (including the date of cessation) if 
the Remuneration Committee, in its discretion, 
considers that the circumstances of the cessation 
merit early vesting of the awards.
The rules of the LTIP set out what happens 
to awards if a participant leaves employment 
before the end of the vesting period. Generally, 
any unvested LTIP awards will lapse when an 
executive director leaves employment except in 
certain circumstances. If the executive director 
ceases to be employed as a result of death, 
injury, retirement, transfer of employment or any 
other analogous reason, they may be treated as 
a ‘good leaver’ under the plan rules. The shares 
for a good leaver will vest subject to an assessment 
of performance, with a pro-rata reduction to 
reflect the proportion of the vesting period served. 
Awards for a good leaver may then vest on the 
normal vesting date, unless the Remuneration 
Committee determines that they should vest 
early (for example, following the death of 
the participant). In determining whether an 
executive director should be treated as a good 
leaver and the extent to which their award 
may vest (up to the pro-rated amount), the 
Remuneration Committee will take into account 
the circumstances of an individual’s departure.
Outplacement services and reimbursement of 
legal costs may be provided where appropriate. 
Any statutory entitlements or sums to settle 
or compromise claims in connection with 
a termination would be paid as necessary.
Outstanding share awards would ordinarily vest 
early on a change of control of the Company. 
In the case of unvested awards under the LTIP, 
performance would be measured to the date 
of control normally with a pro-rata reduction 
to reflect the proportion of the vesting or 
performance period served.
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Financial statements

This part of the Directors’ Remuneration Report 
has been prepared in accordance with Part 3 of 
The Large and Medium-sized Companies and 
Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations (as 
amended) and Rule 6.6.6 of the UK Listing Rules 
and explains how Rotork’s current Remuneration 
Policy has been implemented during the year. 
The Annual Statement and Annual Report on 
Remuneration will be put to a single advisory 
vote at the AGM on 2 May 2025. 
Role of the Remuneration Committee
The principal role of the Remuneration Committee 
is to establish the policy for remuneration of the 
executive directors, the Rotork Management 
Board (RMB) and the Board Chair, which is aligned 
with the long-term success of the Company and 
its shareholders. It also oversees the principles 
and structure of remuneration arrangements for 
all employees across the Group, and seeks to 
ensure that there is consistency across regions, 
business lines and organisational levels. Where 
possible, similar structures are used across the 
Group, to ensure transparency. At all levels of 
the organisation, in line with our remuneration 
principles, we ensure that remuneration is 
competitive and fair; at the executive level, this 
means offering remuneration that is sufficiently 
attractive to appropriately incentivise and retain 
the leadership team to successfully run a complex 
global business.
UK Corporate Governance Code – 
Provision 40 disclosures
When developing the proposed Remuneration 
Policy and considering its implementation, 
the Committee was mindful of the 2018 UK 
Corporate Governance Code and considers 
that the executive remuneration framework 
appropriately addresses the following factors:
•	 Clarity – the Committee is committed 
to providing open and transparent 
disclosures regarding our executive 
remuneration arrangements. 
•	 Simplicity – remuneration arrangements for 
our executives and our wider workforce are 
simple in nature and well understood by both 
participants and shareholders. 
•	 Risk – the Committee considers that the 
incentive arrangements do not encourage 
inappropriate risk taking. Malus and clawback 
provisions apply to annual bonus, LTIP and 
DABP awards (and are accepted in writing by 
those to whom the incentives are awarded). 
The Committee has overarching discretion to 
adjust formulaic outcomes to ensure that they 
are appropriate.
•	 Predictability and proportionality – our Policy 
illustrates opportunity levels for executive 
directors under various scenarios for each 
component of pay.
•	 Alignment to culture – any financial and 
strategic targets set by the Committee are 
designed to drive the right behaviours across 
the business. The LTIP encourages our executives 
to focus on making the right decisions for the 
execution of our strategy and the creation 
of long-term shareholder value.
Priorities and activities of the 
Remuneration Committee during 2024 
Reviewed the application of our Remuneration 
Policy to ensure it delivers a package that 
is proportionate to the opportunity for 
shareholders and aligned with their interests
•	 Set pay principles. 
•	 Reviewed all elements of the Remuneration 
Policy in order to ensure that it remains 
globally relevant and fit for purpose and that 
it aligns with (and supports) Rotork’s culture 
and values, and fits with our pay principles.
•	 Considered corporate governance 
developments, including the incoming 2024 
UK Corporate Governance Code, guidance 
from institutional investors and external 
remuneration trends, to ensure our 
remuneration structures reflect prevailing 
good practice. 
•	 Developed the approach to the remuneration 
structure for 2025. 
•	 Reviewed the approach to the measurement 
and assurance process for the environmental 
measure for the 2024 LTIP awards, following 
the introduction of the environmental 
measure in 2023. 
•	 Reviewed and agreed the performance 
conditions and measures for the 2025 
LTIP awards.
Set pay at a competitive level against the 
external market and ensured remuneration 
remained affordable and fair in the context 
of pay for all Rotork employees
•	 Reviewed the pay arrangements for 
employees across the Group and considered 
how these related to those for our senior leaders.
•	 Ensured that decisions on pay were in line 
with Rotork’s Fair Pay Framework, which 
guides Rotork’s reward policies, procedures, 
systems and decision making globally in 
support of the commitment to deliver fair 
and competitive remuneration in line with 
the remuneration principles. 
•	 Set basic salary for executive directors and 
members of the RMB for 2024. 
•	 Reviewed the fee payable to the Chair.
Determined pay outcomes that are 
performance driven
•	 Determined the bonus performance 
outcome against 2023 targets and 
approved bonus payments. 
•	 Determined the LTIP vesting outcome against 
2021 performance targets and approved vesting. 
•	 Reviewed incentive plan outcomes and 
evaluated whether it was appropriate for 
discretion to be applied.
Ensured future pay is motivating, transparent 
and aligned to shareholders’ interests
•	 Reviewed the terms of both bonus and LTIP 
plans to ensure that they remain fit for 
purpose and in line with developing practice 
from a governance perspective. 
•	 Selected the measures and set the performance 
ranges for executive directors and other 
members of senior management’s bonus 
scheme for 2024. As mentioned in the 2023 
report, for the 2024 bonus scheme, the 
previous lost time injury rate (LTIR) measure, 
which comprises half of the ESG measure 
(10%) of the 2024 bonus opportunity, was 
replaced with the best practice total recordable 
incident rate (TRIR) health and safety measure, 
for our executive directors and other members 
of Rotork’s senior management’s bonus scheme. 
•	 Approved the executive directors’ personal 
objectives for 2024. 
•	 Set LTIP performance targets and award levels 
for executive directors and other members of 
senior management for the 2024 LTIP.
Maintained transparency and clarity in 
everything we do
Approved the Directors’ Remuneration Report 
2023 and recommended that shareholders vote 
in favour of the report at the Company’s 2024 
Annual General Meeting. 
Retirement of Jonathan Davis and appointment 
of Ben Peacock
As disclosed in the 2023 report, during 2023 
the Committee reviewed and determined the 
remuneration arrangements relating to the 
retirement of Jonathan Davis as executive director 
and Group Finance Director and the appointment 
of Ben Peacock as executive director and Chief 
Financial Officer. These arrangements were 
implemented during 2024 and details of their 
respective remuneration arrangements are 
summarised below and detailed within the 
relevant sections of this report. 
Annual Report on Remuneration
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Financial statements

Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Appointment of Ben Peacock as executive 
director and Chief Financial Officer
Ben Peacock was appointed as an executive director 
and Chief Financial Officer on 11 March 2024 
(the Appointment Date). Effective from his 
Appointment Date, Ben Peacock received an 
annual base salary of £430,000, which was 
pro-rated for time served at the Company during 
the year. The first salary review was not intended 
to be undertaken before 1 April 2025. Details 
relating to Ben’s first salary review, effective 
from 1 April 2025, are set out on page 134. 
The benefits that Ben Peacock has received 
since his Appointment Date remain in line with 
Rotork’s current Remuneration Policy. These 
comprise a pro-rated annual non-pensionable 
car allowance of £13,584 (which can only be 
used towards acquiring an electric, hybrid or 
low-emission vehicle), alongside personal 
accident and private medical insurance and life 
assurance. Ben Peacock’s pension allowance, 
which he has received on a pro-rata basis since 
his Appointment Date, was fixed at the rate 
available to the majority of the workforce in 
the UK, being 10.24% of base salary. 
Ben Peacock was eligible to participate in the 
discretionary annual bonus scheme with his 
maximum opportunity being 125% of base 
salary for 2024, pro-rated for time served during 
the year. The outcome of the 2024 bonus 
opportunity is detailed on pages 147 to 148. Ben 
Peacock was also eligible to participate in the 
LTIP, with his participation level being up to 
175% of base salary. The details of the LTIPs 
granted to Ben Peacock during the year, and the 
performance conditions attached to such LTIPs 
are set out below on page 150. In line with the 
approved Remuneration Policy, Ben Peacock is 
also entitled to participate (as and when he 
becomes eligible to do so) in the all-employee 
share plans operated by the Company, which 
currently include the UK Share Incentive Plan 
(SIP) (partnership and free shares) and the UK 
Sharesave schemes. During the year, 
Ben Peacock elected to participate in the 
Company’s UK Sharesave scheme, and details of 
the Sharesave options granted to Ben on 
4 October 2024 are disclosed below on page 
151. In line with the SIP share plan rules, 
Ben Peacock was not eligible to receive an award 
of free shares under the SIP share plan during 
2024, as he had not met the length of service 
requirement.
As previously disclosed, certain elements of 
Ben Peacock’s remuneration from his previous 
employer were bought out and these arrangements 
were all in line with the approved Remuneration 
Policy. A cash payment of £140,568 was made 
to Ben in March 2024, the amount being the 
equivalent to the amount of cash bonus that 
Ben was forecast to lose upon leaving his former 
employer. Within last year’s Annual Report on 
Remuneration, the Company also confirmed that 
it intended to grant Ben Peacock a conditional 
share award over ordinary shares in Rotork plc 
to the value of £230,000, to compensate for 
awards that Ben forfeited as a result of leaving 
his former employer. In determining the structure 
of the awards granted to Ben, the form, timing 
and expected value of the forfeited awards were 
considered. On 11 April 2024, Ben Peacock was 
granted conditional share awards over an aggregate 
of 70,640 ordinary shares in Rotork plc. The 
number of conditional share awards granted was 
calculated using the average of the market close 
price for Rotork plc ordinary shares for the five 
days prior to grant, being £3.2624 per ordinary 
share. The awards were made subject to malus 
and clawback provisions, which were accepted 
in writing at grant, and Ben’s continued 
employment (subject to market-standard good 
leaver provisions). The conditional share awards 
granted to Ben vest in three tranches, the initial 
tranche having vested on 11 April 2024, with 
8,811 ordinary shares being transferred to 
Ben on the same date. A further 31,897 
conditional shares are expected to vest on 
11 April 2025 and the final tranche of 29,932 
conditional shares are expected to vest on 
18 April 2026. 
The Company has also made tax support for up 
to three tax years available to Ben Peacock, to 
assist with advice and support in completing tax 
returns in both the UK and US. This support 
remains subject to an annual cap of £10,000 to 
be paid directly to the provider. During 2024 no 
such support was claimed for. Contributions 
towards relocation costs (subject to caps) from 
the US to a location within 25 miles of Bath (UK) 
have also been provided to Ben Peacock during 
the year. During 2024 such relocation costs have 
included flights, temporary accommodation, 
use of a relocation company, shipping costs and 
payment of incidentals against receipts. The 
amounts received by Ben are disclosed as 
required on page 145. 
Retirement of Jonathan Davis 
as executive director and Group 
Finance Director
Jonathan Davis stepped down from his role as 
Group Finance Director on 11 March 2024, when 
Ben Peacock joined the Board as Chief Financial 
Officer. Jonathan remained appointed as an 
executive director until the conclusion of the 
Company’s 2024 AGM, held on 30 April 2024, 
stepping down from the Board on this date. 
Jonathan continued as an employee of Rotork 
until 10 September 2024 (being Jonathan’s 
Retirement Date). Jonathan’s remuneration 
arrangements were all in line with the approved 
Remuneration Policy. The amounts received by 
Jonathan until 30 April 2024 are set out below in 
the single figure table and related notes on page 
145. Details of the payments Jonathan received 
as an employee of Rotork during the period 
1 May 2024 to his Retirement Date are detailed 
on page 146. 
Jonathan received a base salary increase of 4.2% 
with effect from 1 April 2024, which was in line 
with the UK average salary increase of the UK 
workforce (received from 1 January 2024), taking 
Jonathan’s base salary to £406,480. This was 
pro-rated for time served during the year until 
his Retirement Date. The Committee confirmed 
in last year’s report that Jonathan would be 
eligible to be considered for the 2024 annual 
bonus award. Jonathan received a pro-rated 
annual bonus in relation to the time Jonathan 
was appointed as an executive director during 
2024 of £145k. £99k of which was paid in cash 
and £46k of which was deferred into shares for 
three years. Such figures are included within the 
single figure table below. 
In accordance with the respective share plans, 
Jonathan was granted good leaver status with 
respect to his existing DABP awards and the 
2022 and 2023 LTIP awards that are due to vest 
after his Retirement Date. Jonathan’s existing 
LTIP awards were pro-rated for the period until 
his Retirement Date and remain subject to the 
achievement of the required performance 
conditions, a two-year holding period and the 
relevant rules. Jonathan was not granted any 
LTIP awards in 2024. His outstanding awards 
under the DABP and LTIP are shown on page 
152. Any vesting of Jonathan’s share awards, 
together with such dividend entitlements to 
be settled in the form of additional shares, 
continue to remain subject to the post-departure 
shareholding requirements for executive 
directors (up to 200% of salary for two years 
from Jonathan’s Retirement Date). 
Jonathan’s ability to participate in the Company’s 
SIP fell away at his Retirement Date. Any shares 
held within the SIP trust on Jonathan’s behalf 
were removed from the trust following his 
Retirement Date. 
No payments for loss of office of the type specified 
in Section 430(2B) of the Companies Act 2006 
have been made to Jonathan Davis. The relevant 
remuneration information will continue to be 
included in Rotork’s Directors’ Remuneration 
Report going forwards, as required.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Single figure of remuneration for 2024 and 2023 (£000) (audited)
The tables below set out the single figure remuneration for the directors of Rotork for 2024 and 2023.
Executive directors (£000) (audited)
Salary
Benefits (i) 
Annual bonus (ii)
LTIP (iii)
SIP (iv)
Other items in the 
nature of 
remuneration(v)
Pension and 
related benefits (vi)
Total remuneration 
Total fixed pay
Total variable pay
Name
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
Current executive directors:
Kiet Huynh 
666
600
23
22
879
877
602
20
4
4
—
—
68
61
2,242
1,584
757
683
1,485
901
Ben Peacock 1
347
—
13
—
386
—
230
—
—
—
141
—
33
—
1,150
—
393
—
757
—
Former executive director:
Jonathan Davis 2
131
385
12
15
145
467
306
77
4
4
—
—
13
42
612
990
157
442
455
548
1	
Ben Peacock was appointed Chief Financial Officer on 11 March 2024.
2	
Jonathan Davis stepped down as a director on 30 April 2024. Jonathan’s fixed salary and benefits (including those related to pension) reflect the period that Jonathan was in role as an executive director.
(i)	
The benefit value comprises car allowance and/or benefit in kind value of company car, where applicable, private medical insurance and any cash amounts received pursuant to the sale of unused annual leave allowance in line with the Company’s Annual 
Leave Trading Scheme Policy, which is available to all employees. 
(ii)	
Of the maximum bonus opportunity, the following applied: for Kiet Huynh, £600k was paid in cash with £279k deferred into shares for three years; for Ben Peacock, £261k was paid in cash, with £125k deferred into shares for three years; and for Jonathan 
Davis, £99k was paid in cash with £46k deferred into shares for three years.
(iii)	 The 2024 figure relates to the 55.8% vesting of the 2022 LTIP award based on performance to 31 December 2024. These awards are not eligible to vest until 24 March 2025 and, as such, an indicative share price of 321.0p (being the average closing share 
price over the three-month period to 31 December 2024) has been used for the purposes of valuing these awards. This value will be restated in next year’s report. The 2023 figure relates to the 2021 LTIP award, which vested at 13.8% on 25 March 2024. 
In last year’s report the value of these awards was calculated using the average closing share price over the three-month period to 31 December 2023, being 309.5p, and, this year, the figures have been updated using the closing price on the date of 
vesting, being 326.40p. Dividend equivalents were applied to the vested 2021 LTIP awards, calculated using the same share price, on a reinvestment basis. On 11 April 2024, conditional share awards over an aggregate of 70,640 ordinary shares in Rotork plc 
were granted to Ben Peacock. The conditional share awards vest in three tranches based on continued service only and so they are included in the LTIP column. The value ascribed to such awards is the average five-day closing share price of 326.24p.
(iv)	 Face value of SIP free share awards made during the year.
(v)	
Comprises a cash payment equivalent to the amount Ben Peacock was forecast to lose resultant to leaving his former employer.
(vi)	 Comprises payments in lieu of pension contributions. 
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Financial statements

Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Single figure of remuneration for 2024 and 2023 (£000) (audited) continued
Chair and non-executive directors (£000)
Base fees
Additional fees/
remuneration 
Total remuneration 
Name
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
Current Chair and non-executive directors:
Dorothy Thompson (i)
268
194
—
—
268
194
Svein Richard Brandtzæg (ii)
7
—
—
—
7
—
Andrew Heath (iii)
49
—
7
—
56
—
Karin Meurk-Harvey
64
61
—
—
64
61
Vanessa Simms (iv)
34
—
—
—
34
—
Janice Stipp
64
61
13
11
77
72
Former non-executive directors:
Ann Christin Andersen (v)
21
61
3
7
24
68
Tim Cobbold (vi)
64
61
33
18
97
79
Peter Dilnot (vii)
—
61
—
11
—
72
Martin Lamb (viii)
—
84
—
—
—
84
(i)	
Dorothy Thompson was appointed as Chair with effect from 1 May 2023. The 2023 fees shown are pro-rated for time 
served as Chair with Dorothy Thompson’s fee also including her pro-rated non-executive base fee from 1 January 2023 
to 30 April 2023.
(ii)	
Svein Richard Brandtzæg was appointed to the Board on 20 November 2024.
(iii)	
Andrew Heath was appointed to the Board on 1 April 2024. 
(iv)	
Vanessa Simms was appointed to the Board on 21 June 2024. 
(v)	
Ann Christin Andersen stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2024.
(vi)	
Tim Cobbold stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024. 
(vii)	 Peter Dilnot stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2023. 
(viii)	 Martin Lamb stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2023. 
The additional fees referred to above are the supplementary fees paid in cash to the Chairs of 
the Audit, Remuneration and Safety and Sustainability Committees, the Senior Independent 
Non‑executive Director and the designated Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement. 
All directors have confirmed that, save as disclosed in the single figure of remuneration table above, 
they have not received any other items in the nature of remuneration.
Total pension entitlements (audited)
No director participates in, or has a deferred benefit under, a defined benefit pension scheme. 
In accordance with the current Remuneration Policy, the executive directors receive a cash allowance 
in lieu of pension at the level of the majority of the workforce, being 10.24% from 1 January 2024.
Payments to former directors and for loss of office (audited)
Jonathan Davis stepped down as an executive director of Rotork plc following the conclusion of the 
Company’s 2024 AGM on 30 April 2024. In order to ensure an orderly handover, Jonathan remained 
employed by Rotork until his Retirement Date on 10 September 2024. During the 4 month and 10 
day period as an employee, Jonathan continued to receive a base salary, benefits (including pension), 
and remained eligible to receive an annual bonus for 2024. The amounts Jonathan received during 
the period were as follows: base salary £146,437, benefits (including pension) of £20,298 and the 
cash element of the annual bonus (pro-rated for time) of £109,111. Jonathan remained eligible to 
participate in the Company’s SIP, including the ability to purchase monthly partnership shares under 
the SIP to a maximum of £150 per month. However, all shares held by Jonathan pursuant to the 
Company’s SIP were removed from the SIP trust shortly after Jonathan’s Retirement Date. Jonathan 
Davis continues to hold LTIP awards granted in 2022 and 2023, which are due to vest on 24 March 2025 
and 24 March 2026 respectively. The extent to which Jonathan’s 2022 LTIP award lapsed due to time 
pro-rating and will vest or lapse due to satisfaction of the performance conditions attached to the 
awards are set out below on page 149. Jonathan’s 2023 LTIP awards remain subject to performance 
conditions and have been pro-rated for time served. There are no payments for loss of office for 
Jonathan Davis. 
Kevin Hostetler stepped down as an executive director during 2022. The 2021 LTIP award vested on 
24 March 2024, with details set out in last year’s report. 381,271 LTIP awards were originally granted 
on 24 March 2022, with 372,922 of such awards lapsing due to pro-rating for time served up to his 
date of leaving Rotork, being 17 April 2022. The 8,349 awards that remain will vest at 55.8% (4,659 
awards) on 24 March 2025. Additional shares, representing accrued dividends in the period, will be 
added upon vesting. Kevin will be required to retain the vested number of shares (net of tax and 
social security) for a further period of two years. 
Other than as set out above, no other remuneration payment or any payment for loss of office of 
the type specified in Section 430(2B) of the Companies Act 2006 has been made to Kevin Hostetler 
or Jonathan Davis. The relevant remuneration information will continue to be included in Rotork’s 
Directors’ Remuneration Report in subsequent years, as appropriate. No other payments were made 
to former directors or for loss of office during the year.
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Annual bonus for 2024 
Bonuses in 2024 were based on 60% on annual profit, 15% on cash generation, 10% on ESG 
measures (including total recordable incident rate (TRIR)), and 15% on personal strategic objectives. 
Details of performance achieved against the targets set are shown below. 
Performance 
required to trigger
bonus payment
Performance
 required at
 maximum
% payable
 at maximum
 performance
Performance
 outcome
% bonus 
awarded 
Annual profit target
£150m
£184m
60%
£178.4m
51.4%
Cash generation
85%
110%
15%
119%
15.0%
ESG measures:
 
 
 
 
 
environmental innovation,  
culture & engagement 
See below
See below
5%
See below
3.5%
Total recordable incident rate 
0.26
0.23
5%
0.22
5%
Total
 
 
85%
 
75%
ESG bonus measures comprise: environmental innovation in product and customer focus to reduce 
environmental impact (2%), employee engagement (2%) and culture (1%). The product and customer 
innovation performance was sufficient to deliver the full 2%. The employee engagement score of 
7.1 met the threshold target rate of 7.1, delivering 1% of bonus. The culture score of 42% diversity 
in candidates filling available roles at Rotork Management Board level and the tier below exceeded 
the threshold target range of 40%, delivering 0.5% of bonus. 
Personal strategic objectives, which accounted for 15% of the bonus opportunity, were set at the 
start of the year for Kiet Huynh and Jonathan Davis and upon joining the Company for Ben Peacock. 
The Remuneration Committee set specific and measurable targets covering a range of the Company’s 
strategic priorities and assigned each an individual weighting. Performance against each of the 
defined targets was assessed by the Remuneration Committee with input from the Chair and other 
non-executive directors. 
The objectives for all of the executive directors and the performance against them are summarised 
in the table below. 
Kiet Huynh
Performance summary
% payable 
at maximum
% bonus 
awarded
Business strategy and vision Various initiatives were undertaken to ensure 
that Rotork’s Growth+ strategy continued to 
deliver results and evolve (both organically 
and inorganically), whilst also ensuring 
alignment of the business strategy to the 
macro environment, global megatrends and 
key stakeholders. The Board were kept fully 
updated on all aspects of such continual 
strategic refinements and evaluations via 
regular presentations.
3.0%
3.0%
Growth+ strategy implementation, including:
12.0%
10.0%
Customer value
Delivered improved customer satisfaction 
through a range of commercial and 
operational improvements, evidenced by a 
range of metrics and initiatives.
Innovative products 
and services
Key new products that complement the end 
market growth requirements were successfully 
launched to market.
People initiatives and 
culture evolution
A range of people initiatives and steps 
forming part of Rotork’s cultural evolution 
were achieved, including work to define 
Rotork’s core cultural DNA by identifying the 
key behaviours which will drive success.
Deliver further efficiencies via 
the use of digital technology
Continued progress on the implementation 
plan to deliver the new ERP at various Rotork 
sites, thereby increasing efficiencies and 
decision making. Continued enhancement 
of the ERP subsidiary blueprint in line with 
implementation plan.
Total
15.0%
13.0%
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Annual bonus for 2024 continued
Ben Peacock
Performance summary
% payable 
at maximum
% bonus 
awarded
Finance strategy to 
support Growth+
A detailed strategic review of the finance 
function was undertaken to identify 
opportunities for improving automation and 
controls in support of the delivery of Growth+. 
3.0%
3.0%
Implement finance and technology initiatives, including:
12.0%
11.0%
Data Strategy
Various initiatives were completed as part of 
the development of a detailed data strategy 
in order to ensure that data was leveraged to 
support the Growth+ strategy. This included 
enhancements to the core data architecture.
Control environment 
Continual enhancements were made to 
Rotork’s existing control environment, to 
ensure that the Business Control Framework 
and related governance remained fully up to 
date, and remained embedded within the 
organisation globally. 
Financial forecasting 
and reporting
A review was undertaken, and outcomes 
implemented to improve the forecasting 
and budgeting process and associated 
management reporting. 
Deliver further efficiencies via 
the use of digital technology
Continued progress on the implementation 
plan to deliver the new ERP at various Rotork 
sites, thereby increasing efficiencies and 
decision making, whilst ensuring that controls 
are effectively implemented. Continued 
enhancement of the ERP subsidiary blueprint 
in line with implementation plan. The Board 
have been kept fully updated on the delivery 
programme and budget.
Total
15.0%
14.0%
Jonathan Davis
Performance summary
% payable 
at maximum
% bonus 
awarded
Handover to incoming CFO 
A comprehensive handover was completed 
with Ben Peacock to support a successful CFO 
transition process, which covered all aspects 
of the finance and investor relations functions 
(both strategic and operational) and 
introductions to key external advisers.
8.0%
8.0%
Implementation of certain discrete financial and strategic projects:
7.0%
5.0%
Continued derisking of the UK 
defined benefit pension scheme
Following Board approval, the UK defined 
benefit pension scheme was derisked via 
a bulk annuity purchase 
Inorganic growth proforma
Proforma templates to support the 
inorganic growth were developed to 
support the continued implementation of 
the Growth+ strategy and Rotork’s capital 
allocation framework.
Control environment
Oversight of the Business Control Framework 
reviews that were scheduled, alongside 
a feedback gathering exercise to ensure 
continued evolution of the framework based 
on lessons learned.
Total
15.0%
13.0%
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Annual bonus for 2024 continued
Having reviewed the performance of the business against these targets, including the personal 
objectives, set either at the start of the year or upon joining the Company during the year (in Ben 
Peacock’s case) the Committee decided that the level of payout, expressed in percentage of maximum 
opportunity, should be 131.85% for Kiet Huynh, 111.13% (on a pro-rata basis) for Ben Peacock and 
109.88% (on a pro-rata basis) for Jonathan Davis with no need for discretion to be applied. As a 
result, the 2024 bonus opportunity paid out for Kiet Huynh at 90%, for Ben Peacock at 75% and for 
Jonathan Davis at 75% of 2024 salary (pro-rated for time served during the year for Ben Peacock and 
Jonathan Davis), with 41.85% of salary for Kiet Huynh, 36.13% of salary for Ben Peacock and 34.88% 
of salary (as at his Retirement Date) for Jonathan Davis (pro-rated for time served in Ben Peacock’s 
and Jonathan Davis’ case) being deferred in shares under the Deferred Annual Bonus Plan respectively 
with the details shown below.
Deferred Annual Bonus Plan (DABP) awards (audited)
Any bonus earned above a threshold of 60% of the maximum is deferred into share awards under 
the Deferred Annual Bonus Plan, vesting on the third anniversary of grant. No further performance 
conditions apply; DABP awards are subject to continued employment only and dividend equivalents 
may be paid on the deferred shares on vesting. Of the 2024 bonus award, 41.85% of salary for 
Kiet Huynh, 36.13% of salary for Ben Peacock (pro-rated for time served) and 34.88% of salary 
(as at his Retirement Date) for Jonathan Davis (pro-rated for time served) will be deferred into shares 
in Rotork plc for three years under the Deferred Annual Bonus Plan and are not subject to any 
additional performance conditions. Of such amounts, Kiet Huynh will defer £279k, Ben Peacock 
will defer £125k and Jonathan Davis will defer £97k (of the total 2024 bonus amount awarded 
for the period during which Jonathan Davis was employed during the year). 
LTIP awards vesting based on performance to 31 December 2024 (audited)
The LTIP rewards performance against the principal measures of Rotork’s long-term financial success. 
Performance is measured over a three-year period using a combination of adjusted EPS, relative TSR 
compared to a peer group and economic profit growth (ROIC). 
The economic profit metric (ROIC) measures the post-tax profitability of the Group after a charge 
has been taken for the combined capital used (both debt and equity) within the business. The charge 
is calculated using the weighted average cost of capital based on average capital employed in the 
period. In determining capital employed, cumulative amortised goodwill and long-term pensions 
liabilities are adjusted for. In determining the economic profit, adjustments are made for restructuring 
costs and also, when material, for M&A activity and exchange rates movements. The target is set by 
using the latest long-term financial plan approved by the Board. It targets a rate of growth of the 
average economic profit over the three years of the plan over the three years preceding the plan period. 
The measure captures the extent to which the business has earned a return above the cost of capital. 
It has been shown in many other capital-intense businesses to drive improved decision making, 
particularly when evaluating large-scale investment decisions, and was introduced at Rotork in 2017. 
The LTIP awards granted on 24 March 2022 had a three-year performance period, which ran 
from 1 January 2022 to 31 December 2024 and such awards were subject to the following 
performance targets:
Measure
Weighting
Performance period
Threshold target
Stretch target 
(100% vesting)
Performance outcome
Adjusted earnings 
per share growth (i)
33%
01/01/22 
– 31/12/24
9% (25% vesting) 35% or more
Adjusted EPS grew 
by 41.2% over the 
period, exceeding 
the stretch target 
of 35% for a 
maximum payout. 
This resulted in 
100% vesting of 
this tranche
TSR relative to the 
constituents of the 
FTSE 350 Industrial 
Goods and 
Services Sector
33%
01/01/22 
– 31/12/24
Median ranking 
(25% vesting)
Upper quartile 
ranking 
and above
Rotork’s relative 
TSR ranking within 
its comparator 
group was 
insufficient for this 
tranche to vest. 
Economic profit 
growth (ROIC)
33%
01/01/22 
– 31/12/24
Three times 
the 2021 
economic profit 
(0% vesting)
81% growth 
on three times 
the 2021 
economic profit
Economic profit 
increased over the 
measurement 
period, exceeding 
the threshold level 
but not reaching 
the stretch target. 
This resulted in 
67.4% vesting 
of this tranche.
(i)	 For performance between threshold and stretch, awards vest on a pro-rata basis.
During the three-year performance period, adjusted EPS grew by 41.2%. Relative TSR performance 
in the period was insufficient for vesting. Economic profit growth (growth in profit ahead of the 
return demanded by the weighted average cost of capital) increased over the performance period 
by 48.2%. The Remuneration Committee, therefore, approved the vesting of 55.8% of the shares 
awarded under the 2022 cycle to executive directors as set out below. 
2022 LTIP award
Grant date
Number of shares
 under award
Number of 
shares vesting
Number of shares 
lapsing
Vesting/
lapse date
Kiet Huynh
24 March 2022
335,939
187,454
148,485
24 March 2025
Jonathan Davis (i)
24 March 2022
192,246
95,412
96,834
24 March 2025
(i)	 Of the total number of shares lapsing, 21,256 lapsed due to time served during the performance period up to Jonathan’s 
Retirement Date and 75,578 lapsed due to non-satisfaction of performance conditions attached to the award.
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Strategic report
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Financial statements
Directors’ Remuneration report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Share awards granted in 2024 (audited)
LTIP awards (audited)
The following LTIP awards were made to the executive directors on 21 March 2024. These grants 
were made at the levels permitted under the current Remuneration Policy. 
Share 
awards made 
during 2024 (i)
Basis on which 
awards made
Face value of 
award (£) (ii)
Percentage 
vesting
for minimum
 performance (iii)
End of 
performance 
period
Vesting date
Kiet Huynh
377,464
200% of 
salary
£1,232,797
15.0%
31 December 
2026
21 March 
2027
Ben Peacock
230,404
175% of 
salary
£752,500
15.0%
31 December 
2026
21 March 
2027
(i)	
Awards to both Kiet Huynh and Ben Peacock were made as nil-cost options. 
(ii)	
The share price used to determine the number of shares under the awards was 326.6p, being the average share price 
over the five market days immediately preceding the date of the award.
(iii)	 Vesting if the minimum performance on adjusted EPS, TSR, capital return (economic profit) and ESG conditions are 
achieved. The performance measures are:
	
a	 30% based on adjusted earnings per share – adjusted EPS growth must be at least 9% for 25% vesting, increasing on 
a straight-line basis to full vesting for EPS growth of 35% and above; 
	
b	 30% based on relative total shareholder return – measured relative to the constituents of the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods 
and Services Sector, with 25% vesting for median performance, increasing on a straight-line basis to full vesting for 
upper quartile performance and above;
	
c	 30% based on economic profit – measures the profitability of the Group after a charge for the overall level of capital 
(based on the total capital used and calculated using the weighted average cost of capital) is subtracted. It is measured 
on a cumulative basis, over the three-year performance period. No payout will be received for a negative economic 
profit. The threshold target (at which 0% vests) requires average economic profit over the three-year period to exceed 
that generated in 2023 and the maximum target has been set such that it will require double-digit growth in post-tax 
profits alongside improved balance sheet efficiencies. Details of the exact targets are considered by the Remuneration 
Committee to be commercially sensitive. However, full details of the targets and how economic profit has been 
calculated will be disclosed on vesting; and
	
d	 10% ESG measures – 10% based on an absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 emissions with targets at least as 
demanding as the path required to meet the published 2030 SBTi targets. 
Conditional share awards (audited) 
The following conditional share awards were granted to Ben Peacock on 11 April 2024. These grants 
were made at levels permitted within the current Remuneration Policy. As disclosed in the 2023 
Annual Report on Remuneration, the conditional share awards were granted to facilitate the 
recruitment of Ben Peacock and compensate Ben for share awards forfeited as a result of leaving 
his previous employer. The conditional share awards were granted subject to malus and clawback 
provisions, which were accepted by Ben in writing at grant, and continued employment (subject 
to market-standard good leaver provisions). The conditional share awards are not subject to any 
performance conditions (replicating those forfeited) but a two-year post-vesting holding period applies.
Share awards made
during 2024 (i)
Face value 
of award (£)
Vesting date
Ben Peacock
8,811
£28,745
11 April 2024
31,897
£104,061
11 April 2025
29,932
£97,650
18 April 2026
(i)	 The share price used to determine the number of shares under the awards was 326.24p, being the average share price over 
the five market days immediately preceding the date of the award. The first tranche vested on 11 April 2024, and the ordinary 
shares were immediately transferred to Ben Peacock.
SIP share awards (audited)
In common with all eligible employees, UK-based executive directors receive an entitlement to 
ordinary shares under the SIP. Under the SIP, an aggregate total of up to 4% of profits are distributed 
to employees each year in the form of ordinary shares. The distribution is calculated by reference to 
years of service and basic salary, capped at £3,600. Details of free share awards under the SIP made 
to executive directors in 2024 are set out below.
Free share awards made during the year
Face value
 of award (£)
Date of grant
Number
Basis on which award made
Kiet Huynh
8 April 2024
1,105
Non-performance based
£3,600
Jonathan Davis (i)
8 April 2024
1,105
Non-performance based
£3,600
(i)	 Jonathan Davis retired as a director of the Company with effect from 30 April 2024. Jonathan remained an employee 
of Rotork until 10 September 2024, after which shares were removed from the SIP Trust.
The executive directors are also eligible to elect to purchase monthly partnership shares under the 
SIP up to a maximum of £150 per month.
Annual Report on Remuneration continued
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
Summary of outstanding share awards held by executive directors (audited)
Awards held at 
31 December 2023
Granted 
in the year
Lapsed in 
the year
Awards exercised 
in the year
Awards held at 
31 December 2024
Performance period
Exercise 
price
Date of grant
Vesting date
End of holding period
Kiet Huynh
LTIP (i)
43,681
—
37,653
—
6,028
1 Jan 2021–31 Dec 2023
—
24 March 2021
24 March 2024
24 March 2026
LTIP (i), (iii)
335,939
—
—
—
335,939
1 Jan 2022–31 Dec 2024
—
24 March 2022
24 March 2025
24 March 2027
LTIP (i), (iv)
358,586
—
—
—
358,586
1 Jan 2023–31 Dec 2025
—
24 March 2023
24 March 2026
24 March 2028
LTIP (i), (iv)
—
377,464
—
—
377,464
1 Jan 2024–31 Dec 2026
—
21 March 2024
21 March 2027
21 March 2029
DABP (ii)
—
104,067
—
—
104,067
N/A
—
11 March 2024
11 March 2027
11 March 2029
SIP
991
—
 —
991
—
N/A
—
9 April 2021
9 April 2024
N/A
SIP
889
—
— 
—
889
N/A
—
6 April 2022
6 April 2025
N/A
SIP
1,151
—
—
—
1,151
N/A
—
6 April 2023
6 April 2026
N/A
SIP
—
1,105
—
—
1,105
N/A
—
8 April 2024
8 April 2027
N/A
SAYE
9,201
—
—
—
9,201
N/A
195p
7 October 2022
1 June 2026
N/A
Total
750,438
482,636
37,653
991
1,194,430
(i)	
Nil-cost options.
(ii)	
Conditional share awards.
(iii)	 Subject equally to adjusted EPS performance (9% to 35% growth), TSR performance relative to the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Sector (median to upper quartile) and capital return (economic profit) performance over the three-year 
performance period. 
(iv)	 Subject equally to adjusted EPS performance (9% to 35% growth), TSR performance relative to the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Sector (median to upper quartile), capital return (economic profit) and, in the case of the 2023 and 2024 LTIP 
awards, ESG performance over the three-year performance period. 
Awards held at 
31 December 2023
Granted 
in the year
Lapsed in 
the year
Awards exercised 
in the year
Awards held at 
31 December 2024
Performance period
Exercise 
price
Date of grant
Vesting date
End of holding period
Ben Peacock
LTIP (i), (iv)
—
230,404
—
—
230,404
1 Jan 2024–31 Dec 2026
—
21 March 2024
21 March 2027
21 March 2029
Conditional 
shares (ii), (iii)
—
8,811
—
8,811
—
N/A
—
11 April 2024
11 April 2024
11 April 2026
Conditional 
shares (ii), (iii)
—
31,897
—
—
31,897
N/A
—
11 April 2024
11 April 2025
11 April 2027
Conditional 
shares (ii), (iii)
—
29,932
—
—
29,932
N/A
—
11 April 2024
18 April 2026
18 April 2028
SAYE
—
12,394
—
—
12,394
N/A
254p
4 October 2024
1 December 2029
N/A
Total
—
313,438
—
8,811
304,627
 
(i)	
Nil-cost options.
(ii)	
Conditional share awards.
(iii)	 Not subject to performance conditions, but subject to continued employment condition. 
(iv)	 Subject equally to adjusted EPS performance (9% to 35% growth), TSR performance relative to the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Sector (median to upper quartile), capital return (economic profit) and, in the case of the 2024 LTIP awards, 
ESG performance over the three-year performance period. 
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Financial statements

Summary of outstanding share awards held by executive directors (audited) continued
Awards held at
31 December 2023
Granted 
in the year
Lapsed in 
the year
Awards exercised 
in the year
Awards held at 
30 April 2024
Performance period
Exercise 
price
Date of grant
Vesting date
End of holding period
Jonathan Davis 1 
LTIP (i)
14,219
—
—
—
14,219 
1 Jan 2019–31 Dec 2021
—
16 May 2019
16 May 2022
16 May 2024
LTIP (i)
169,899
— 
146,453
—
23,446
1 Jan 2021–31 Dec 2023
—
24 March 2021
24 March 2024
24 March 2026
LTIP (i), (iii)
192,246
—
—
—
192,246
1 Jan 2022–31 Dec 2024
—
24 March 2022
24 March 2025
24 March 2027
LTIP (i), (iv)
211,978
—
—
—
211,978
1 Jan 2023–31 Dec 2025
—
24 March 2023
24 March 2026
24 March 2028
DABP (ii) 
—
54,990
—
—
54,990
N/A
—
11 March 2024
11 March 2027
11 March 2029
DABP (ii)
8,544
—
—
—
8,544
N/A
—
8 March 2021
8 March 2024
N/A
SIP
991
—
—
991
—
N/A
—
9 April 2021
9 April 2024
N/A
SIP
1,091
—
—
—
1,091
 N/A
—
6 April 2022
6 April 2025
N/A
SIP
1,151
—
—
—
1,151
N/A
—
6 April 2023
6 April 2026
N/A
SIP
—
1,105
—
—
1,105
N/A
—
8 April 2024
8 April 2027
N/A
Total
600,119
56,095
146,453
991
508,770
1	
Holdings are as at 30 April 2024, being the date on which Jonathan Davis stepped down from the Board.
(i)	
Nil-cost options.
(ii)	
Conditional share awards.
(iii)	 Subject equally to adjusted EPS performance (9% to 35% growth), TSR performance relative to the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Sector (median to upper quartile) and capital return (economic profit) performance over the three-year 
performance period. The award was pro-rated for time, following Jonathan Davis’s Retirement Date.
(iv)	 Subject equally to adjusted EPS performance (9% to 35% growth), TSR performance relative to the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Sector (median to upper quartile), capital return (economic profit) and, in the case of the 2023 LTIP award, 
ESG performance over the three-year performance period. The award was pro-rated for time, following Jonathan Davis’s Retirement Date.
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Statement of directors’ shareholding and share interests (audited)
The table below shows total shareholdings of the current directors as at 31 December 2024.
Beneficially
 owned shares (i)
Unvested
DABP awards (ii)
SIP (iii)
% of salary
 shareholding
 achieved(iv)
Unvested 
LTIP awards subject to
 performance targets
Current executive directors:
Kiet Huynh
39,195
104,067
3,145
47%
1,071,989
Ben Peacock 1 
8,811
—
—
7%
292,233(v)
Former executive directors: 
Jonathan Davis 2
545,119
54,990
3,347
463%
404,224
Current Chair and non-executive directors:
Dorothy Thompson
20,000
—
—
N/A
—
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
—
—
—
N/A
—
Andrew Heath
25,000
—
—
N/A
—
Karin Meurk-Harvey
2,000
—
—
N/A
—
Vanessa Simms
—
—
—
N/A
—
Janice Stipp
5,000
—
—
N/A
—
Former non-executive directors:
Ann Christin Andersen 2
2,000
—
—
N/A
—
Tim Cobbold 2
—
—
—
N/A
—
1	
Appointed 11 March 2024.
2	
Jonathan Davis and Ann Christin Andersen stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2024 and Tim Cobbold stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024. Their shareholdings are based on the shares held at the date of ceasing to be a director 
of the Company. 
(i)	
Includes shares held by connected persons, SIP partnership shares, SIP free shares released from the three-year trust period and vested LTIP awards which are subject to the two-year holding period. For Ben Peacock only this figure includes the conditional 
share awards that vested during the year and remain subject to a two-year post-vesting holding period. 
(ii)	
DAPB awards attract an entitlement to accrued dividends during the holding period but are only available upon release. The satisfaction of the entitlement can be in shares or cash as determined by the Remuneration Committee at the time of the 
release confirmation. Unvested DABP awards are included within the % of salary shareholding achieved on a net of tax and NICs basis.
(iii)	 SIP free share awards that remain held in the SIP Trust.
(iv)	 The share price used to determine the percentage of the shareholding of salary achieved is 325.9p, being the 12-month average share price as at 31 December 2024. The shareholding guideline for the executive directors is 350% of salary for the Chief 
Executive Officer and 300% of salary for the Chief Financial Officer to be achieved within five years. A post-cessation holding requirement of 200% of salary was introduced under the Policy and is applicable only to share-based awards granted after the 
approval of the Policy on 24 April 2020. In order to ensure adherence to the post-cessation holding requirements, executive directors will, as a condition of receiving any and each share-based award, formally accept the post-cessation requirements in 
writing. The post-cessation shareholding requirement for Jonathan Davis will apply for two years from his Retirement Date and has been calculated on his salary at that date in accordance with the Policy. The percentage figure is not audited information. 
The audited information relates to the disclosure of the shareholding guidelines and whether they have been met.
(v)	
Figure includes the second and third tranches of the conditional share awards granted to Ben Peacock during 2024 as part of his on boarding arrangements, such awards are due to vest in April 2025 and April 2026 respectively. The awards are not subject 
to any corporate performance conditions, but a two-year post vesting holding period applies.
There has been no change in the directors’ interests in the ordinary share capital of the Company between 31 December 2024 and 10 March 2025.
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
TSR performance graph
This graph shows the value, by 31 December 2024, of £100 invested in Rotork plc on 31 December 2014, 
compared with the value of £100 invested in the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Index on 
the same date. This index has been chosen as a comparator as it represents companies with similar 
business operations to the Company, and is an index of which Rotork is a constituent.
£50
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
£100
£150
£200
£250
 
  Rotork plc 
  FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services Index
Historical Chief Executive Officer remuneration table
Year
Chief Executive
Chief Executive single 
figure remuneration
 (£000)
Annual cash bonus 
as a percentage of 
maximum opportunity
LTIP vesting rate 
as a percentage of
 maximum opportunity
2024
Kiet Huynh
2,242
87.9%
55.8%
2023
Kiet Huynh
1,584
97.5%
N/A
2022
Kevin Hostetler/Kiet Huynh (i)
1,114
46.2%
0%
2021
Kevin Hostetler
1,380
48.7%
9.4%
2020
Kevin Hostetler
2,203
69.7%
84.4%
2019
Kevin Hostetler
1,422
82.0%
N/A
2018
Kevin Hostetler (ii)
1,193
90.9%
N/A
2018
Martin Lamb (iii)
353
N/A
N/A
2017
Martin Lamb (iii)
282
N/A
N/A
2017
Peter France (iv)
681
72.0%
0%
2016
Peter France
835
45.5%
0%
2015
Peter France
696
23.4%
0%
2014
Peter France
1,092
66.0%
37.0%
(i)	
Kiet Huynh was appointed to the role of Chief Executive Officer on 10 January 2022. The CEO single figure remuneration 
for 2022 includes both the remuneration for Kevin Hostetler from 1 to 10 January 2022 of £27,000 and for Kiet Huynh from 
10 January to 31 December 2022 of £1,087,000. The annual cash bonus figure is an average of the bonus for Kiet Huynh 
of 46.8% and for Kevin Hostetler of 45.6%.
(ii)	
Kevin Hostetler was appointed to the role of Chief Executive Officer on 12 March 2018 and stood down from the Board 
on 10 January 2022.
(iii)	 Martin Lamb held the role of Executive Chairman from 28 July 2017 to 12 March 2018 and received an additional fixed 
remuneration of £55,000 per month on top of his annual Chairman’s fee during this period. 
(iv)	 Peter France resigned as Chief Executive Officer and stood down from the Board on 27 July 2017.
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Financial statements

Percentage change in directors’ remuneration versus employee pay 
The table below shows the year-on-year percentage change in remuneration (based on salary/fee, benefits and bonus) between 2024 and 2020 of each director compared with the percentage change for 
the average UK employee. 
Percentage change FY24 to FY23
Percentage change FY23 to FY22
Percentage change FY22 to FY21
Percentage change FY21 to FY20
Role
Salary/fee (i)
Benefits
Bonus
Salary/fee
Benefits
Bonus
Salary/fee
Benefits
Bonus
Salary/fee
Benefits
Bonus
Current executive directors:
Kiet Huynh
Chief Executive Officer
11.1
0.3
0.2
11.5
1.5
132.0
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Ben Peacock 1
Chief Financial Officer 
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Former executive director:
Jonathan Davis 2
Executive director
-65.9
-15.8
-69.2
4.6
-4.9
128.9
3.1
1.8
-6.2
1.9
N/A
-10.1
Current Chair and non-executive directors:
Dorothy Thompson 3
Chair
38.7
N/A
N/A
3,817
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Svein Richard Brandtzæg 4 
Non-executive director
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Karin Meurk-Harvey
Non-executive director
4.4
N/A
N/A
4.5
N/A
N/A
260
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Andrew Heath 5
Non-executive director
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Vanessa Simms 6
Non-executive director
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Janice Stipp
Non-executive director
6.8
N/A
N/A
4.5
N/A
N/A
1.9
N/A
N/A
1.9
N/A
N/A
Former non-executive directors:
Ann Christin Andersen 7
Non-executive director
-65.7
N/A
N/A
4.5
N/A
N/A
3.1
N/A
N/A
1.9
N/A
N/A
Tim Cobbold 8
Non-executive director
21.9
N/A
N/A
4.5
N/A
N/A
3.1
N/A
N/A
1.9
N/A
N/A
All permanent employees	
4.1
0.7
-3.2
8.3
14.1
116.4
5.7
13.6
49.9
4
2.6
-16.6
1	
Ben Peacock joined the Board on 11 March 2024.
2	
Jonathan Davis stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2024. 
3	
Dorothy Thompson originally joined the Board as non-executive director and Chair Designate in December 2022. The pro-rata fee increase during the FY23 was 229%; this included the Chair fee increase applied on 1 April 2023 of 5%.
4	
Svein Richard Brandtzæg joined the Board on 20 November 2024.
5	
Andrew Heath joined the Board on 1 April 2024.
6	
Vanessa Simms joined the Board on 21 June 2024. 
7	
Ann Christin Andersen stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2024. 
8	
Tim Cobbold stepped down from the Board on 31 December 2024. 
(i)	 Pro-rata fee increases, where applicable, were effective from 1 April 2024.
Relative importance of spend on pay
The following table shows actual expenditure of the Group and change in spend between current and prior financial periods on remuneration paid to all employees against distributions to shareholders.
2024
2023
Percentage 
change
Employee remuneration (£000)
164,323
152,679
7.6%
Dividends (£000)
65,517
61,940
5.8%
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Annual Report on Remuneration continued
CEO pay ratio disclosure
The table below sets out Rotork’s CEO pay ratio for the 2018–2024 financial years.
Year
Method
25th percentile 
pay ratio
Median 
pay ratio
75th percentile 
pay ratio
2024
Option B
64:1
51:1
31:1
2023
Option B
43:1
34:1
25:1
2022
Option B
36:1
33:1
20:1
2021
Option B
43:1
38:1
28:1
2020
Option B
45:1
37:1
28:1
2019
Option B
48:1
43:1
27:1
2018
Option B
49:1
45:1
33:1
Option B has been used for the calculation of the pay ratio. Under this method, the latest gender pay 
gap data has been used to identify on an indicative basis three UK employees at 25th, median and 
75th percentile. This methodology has been chosen as the data is readily available and avoids the 
challenge in collecting and verifying accurately the variable pay elements for all UK employees across 
many subsidiaries. The figure for 2022 is lower than previous periods due to the starting salary of the 
incumbent CEO who was appointed in January 2022. In line with the base salary arrangements for 
the CEO (disclosed above and in previous Remuneration Reports) the CEO’s base salary level has risen 
to the level of his immediate predecessor’s 2021 salary.
To provide further context, the table below shows the CEO and the employee percentile pay used to 
determine the 2024 pay ratios. The main changes are due to the variable pay outturns in the last few years.
Year
CEO
£000
25th percentile
 £000
Median 
£000
75th percentile
 £000
Total salary (i)
666
28
36
57
Total remuneration (single figure) (i)
2,242
35
44
73
(i)	 Full time equivalent.
Executive directors’ service contracts and non-executive directors’ terms 
of engagement
A summary of the operation of the executive directors’ service contracts and policy on payments 
for loss of office is set out within the overview of the Remuneration Policy section on page 142. 
The Chair and non-executive directors do not have service contracts; they serve under letters 
of appointment and are subject to annual re-election by shareholders at the AGM. The term of 
appointment for non-executive directors and the Chair is three years and their appointments are 
subject to termination on three months’ notice (up to 12 months for the Chair). In the event of 
the termination of their position, they are entitled to reimbursement of any outstanding fees and 
expenses due. The dates of appointment and date of service contract (in the case of executive 
directors) or date of letter of appointment (in the case of non-executive directors) for those directors 
seeking election or re-election at the 2025 AGM are set out below. The service contracts and letters 
of appointment may be viewed at the Company’s registered office. 
Executive directors’ service contracts
Name
Date of appointment to Board
Date of service contract
Notice period (rolling)
Kiet Huynh
10 January 2022
8 January 2022
12 months by either party 
Ben Peacock
11 March 2024
11 September 2023
12 months by either party
Non-executive directors’ terms of engagement
Name
Date of appointment to the Board
Date of most recent letter of appointment
Dorothy Thompson (Chair)
1 December 2022
30 November 2022
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
20 November 2024
19 November 2024
Andrew Heath
1 April 2024
26 February 2024
Karin Meurk-Harvey
13 September 2021
3 December 2024
Vanessa Simms
21 June 2024
26 February 2024
Janice Stipp
1 December 2020
3 December 2024
Statement of voting at general meeting
The Remuneration Committee is committed to ongoing shareholder dialogue and takes an active 
interest in voting outcomes. Where there are substantial votes against resolutions in relation to 
directors’ remuneration, the Company seeks to understand the reasons for any such vote and will 
report any actions in response to it. The following table sets out the binding vote at the AGM held 
on 28 April 2023 in respect of the current Remuneration Policy and the advisory vote at the AGM 
held on 30 April 2024 in respect of the Annual Report on Remuneration for the year ended 
31 December 2023. 
Year
Resolution
Votes ‘for’
% for
Votes 
‘against’
% against
Votes 
‘withheld’
%
2023
To approve the 
Remuneration Policy
683,772,096
98.04
13,640,012
1.96
410,841
—
2024
To approve the Annual 
Report on Remuneration 
678,625,474
98.73
8,729,791
1.27
182,080
—
Advisers to the Remuneration Committee
Korn Ferry has acted as adviser to the Committee since July 2020. Korn Ferry is a member of the 
Remuneration Consultants Group and a signatory to its Code of Conduct. The Committee keeps the 
independence of the advice provided under review and remains satisfied that Korn Ferry is sufficiently 
independent to act as remuneration adviser to the Remuneration Committee. Korn Ferry provides 
additional advice to the Company. 
In 2024, the Company paid £40,500 (2023: £122,400) to Korn Ferry for services to the Remuneration 
Committee. Figures exclude VAT and disbursements.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

How we will operate the Policy in 2025 
The Remuneration Committee notes that the 2024 UK Corporate Governance Code applies to the Company with effect from 1 January 2025.
Salary
Kiet Huynh will receive a salary increase of 3.9%, in line with the average workforce increase in the UK (excluding promotions), taking his annual salary to £709,585, effective from 
1 April 2025
Ben Peacock will receive a salary increase of 6%, taking his annual salary to £455,800, effective from 1 April 2025, noting that a benchmarking exercise was undertaken to ensure that 
Ben’s salary does not fall too far below the mid-market level. Following this increase, Ben’s salary will be just below the lower quartile salary level for CFOs of companies that have a 
similar market capitalisation to Rotork. 
Benefits
Benefits comprise a car allowance, personal accident and private medical insurance and life assurance. Ben Peacock shall also be able to receive contributions towards relocation costs 
related to his onboarding, in line with the Policy.
Pension
The pension allowance for the executive directors is aligned to the contribution available to the majority of the UK workforce. As at the date of this report, this is 10.24%. This rate will 
increase to 10.35% for the directors and the wider UK workforce from 1 April 2025 in line with the changes introduced to increase UK employer NI contribution levels.
Annual bonus
In line with the current Remuneration Policy, the maximum opportunity for Kiet Huynh will be 150% of salary and the maximum opportunity for Ben Peacock will be 125% of salary. 
Any bonus earned above 60% of the maximum opportunity will be deferred in shares for three years. Bonuses will be based on:
•	 Adjusted operating profit performance (60% of opportunity) – the plan is based on the 2025 Budget approved by the Board and the challenging nature of the targets and stretch 
elements will be maintained.
•	 Cash generation (15% opportunity) – the target to achieve maximum outturn will remain at 110%, reflecting the value of a sustained focus on cash generation.
•	 ESG (10% of opportunity) – measures will be aligned to the three pillars of the ESG strategy. Half of the opportunity will be based on a TRIR health and safety measure with a 
threshold set at 0.24 and a maximum at 0.20. The remaining 5% will be split across quantitative targets set to cover culture and employee engagement scores and qualitative targets 
focusing on environmental innovation, particularly in relation to products and the positive impacts of customer engagement.
•	 Strategic personal objectives (15% of opportunity) – these will be set with a focus on the continued strategic development of the business with a focus on continuing delivery of the 
Growth+ programme.
The specific targets relating to the bonus have not been disclosed as they are considered by the Remuneration Committee to be commercially sensitive but full details will be given on a 
retrospective basis in next year’s report. The executive directors will be invited to participate and must agree in writing to the conditions pertaining to the Annual Bonus Plan, including 
those relating to the post-cessation of employment shareholding arrangements that will apply to any bonus deferred in shares. 
LTIP
The LTIP maximum award levels for 2025 will be 200% of salary for Kiet Huynh and 175% of salary for Ben Peacock. The awards will be subject to the following performance conditions: 
•	 30% will be based on adjusted EPS. Adjusted EPS growth must be at least 9% for 25% vesting, increasing on a straight-line basis to full vesting for adjusted EPS growth of 35% and 
above. The targets will be based on adjusted EPS (i.e. excluding the impact of any material restructuring costs). However, the Committee will use its discretion to increase the targets 
as appropriate, to take into account the Board’s expected return on any restructuring investment during the period.
•	 30% will be based on relative TSR performance with 25% vesting at median, increasing to full vesting for upper quartile performance or above. The comparator group shall remain 
the median to upper quartile of the FTSE 350 Industrial Goods and Services sector constituents.
•	 30% will be based on economic profit. No payout will be received for a negative economic profit. The threshold target (0% vesting) will require the cumulative economic profit over 
the three-year period to exceed that generated in the three year period to 2024 and the maximum target has been set such that it will require double-digit growth in post-tax profits, 
alongside improved balance sheet efficiencies. Similar to adjusted EPS targets, these targets may be adjusted upwards to take into account the Board’s expected return on any 
restructuring investment during the period. Details of the exact targets are considered by the Remuneration Committee to be commercially sensitive at the current time. However, 
full details of the targets and how economic profit has been calculated will be disclosed on vesting.
•	 10% will be based on an absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 emissions with targets at least as demanding as the path required to meet the published 2030 SBTi target.
The awards will be granted following the publication of the 2024 results and will be made subject to executive directors agreeing in writing to all the conditions under which the awards 
are made, including the post-cessation of employment shareholding arrangements that will apply to these awards. The executive directors will be required to retain any shares vesting 
under the awards (net of tax) until the fifth anniversary of grant.
Annual Report on Remuneration continued
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Xxxxx
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
Directors’ Remuneration report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Shareholding 
guidelines
The executive directors are required to build and maintain a shareholding equivalent to their total variable pay opportunity (being 350% and 300% for the Chief Executive Officer and 
Chief Financial Officer respectively) to be achieved within five years.
A requirement to hold shares for a period of two years post-cessation will apply, as described in the Share Ownership Policy, and is applicable only to share-based awards made after the 
Share Ownership Policy was approved on 24 April 2020. In order to ensure adherence to the post-cessation holding requirements, executive directors will, as a condition of receiving any 
and each share-based award, formally accept the post-cessation requirements in writing.
Non-executive 
director fees
An increase to the Chair’s fee, the base Board fees and fees for additional Board responsibilities have been approved, noting that a benchmarking exercise has been undertaken and that 
the increase for the wider workforce in the UK (excluding promotions) was 3.9%.
Chair: A fee increase of 18%, taking the annual fee to £320,000, effective from 1 April 2025.1
Base Board fee: A fee increase of 3.9%, taking the annual fee to £67,300, effective from 1 April 2025. 
An increase to the supplementary fees payable to those directors with additional responsibilities, as set out below:
Additional fee for chairing the Audit Committee: A fee increase of 3.9%, taking the annual fee to £14,500, effective from 1 April 2025.
Additional fee for chairing the Remuneration Committee: A fee increase of 3.9%, taking the annual fee to £14,500, effective from 1 April 2025.
Additional fee for the role of Senior Independent Non-executive Director: A fee increase of 13.3%, taking the annual fee to £12,000, effective from 1 April 2025.2
Additional fee for chairing the Safety and Sustainability Committee: A fee increase of 3.9%, taking the annual fee to £10,400, effective from 1 April 2025. 
Additional fee for undertaking the role of Non-executive Director for Workforce Engagement: A fee increase of 3.9%, taking the annual fee to £10,400, effective from 1 April 2025.
1	
The increase will bring the Chair’s fee to the mid-market level against UK listed companies with a similar market capitalisation to Rotork, but would still be below that of the mid-market level of companies within the relevant UK sector. 
2	
The increase will bring the Senior Independent Non-executive Director’s fee closer to the medians of companies within the relevant UK sector and UK listed companies with a similar market capitalisation.
On behalf of the Board
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
Chair of the Remuneration Committee
10 March 2025
Annual Report on Remuneration continued
How we will operate the Policy in 2025 continued
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Directors’ Remuneration report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Directors’ report
The directors present their report which 
incorporates the management report required 
under the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency 
Rules (DTRs) for listed companies and the audited 
accounts for the year ended 31 December 2024 
as set out on pages 173 to 210. In compiling this 
report, the directors have consulted with 
the management of the Group.
Information required in the report 
of the directors set out in the 
Strategic Report
Information relating to the likely future 
developments of the Company and its 
subsidiaries and information relating to 
the research and development activities of 
the Company and its subsidiaries, together 
with a description of the principal risks and 
uncertainties that they face, are set out in 
the Strategic Report on pages 70 to 77 and 
are incorporated into this Directors’ Report 
by reference.
Corporate governance statement 
and TCFD disclosures 
The corporate governance statement, required 
under Rule 7 of the DTRs, explaining how Rotork 
has applied and complied with the 2018 UK 
Corporate Governance Code (the 2018 Code) is 
set out on page 96 and is incorporated into this 
Directors’ Report by reference. A description of 
the composition and operation of the Board 
and its Committees, including the requisite 
disclosures in relation to diversity, is set out on 
pages 97 to 99 and is incorporated into this 
Directors’ Report by reference. Full details of 
the 2018 Code can be found on the Financial 
Reporting Council’s website at www.frc.org.uk/
library/standards-codes-policy/corporate-
governance/uk-corporate-governance-code/.
Rotork’s statement of compliance in implementing 
the recommendations of the Task Force on 
Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), 
required to be made under UK Listing Rule 
6.6.6R(8), is set out on page 79.
Additional disclosures
The Strategic Report can be found on pages 1 to 
89, and encompasses our Sustainability Report 
(which is set out on pages 34 to 66). A complete 
list of the Group’s subsidiaries has been included 
on pages 208 to 210 to comply with Section 409 
of the Companies Act 2006 (the Act). Other 
information that is relevant to this report, and is 
incorporated by reference, including information 
required in accordance with the Act and UK 
Listing Rule 6.6.1R, can be located as follows:
UK Listing Rule 
statement
Detail
Page reference
6.6.1R (3)
Details of long-term 
incentive schemes
Note 27 to 
the financial 
statements and 
the Directors’ 
Remuneration 
Report on 
pages 131 
to 158
6.6.1R (11)
Shareholder waivers 
of dividends
Note 18 to 
the financial 
statements
6.6.1R (12) 
Shareholder waivers 
of future dividends
Note 18 to 
the financial 
statements
6.6.1R (1-2), 
(4-10) and (13)
Not applicable
N/A
Principal activity 
The Group manufactures intelligent flow control 
equipment and instrumentation for oil and gas, 
water and wastewater, power, chemical, process 
and industrial applications. It operates globally 
serving customers in 170 countries through a 
network of offices and manufacturing facilities. 
The Group employs circa 3,500 employees 
worldwide and is headquartered in Bath, UK.
Company status 
Rotork plc is incorporated as a public limited 
company and is registered in England and Wales 
with the registered number 00578327. Its 
registered office is Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, 
Bath, United Kingdom, BA1 3JQ. Rotork plc’s 
ordinary shares are listed in the commercial 
companies (equity shares) category on the 
London Stock Exchange (LON:ROR) and Rotork 
plc is a constituent member of the FTSE 250 
Index. Rotork plc’s legal entity identifier is: 
213800AH5RZIHGWRJ718. The Company’s 
share registrars are Equiniti Limited, which are 
located at Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, 
West Sussex, BN99 6DA.
Results and dividends 
The results for the year ended 31 December 2024 
are set out in the financial statements on pages 
173 to 177. The Board has recommended the 
following dividends:
Interim dividend paid 
on 23 September 2024:
2.75p per ordinary share 
(2023: 2.55p)
Proposed final 
dividend to be paid 
on 3 June 2025:
5.00p per ordinary share 
(2023: 4.65p)
Total dividend 
for FY24: 
7.75p per ordinary share 
(2023: 7.20p)
Subject to shareholder approval, the 2024 final 
dividend will be paid on 3 June 2025, to ordinary 
shareholders whose names appear on the 
register at the close of business on 25 April 2025. 
The last date to elect for the Dividend Reinvestment 
Plan (DRIP) is 12 May 2025. The Rotork DRIP is 
provided by Equiniti Financial Services Limited. 
The DRIP enables the Company’s shareholders 
to elect to have their cash dividend payments 
used to purchase the Company’s shares. 
More information can be found at 
www.shareview.co.uk/info/drip. 
Directors
The directors of the Company who held office 
during the year and up to the date of signing 
the financial statements were as follows:
Chair:
Dorothy Thompson, CBE
Executive 
directors:
Kiet Huynh
Ben Peacock
Independent 
non-executive 
directors: 
Andrew Heath 
(Senior Independent 
Non‑executive Director)
Svein Richard Brandtzæg
Karin Meurk-Harvey
Vanessa Simms
Janice Stipp
The biographies and other details of each of 
the current directors are set out on pages 94 
and 95. 
Former directors who held office on the Board 
during the course of 2024 included: Jonathan 
Davis and Ann Christin Andersen (who both 
stepped down from the Board on 30 April 2024) 
and Tim Cobbold (who stepped down on 
31 December 2024).
Details of the interests in the Company’s shares 
held by all directors who held office during the 
year are set out in the Directors’ Remuneration 
Report, which is incorporated by reference to 
this report and can be found on page 153. 
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Directors’ report
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Directors’ indemnification and insurance
The Company’s Articles of Association provide 
for the directors and officers of the Company 
to be appropriately indemnified, subject to the 
provisions of the Act. The Company has granted 
indemnities to each director and the Group 
General Counsel & Company Secretary in respect 
of any liabilities incurred in relation to acts or 
omissions arising in the ordinary course of their 
duties, but only to the extent permitted by law. 
The Company also purchases and maintains 
insurance for the directors and officers of the 
Company in respect of potential legal action 
instigated against its directors, to the full extent 
as permitted by Section 233 of the Act.
Powers of the directors
As set out in the Company’s Articles of 
Association, the business of the Company is 
managed by the Board which may exercise all 
the powers of the Company. The powers of the 
directors are also determined by prevailing UK 
legislation and any specific authorities that the 
Company’s shareholders may approve from 
time to time. 
Appointment and removal of directors
The Board may appoint a director, either to fill a 
vacancy or as an additional director. Any director 
appointed by the Board must retire at the next 
AGM of the Company and put themself forward 
for re-appointment by the shareholders. In 
accordance with the recommendations of the 
Code, each current member of the Board will 
retire from office and will submit themself for 
election or re-election at the 2025 Annual 
General Meeting.
In addition to any power of removal conferred 
by the Companies Act 2006, the Company may 
by ordinary resolution remove any director 
before the expiration of their period of office 
and may, subject to the Articles of Association, 
by ordinary resolution appoint another person 
who is willing to act as a director in their place.
Committed to the highest standards 
of ethical behaviour
High ethical standards are fundamental to 
the way in which we do business. Respecting 
internationally-proclaimed human rights, 
promoting an open and honest culture, having 
a zero-tolerance approach to bribery and 
corruption worldwide, and selecting channel 
partners and suppliers with sound reputations 
in the marketplace are important principles 
that the Group adheres to.
Code of Conduct
A refreshed Code of Conduct was launched in 
2024, which sets out the standards of behaviour 
that Rotork expects from anyone acting on 
Rotork’s behalf. This is supplemented by a 
range of additional policies that sit beneath 
the Code of Conduct, covering Anti-Bribery 
and Corruption, Speak Up, Confidentiality, 
Conflicts of Interest, Fair Competition, Gifts 
and Hospitality, Data Protection, Modern Slavery 
and Trade Sanctions. Training is provided to 
support employees’ understanding of the 
Code of Conduct and these policies. 
Our Code of Conduct is published on our 
corporate website at www.rotork.com/en/
sustainability/esg-reports-and-policies/rotork-
code-of-conduct.
Our suppliers must adhere to our 
Supplier Code of Conduct, which is also 
published on our corporate website at  
www.rotork.com/en/terms-and-conditions/
suppliers/supplier-code-of-conduct.
Whistleblowing
Rotork encourages the reporting of any 
suspected wrongdoing. Our Speak Up Policy 
provides our employees and third parties (such 
as our suppliers) with various ways to alert 
management and directors to any concerns. 
This includes an independent Speak Up helpline, 
which is designed to assist in facilitating the 
reporting of any concerns confidentially, and 
anonymously if preferred. The Company has a 
strict non-retaliation policy in place to protect 
those raising concerns. 
All Speak Ups are investigated thoroughly, 
however communicated. The Board of directors 
receives updates on the nature and number of 
Speak Up concerns that the Company may receive. 
Our Speak Up Policy is published on our corporate 
website at www.rotork.com/en/sustainability/
esg-reports-and-policies/speak-up-policy. Details 
of how to use the Company’s Speak Up hotline 
can be found in the Speak Up Policy or Code 
of Conduct. 
Anti-bribery and corruption
Rotork has a zero-tolerance policy to bribery and 
corruption worldwide, irrespective of country or 
business culture. Both our Code of Conduct and 
Anti-Bribery and Corruption Policy make it clear 
that our employees will never offer, pay or solicit 
bribes in any form. Our Group Gifts and Hospitality 
Policy sets out our key principles regarding the 
giving and receiving of gifts and hospitality and 
the process that our employees are required to 
follow should they intend to offer or accept them.
We only engage channel partners and suppliers 
which pass our selection process and which we 
are satisfied will conduct business legally and 
ethically. We monitor these relationships on 
an ongoing basis and take appropriate action 
against any supplier that fails to adhere to the 
Supplier Code of Conduct, or channel partner 
whose behaviour is found not to align with our 
Code of Conduct.
Modern Slavery Act
In March 2025, the Board approved an updated 
Modern Slavery Act Statement which can be 
found on our corporate website at www.rotork.
com/en/investors/modern-slavery-statement. 
The updated statement was considered to reflect 
Rotork’s approach to identifying, monitoring and 
eradicating human slavery and trafficking in its 
business and supply chain, together with the 
continual improvements to be made during the 
coming year. 
Charitable donations
Rotork supports its chosen charities, Pump Aid 
and Renewable World. Additionally, we make 
various local donations to charitable causes 
that are relevant to the communities in which 
Rotork’s operating sites are based. Donations are 
also directed to the Rotork Benevolent Support 
Fund, a charity that provides short-term financial 
support to employees, former employees and 
their families facing financial hardship. Further 
details are provided on pages 62 to 63.
Political donations or political 
expenditure incurred
No political donations were made, or political 
expenditure incurred, during the year. The Group 
has a policy of not making political donations 
in any part of the world and this will continue. 
However, it is possible that certain routine 
activities undertaken by the Company and its 
subsidiaries might unintentionally fall within the 
wide definition of matters constituting political 
donations and expenditure in the Act. Accordingly, 
at the 2025 AGM, the Company is seeking a 
renewal of authority to ensure that it does not 
inadvertently commit any breaches of the Act 
through the undertaking of routine activities 
that would not normally be considered to 
comprise political donations or expenditure. 
Further details of the proposed ordinary 
resolution are provided within the 2025 
AGM Notice. 
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Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Use of financial instruments
An explanation of the Group policies on the 
use of financial instruments and financial 
risk management objectives is contained 
in note 28 to the financial statements. 
Existence of branches outside the UK
The Company has no branches outside of 
the UK.
Share capital 
Details of the Company’s share capital including 
the rights and obligations attached to each class 
of shares and the ordinary shares issued during 
2024 are summarised in note 18 of the financial 
statements. Ordinary shares of 0.5p each 
represent over 99.9% of the Company’s total 
share capital and £1 non-redeemable preference 
shares represent less than 0.1% of the 
Company’s total share capital.
There are no securities of the Company 
carrying special rights with regard to the 
control of the Company.
At the Company’s last AGM held on 30 April 2024, 
the shareholders authorised the Company to 
make market purchases of ordinary shares 
limited to just under approximately 10% of its 
issued ordinary share capital at that time and 
of certain issued preference shares, and to 
allot shares within certain limits approved by 
shareholders. These authorities will expire at the 
2025 AGM and appropriate renewals are being 
sought from shareholders at the 2025 AGM. 
Further details of the resolutions proposed are 
provided within the 2025 AGM Notice. 
Consistent with the Group’s capital allocation 
policy the Company announced a share buyback 
programme on 5 March 2024, to return £50m 
(excluding stamp duty and expenses) of cash to 
shareholders. In accordance with the authorities 
provided by shareholders at the 2023 and 2024 
AGMs respectively, the Company repurchased 
15,141,358 ordinary shares with a nominal value 
of 0.5p each for a total consideration of 
£49,999,981.08 during the 2024 financial year. 
All of the shares purchased in the share buyback 
programme were subsequently cancelled. The 
Company does not hold any shares in treasury. 
The Company entered into irrevocable, non-
discretionary arrangements with a broker in 
order to effect 2024 share buyback programme. 
The Company intends to undertake a further 
£50m share buyback programme during 2025.
JTC Employer Solutions Limited is a shareholder 
which acts as the trustee of Rotork’s Employee 
Benefit Trust (EBT). It is used to purchase 
Company shares in the market from time to time 
and hold them for the benefit of employees, 
including satisfying outstanding awards under 
the Company’s various employee share plans. 
The EBT purchased a total of 3,129,279 shares 
during the year for an aggregate consideration 
of £10,362,788 (including dealing costs) and 
released 973,309 shares to satisfy share plan 
awards. As at 31 December 2024, the EBT held 
3,721,518 Rotork plc ordinary shares (0.44%) 
of the issued share capital in trust. A dividend 
waiver remains in place from the trustee in 
respect of the dividends payable by the Company 
on the shares held in the EBT. Further details can 
be found in note 18 to the financial statements. 
The Company’s Articles of Association contain 
customary restrictions on the transfer of shares 
as applicable only in certain limited 
circumstances (e.g. in relation to transfers to a 
minor). Save for those provisions, there are no 
restrictions on the transfer of ordinary shares in 
the capital of the Company other than certain 
restrictions which may be required from time to 
time by law, for example, insider trading law. In 
accordance with the Company’s Securities 
Dealing Code, directors and certain employees 
are required to seek the prior approval of the 
Company in order to deal in its shares.
The Company is not aware of any agreements 
between shareholders that may result in 
restrictions on the transfer of securities and/or 
voting rights. The Company’s Articles of 
Association contain limited restrictions on 
the exercise of voting rights (e.g. in relation 
to disenfranchised shares following the issue 
of a notice to shareholders under Section 793 
of the Companies Act 2006).
The Company’s share schemes each contain 
provisions providing voting rights to the 
scheme trustee.
Amendments to the Company’s 
Articles of Association
The Company’s Articles of Association may only 
be amended by special resolution at a general 
meeting of the shareholders and were last 
updated and approved by shareholders at the 
AGM held on 30 April 2021.
Change of control provisions 
The £75m unsecured revolving credit facility, 
under which the Company is the borrower, 
contains provisions allowing the lenders to 
cancel their loan commitment and require 
repayment of any outstanding amounts 
upon a change of control of the Company.
Compensation for loss of office
There are no agreements between the Company 
and its directors or employees that provide for 
compensation for loss of office or employment 
that occurs because of a takeover bid, except 
that provisions of the Company’s share schemes 
and plans may cause options and awards granted 
to employees and directors under such schemes 
and plans to vest on a change of control of 
the Company.
Greenhouse gas emissions
The disclosures concerning greenhouse gas 
emissions required by law are set out in the 
key performance indicators on page 15, and 
contained within the Sustainability Review on 
pages 34 to 66. Our detailed greenhouse gas 
footprint is set out on pages 84 to 85. 
Disabled persons and 
employee engagement
The disclosures concerning the Group’s policies 
on the employment of disabled persons and 
how we engage with our employees are set out 
on pages 59 and 106 to 113.
Engagement with suppliers 
and customers
Details of engagement activities with our 
suppliers and customers are set out on pages 
110 to 111.
Relations with shareholders
The Board supports the aims of the 2018 UK 
Corporate Governance Code and the UK 
Stewardship Code to promote engagement and 
interaction between listed companies and their 
major shareholders.
The Board welcomes the opportunity for 
investors and shareholders to engage directly 
with the Chair and Senior Independent 
Non‑executive Director alongside the Chief 
Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer. 
Information on how the Board has engaged with 
its shareholders is set out on pages 108 to 109. 
A range of online and in-person investor 
relations events following the publication of 
the full-year and half-year results have been 
scheduled for 2025. 
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Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Substantial shareholders
As at 31 December 2024, the Company had 
been notified under DTR 5 of the following 
interests in its shares representing 3% or more 
of the voting rights in its issued share capital. 
Save for the notification received from Liontrust 
Investment Partners LLP on 6 March 2025 (and 
captured within the table below), there were no 
changes in the interests in shares notified to the 
Company between 31 December 2024 and 
10 March 2025.
Identity
Number of 
voting rights 
(direct and 
indirect)
% of 
voting rights
BlackRock, Inc.
45,840,353
5.13
Liontrust Investment 
Partners LLP
42,213,708
4.99
Wellington Management 
Group LLP
42,630,396
4.96
Disclosure of information to the 
external auditor 
The directors who held office at the date of 
approval of this Directors’ Report confirm that, 
so far as they are each aware, there is no relevant 
audit information of which the Company’s 
external auditor (KPMG LLP) is unaware, and 
each director has taken all the steps that they 
ought to have taken as a director to make 
themself aware of any relevant audit information 
and to establish that the Company’s external 
auditor is aware of that information.
‘Going concern’ basis of preparation
After making enquiries, the directors are 
satisfied that the Group has sufficient resources 
to continue in operation for the foreseeable 
future, being a period of not less than 12 months 
from the date of this Directors’ Report. Accordingly, 
they continue to adopt the going concern basis 
in preparing the financial statements. In forming 
this view, the directors have considered trading 
and cash flow forecasts, financial commitments, 
the significant order book with customers spread 
across different geographic areas and industries, 
available facilities and the net cash position. 
For further information see pages 173 to 177.
Viability statement
In line with the 2018 UK Corporate Governance 
Code, the directors have carried out a rigorous 
review of the prospects of the current business, 
and its ability to meet its liabilities through to 
at least the end of December 2027. For further 
information, see page 78 which is incorporated 
into this Directors’ Report by reference.
Events after the reporting period
Details of events after the reporting period, 
including the agreement to acquire NOAH 
Actuation Co., Ltd. in March 2025, can be 
found in Note 33 to the financial statements 
on page 204.
Annual General Meeting
The 2025 Annual General Meeting of the 
Company will be held on 2 May 2025. Full 
details of the resolutions to be proposed at the 
AGM, as well as shareholders’ rights with respect 
to attendance, participation in the meeting and 
the process for submission of proxy votes in 
advance of the meeting, are set out in the Notice 
of AGM. The Notice of AGM will be issued to 
shareholders at least 20 working days prior to 
the AGM and will also be made available on the 
Company’s website. Shareholders are requested 
to check the Company’s website (www.rotork.com) 
for additional information and for the latest 
details concerning the 2025 AGM.
External auditor
Upon the recommendation of the Audit 
Committee and approval of the Board, a 
resolution to re-appoint KPMG LLP as the 
Company’s external auditor, alongside a 
resolution to authorise the Audit Committee 
to determine its remuneration, will be proposed 
at the forthcoming AGM. The external auditor 
contract was last put out to competitive tender 
in 2023. Pursuant to the prevailing regulations, 
the Company is required to re-tender the external 
auditor contract by no later than for the 2034 
financial year. 
The Directors’ Report was approved by the 
Board on 10 March 2025.
By order of the Board
Stuart Pain
Group General Counsel & Company Secretary 
10 March 2025
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Directors’ report continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Statement of directors’ responsibilities for preparing 
the Annual Report and financial statements
Directors’ responsibilities
The directors are responsible for preparing the 
Annual Report and the financial statements in 
accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the directors to prepare 
financial statements for each financial year. 
Under that law, the directors are required to 
prepare the Group financial statements in 
accordance with UK-adopted International 
Accounting Standards. The directors have also 
chosen to prepare the parent company financial 
statements in accordance with Financial Reporting 
Standard 101 Reduced Disclosure Framework. 
Under company law, the directors must not 
approve the financial statements unless they are 
satisfied that they give a true and fair view of 
the state of affairs of the Company and of the 
profit or loss of the Company for that period. In 
preparing these financial statements, International 
Accounting Standard 1 requires that directors:
•	 Properly select and apply accounting policies.
•	 Make judgements and estimates that are 
reasonable, relevant, and reliable and, in 
respect of the parent Company financial 
statements only, prudent. 
•	 For the parent Company financial statements, 
state whether applicable UK accounting 
standards have been followed, subject to any 
material departures disclosed and explained 
in the parent Company financial statements. 
•	 Present information, including accounting 
policies, in a manner that provides 
relevant, reliable, comparable and 
understandable information. 
•	 Provide additional disclosures when 
compliance with the specific requirements 
in IFRSs are insufficient to enable users 
to understand the impact of particular 
transactions, other events and conditions 
on the entity’s financial position and 
financial performance. 
•	 Assess the Group and parent Company’s 
ability to continue as a going concern, 
disclosing, as applicable, matters related 
to going concern.
•	 Use the going concern basis of accounting 
unless they either intend to liquidate the 
Group or the parent Company or to cease 
operations, or have no realistic alternative 
but to do so. 
The directors are responsible for keeping 
adequate accounting records that are sufficient 
to show and explain the Company’s transactions 
and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any 
time the financial position of the Company 
and enable them to ensure that the financial 
statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. 
They are also responsible for safeguarding the 
assets of the Company and hence for taking 
reasonable steps for the prevention and 
detection of fraud and other irregularities.
The directors are responsible for the maintenance 
and integrity of the corporate and financial 
information included on the Company’s website. 
Legislation in the United Kingdom governing 
the preparation and dissemination of financial 
statements may differ from legislation in 
other jurisdictions.
In accordance with Disclosure Guidance and 
Transparency Rule DTR 4.1.16R, the financial 
statements will form part of the annual financial 
report prepared under DTR 4.1.17R and 4.1.18R. 
The auditor’s report on these financial statements 
provides no assurance over whether the annual 
financial report has been prepared in accordance 
with those requirements.
Directors’ responsibility statement 
pursuant to the Disclosure Guidance 
and Transparency Rules
Each of the currently serving directors, whose 
names and functions are listed on pages 94 and 
95, confirm that, to the best of each person’s 
knowledge and belief:
•	 The financial statements, prepared in 
accordance with the applicable set of 
accounting standards, give a true and fair 
view of the assets, liabilities, financial position 
and profit of the Group and Company. 
•	 The Report of the Directors includes a fair 
review of the development and performance 
of the business and the position of the Group 
and Company, together with a description of 
the principal risks and uncertainties that they 
face; and 
•	 Having taken advice from the Audit Committee, 
the Annual Report and financial statements, 
taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and 
understandable and provides the information 
necessary for shareholders to assess the 
Company’s position and performance, 
strategy and business model. 
Kiet Huynh
Chief Executive Officer
10 March 2025
 
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Statement of directors’ responsibilities 
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Financial 
statements
In this section
165	
Independent auditor’s report 
to the members of Rotork plc
173	
Consolidated income statement
	
Consolidated statement of 
comprehensive income
174	
Consolidated balance sheet
175	
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
177	
Consolidated statement of cash flows
178	
Notes to the Group financial statements
205	 Company balance sheet  
Company statement of changes in equity
206	 Notes to the Company financial statements
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Financial statements
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Financial statements

Independent auditor’s report
1. Our opinion is unmodified
We have audited the financial statements of Rotork plc (“the Company”) for the year ended 
31 December 2024 which comprise the consolidated income statement, consolidated statement 
of comprehensive income, consolidated balance sheet, consolidated statement of changes in equity, 
consolidated statement of cash flows, company balance sheet and company statement of changes 
in equity and the related notes, including the accounting policies in notes 1 and (a). 
In our opinion: 
•	 the financial statements give a true and fair view of the state of the Group’s and of the parent 
Company’s affairs as at 31 December 2024 and of the Group’s profit for the year then ended; 
•	 the Group financial statements have been properly prepared in accordance with UK-adopted 
international accounting standards; 
•	 the parent Company financial statements have been properly prepared in accordance with 
UK accounting standards, including FRS 101 Reduced Disclosure Framework; and 
•	 the financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the requirements of the 
Companies Act 2006. 
Basis for opinion 
We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (“ISAs (UK)”) 
and applicable law. Our responsibilities are described below. We believe that the audit evidence we 
have obtained is a sufficient and appropriate basis for our opinion. Our audit opinion is consistent 
with our report to the audit committee. 
We were first appointed as auditor by the shareholders on 30 April 2024. The period of total 
uninterrupted engagement is for the one financial year ended 31 December 2024. We have fulfilled 
our ethical responsibilities under, and we remain independent of the Group in accordance with, UK 
ethical requirements including the FRC Ethical Standard as applied to listed public interest entities. 
No non-audit services prohibited by that standard were provided.
Overview
Materiality
Group financial statements as a whole
£8.0m
4.4% of Normalised Group profit before tax
Key audit matters
Recurring risks
Revenue recognition
Parent Company: Recoverability of the parent Company’s debt due from 
Group entities 
2. Key audit matters: our assessment of risks of material misstatement
Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance 
in the audit of the financial statements and include the most significant assessed risks of material 
misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) identified by us, including those which had the greatest 
effect on: the overall audit strategy; the allocation of resources in the audit; and directing the efforts 
of the engagement team. We summarise below the key audit matters, in decreasing order of audit 
significance, in arriving at our audit opinion above, together with our key audit procedures to address 
those matters and, as required for public interest entities, our results from those procedures. These 
matters were addressed, and our results are based on procedures undertaken, in the context of, 
and solely for the purpose of, our audit of the financial statements as a whole, and in forming our 
opinion thereon, and consequently are incidental to that opinion, and we do not provide a separate 
opinion on these matters. 
 
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Financial statements

Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
2. Key audit matters: our assessment of risks of material misstatement continued
The risk
Our response
Revenue recognition
(£754.4 million; 2023: £719.2 million) 
Refer to page 123 (Audit Committee 
Report), page 179 (accounting policy 
and financial disclosures).
Revenue recognised in an inappropriate period 
There is clear incentive and pressure for fraudulent revenue recognition driven 
by the Growth+ strategy and external expectations of revenue growth which 
are then reflected in internal targets. 
The Group has historically recorded greater amounts of revenue than the 
average month in December of each year which presents an opportunity 
to conceal fraudulent revenue recognition at the period end. 
Our procedures included: 
•	 Test of detail: We agreed a sample of sales transactions prior to the year 
end based on their financial significance to purchase order and customer 
confirmation of collection or delivery to assess whether the performance 
obligation has been met and that revenue has been recognised in the 
appropriate accounting period. 
•	 Test of detail: We agreed a sample of post year end credit notes, based on 
their financial significance, to assess that revenue has not been overstated 
to date. 
We performed the detailed tests above rather than seeking to rely on any of the 
Group‘s controls as detailed testing is a more effective method of obtaining audit 
evidence due to the timing of when the control operates. 
Our results 
The results of our testing were satisfactory and we considered the amount 
of revenue recognised in the year to be acceptable.
Parent Company: Recoverability of 
the parent Company’s debt due from 
Group entities 
(£413.2 million; 2023: £367.1) million 
Refer to page 205 (financial disclosures).
Low risk, high value
The carrying amount of the intra-group debtor balance represents 90% (2023: 
89%) of the parent Company’s total assets. 
Their recoverability is not at a high risk of material misstatement or subject 
to significant judgement. However, due to their materiality in the context of the 
parent Company financial statements, this is considered to be the area that had 
the greatest effect on our overall parent Company audit. 
Our procedures included: 
•	 Assessment of risk of default: For a selection of the highest value intra-
group debtors representing 90% of the balance, we evaluated the likely risk 
of default (where default is defined as the inability of the subsidiary to pay 
within 30 days of the debt being called) with reference to the subsidiaries’ 
net asset values and forecasts of future profitability.
•	 Assessing subsidiary audits: We assessed the work performed by us and 
the component auditors of the that sample of subsidiaries and considered 
the results of that work on the subsidiaries’ profits and net assets. 
We performed the tests above rather than seeking to rely on any of the parent 
Company’s controls because the nature of the balance is such that we would expect 
to obtain audit evidence primarily through the procedures described. 
Our results 
We found the intra-group debtor balances to be acceptable. 
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Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
3. Our application of materiality and an overview of the scope of our audit
Our application of materiality
Materiality for the Group financial statements as a whole was set at £8.0m, determined with 
reference to a benchmark of Group profit before tax, normalised to add back this year’s Business 
Transformation costs of £17.2m, the Defined benefit scheme settlement loss of £18.0m and this 
year’s Other costs of £4.7m as disclosed in note 5, of which it represents 4.4%. We adjusted for 
these items because they do not represent the normal, continuing operations of the Group.
Materiality for the parent Company financial statements as a whole was set at £7.0m, determined 
with reference to a benchmark of parent Company net assets, of which it represents 2.1%. 
In line with our audit methodology, our procedures on individual account balances and disclosures 
were performed to a lower threshold, performance materiality, so as to reduce to an acceptable level 
the risk that individually immaterial misstatements in individual account balances add up to a material 
amount across the financial statements as a whole. 
Performance materiality for the Group was set at 65% of materiality for the financial statements as 
a whole, which equates to £5.2m. We applied this percentage in our determination of performance 
materiality based on the level of identified misstatements, control deficiencies and changes in the 
control environment during the prior period. 
Performance materiality for the parent Company was set at 75% of materiality for the financial 
statements as a whole, which equates to £5.2m. We applied this percentage in our determination 
of performance materiality because we did not identify any factors indicating an elevated level of risk.
We agreed to report to the audit committee any corrected or uncorrected identified misstatements 
exceeding £0.4m, in addition to other identified misstatements that warranted reporting on 
qualitative grounds. 
Overview of the scope of our audit
This year, we applied the revised group auditing standard in our audit of the consolidated financial 
statements. The revised standard changes how an auditor approaches the identification of 
components, and how the audit procedures are planned and executed across components. 
In particular, the definition of a component has changed, shifting the focus from how the entity 
prepares financial information to how we, as the group auditor, plan to perform audit procedures to 
address group risks of material misstatement (“RMMs”). Similarly, the group auditor has an increased 
role in designing the audit procedures as well as making decisions on where these procedures are 
performed (centrally and/or at component level) and how these procedures are executed and 
supervised. In this report we provide an indication of scope coverage on the new basis. 
We performed risk assessment procedures to determine which of the Group’s components are likely 
to include risks of material misstatement to the Group financial statements and which procedures to 
perform at these components to address those risks.
In total, we identified 62 components, having considered our evaluation of the Group’s operational 
structure, geographical locations, the presence of key audit matters and our ability to perform audit 
procedures centrally. 
Of those, we identified 3 quantitatively significant components which contained the largest percentages 
of either total revenue or total assets of the Group, for which we performed audit procedures. 
We also identified 9 components as requiring special audit consideration, owing to Group risk 
relating to revenue residing in these components.
Additionally, having considered qualitative and quantitative factors, we selected 6 components with 
accounts contributing to the specific RMMs of the Group financial statements. 
Accordingly, we performed audit procedures on 8 components, of which we involved component 
auditors in performing the audit work on 16 components. We performed audit procedures on the 
items excluded from the normalised Group profit before tax used as the benchmark for our materiality. 
We also performed the audit of the parent Company. 
We set the component materialities, ranging from £0.8m to £4.0m, having regard to the mix of size 
and risk profile of the Group across the components. 
£8.0m 
Whole financial statements materiality
£5.2m 
Whole financial statements 
performance materiality 
£4.0m 
Range of materiality at 18 components 
(£0.8m-£4.0m)
 
 
£0.4m 
Misstatements reported to the 
audit committee
 Normalised PBT
 Group materiality
Normalised Group profit before tax
Group materiality
£8.0m
£180.4m
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Financial statements

Group total current assets
Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
3. Our application of materiality and an overview of the scope of our audit continued
Overview of the scope of our audit continued
Our audit procedures covered 70% of Group revenue. 
We performed audit procedures in relation to components that accounted for 68% of the total 
profits and losses that made up Group profit before tax and 78% of Group total current assets.
For the remaining components for which we performed no audit procedures, no component 
represented more than 3.7% of Group total revenue, the total profits and losses that made up Group 
profit before tax or Group current assets. We performed analysis at an aggregated Group level to 
re-examine our assessment that there is not a reasonable possibility of a material misstatement in 
these components. 
Impact of controls on our group audit
The Group has nine main, separate ERP IT systems relevant to our group audit. These include both 
the legacy systems which have been in place for a number of years, the Group’s new ERP system 
which is in use at a small number of components, as well as a consolidation system. With support 
from our IT Auditors we gained an understanding of these systems. 
Our testing, including further procedures in response to identified deficiencies, demonstrated that 
we were able to rely on general IT controls and automated controls in relation to the consolidation 
system in determining the work to be performed over certain consolidation activities. For the other 
systems, we did not plan to rely on IT controls due to deficiencies and, in some cases, informalities 
identified as part of our risk assessment procedures, and the diverse range of systems. 
For other areas of the audit, given we did not plan to rely on the related IT controls and considering 
the most efficient and effective approach for gaining the appropriate audit evidence, we took a 
predominantly substantive audit approach in all areas of our audit. We adopted a data-oriented 
approach to testing both manual and automated journals and used data and analytical routines to 
test revenue across all components. Given that we did not rely on the related IT controls, a manual 
testing approach was performed over the completeness and accuracy of data used in these routines 
and in respect of system data used in our substantive testing on other transactional areas. 
Group revenue
The total profits and losses that made 
up Group profit before tax 
Group auditor oversight
As part of establishing the overall Group audit strategy and plan, we conducted the risk assessment 
and planning discussion meetings with component auditors to discuss Group audit risks relevant to 
the components, including the key audit matter in respect of Revenue recognition.
We instructed component auditors as to the significant areas to be covered, including the relevant 
risks detailed above and the information to be reported back.
We visited 7 component auditors in the United Kingdom, the United States, India, China, Italy, 
South Korea and Singapore to assess the audit risks and strategy. Video and telephone conference 
meetings were also held with these component auditors and others that were not physically visited. 
At these visits and meetings, the results of the planning procedures and further audit procedures 
communicated to us were discussed in more detail, and any further work required by us was then 
performed by the component auditors.
We inspected the work performed by the component auditors for the purpose of the Group audit 
and evaluated the appropriateness of conclusions drawn from the audit evidence obtained and 
consistencies between communicated findings and work performed, with a particular focus on 
inspecting work relating to the Revenue recognition key audit matter, the risk of management 
override of controls and inventory.
Our audit procedures covered the following 
percentage of Group revenue:
We performed audit procedures in relation to components that accounted for the following percentages 
of the total profits and losses that made up Group profit before tax and Group current assets:
68%
78%
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70%

4. Impact of climate change on our audit 
We have considered the potential impacts of climate change on the financial statements as part 
of planning our audit. 
The key factors of Rotork’s business which were relevant in our considerations were the current 
and forecast levels of trade with customers in the Oil and Gas industry (and impact on continued 
demand for Rotork’s products), the geographical locations of key factories and Rotork’s own 
decarbonisation targets. 
We have performed a risk assessment over how climate change may impact the financial statements 
and our audit. We held discussions with our own climate change professionals to challenge our risk 
assessment including goodwill impairment, useful economic lives of PPE and going concern.
Taking into account the extent of headroom in the goodwill impairment assessment, the remaining 
useful economic lives of PPE and the nature of the Group’s products, our assessment is that climate 
related risks to the Group’s strategy and financial planning did not have a significant impact on our 
audit given the nature of the Group’s operations.
We have read the disclosure of climate related information on pages 34 to 66 of the front half of the 
annual report and considered consistency with the financial statements and our audit knowledge.
5. Going concern
The directors have prepared the financial statements on the going concern basis as they do not 
intend to liquidate the Group or the parent Company or to cease their operations, and as they have 
concluded that the Group’s and the parent Company’s financial position means that this is realistic. 
They have also concluded that there are no material uncertainties that could have cast significant 
doubt over their ability to continue as a going concern for at least a year from the date of approval 
of the financial statements (“the going concern period”). 
We used our knowledge of the Group, its industry, and the general economic environment to 
identify the inherent risks to its business model and analysed how those risks might affect the 
Group’s and parent Company’s financial resources or ability to continue operations over the going 
concern period. The risks that we considered most likely to adversely affect the Group’s and parent 
Company’s available financial resources over this period were: 
•	 Ability of Rotork to deliver forecast growth in 2025 and 2026 from key customers. 
•	 Potential impact of significant one-off cash transactions impacting the liquidity of the Group. 
We considered whether these risks could plausibly affect the liquidity in the going concern period by 
comparing severe, but plausible downside scenarios that could arise from these risks individually and 
collectively against the level of available financial resources indicated by the Group’s financial forecasts.
Our conclusions based on this work:
•	 we consider that the directors’ use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation 
of the financial statements is appropriate;
•	 we have not identified, and concur with the directors’ assessment that there is not, a material 
uncertainty related to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant 
doubt on the Group’s or parent Company’s ability to continue as a going concern for the going 
concern period;
•	 we have nothing material to add or draw attention to in relation to the directors’ statement in 
note 1 to the financial statements on the use of the going concern basis of accounting with no 
material uncertainties that may cast significant doubt over the Group and parent Company’s use 
of that basis for the going concern period, and we found the going concern disclosure in note 1 
to be acceptable; and
•	 the related statement under the Listing Rules set out on page 162 is materially consistent with the 
financial statements and our audit knowledge.
However, as we cannot predict all future events or conditions and as subsequent events may result 
in outcomes that are inconsistent with judgements that were reasonable at the time they were 
made, the above conclusions are not a guarantee that the Group or the parent Company will 
continue in operation. 
6. Fraud and breaches of laws and regulations – ability to detect
Identifying and responding to risks of material misstatement due to fraud
To identify risks of material misstatement due to fraud (“fraud risks”) we assessed events or 
conditions that could indicate an incentive or pressure to commit fraud or provide an opportunity 
to commit fraud. Our risk assessment procedures included:
•	 Enquiring of directors, the audit committee, internal audit and inspection of policy documentation 
as to the Group’s high-level policies and procedures to prevent and detect fraud, including the 
internal audit function, and the Group’s channel for “whistleblowing”, as well as whether they 
have knowledge of any actual, suspected or alleged fraud.
•	 Reading Board and audit committee minutes.
•	 Considering remuneration incentive schemes and performance targets for management and 
directors, including the relevant targets for management remuneration.
•	 Using analytical procedures to identify any unusual or unexpected relationships.
•	 Our forensic professionals assisted us in identifying key fraud risk factors. This included attending 
a fraud risk brainstorm and holding discussions with the engagement team.
We communicated identified fraud risks throughout the audit team and remained alert to any 
indications of fraud throughout the audit. This included communication from the Group auditor to 
component auditors of relevant fraud risks identified at the Group level and requesting component 
auditors performing procedures at the component level to report to the Group auditor any identified 
fraud risk factors or identified or suspected instances of fraud.
Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
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Financial statements

6. Fraud and breaches of laws and regulations – ability to detect continued
Identifying and responding to risks of material misstatement due to fraud continued
As required by auditing standards, and taking into account possible pressures to meet profit targets 
we perform procedures to address the risk of management override of controls and the risk of 
fraudulent revenue recognition, in particular:
•	 the risk that Group and component management may be in a position to make inappropriate 
accounting entries; and
•	 the risk that revenue from the sale of goods is overstated through recording revenues in the 
wrong period.
We did not identify any additional fraud risks.
Further detail in respect of revenue recognition is set out in the key audit matter disclosures in 
section 2 of this report.
In determining the audit procedures we took into account the results of our evaluation and testing 
of the operating effectiveness of some of the Group-wide fraud risk management controls. 
We also performed procedures including: 
•	 Identifying journal entries and other adjustments to test at the Group level and for selected 
components based on risk criteria and comparing the identified entries to supporting documentation. 
These included those posted by senior finance management, and those posted to unusual accounts. 
•	 Assessing whether the judgements made in making accounting estimates are indicative of a 
potential bias.
Identifying and responding to risks of material misstatement due to non-compliance with laws 
and regulations
We identified areas of laws and regulations that could reasonably be expected to have a material 
effect on the financial statements from our general commercial and sector experience and through 
discussion with the directors (as required by auditing standards), and discussed with the directors the 
policies and procedures regarding compliance with laws and regulations. 
As the Group is regulated, our assessment of risks involved gaining an understanding of the control 
environment including the entity’s procedures for complying with regulatory requirements.
We communicated identified laws and regulations throughout our team and remained alert to any 
indications of non-compliance throughout the audit. This included communication from the Group 
auditor to component auditors of relevant laws and regulations identified at the Group level, and a 
request for component auditors to report to the Group audit team any instances of non-compliance 
with laws and regulations that could give rise to a material misstatement at the Group level.
The potential effect of these laws and regulations on the financial statements varies considerably.
Firstly, the Group is subject to laws and regulations that directly affect the financial statements 
including financial reporting legislation (including related companies legislation), distributable profits 
legislation and taxation legislation and we assessed the extent of compliance with these laws and 
regulations as part of our procedures on the related financial statement items. 
Secondly, the Group is subject to many other laws and regulations where the consequences of 
non-compliance could have a material effect on amounts or disclosures in the financial statements, 
for instance through the imposition of fines or litigation. We identified the following areas as those 
most likely to have such an effect: health and safety, data protection laws, anti-bribery and money 
laundering, employment law and certain aspects of company legislation recognising the nature of 
the Group’s activities. Auditing standards limit the required audit procedures to identify non-compliance 
with these laws and regulations to enquiry of the directors and inspection of regulatory and legal 
correspondence, if any. Therefore if a breach of operational regulations is not disclosed to us or 
evident from relevant correspondence, an audit will not detect that breach.
Context of the ability of the audit to detect fraud or breaches of law or regulation
Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that we may not have 
detected some material misstatements in the financial statements, even though we have properly 
planned and performed our audit in accordance with auditing standards. For example, the further 
removed non-compliance with laws and regulations is from the events and transactions reflected 
in the financial statements, the less likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing 
standards would identify it. 
In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of non-detection of fraud, as these 
may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal 
controls. Our audit procedures are designed to detect material misstatement. We are not responsible 
for preventing non-compliance or fraud and cannot be expected to detect non-compliance with all 
laws and regulations.
7. We have nothing to report on the other information in the Annual Report
The directors are responsible for the other information presented in the Annual Report together 
with the financial statements. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other 
information and, accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion or, except as explicitly stated 
below, any form of assurance conclusion thereon. 
Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether, based on our 
financial statements audit work, the information therein is materially misstated or inconsistent with 
the financial statements or our audit knowledge. Based solely on that work we have not identified 
material misstatements in the other information.
Strategic report and directors’ report 
Based solely on our work on the other information: 
•	 we have not identified material misstatements in the strategic report and the directors’ report; 
•	 in our opinion the information given in those reports for the financial year is consistent with the 
financial statements; and 
•	 in our opinion those reports have been prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 2006.
Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
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Financial statements

7. We have nothing to report on the other information in the Annual Report continued
Directors’ remuneration report 
In our opinion the part of the Directors’ Remuneration Report to be audited has been properly 
prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 2006. 
Disclosures of emerging and principal risks and longer-term viability 
We are required to perform procedures to identify whether there is a material inconsistency between 
the directors’ disclosures in respect of emerging and principal risks and the viability statement, and 
the financial statements and our audit knowledge. 
Based on those procedures, we have nothing material to add or draw attention to in relation to: 
•	 the directors’ confirmation within the viability statement on page 78 that they have carried out 
a robust assessment of the emerging and principal risks facing the Group, including those that 
would threaten its business model, future performance, solvency and liquidity; 
•	 the emerging risks and opportunities disclosures describing these risks and how emerging risks 
are identified, and explaining how they are being managed and mitigated; and
•	 the directors’ explanation in the viability statement of how they have assessed the prospects 
of the Group, over what period they have done so and why they considered that period to be 
appropriate, and their statement as to whether they have a reasonable expectation that the 
Group will be able to continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the 
period of their assessment, including any related disclosures drawing attention to any 
necessary qualifications or assumptions. 
We are also required to review the viability statement, set out on page 78 under the Listing Rules. 
Based on the above procedures, we have concluded that the above disclosures are materially 
consistent with the financial statements and our audit knowledge.
Our work is limited to assessing these matters in the context of only the knowledge acquired during 
our financial statements audit. As we cannot predict all future events or conditions and as subsequent 
events may result in outcomes that are inconsistent with judgements that were reasonable at the 
time they were made, the absence of anything to report on these statements is not a guarantee 
as to the Group’s and parent Company’s longer-term viability.
Corporate governance disclosures 
We are required to perform procedures to identify whether there is a material inconsistency between 
the directors’ corporate governance disclosures and the financial statements and our audit knowledge.
Based on those procedures, we have concluded that each of the following is materially consistent 
with the financial statements and our audit knowledge: 
•	 the directors’ statement that they consider that the annual report and financial statements taken 
as a whole is fair, balanced and understandable, and provides the information necessary for 
shareholders to assess the Group’s position and performance, business model and strategy; 
•	 the section of the annual report describing the work of the audit committee, including the 
significant issues that the audit committee considered in relation to the financial statements, 
and how these issues were addressed; and
•	 the section of the annual report that describes the review of the effectiveness of the Group’s risk 
management and internal control systems.
We are required to review the part of the Corporate Governance Statement relating to the Group’s 
compliance with the provisions of the UK Corporate Governance Code specified by the Listing Rules 
for our review. We have nothing to report in this respect.
8. We have nothing to report on the other matters on which we are required 
to report by exception 
Under the Companies Act 2006, we are required to report to you if, in our opinion: 
•	 adequate accounting records have not been kept by the parent Company, or returns adequate 
for our audit have not been received from branches not visited by us; or 
•	 the parent Company financial statements and the part of the Directors’ Remuneration Report 
to be audited are not in agreement with the accounting records and returns; or 
•	 certain disclosures of directors’ remuneration specified by law are not made; or 
•	 we have not received all the information and explanations we require for our audit. 
We have nothing to report in these respects.
9. Respective responsibilities 
Directors’ responsibilities 
As explained more fully in their statement set out on page 163, the directors are responsible for: the 
preparation of the financial statements including being satisfied that they give a true and fair view; 
such internal control as they determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements 
that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error; assessing the Group and 
parent Company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to 
going concern; and using the going concern basis of accounting unless they either intend to liquidate 
the Group or the parent Company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so. 
Auditor’s responsibilities 
Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a 
whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue our opinion 
in an auditor’s report. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but does not guarantee that 
an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it 
exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in 
aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken 
on the basis of the financial statements.
A fuller description of our responsibilities is provided on the FRC’s website at www.frc.org.uk/
auditorsresponsibilities. 
Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
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Independent auditor’s report to the members of Rotork plc continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

9. Respective responsibilities continued
Auditor’s responsibilities continued
The Company is required to include these financial statements in an annual financial report 
prepared under Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 4.1.17R and 4.1.18R. This auditor’s report 
provides no assurance over whether the annual financial report has been prepared in accordance 
with those requirements. 
10. The purpose of our audit work and to whom we owe our responsibilities 
This report is made solely to the Company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 
of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state 
to the Company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report 
and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume 
responsibility to anyone other than the Company and the Company’s members, as a body, 
for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed. 
Huw Brown (Senior Statutory Auditor)
for and on behalf of KPMG LLP, Statutory Auditor 
Chartered Accountants 
66 Queen Square
Bristol
BS1 4BE
10 March 2025
Report on the audit of the financial statements continued
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Independent auditor’s report to the members of Rotork plc continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Consolidated income statement  
For the year ended 31 December 2024
2024
2023
Note
£000
£000
Revenue
3
754,428
719,150
Cost of sales
(382,494)
(380,054)
Gross profit
371,934
339,096
Other income
6
1,733
1,405
Distribution costs
(6,669)
(6,314)
Administrative expenses
(230,896)
(184,630)
Other expenses
6
(243)
(790)
Operating profit
3
135,859
148,767
Finance income
8
7,323
5,301
Finance expense
8
(2,721)
(3,430)
Profit before tax
9
140,461
150,638
Income tax expense
10
(35,663)
(37,150)
Profit for the year
104,798
113,488
Attributable to:
Owners of the parent
103,585
113,135
Non-controlling interests
1,213
353
104,798
113,488
Basic earnings per share
19
12.1p
13.2p
Diluted earnings per share
19
12.1p
13.2p
Operating profit
3
135,859
148,767
Adjustments to profit:
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
5
2,604
2,110
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
5
18,009
—
Other adjustments
5
21,934
13,598
Adjusted operating profit
2,3
178,406
164,475
Adjusted basic earnings per share
2,19
15.9p
14.6p
Adjusted diluted earnings per share
2,19
15.8p
14.6p
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income  
For the year ended 31 December 2024
2024
2023
£000
£000
Profit for the year
104,798
113,488
Other comprehensive income
Items that may be subsequently reclassified to the income statement:
Foreign exchange translation differences
(12,915)
(20,271)
Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow hedges net of tax
(57)
1,397
(12,972)
(18,874)
Items that may not be subsequently reclassified to the income statement:
Remeasurement gain/(loss) in pension scheme net of tax
563
(7,722)
Expenses and income recognised in other comprehensive income
(12,409)
(26,596)
Total comprehensive income for the year
92,389
86,892
Attributable to:
Owners of the parent
91,102
86,609
Non-controlling interests
1,287
283
92,389
86,892
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Consolidated income statement and Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Consolidated balance sheet 
At 31 December 2024
Note
2024 
£000
2023 
£000
Non-current assets
Goodwill
11
224,793
231,703 
Intangible assets
12
31,429
31,126
Property, plant and equipment
13
90,302
74,411
Derivative financial instruments
24
120
206
Defined benefit scheme surplus
26
—
9,144
Deferred tax assets
14
22,084
15,454
Total non-current assets
368,728
362,044
Current assets
Inventories
15
83,364
83,963
Trade receivables
16
149,479
152,842
Current tax
16
4,164
4,187
Derivative financial instruments
24
929
673
Other receivables
16
23,839
23,701
Cash and cash equivalents
17
149,983
146,372
Total current assets
411,758
411,738
Total assets
780,486
773,782
Current liabilities
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
20
4,329
3,131
Trade payables
23
43,838
40,585
Employee benefits
21
29,146
29,754
Current tax
23
15,982
12,387
Derivative financial instruments
24
362
538
Other payables
23
49,989
42,536
Provisions
22
4,757
4,275
Total current liabilities
148,403
133,206
Non-current liabilities
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
20
20,320
8,826
Employee benefits
21
7,699
4,197
Deferred tax liabilities
14
4,037
3,872
Derivative financial instruments
24
84
15
Provisions
22
1,441
1,371
Total non-current liabilities
33,581
18,281
Total liabilities
181,984
151,487
Net assets
598,502
622,295
Note
2024 
£000
2023 
£000
Equity
Issued equity capital
18
4,232
4,306
Share premium
21,842
21,004
Other reserves
495
13,465
Retained earnings
569,211
581,813
Equity attributable to the parent
595,780
620,588
Non-controlling interests
2,722
1,707
Total equity
598,502
622,295
These financial statements were approved by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 
10 March 2025 and were signed on its behalf by: 
K Huynh and B Peacock
Directors
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Consolidated balance sheet 
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Issued
equity
capital
Share
premium
Translation
reserve
Capital
redemption
reserve
Hedging
reserve
Retained
earnings
Total 
attributable 
to owners of 
the parent
Non-
controlling 
interests
Total
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Balance at 31 December 2022
4,304
19,959
31,352
1,716
(799)
531,951
588,483
1,424
589,907
Profit for the year
—
—
—
—
—
113,135
113,135
353
113,488
Other comprehensive income
Foreign exchange translation differences
—
—
(20,201)
—
—
—
(20,201)
(70)
(20,271)
Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow hedges
—
—
—
—
1,841
—
1,841
—
1,841
Actuarial loss on defined benefit pension plans 
—
—
—
—
—
(9,875)
(9,875)
—
(9,875)
Tax on other comprehensive (loss)/income
—
—
—
—
(444)
2,153
1,709
—
1,709
Total other comprehensive (loss)/income
—
—
(20,201)
—
1,397
(7,722)
(26,526)
(70)
(26,596)
Total comprehensive (loss)/income
—
—
(20,201)
—
1,397
105,413
86,609
283
86,892
Transactions with owners, recorded directly in equity
Equity settled share-based payment transactions 
—
—
—
—
—
2,282
2,282
—
2,282
Tax on equity settled share-based payment transactions
—
—
—
—
—
43
43
—
43
Share options exercised by employees
2
1,045
—
—
—
—
1,047
—
1,047
Own ordinary shares acquired
—
—
—
—
—
(2,444)
(2,444)
—
(2,444)
Own ordinary shares awarded under share schemes
—
—
—
—
—
3,388
3,388
—
3,388
Dividends paid on ordinary shares
—
—
—
—
—
(58,820)
(58,820)
—
(58,820)
Balance at 31 December 2023
4,306
21,004
11,151
1,716
598
581,813
620,588
1,707
622,295
Consolidated statement of changes in equity  
For the year ended 31 December 2024
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175
Consolidated statement of changes in equity 
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Issued
equity
capital
Share
premium
Translation
reserve
Capital
redemption
reserve
Hedging
reserve
Retained
earnings
Total 
attributable 
to owners of 
the parent
Non-
controlling 
interests
Total
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Balance at 31 December 2023
4,306
21,004
11,151
1,716
598
581,813
620,588
1,707
622,295
Profit for the year
—
—
—
—
—
103,585
103,585
1,213 
104,798 
Other comprehensive income
Foreign exchange translation differences
—
—
(12,989)
—
—
—
(12,989)
74
(12,915)
Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow hedges
—
—
—
—
(76)
—
(76)
—
(76)
Actuarial gain on defined benefit pension plans 
—
—
—
—
—
922
922
—
922
Tax on other comprehensive income/(loss)
—
—
—
—
19
(359)
(340)
—
(340)
Total other comprehensive (loss)/income
—
—
(12,989)
—
(57)
563
(12,483)
74
(12,409)
Total comprehensive (loss)/income
—
—
(12,989)
—
(57)
104,148
91,102
1,287
92,389
Transactions with owners, recorded directly in equity
Equity settled share-based payment transactions 
—
—
—
—
—
4,046
4,046
—
4,046
Tax on equity settled share-based payment transactions
—
—
—
—
—
9
9
—
9
Share options exercised by employees
2
838
—
—
—
—
840
—
840
Own ordinary shares acquired
—
—
—
—
—
(10,348)
(10,348)
—
(10,348)
Own ordinary shares awarded under share schemes
—
—
—
—
—
3,134
3,134
—
3,134
Share buyback programme
(76)
—
—
76
—
(50,326)
(50,326)
—
(50,326)
Dividends paid on ordinary shares
—
—
—
—
—
(63,265)
(63,265)
—
(63,265)
Dividends paid to non-controlling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(272)
(272)
Balance at 31 December 2024
4,232
21,842
(1,838)
1,792
541
569,211
595,780
2,722
598,502
Detailed explanations for equity capital, the translation reserve, capital redemption reserve and hedging reserve can be seen in note 18.
Consolidated statement of changes in equity  
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Consolidated statement of changes in equity continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Consolidated statement of cash flows 
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Note
2024 
£000
2024 
£000
2023 
£000
2023
£000
Cash flows from operating activities
Cash generated from operations
25
212,738
197,843
Operating cash flow impacts of other adjustments
5
(21,200)
(13,496)
Difference between pension charge and cash contribution
(4,007)
(26,628)
Income taxes paid
(38,757)
(32,825)
Net cash flows from operating activities
148,774
124,894
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment
(13,983)
(7,306)
Purchase of intangible assets
(1,635)
(2,089)
Product development costs capitalised
(4,327)
(2,411)
Sale of property, plant and equipment
224
1,883
Acquisition of business (net of cash acquired)
4
—
(18,399)
Settlement of hedging derivatives
2,677
937
Interest received
4,097
3,927
Net cash flows from investing activities
(12,947)
(23,458)
Cash flows from financing activities
Issue of ordinary share capital
840
1,047
Own ordinary shares acquired
(10,348)
(2,444)
Interest paid
(1,884)
(936)
Repayment of lease liabilities
(4,217)
(3,699)
Share buyback programme
(50,326)
—
Dividends paid on ordinary shares
(63,265)
(58,820)
Dividends paid to non-controlling interests
(272)
—
Net cash flows from financing activities
(129,472)
(64,852)
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
6,355
36,584
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January
146,372
114,770
Effect of exchange rate fluctuations on cash held
(2,744)
(4,982)
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December
17
149,983
146,372
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Consolidated statement of cash flows 
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Except where indicated, values in these notes are in £000.
Rotork plc is a public company limited by shares, registered and domiciled in England and Wales, its 
ordinary shares have a commercial companies (equity shares) category listing on the London Stock 
Exchange. The consolidated financial statements of the Company for the year ended 31 December 2024 
comprise the Company and its subsidiaries (together referred to as the Group). The accounting 
policies contained below in note 1 and the disclosures in notes 2 to 33 all relate to the Group 
financial statements. The Company balance sheet, accounting policies and applicable notes can 
be found following note 33. 
1. Accounting policies
The accounting policies applied in the preparation of these consolidated financial statements 
are set out below. These policies have been consistently applied to the years presented, unless 
otherwise stated.
Basis of preparation
The consolidated financial statements of Rotork plc have been prepared in accordance with 
UK‑adopted International Accounting Standards.
The consolidated financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention 
except for defined benefit pension schemes, share-based payments and derivative financial 
instruments as referred to in the respective accounting policies below.
New accounting standards and interpretations
A number of amended standards became applicable for the current reporting period. The application 
of these amendments has not had any material impact on the disclosures, net assets or results of 
the Group.
New standards and interpretations not yet adopted
Further narrow scope amendments have been issued which are mandatory for periods commencing 
on or after 1 January 2025. The application of these amendments will not have any material impact 
on the disclosures, net assets or results of the Group.
Adjustments to profit 
Adjustments to profit are items of income and expense which, because of the nature, size and/or 
infrequency of the events giving rise to them, merit separate presentation. These specific items 
are presented as a footnote to the income statement to provide greater clarity and an enhanced 
understanding of the impact of these items on the Group’s financial performance. In doing so, it also 
facilitates greater comparison of the Group’s results with prior periods and assessment of trends in 
financial performance. This split is consistent with how business performance is measured internally.
Adjustments to profit items may include but are not restricted to: costs of significant business 
restructuring and any associated impairments of intangible or tangible assets, adjustments to the 
fair value of acquisition-related items such as contingent consideration, acquired intangible asset 
amortisation and other items considered to be significant due to their nature or the expected 
infrequency of the events giving rise to them.
Going concern
The directors are satisfied that the Group has sufficient resources to continue in operation for a 
period of not less than 12 months from the date of this report. Accordingly, the directors continue 
to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.
In forming this view, the macroeconomic conditions and the impact of geopolitical instability 
on the Group, as discussed in our principal risks on pages 70 to 77, have been considered. 
The directors have reviewed: the current financial position of the Group, which has net cash of 
£125m, an undrawn committed revolving credit facility of £75m and unused overdraft facilities 
of £33m as at the period end; the significant order book, which contains customers spread across 
different geographic areas and industries; and the trading and cash flow forecasts for the Group. 
A reverse stress test, where the Group’s business model would become unviable, has been performed 
and the directors believe there is no reasonably possible scenario that would lead to the conditions 
modelled in the reverse stress test.
The directors are satisfied that the Group has adequate resources to continue operating as a going 
concern for a period of not less than 12 months from the date of this report, and that no material 
uncertainties exist with respect to this assessment. The Group also has a number of mitigating 
actions that it can take at short notice to preserve cash, for example reduction in capital programmes, 
dividend deferral and other reductions in discretionary spend.
Consolidation
The consolidated financial statements incorporate the financial statements of the Company and its 
subsidiaries for the year to 31 December 2024. The financial statements of subsidiaries are included 
in the consolidated financial statements from the date that control commences until the date control 
ceases. Intra-group balances and any unrealised gains or losses or income and expenses arising from 
intra-group transactions are eliminated in preparing the consolidated financial statements.
Foreign currencies
The individual financial statements of each Group company are presented in the currency of the 
primary economic environment in which it operates (its functional currency). For the purposes of 
the consolidated financial statements, the results and financial position of each Group company 
is expressed in sterling, which is the functional currency of the Company, and the presentational 
currency for the consolidated financial statements.
Transactions in foreign currencies are translated at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of the 
transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies at the balance sheet 
date are translated to sterling at the foreign exchange rate ruling at that date. Foreign exchange 
differences arising on translation are recognised in the income statement. Non-monetary assets 
and liabilities that are measured in terms of historical cost in a foreign currency are translated using 
the exchange rate at the date of the transaction. Non-monetary assets and liabilities denominated 
in foreign currencies that are stated at fair value are translated to sterling at foreign exchange rates 
at the dates the values were determined.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
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Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
Notes to the Group financial statements
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

1. Accounting policies continued
Foreign currencies continued
Assets and liabilities of foreign subsidiaries, including goodwill and fair value adjustments arising 
on consolidation, are translated into sterling at rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date. 
The revenues and expenses of foreign subsidiaries are translated to sterling at the average foreign 
exchange rates for the year, this is deemed to be a reasonable approximation of the actual rate ruling 
at the transaction date. Differences on exchange arising from the retranslation of the opening net 
investment in subsidiaries, and from the translation of the results of those subsidiaries at average 
rate, are reported as an item of other comprehensive income and accumulated in the translation 
reserve. Any differences that have arisen since 1 January 2004, the date of transition to IFRS, are 
presented as a separate component of equity. Translation differences that arose before the date of 
transition to IFRS in respect of all foreign entities are not presented as a separate component.
Revenue
Revenue is measured based on the consideration specified in a contract with a customer. The Group 
recognises revenue when it transfers control of a product or service to a customer and is shown net 
of value-added tax, returns, rebates and discounts and after eliminating sales within the Group. 
The transaction price is determined and known at the point of initial sale.
Revenue from the sale of actuators, gearboxes and flow control products is recognised in the income 
statement when control of the goods has transferred. The timing of the transfer of control to the 
customer varies depending on the nature of the products sold and the individual terms of the contract 
of sale. Sales made under internationally accepted trade terms, Incoterms 2020, are recognised as 
revenue when the Group has completed the primary duties required to transfer control as defined 
by the International Chamber of Commerce Official Rules for the Interpretation of Trade Terms. 
This is the agreed point in time when the customer has accepted and has legal title to the goods, 
there is a present right to payment for the goods, and they can determine its future use and location.
The Group provides service and support through preventative maintenance contracts, on-site and 
workshop service, retrofit solutions and the client support programme. Revenue in respect of on-site 
and workshop service and retrofit solutions is recognised on completion of the work and after all 
performance obligations have been completed. Revenue in respect of preventative maintenance 
contracts and the client support programme is recognised as the services are performed in line with 
the contractual terms. The stage of completion is assessed by reference to the transfer of control 
over time, which usually corresponds to the contractual agreement with each separate customer and 
the costs incurred on the contract to date in comparison with the total forecast costs of the contract. 
The directors have assessed that these contracts are satisfied over time given that the customer 
simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided by the Group. The nature of revenue 
recognised on an over time basis is not dissimilar to that recognised on a point in time basis when 
considering the factors in IFRS 15, in particular the short timeframe over which the Group’s 
performance obligations are satisfied and the low level of uncertainty in those revenue 
arrangements, therefore no further disaggregation is considered necessary in note 3.
No revenue is recognised if there are significant uncertainties regarding recovery of the consideration 
due, associated completion costs, the possible return of goods or continuing management 
involvement with the goods. 
The Group has applied the practical expedient in IFRS 15.121 and therefore not disclosed the 
information in IFRS 15.120 regarding unsatisfied (or partially unsatisfied) performance obligations 
on contracts with a duration of one year or less.
Business combinations
Business combinations are accounted for using the acquisition method as at the acquisition date, 
which is the date on which control is transferred to the Group
For acquisitions on or after 1 January 2010, the Group measures goodwill at the acquisition date as:
•	 the fair value of the consideration transferred; plus 
•	 the recognised amount of any non-controlling interests in the acquiree; plus
•	 the fair value of the existing equity interest in the acquiree; less
•	 the net recognised amount (generally fair value) of the identifiable assets acquired and 
liabilities assumed. 
When the excess is negative, a bargain purchase gain is recognised immediately in the income 
statement. The fair value of the assets and liabilities assumed are provisional for a 12 month period. 
Costs related to the acquisition, other than those associated with the issue of debt or equity 
securities, are expensed as incurred.
Any contingent consideration payable is recognised at fair value at the acquisition date. If the 
contingent consideration is classified as equity, it is not remeasured and settlement is accounted for 
within equity. Otherwise, subsequent changes to the fair value of the contingent consideration are 
recognised in the Consolidated income statement.
Goodwill is stated at cost or deemed cost less any impairment losses. Goodwill is not amortised 
but is reviewed for impairment annually. For the purposes of impairment testing, goodwill is 
allocated to each of the Group’s cash generating units (CGUs) expected to benefit from the 
synergies of the combination. An impairment loss is recognised whenever the carrying value 
of an asset or its CGU exceeds its recoverable amount. Impairment losses are recognised in the 
Consolidated income statement.
Non-controlling interests
Non-controlling interests in subsidiaries are identified separately from the Group’s equity therein. 
The interest of non-controlling shareholders is initially measured at the non-controlling interests’ 
proportion of the share of the fair value of the acquiree’s identifiable net assets. Subsequent to 
acquisition, the carrying amount of non-controlling interests is the amount of those interests 
at initial recognition plus the non-controlling interests’ share of subsequent changes in equity. 
Total comprehensive income is attributed to non-controlling interests even if this results in the 
non-controlling interests having a deficit balance.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
179
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

1. Accounting policies continued
Intangible assets
i) Research and development
Expenditure on research activities, undertaken with the prospect of gaining new scientific or technical 
knowledge and understanding, is recognised in the income statement in the period in which it is 
incurred. Development costs incurred after the point at which the commercial and technical feasibility 
of the product have been proven, and the decision to complete the development has been taken and 
resources made available, are capitalised. The expenditure capitalised includes the cost of materials, 
direct labour and an appropriate proportion of overheads. Capitalised development expenditure is 
stated at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. Development expenditure has 
an estimated useful life of up to five years and is written off on a straight-line basis.
ii) Software as a Service
For ‘Software as a Service‘ (SaaS) arrangements, the Group capitalises costs only relating to the 
configuration and customisation of SaaS arrangements as intangible assets where control of the 
software and associated configured and customised elements exists. An element of judgement is 
involved with identifying specific elements of programme costs, however, these judgements do not 
have a significant impact on the costs to be capitalised. SaaS assets are assessed to have useful lives of 
10 to 15 years from the point in time they are available for use and are amortised on a straight-line basis.
iii) Other intangible assets
Other intangible assets that are acquired by the Group as part of a business combination are stated 
at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. The useful life of each of these assets 
is assessed based on discussions with the management of the acquired business and takes account 
of the differing nature of each of the intangible assets acquired. The assessed useful lives of 
intangibles acquired are as follows: 
Brands	
	
	
	
4 to 10 years 
Customer relationships	
	
2 to 8 years
Other	
	
	
	
3 to 8 years
Amortisation is charged on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful life of the assets. 
Property, plant and equipment
Freehold land is not depreciated. Long leasehold buildings are amortised over 50 years or the 
expected useful life of the building where less than 50 years. Other assets are depreciated in equal 
annual instalments by reference to their estimated useful lives and residual values at the following 
annual rates:
Freehold buildings	 	
	
2% to 4%
Short leasehold buildings	
	
period of lease
Plant and equipment	
	
10% to 33%
Items of property, plant and equipment are stated at cost or deemed cost less accumulated 
depreciation and impairment losses. 
Leases
i) The Group as a lessee
For any new contracts entered into, the Group considers whether a contract is, or contains a lease. 
A lease is defined as ‘a contract, or part of a contract, that conveys the right to use an asset 
(the underlying asset) for a period of time in exchange for consideration’. To apply this definition 
the Group assesses whether the contract meets three key evaluations which are whether:
•	 the contract contains an identified asset, which is either explicitly identified in the contract 
or implicitly specified by being identified at the time the asset is made available to the Group;
•	 the Group has the right to obtain substantially all of the economic benefits from use of the 
identified asset throughout the period of use, considering its rights within the defined scope 
of the contract; and
•	 the Group has the right to direct the use of the identified asset throughout the period of use. 
The Group assesses whether it has the right to direct ‘how and for what purpose’ the asset is 
used throughout the period of use.
ii) Measurement and recognition of leases as a lessee
At the lease commencement date, the Group recognises a right-of-use asset and a lease liability 
on the balance sheet. The right-of-use asset is measured at cost, which is made up of the initial 
measurement of the lease liability, any initial direct costs incurred by the Group, an estimate of any 
costs to dismantle and remove the asset at the end of the lease, and any lease payments made in 
advance of the lease commencement date (net of any incentives received). Where a lease allows for 
an extension to the initial duration, this is recognised only when the extension is reasonably certain 
to be exercised.
The Group depreciates the right-of-use assets on a straight-line basis from the lease commencement 
date to the earlier of the end of the useful life of the right-of-use asset or the end of the lease term. 
The Group also assesses the right-of-use asset for impairment when such indicators exist.
At the commencement date, the Group measures the lease liability at the present value of the lease 
payments unpaid at that date, discounted using the interest rate implicit in the lease if that rate is 
readily available or the Group’s incremental borrowing rate. Lease payments included in the 
measurement of the lease liability are made up of fixed payments, variable payments based on an 
index or rate, amounts expected to be payable under a residual value guarantee and payments 
arising from options reasonably certain to be exercised.
Subsequent to initial measurement, the liability will be reduced for payments made and increased 
for interest. It is remeasured to reflect any reassessment or modification, or if there are changes in 
in-substance fixed payments. When the lease liability is remeasured, the corresponding adjustment 
is reflected in the right-of-use asset, or income statement if the right-of-use asset is already reduced to zero.
The Group has elected to account for short-term leases and leases of low-value assets using the practical 
expedients. Instead of recognising a right-of-use asset and lease liability, the payments in relation to 
these are recognised as an expense in the income statement on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
On the balance sheet, right-of-use assets have been included in property, plant and equipment and 
lease liabilities have been included in interest-bearing loans and borrowings.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
180
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

1. Accounting policies continued
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
Obligations for loans and borrowings are recognised when the Group becomes party to the related 
contracts and are measured initially at fair value less directly attributable transaction costs. After 
initial recognition, interest-bearing loans and borrowings are subsequently measured at amortised 
cost. Amortised cost is calculated by taking into account any issue costs and any discount or premium 
on settlement. Borrowings are classified as current liabilities unless the Group has a right to defer 
settlement of the liability for at least 12 months after the balance sheet date.
Taxation
Income tax on the profit for the year comprises current and deferred tax. Income tax is recognised 
in the income statement except to the extent that it relates to items recognised directly in equity or 
in other comprehensive income, in which case it is recognised in equity or in other comprehensive 
income respectively. Current tax is the expected tax payable on the taxable income for the year, 
using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date, and any adjustment 
to tax payable in respect of previous years.
Deferred tax is provided using the balance sheet liability method, providing for temporary differences 
between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts 
used for taxation purposes. The following temporary differences are not provided for: the effect of 
taxable temporary differences for goodwill not deductible for tax purposes and the initial recognition 
of assets or liabilities in a transaction which is not a business combination that affect neither accounting 
nor taxable profits. The amount of deferred tax provided is based on the expected manner of realisation 
or settlement of the carrying amount of assets and liabilities, using tax rates enacted or substantively 
enacted at the balance sheet date.
A deferred tax asset is recognised only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profits 
will be available against which the asset can be utilised. Deferred tax assets are reduced to the extent 
that it is no longer probable that the related tax benefit will be realised. Both deferred and current 
tax assets and liabilities are offset when criteria set out in IAS 12.71 and IAS 12.74 are met.
Inventory and work in progress
Inventory and work in progress is valued at the lower of cost and net realisable value. Cost is 
calculated either on a ‘first in, first out’ or an average cost basis depending upon its nature and use. 
In respect of work in progress and finished goods, cost includes all production overheads and the 
attributable proportion of indirect overhead expenses which are required to bring inventories to their 
present location and condition. The net realisable value in respect of old and slow moving inventory 
is assessed by reference to historic usage patterns and forecast future usage.
Trade and other receivables
Trade and other receivables are initially recognised at fair value and are subsequently held at amortised 
cost less any expected credit losses according to IFRS 9.
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash balances and short term (with an original maturity less than 
three months) deposits. Bank overdrafts that are repayable on demand form part of cash and cash 
equivalents for the purpose of the consolidated statement of cash flows.
Equity
Equity comprises issued equity capital, share premium, reserves and retained earnings.
When issued equity capital is repurchased, the amount paid, including directly attributable costs, 
is recognised as a change in equity. Repurchased shares are debited directly to equity and shown 
as a deduction from retained earnings.
Provisions
A provision for warranties is recognised when the underlying products or services are sold. The 
provision is based on historical warranty cost data, known issues and management expectations 
of future costs.
Employee benefits
i) Pension plans
Where the Group operates a defined benefit pension scheme, contributions are made in accordance 
with the schedule of contributions agreed with the Trustees. In respect of all remeasurements that 
arise in calculating the Group’s obligation in respect of the plans, these are recognised in other 
comprehensive income. The retirement benefit obligation recognised in the consolidated balance 
sheet represents the deficit in the Group’s defined benefit pension schemes. Where the interest is 
a net expense it is recognised within finance expenses and where it is net income it is recognised 
within finance income.
The Group also operates defined contribution pension schemes. The costs for these schemes are 
recognised in the income statement as incurred.
ii) Share-based payment transactions
The Rotork Sharesave Plan offers certain employees the opportunity to purchase shares in Rotork plc 
at a discounted price compared with the market price at the time of grant. Details of the scheme 
are given in note 27. The fair value of the right/option is recognised as an employee expense with 
a corresponding increase in equity. The fair value is measured at grant date and spread over the 
period between grant and maturity. The right/option reaches maturity when the employee becomes 
unconditionally entitled. The fair value of the grant is measured using a Black-Scholes model, taking 
into account the terms and conditions upon which the rights were granted. The amount recognised 
as an expense is adjusted to reflect the actual number of share options that vest except where 
forfeiture is due only to share prices not achieving the threshold for vesting.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
181
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

1. Accounting policies continued
Employee benefits continued
ii) Share-based payment transactions continued
The Rotork Long Term Incentive Plan grants shares to executive directors and senior managers. 
These awards may vest after a period of three years dependent upon both market and non-market 
performance conditions being met. Details of the grants are given in note 27. The fair value of the 
award is measured at grant date, using a Monte Carlo simulation model which takes into account the 
market based performance criteria, and spread over the vesting period. The fair value of the award 
is recognised as an employee expense with a corresponding increase in equity for the share settled 
award. The amount recognised as an expense is adjusted to exclude options that do not vest as a 
result of non-market performance conditions not being met.
The Global Employee Share Plan (GESP) and the share incentive plan (SIP) are discretionary profit-linked 
share schemes based on the prior year profit of the participating Rotork companies. The value of the 
award to each employee is based on salary and the length of service. The value of the awards can be 
up to £3,600. Shares awarded under these schemes are issued by the trustee at the cost of purchase. 
The costs of providing these plans are recognised in the income statement over the period in which 
the employee has earned the award. 
iii) Long term service leave
The Group’s net obligation in respect of long term service leave is the amount of future benefit 
that employees have earned in return for their service in the current and prior periods.
iv) Other employee benefits
The Group offers a number of discretionary bonus schemes to employees around the world. 
The costs of these schemes are recognised in the income statement as the criteria are met and 
service is undertaken. 
Derivative financial instruments
The Group uses forward exchange contracts and swaps to hedge its exposure to foreign exchange 
risk arising from operational and financing activities. These are the only derivative financial instruments 
used by the Group. In accordance with its Treasury Policy, the Group does not hold or issue contracts 
for trading purposes. Forward exchange contracts that do not qualify for hedge accounting are 
accounted for as trading instruments.
At inception of designated hedging relationships, the Group documents the risk management 
objective and strategy for undertaking the hedge. The Group also documents the economic 
relationship between the hedged item and the hedging instrument, including whether the changes 
in cash flows of the hedged item and hedging instrument are expected to offset each other.
Forward exchange contracts are recognised initially at fair value. Where a forward exchange contract 
is designated as a hedge of the variability in cash flows of a recognised liability or a highly probable 
forecasted transaction, the effective part of any gain or loss on the forward contract is recognised 
directly in other comprehensive income. Any effective cumulative gain or loss is removed from equity 
and recognised in the income statement at the same time as the hedged transaction. The ineffective 
part of any gain or loss is recognised in the income statement immediately.
When a hedging instrument or hedge relationship is terminated but the hedged transaction is still 
expected to occur, the cumulative gain or loss at that point remains in equity and is recognised in 
accordance with the above policy when the transaction occurs. If the hedged transaction is no 
longer expected to take place, the cumulative unrealised gain or loss held in equity is recognised 
in the income statement immediately. 
Dividends
Interim dividends are recorded in the financial statements when they are paid. Final dividends 
are recorded in the financial statements in the period in which they are approved by the 
Company’s shareholders.
Critical judgements and key estimation uncertainties
Estimates and judgements are regularly evaluated and are based on historical experience and 
other factors, including expectations of future events that are believed to be reasonable under 
the circumstances.
As described on pages 80 to 84, we have considered the impact of climate change and climate-related 
risks and concluded that there is no material impact on the key accounting policies, estimates and 
judgements that form the basis of these financial statements.
The Group makes estimates and assumptions concerning the future. The resulting estimates will, by 
definition, seldom equal the actual results. The estimates and assumptions that have a risk of causing 
a material adjustment to the carrying amount of assets and liabilities in the next financial year are 
listed below.
i) Critical accounting judgements
There are no critical accounting judgements requiring evaluation.
ii) Key sources of estimation uncertainty
There are no key sources of estimation uncertainty in the current year. In the prior year, for the defined 
benefit pension schemes, management were required to estimate the future rates of inflation, discount 
rates and longevity of members, each of which may have a material impact on the defined benefit 
obligations that were recorded. Sensitivities to changes in key estimates affecting the pension 
schemes’ liabilities are shown in note 26.
2. Alternative performance measures
The Group uses adjusted figures as key performance measures in addition to those reported under 
adopted IFRS, as management believe these measures provides stakeholders with additional useful 
information to facilitate greater comparison of the Group’s underlying results with prior periods and 
assessment of trends in financial performance. 
The Group believes alternative performance measures, which are not considered to be a substitute 
for, or superior to, IFRS measures, provide stakeholders with additional helpful information on the 
performance of the business. These alternative performance measures are consistent with how the 
business performance is planned and reported within the internal management reporting to the 
Board. Some of these measures are also used for the purpose of setting remuneration targets.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
182
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

2. Alternative performance measures continued
The key alternative performance measures that the Group use include adjusted profit measures and 
organic constant currency (OCC). Explanations of how they are calculated and reconciled to IFRS 
statutory results are set out below.
a. Adjusted operating profit
Adjusted operating profit is the Group’s operating profit excluding the amortisation of acquired 
intangible assets and other adjusting items as defined in note 1. Further details on these adjustments 
are given in note 5.
b. Adjusted profit before tax
The adjustments in calculating adjusted profit before tax are consistent with those in calculating 
adjusted operating profit above.
2024
2023
Profit before tax
140,461
150,638
Adjustments:
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
2,604
2,110
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
18,009
—
Gain on disposal of property
—
(723)
Business Transformation costs
17,214
13,097
Other costs
4,720
1,224
Adjusted profit before tax
183,008
166,346
c. Adjusted basic and diluted earnings per share
Adjusted basic earnings per share is calculated using the adjusted net profit attributable to the 
ordinary shareholders and dividing it by the weighted average ordinary shares in issue (see note 19). 
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders is calculated as follows:
2024
2023
Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
103,585
113,488
Adjustments:
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
2,604
2,110
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
18,009
—
Gain on disposal of property
—
(723)
Business Transformation costs
17,214
13,097
Other costs
4,720
1,224
Tax effect on adjusted items
(10,526)
(3,567)
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
135,606
125,629
Adjusted diluted earnings per share is calculated by using the adjusted net profit attributable to 
ordinary shareholders and dividing it by the weighted average ordinary shares in issue adjusted to 
assume conversion of all potentially dilutive ordinary shares (see note 19). 
d. Adjusted dividend cover
Dividend cover is calculated as earnings per share divided by dividends per share. Adjusted dividend 
cover is calculated as adjusted earnings per share as defined in note 2c above divided by dividends 
per share.
e. Total shareholder return
Total shareholder return is the movement in the price of an ordinary share plus dividends during the 
year, divided by the opening share price.
f. Return on capital employed
The return on capital employed ratio is used by management to help ensure that capital is 
used efficiently.
2024
2023
Adjusted operating profit
178,406
164,475
Capital employed
Net assets
598,502
622,295
Cash and cash equivalents
(149,983)
(146,372)
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
24,649
11,957
Pension deficit/(surplus) net of deferred tax
2,686
(6,904)
Capital employed
475,854
480,976
Average capital employed
478,415
485,507
Return on capital employed
37.3%
33.9%
Average capital employed is defined as the average of the capital employed at the start and end of 
the relevant year.
g. Working capital as a percentage of revenue
Working capital as a percentage of revenue is monitored as control of working capital is key to 
achieving our cash generation targets. It is calculated as inventory plus trade receivables, less trade 
payables, divided by revenue.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
183
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

2. Alternative performance measures continued
h. Organic constant currency (OCC)
OCC results adjust for currency movements and for acquisitions and disposals.
Key headings in the income statement are reconciled to OCC as follows:
2023
Foreign 
exchange
Acquisitions
Organic constant 
currency
 
2024
Revenue
719,150
(24,110)
2,209
57,179
754,428
Cost of sales
(380,054)
13,463
(895)
(15,008)
(382,494)
Gross profit
339,096
(10,647)
1,314
42,171
371,934
Overheads
(174,621)
3,526
(383)
(22,050)
(193,528)
Adjusted operating profit
164,475
(7,121)
931
20,121
178,406
During the year the calculation of OCC performance was changed from translating reporting period 
results at the prior period average exchange rates to translating the prior period results at the 
reporting period’s average exchange rates. This change enables greater comparability of results 
over multiple previous periods. Adjustments for acquisitions and/or disposals are unchanged – 
acquired businesses are not included until owned for more than one year and are then included 
on an equal perimeter basis, disposed businesses are excluded entirely. 
Applying the previous calculation methodology to the 2024 results does not result in a material 
difference in the OCC performance for the year.
i. Cash conversion
Cash conversion is calculated as cash generated from operations (titled adjusted operating cash flow 
in prior year) as a percentage of adjusted operating profit. It is monitored to illustrate how efficiently 
adjusted operating profits are converted into cash. Cash generated from operations is calculated in 
note 25.
2024
2023
Cash generated from operations (note 25)
212,738
197,843
Adjusted operating profit (note 5)
178,406
164,475
Cash conversion
119%
120%
3. Operating segments 
The three identifiable operating segments where the financial and operating performance is reviewed 
monthly by the chief operating decision maker are as follows: 
•	 Oil & Gas
•	 Chemical, Process & Industrial
•	 Water & Power
The Group’s customers are allocated to a segment. Sales to that customer, along with all directly 
associated costs of that sale, are reported under the segment to which that customer is allocated. 
Where customers sell into multiple segments, a lead segment is identified. Sales to these customers 
will generally be allocated to the lead segment unless the sale is of significance and an alternative 
segment has been identified, in which case it will be reported under the alternative segment.
Costs not directly attributed to a sale are allocated across the three segments. There are some costs 
which are directly attributable to a segment, but most support costs and facility costs are not directly 
attributable to a segment and are generally allocated based on split of revenue. 
Analysis by operating segment
Oil & Gas 
2024
Chemical, 
Process & 
Industrial
2024
Water & 
Power
2024
Corporate
 expenses
2024
Group
2024
Revenue from 
external customers
355,506
205,028
193,894
—
754,428
Segment result/Adjusted 
operating profit*
91,983
52,987
56,359
(22,923)
178,406
Adjusting items
(42,547)
Operating profit
135,859
Net finance income
4,602
Income tax expense
(35,663)
Profit for the year
104,798
Oil & Gas
2023
Chemical, 
Process & 
Industrial
2023
Water & 
Power
2023
Corporate
 expenses
2023
Group
2023
Revenue from 
external customers
328,391
213,712
177,047
—
719,150
Segment result/Adjusted 
operating profit*
83,627
51,253
46,445
(16,850)
164,475
Adjusting items
(15,708)
Operating profit
148,767
Net finance income
1,871
Income tax expense
(37,150)
Profit for the year
113,488
*	
Adjusted operating profit is operating profit before adjusting items (see note 5).
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
184
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

3. Operating segments continued
Analysis by operating segment continued
Oil & Gas
2024
Chemical, 
Process & 
Industrial
2024
Water &
 Power
2024
Group
2024
Depreciation
6,489
3,782
4,021
14,292
Amortisation of development costs
1,283
748
794
2,825
Oil & Gas
2023
Chemical, 
Process & 
Industrial
2023
Water & 
Power
2023
Group
2023
Depreciation
6,180
4,022
3,331
13,533
Amortisation of development costs
774
504
417
1,695
Balance sheets are reviewed by subsidiary and operating segment balance sheets are not prepared. 
Therefore no further analysis of operating segments assets and liabilities is presented.
Geographical analysis
Rotork has a worldwide presence in all three operating segments. A full list of Rotork locations can 
be found at www.rotork.com.
Revenue by end destination
2024
2023
UK
54,594
48,124
Other EMEA
233,935
212,689
Total EMEA
288,529
260,813
China
112,478
111,284
India
49,242
40,925
Other APAC
93,555
105,290
Total APAC
255,275
257,499
USA
143,523
132,840
Other Americas
67,101
67,998
Total Americas
210,624
200,838
754,428
719,150
4. Acquisitions 
There were no acquisitions in the current year.
Prior year acquisitions
On 4 August 2023, the Group acquired 100% of the share capital of Hanbay Inc. (‘Hanbay’) for 
£21,107,000. Hanbay designs and manufactures precise, miniature electric actuators which offer 
a compact profile and high torque design for use with small valves and instrument valves for use 
in hazardous and non-hazardous applications, headquartered in Montreal, Canada. The acquisition 
expands the Group’s electric actuator offering and is fully consistent with all three pillars of the Growth+ 
strategy and increases the percentage sales contribution of the Group’s Eco-transition portfolio. 
The acquisition had the following effect on the Group’s assets and liabilities as at 31 December 2023 
and were not provisional at 31 December 2023.
Fair value
Non-current assets
Property, plant and equipment
13
Intangible assets
9,379
Current assets
Inventory
695
Trade and other receivables
45
Cash
2,708
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables
(96)
Non-current liabilities
Deferred tax liability
(2,485)
Total net identifiable assets
10,259
Goodwill
10,848
Cash movements in respect of acquisitions
 
Purchase consideration – paid in cash
21,107
Cash held in acquired subsidiary
(2,708)
 
18,399
The goodwill arising from this acquisition represents the opportunity to grow through expanding the 
Group’s electric actuator offering and employee know-how.
The intangible assets identified comprise customer relationships, product design and non-compete 
agreements. The intangible assets have been valued by modelling the discounted cash flows attributable 
to the respective asset. A discount rate of 18.0% was used. Assumptions regarding future cash flows 
are based on a combination of historic performance data and management’s forecasts.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
185
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

4. Acquisitions continued
Prior year acquisitions continued
Acquisition costs
Acquisition costs of £384,000 were expensed in administration expenses in the income statement 
in the prior year and presented as other adjustments to profit. 
5. Adjusting items 
Refer to note 1 for details on the adjustments to profit, including an explanation of ‘other adjustments’. 
The adjustments to profit included in statutory profit are as follows:
2024
2023
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
(2,604)
(2,110)
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
(18,009)
—
Gain on disposal of property
—
723
Business Transformation costs
(17,214)
(13,097)
Other costs
(4,720)
(1,224)
Other adjustments
(21,934)
(13,598)
Total adjusting items
(42,547)
(15,708)
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
In August 2024 the UK defined benefit pension scheme transacted a second bulk annuity, covering 
the benefits of the remaining UK Scheme’s membership (mainly deferred pensioners). Given all 
the UK scheme’s liabilities are now insured, this second bulk annuity has been accounted for as 
a settlement under IAS 19 and therefore a loss of £18,009,000 has been recognised in the income 
statement. Further information can be found in note 26.
Business Transformation costs
During the year £17,214,000 (2023: £13,097,000) of costs were incurred on Business Transformation. 
The multi-year transformation includes the implementation and integration of common systems and 
processes throughout the Group, including a new cloud-based ERP system. This brings the total 
expensed under the programme to £62,134,000. These costs were expensed as they do not meet 
the capitalisation criteria under IAS 38. Costs include an allocation of personnel expenses in respect 
of employees directly involved in the programme.
Over the next three years we will deploy the Business Transformation programme, including the 
new ERP system, across all other Group entities at an estimated further cost of £60m to £65m. 
Other costs
£4,720,000 (2023: £1,224,000) of other costs have been incurred, largely in relation to the 
relocation of the Shanghai (China) facility to Changshu (China). 
Income statement disclosure 
All adjustments are included in administrative expenses. The adjustments are taxable or tax deductible 
in the country in which the expense is incurred.
Cash flow statement disclosure 
Other adjustments have a net operating cash outflow of £21,200,000 (2023: £13,496,000) and a net 
investing cash inflow of £nil (2023: £955,000).
6. Other income and expenses 
2024
2023
Gain on disposal of property, plant and equipment
161
684
Other
1,572
721
Other income
1,733
1,405
2024
2023
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment
(64)
(342)
Other
(179)
(448)
Other expenses
(243)
(790)
7. Personnel expenses 
2024
2023
Wages and salaries (including bonus and incentive plans)
164,323
152,679
Social security costs
22,657
21,514
Pension costs (note 26)
8,343
7,392
Share-based payments (note 27)
6,664
5,670
Increase/(decrease) in liability for long term service leave
303
(352)
202,290
186,903
2024
2023
Average monthly number of employees during the year:
UK
972
901
Overseas
2,468
2,390
3,440
3,291
Personnel expenses and the average monthly number of employees during the year includes expenses 
and employees that are included in Business Transformation costs within Adjusting items (note 5).
In addition to the costs shown above £18,009,000 (2023: £nil) has been recognised in the consolidated 
income statement in relation to the settlement loss on the UK defined benefit pension scheme (note 26).
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
186
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

8. Finance income and expense 
Recognised in the consolidated income statement
2024
2023
Interest income
4,391
4,203
Net interest income on pension scheme liabilities (note 26)
215
352
Foreign exchange gains
2,717
746
Finance income
7,323
5,301
2024
2023
Interest expense
(1,480)
(807)
Interest expense on lease liabilities (note 29)
(761)
(495)
Foreign exchange losses
(480)
(2,128)
Finance expense
(2,721)
(3,430)
Recognised in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income
2024
2023
Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow hedges
721
797
Fair value of cash flow hedges transferred to income statement
(797)
1,044
Foreign currency translation differences for foreign operations
(12,915)
(20,271)
(12,991)
(18,430)
Recognised in:
Hedging reserve
(76)
1,841
Translation reserve
(12,915)
 (20,271)
(12,991)
(18,430)
9. Profit before tax 
Profit before tax is stated after charging/(crediting) the following:
 
Notes
2024
2023
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment:
– Owned assets
i
9,389
9,385
– Assets held under lease contracts
i
4,903
4,148
Amortisation:
– Acquired intangible assets
iii
2,604
2,110
– Product development costs
iii
1,928
1,409
– Software
iii
789
657
Impairment of development cost assets
iii
897
286
Inventory write downs recognised in the year
ii
5,992
2,310
Product research and development expenditure
iii
9,091
10,468
Exchange differences realised 
iv
(851)
1,382
Fees payable to the Group’s auditor and their associates for*:
– For the audit of the Group’s annual accounts
1,443
1,338
– For the audit of the Group’s subsidiaries
257
106
Total audit fees
1,700
1,444
– Audit related assurance services
81
70
Total non-audit fees
81
70
Total fees
1,781
1,514
These costs can be found under the following headings in the consolidated income statement:
i)	
Both within cost of sales and administrative expenses
ii)	 Within cost of sales
iii)	 Within administrative expenses
iv)	 Within finance income and expenses
*	
KPMG LLP were appointed as the Group’s auditors on 30 April 2024. Audit fees payable in 2024 are to KPMG LLP and audit 
fees payable in 2023 are to the Group’s previous auditor, Deloitte LLP.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
187
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

10. Income tax expense
2024
2024
2023
2023
Current tax
UK corporation tax on profits for the year
6,658
4,865
Adjustment in respect of prior years
486
435
7,144
5,300
Overseas tax on profits for the year
37,459
32,091
Adjustment in respect of prior years
(1,940)
146
35,519
32,237
Total current tax
42,663
37,537
Deferred tax
Origination and reversal of other temporary 
differences
(6,303)
1,187
Impact of rate change
(71)
(591)
Adjustment in respect of prior years
(626)
(983)
Total deferred tax
(7,000)
(387)
Total tax charge for year
35,663
37,150
Profit before tax
140,461
150,638
Profit before tax multiplied by the blended standard rate 
of corporation tax in the UK of 25.0% (2023: 23.5%)
35,115
35,400
Effects of:
Different tax rates on overseas earnings
(177)
2,131
Irrecoverable withholding tax on dividends
3,777
2,421
Permanent differences
695
(118)
Losses not recognised
126
166
Tax incentives
(1,722)
(1,587)
Impact of rate change
(71)
(861)
Adjustments to tax charge in respect of prior years
(2,080)
(402)
Total tax charge for year
35,663
37,150
Effective tax rate
25.4%
24.7%
2024
2024
2023
2023
Adjusted profit before tax (note 2b)
183,008
166,346
Total tax charge for the year
35,663
37,150
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
549
286
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
4,502
—
Business Transformation costs
4,357
3,220
Other adjustments (note 5)
1,118
61
Adjusted total tax charge for the year
46,189
40,717
Adjusted effective tax rate
25.2%
24.5%
A tax credit of £9,000 (2023: £43,000) in respect of share-based payments has been recognised 
directly in equity in the year. 
The effective tax rate for the year is 25.4% (2023: 24.7%). The adjusted effective tax rate is 25.2% 
(2023: 24.5%) and is lower than the effective tax rate for the year principally because of the tax 
treatment of expenses included in adjusting items.
The adjusted effective tax rate has increased from 24.5% in 2023 to 25.2% in 2024, principally 
because of increases in tax rates in jurisdictions in which Rotork operate, including the blended 
UK corporation tax rate which increased from 23.5% in 2023 to 25.0% in 2024. The consequent 
increase in the adjusted effective tax rate has been partially offset by the recovery of withholding tax 
relating to prior year distributions, which is also the predominant driver of the prior year adjustment 
to overseas tax above. The Group expects its adjusted effective tax rate to continue to move in line 
with the trends in corporate tax rates in the jurisdictions where Rotork operates. The adjusted 
effective tax rate will continue to be higher than the standard UK rate due to higher rates of tax 
in China, the US, Germany and India.
On 20 June 2023 legislation was substantively enacted in the UK to introduce the OECD’s Pillar Two 
global minimum tax rules together with a UK qualified domestic minimum top-up tax, with effect from 
1 January 2024. Under the legislation Rotork plc will be required to pay to the UK tax authorities 
top-up tax on profits of its subsidiaries that are taxed at an effective tax rate of less than 15 per cent.
The Pillar Two tax charge borne by the Rotork plc does not have a material impact on its current tax expense.
The Group will continue to assess the impact of the Pillar Two income taxes legislation on its future 
financial performance.
There is an unrecognised deferred tax liability for temporary differences associated with investments 
in subsidiaries. Rotork plc controls the dividend policies of its subsidiaries and the timing of the reversal 
of the temporary differences. The value of temporary differences associated with unremitted earnings 
of subsidiaries for which deferred tax has not been recognised is £357,208,000 (2023: £320,839,000).
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
188
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

11. Goodwill
2024
2023
Cost
At 1 January
253,397
249,791
Acquisition through business combinations (note 4)
—
10,848
Exchange adjustments
(7,032)
(7,242)
At 31 December
246,365
253,397
Provision for impairment
At 1 January
21,694
21,786
Exchange adjustments
(122)
(92)
At 31 December
21,572
21,694
Net book value
224,793
231,703
Cash generating units
Goodwill acquired through business combinations has been allocated to groups of cash generating 
units (CGUs) that are expected to benefit from that business combination. For the Group, these are 
considered to be the Oil & Gas, Chemical, Process & Industrial and Water & Power divisions. On this 
basis, the value in use calculations exceeded the CGU carrying values after applying sensitivity analysis.
Discount rate 
Discount rate
Cash generating unit
2024
2023
2024
2023
Oil & Gas
11.5%
13.5% 
88,864
92,326
Chemical, Process & Industrial
11.6%
13.7% 
119,113
120,799
Water & Power
11.6%
13.7% 
16,816
18,578
Total Group
224,793
231,703
	
Impairment testing
The Group is required to test, on an annual basis, whether goodwill has suffered any impairment. 
The annual impairment test was performed at 31 October 2024. The annual impairment testing 
considers a range of scenarios which includes costs and risks associated with sustainability.
The key assumptions used in the annual impairment review which are common to all CGUs are 
set out below:
i) Discount rates
The discount rates for the significant CGUs presented above are pre-tax rates that reflect current 
market assessments of the time value of money and the risks specific to the CGU for which the 
future cash flows have not been adjusted. Discount rates are based on estimations that market 
participants operating in similar sectors to Rotork would make, using the Group’s economic profile 
as a starting point. For each CGU, the risk premium was adjusted on a weighted average basis to 
reflect the region in which the CGU carries out the majority of its business, applied a premium based 
on the size of the CGU and applied a market participant tax rate in the region the CGU operates. 
In calculating the discount rates, consideration was given to exclude risks that were not relevant 
or which had already been reflected in the cash flows.
ii) Growth rates
Value in use calculations are used to determine the recoverable amount of goodwill allocated to 
each of the CGUs. These calculations use cash flow projections from management forecasts which 
are based on the budget and the Group’s three year strategic plan. The three year plan is a bottom 
up process which takes place as part of the annual budget process. Once the budget for the next 
financial year is finalised, years two and three of the three year plan are prepared by each reporting 
entity’s management reflecting their view of the local market, known projects and experience of 
past performance and expectations of future changes in the market. The Group annual budget 
and the three year plan are reviewed and approved by the Board each year. The compound annual 
revenue growth forecast for the Group during years one to three, used within the impairment 
models, reflects the growth rates within the budget and three-year plans. Years four and five 
of the forecast used within the impairment model are based on Group management judgement 
and forecasts taking account for future expected changes in the market. From year six onwards, 
a growth rate of 2% (2023: 2%) is used to drive a terminal value.
Sensitivity analysis
The Group has conducted an analysis of the sensitivity of the impairment test to changes in the key 
assumptions used to determine the recoverable amount for each of the CGUs to which goodwill 
is allocated. 
There are no reasonably possible changes in assumptions that would lead to an impairment.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
189
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

12. Intangible assets
Software
Product 
development
costs
Acquired intangible assets
Brands
Customer 
relationships
Other
Total
Cost
31 December 2022
11,690
26,238
52,892
119,395
22,243
232,458
Additions
2,089
3,394
—
—
—
5,483
Acquisition through business 
combinations
—
—
—
1,938
7,441
9,379
Exchange adjustments
—
(106)
(1,703)
(3,484)
(454)
(5,747)
31 December 2023
13,779
29,526
51,189
117,849
29,230
241,573
Additions
2,729
4,329
—
—
—
7,058
Exchange adjustments
—
(59)
(963)
(3,081)
(1,147)
(5,250)
31 December 2024
16,508
33,796
50,226
114,768
28,083
243,381
Amortisation
31 December 2022
—
19,930
50,564
119,142
22,243
211,879
Charge for the year
657
1,409
1,186
378
546
4,176
Impairment
—
286
—
—
—
286
Exchange adjustments
—
(105)
(1,672)
(3,537)
(580)
(5,894)
31 December 2023
657
21,520
50,078
115,983
22,209
210,447
Charge for the year
789
1,928
1,111
237
1,256
5,321
Impairment
—
897
—
—
—
897
Exchange adjustments
—
(52)
(963)
(2,957)
(741)
(4,713)
31 December 2024
1,446
24,293
50,226
113,263
22,724
211,952
Net book value
31 December 2023
13,122
8,006
1,111
1,866
7,021
31,126
31 December 2024
15,062
9,503
—
1,505
5,359
31,429
Other acquired intangible assets represent order books, intellectual property, non-compete 
agreements and unpatented technology.
The amortisation charge and impairment are recognised within administrative expenses in the 
income statement.
Included in the net book value of software are assets in the course of development, which are not 
amortised, with a cost of £2,389,000 (2023: £917,000).
13. Property, plant and equipment 
Land and 
buildings
Plant and 
equipment
Total
Cost
31 December 2022
85,451
130,178
215,629
Additions
5,715
8,735
14,450
Disposals
(1,704)
(9,525)
(11,229)
Acquisition through business combinations
—
13
13
Exchange adjustments
(5,992)
(5,850)
(11,842)
31 December 2023
83,470
123,551
207,021
Additions
15,486
16,304
31,790
Disposals
(2,835)
(3,689)
(6,524)
Transfers
(2,026)
2,026
—
Exchange adjustments
(4,506)
(6,927)
(11,433)
31 December 2024
89,589
131,265
220,854
Depreciation
31 December 2022
34,066
102,837
136,903
Charge for the year
4,508
9,025
13,533
Disposals
(1,243)
(9,116)
(10,359)
Exchange adjustments
(4,228)
(3,239)
(7,467)
31 December 2023
33,103
99,507
132,610
Charge for the year
5,028
9,264
14,292
Disposals
(2,835)
(3,570)
(6,405)
Exchange adjustments
(3,166)
(6,779)
(9,945)
31 December 2024
32,130
98,422
130,552
Net book value
31 December 2023
50,367
24,044
74,411
31 December 2024
57,459
32,843
90,302
The net book value of land and buildings can be analysed between:
2024
2023
Land
5,474
5,820
Buildings
51,985
44,547
Net book value at 31 December
57,459
50,367
It is the Group’s policy to test assets for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances 
indicate that their carrying amounts may not be recoverable. 
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
190
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

13. Property, plant and equipment continued
Included in the net book value of plant and equipment are assets in the course of construction, 
which are not depreciated, with a cost of £nil (2023: £1,996,000). Depreciation of these assets 
will commence when the assets are ready for their intended use.
Included in the net book value of land and buildings and plant and equipment are leased assets 
(see note 29).
14. Deferred tax assets and liabilities
Assets
Liabilities
Net
Assets
Liabilities
Net
2024
2024
2024
2023
2023
2023
Property, plant and equipment
3,803
(1,900)
1,903
1,942
(1,530)
412
Intangible assets
5,933
(5,401)
532
3,111
(4,187)
(1,076)
Employee benefits
5,695
(50)
5,645
3,170
— 
3,170
Inventory
6,810
(100)
6,710
5,709
—
5,709
Tax losses
1,707
—
1,707
1,646
—
1,646
Other items
3,315
(1,765)
1,550
3,577
(1,856)
1,721
Net tax assets/(liabilities)
27,263
(9,216)
18,047
19,155
(7,573)
11,582
Set off of tax
(5,179)
5,179
—
(3,701)
3,701
—
22,084
(4,037)
18,047
15,454
(3,872)
11,582
Movements in the net deferred tax balance during the year are as follows:
2024
2023
Balance at 1 January 
11,582
11,937
Credited/(charged) to the income statement
6,929
(204)
Credited directly to equity in respect of share-based payments
9
43
Impact of rate change
71
591
(Charged)/credited directly to equity in respect of pension schemes
(359)
2,153
Credited/(charged) directly to hedging reserves in respect of cash flow hedges
19
(445)
Acquired as part of business combinations
—
(2,527)
Exchange differences
(204)
34
Balance at 31 December 
18,047
11,582
A deferred tax asset of £22,084,000 (2023: £15,454,000) has been recognised at 31 December 2024. 
The directors are of the opinion, based on recent and forecast trading, that the level of profits in the 
current and future years make it more likely than not that these assets will be recovered. 
A deferred tax asset has not been recognised in relation to capital losses of £7,632,000 (2023: £7,559,000), 
due to uncertainty over the offset against future capital profits in the companies concerned. There is 
no expiry date in relation to this asset.
15. Inventories
2024
2023
Raw materials and consumables
64,180
67,381
Work in progress
3,135
5,687
Finished goods
16,049
10,895
83,364
83,963
Included in cost of sales was £265,088,000 (2023: £262,201,000) in respect of inventories consumed 
in the year. 
16. Trade and other receivables
2024
2023
Current assets
Trade receivables
153,501
154,870
Allowance for expected credit loss
(4,022)
(2,028)
Trade receivables – net
149,479
152,842
Current tax
4,164
4,187
Other non-trade receivables
6,406
6,683
Other taxes and social security
8,175
10,323
Prepayments
9,258
6,695
Other receivables
23,839
23,701
17. Cash and cash equivalents
2024
2023
Bank balances
70,290
78,617
Cash in hand
12
12
Short term deposits
79,681
67,743
Cash and cash equivalents in the consolidated statement of cash flows
149,983
146,372
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
191
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

18. Capital and reserves
0.5p Ordinary 
shares issued 
and fully 
paid up 
2024
£1 Non- 
redeemable 
preference 
shares 
2024
0.5p Ordinary 
shares issued 
and fully 
paid up 
2023
£1 Non- 
redeemable 
preference 
shares 
2023
At 1 January
4,306
40
4,304
40
Issued under employee share schemes
2
—
2
—
Cancelled following share buyback programme
(76)
—
—
—
At 31 December
4,232
40
4,306
40
Number of shares (000)
846,381
861,201
The ordinary shareholders are entitled to receive dividends as declared and are entitled to vote at 
meetings of the Company. 
Share issue
The Group received proceeds of £840,000 (2023: £1,047,000) in respect of the 321,000 (2023: 430,000) 
ordinary shares issued during the year: £2,000 (2023: £2,000) was credited to share capital and 
£838,000 (2023: £1,045,000) to share premium. Further details of the share awards are shown 
in note 2.
Own shares held
Within the retained earnings reserve are own shares held in Rotork’s Employee Benefit Trust. The Group 
acquired 3,129,000 of its own shares during the year (2023: 773,000). The total amount paid to 
acquire the shares was £10,348,000 (2023: £2,444,000), and this has been deducted from shareholders’ 
equity. During the year, 973,000 (2023: 1,038,000) ordinary shares were released to satisfy share 
plan awards. The investment in own shares held is £12,271,000 (2023: £5,056,000) and represents 
3,722,000 (2023: 1,566,000) ordinary shares of the Company held in trust for the benefit of directors 
and employees for future payments under the Share Incentive Plan and Long Term Incentive Plan. 
The dividends on these shares have been waived.
Preference shares
The preference shareholders (see note 20) take priority over the ordinary shareholders when there 
is a distribution upon winding up the Company or on a reduction of equity involving a return of 
capital. The holders of preference shares are entitled to vote at a general meeting of the Company 
if a preference dividend is in arrears for six months or the business of the meeting includes the 
consideration of a resolution for winding up the Company or the alteration of the preference 
shareholders’ rights.
Translation reserve
The translation reserve comprises all foreign exchange differences arising from the translation 
of the financial statements of foreign operations.
Capital redemption reserve
The capital redemption reserve arises when the Company redeems shares wholly out of 
distributable profits.
Hedging reserve
The hedging reserve comprises the effective portion of the cumulative net change in the fair value 
of cash flow hedging instruments that are determined to be an effective hedge.
Dividends
The following dividends were paid in the year per qualifying ordinary share:
Payment date
2024 
2024
2023
4.65p final dividend for 2023 (final dividend  
for 2022: 4.30p)
24 May
39,881
36,926
2.75p interim dividend for 2024  
(interim dividend for 2023: 2.55p)
23 September
23,384
21,894
63,265
58,820
After the balance sheet date the following dividends per qualifying ordinary share were proposed by 
the directors. The dividends have not been provided for.
2024
2023
Final proposed dividend per qualifying ordinary share
5.00p
42,133
—
4.65p
—
40,046 
19. Earnings per share
Basic earnings per share
Earnings per share is calculated for both the current and previous years using the profit attributable 
to the ordinary shareholders for the year. The earnings per share calculation is based on 853.6m 
shares (2023: 859.3m shares) being the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue 
(net of own ordinary shares held) for the year.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
192
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

19. Earnings per share continued
Basic earnings per share continued
2024
2023
Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
103,585
113,488
Weighted average number of ordinary shares
Issued ordinary shares net of own shares held at 1 January
859,636
858,940
Effect of own shares held
82
198
Effect of share buyback programme
(6,174)
—
Effect of shares issued under Sharesave plans
102
122
Weighted average number of ordinary shares during the year 
853,646
859,260
Basic earnings per share
12.1p
13.2p
Adjusted basic earnings per share
Adjusted basic earnings per share is calculated for both the current and previous years using the 
profit attributable to the ordinary shareholders for the year after adding back the after-tax impact 
of the adjustments. The reconciliation showing how adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary 
shareholders is derived is shown in note 2.
2024
2023
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
135,606
125,629
Weighted average number of ordinary shares during the year 
853,646
859,260
Adjusted basic earnings per share
15.9p
14.6p
Diluted earnings per share
Diluted earnings per share is based on the profit for the year attributable to the ordinary shareholders 
and 857.0m shares (2023: 862.4m shares). The number of shares is equal to the weighted average 
number of ordinary shares in issue (net of own ordinary shares held) adjusted to assume conversion 
of all potentially dilutive ordinary shares. The Company has two categories of potentially dilutive 
ordinary shares: those share options granted to employees under the Sharesave plan where the 
exercise price is less than the average market price of the Company’s ordinary shares during the 
year and contingently issuable shares awarded under the Long Term Incentive Plan (LTIP).
2024
2023
Net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
103,585
113,488
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (diluted)
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the year 
853,646
859,260
Effect of Sharesave options 
798
730
Effect of LTIP share awards 
2,549
2,398
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (diluted) during the year 
856,993
862,388
Diluted earnings per share
12.1p
13.2p
Adjusted diluted earnings per share
2024
2023
Adjusted net profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
135,606
125,629
Weighted average number of ordinary shares (diluted) during the year
856,993
862,388
Adjusted diluted earnings per share
15.8p
14.6p
20. Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
This note provides information about the contractual terms of the Group’s interest-bearing loans and 
borrowings. For more information about the Group’s exposure to interest rate, liquidity and currency 
risks, see note 28.
Notes
2024
2023
Non-current liabilities
Preference shares classified as debt
40
40
Lease liabilities
29
20,280
8,786
20,320
8,826
Current liabilities
Lease liabilities
29
4,329
3,131
4,329
3,131
Total interest-bearing loans and borrowings
24,649
11,957
Terms and debt repayment schedule
The terms and conditions of outstanding bank loans and preference shares were as follows:
Currency
Interest 
rates
Year of 
maturity
2024
2023
Non-redeemable preference shares
Sterling
9.5%
—
40
40
40
40
Information on leases and the lease repayment profile are shown in note 29.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
193
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

21. Employee benefits
2024
2023
Recognised liability for defined benefit obligations (note 26)
3,618
—
Other pension scheme liabilities
153
673
Employee bonuses
24,773
25,497
Employee indemnity provision
1,884
2,016
Other employee benefits
6,417
5,765
36,845
33,951
Non-current
7,699
4,197
Current
29,146
29,754
36,845
33,951
Defined benefit pension scheme disclosures are detailed in note 26.
22. Provisions
Warranty 
provision
Other 
provisions
Total
Balance at 1 January 2024
4,465
1,181
5,646
Exchange differences
(99)
(1)
(100)
Charge to the income statement
731
752
1,483
Provisions utilised during the year
(559)
(272)
(831)
Balance at 31 December 2024
4,538
1,660
6,198
Maturity at 31 December 2024
Non-current
1,441
—
1,441
Current
3,097
1,660
4,757
4,538
1,660
6,198
Maturity at 31 December 2023
Non-current
1,371
—
1,371
Current
3,094
1,181
4,275
4,465
1,181
5,646
The warranty provision is based on estimates made from historical warranty data associated with 
similar products and services. The provision relates mainly to products sold during the last 12 months 
and the typical warranty period is 18 months.
The Other provisions are expected to be utilised within the next 12 months.
23. Trade and other payables
2024
2023
Current liabilities
Trade payables
43,838
40,585
Current tax
15,982
12,387
Other taxes and social security
8,801
8,906
Contract liabilities
7,715
9,142
Other non-trade payables and accrued expenses
33,473
24,488
Other payables
49,989
42,536
Contract liabilities are recognised as amounts are received from customers in advance of performance 
under contract, these amounts are then recognised as revenue as and when the Group performs 
under the contract. Generally there is no significant time delay between receipt from customers and 
performance under contract and so these liabilities remain current. 
24. Derivative financial instruments
Assets
2024
Liabilities
2024
Assets
2023
Liabilities
2023
Forward foreign exchange contracts – cash flow hedges
1,049
303
879
81
Foreign exchange swaps – cash flow hedges
—
143
—
472
Total 
1,049
446
879
553
Less non-current portion:
Forward foreign exchange contracts – cash flow hedges
120
84
206
15
Current portion
929
362
673
538
The full fair value of a hedging derivative is classified as a non-current asset or liability if the 
remaining maturity of the hedged item is more than 12 months, and as a current asset or liability, 
if the maturity of the hedged item is less than 12 months.
There was no ineffectiveness to be recorded from the use of foreign exchange contracts.
The hedged forecast transactions denominated in foreign currency are expected to occur at various 
dates. Gains and losses in respect of these derivatives recognised in the hedging reserve in equity at 
31 December 2024 are recognised in the income statement in the period or periods during which the 
hedged forecast transaction affects the income statement.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
194
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

25. Cash generated from operations
Note
2024 
2023 
Profit for the year
104,798
113,488
Income tax expense
10
35,663
37,150
Finance income
8
(7,323)
(5,301)
Finance expense
8
2,721
3,430
Operating profit
135,859
148,767
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
2,604
2,110
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
5
18,009
—
Other adjustments
5
21,934
13,598
Depreciation
13
14,292
13,533
Amortisation and impairment of development costs
12
3,614
2,352
Equity settled share-based payments
27
6,664
5,670
Profit on sale of property, plant and equipment
(109)
(342)
Increase in provisions
922
216
Cash generated from operations before working 
capital cash flows
203,789
185,904
(Increase)/decrease in inventories
(1,437)
5,490
Increase in trade and other receivables
(1,064)
(10,488)
Increase in trade and other payables
12,017
1,399
(Decrease)/increase in employee benefits
(567)
15,538
Cash generated from operations
212,738
197,843
26. Pension schemes
i) Defined benefit pension schemes
The Group operates two defined benefit pension arrangements – the Rotork Pension and Life 
Assurance Scheme (UK Scheme) and the Rotork Controls Inc. Pension Plan (US Pension Plan). 
On retirement, leaving service or death, the Schemes provide benefits based on final salary and 
length of service. Whether measured by assets or liabilities, the UK Scheme is more than 85% 
of the overall value of the two defined benefit schemes.
The UK Scheme is subject to the Statutory Funding Objective under the Pensions Act 2004. 
A valuation of the Scheme is carried out at least once every three years to determine whether 
the Statutory Funding Objective is met. As part of the process, the Company must agree with 
the trustees of the Scheme the contributions to be paid to address any shortfall against the 
Statutory Funding Objective.
The UK Scheme is managed by a Trustee, with directors appointed in part by the Group and part 
from elections by members of the Scheme. The Trustee has responsibility for obtaining valuations of 
the fund, administering benefit payments and investing the Scheme’s assets. The Trustee delegates 
some of these functions to its professional advisers where appropriate. The UK Scheme which was 
closed to new entrants in 2003 and was closed to future accrual from 1 April 2018.
In May 2023, the Group paid a one-off contribution to the UK Scheme of £20.0m. This was to help 
facilitate the Scheme’s purchase of a bulk annuity with Aviva, covering the UK Scheme’s current 
pensioner liabilities. This transaction happened in the second half of June 2023. 
In August 2024 the UK Scheme transacted a second bulk annuity with Aviva, covering the benefits of 
the remainder of the UK Scheme’s membership (mainly deferred pensioners). With exception of GMP 
equalisation, which has still to be implemented and has therefore not been insured yet, and subject 
to any issues that emerge from the ongoing data verification work for the two bulk annuities, all the 
liabilities of the UK Scheme have now been insured with Aviva. However, 5% of the premium due for 
the second bulk annuity has been deferred and can remain so until the data verification work has 
been completed – this amount (which was just over £3.0 million at 31 December 2024) has been 
included as a liability of the UK Scheme at 31 December 2024.
Given all the UK Scheme’s liabilities are now insured (except for the impact of GMP equalisation and 
subject to the results of the data verification work), this second bulk annuity has been accounted for 
as a settlement under IAS 19. The settlement calculations have been carried out at 19 August 2024, 
which was the risk transfer date for the second transaction. The settlement loss arising at 19 August 
2024 has two components. The main component results from the £17.5m difference between the 
premium paid by the UK Scheme and the value of the insured liabilities measured on an IAS 19 basis. 
In addition, as part of the second bulk annuity negotiations, it was established that Aviva were 
unable to administer one aspect of the UK Scheme’s method for revaluing deferred members’ 
benefits. To enable the bulk annuity to transact, a slightly improved methodology for deferred 
revaluation was agreed. This means there is also a past service cost component, equal to £0.5m. 
The overall settlement loss is therefore £18.0m.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
195
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

26. Pension schemes continued
i) Defined benefit pension schemes continued
The US Pension Plan is subject to the ERISA funding requirements. A valuation of the Plan is carried 
out annually to ensure the Funding Objective is met under ERISA by contributing at least the 
Minimum Required Contribution. As part of this process the Company must contribute to the Plan 
enough contributions to ensure at least the Minimum Contribution is deposited in the Trust to pay 
for the accrual of benefits. The US Pension plan, which was closed to new entrants in 2009, was 
closed to future accrual on 31 December 2018.
The impact of the requirement to equalise benefits of men and women for unequal GMPs was 
previously estimated to be a 0.3% addition to the liabilities of the UK Scheme. In the context of the 
second bulk annuity, the UK Scheme’s advisers made an updated estimate of the eventual impact 
of GMP equalisation on the two buy-in contracts. The corresponding IAS 19 value of this revised 
estimate is marginally higher than the previous allowance within the UK Scheme’s IAS 19 liabilities 
and has been allowed for within the 2024 year-end valuation. The precise impact of GMP 
equalisation is unlikely to be clear for some time.
The ongoing data verification work for the first buy-in, although not yet complete, has led the 
UK Scheme’s advisers to estimate that there may be a small additional premium due as part of 
the eventual true-up. This has been reflected at the 2024 year-end. 
In June 2023, the High Court handed down a decision in the case of Virgin Media Limited v 
NTL Pension Trustees II Limited and others relating to the validity of certain historical pension 
changes. This case may have implications for other defined benefit schemes in the UK. In July 2024, 
the appeal against the original decision was dismissed. The Group obtained legal advice that there is 
no obligation for the Trustee to investigate historical changes made and concluded that the scheme 
will be administered on the same basis as before the decision. Therefore, this has had no impact on 
the value of the defined benefit obligations.
Movements in the present value of defined benefit obligations
2024
2023
Liabilities at 1 January
146,222
144,381
Interest cost
6,637
6,704
Benefits paid
(7,782)
(7,414)
Actuarial (gain)/loss
(15,771)
3,558
Past service cost
519
—
Currency loss/(gain)
291
(1,007)
Liabilities at 31 December
130,116
146,222
Movements in fair value of plan assets
2024
2023
Assets at 1 January
155,366
136,375
Interest income on plan assets
6,852
7,056
Employer contributions
4,129
26,475
Benefits paid
(7,782)
(7,414)
Return on plan assets, excluding interest income on plan assets
(14,849)
(6,317)
Settlement loss on assets
(17,490)
—
Currency gain/(loss)
272
(809)
Assets at 31 December
126,498
155,366
Expense recognised in the income statement
2024
2023
Net interest income
(215)
(352)
Past service cost
519
—
Settlement loss on assets
17,490
—
17,794
(352)
This expense is recognised in the following line items in the income statement
2024
2023
Net finance expense 
(215)
(352)
Administrative expenses
18,009
—
17,794
(352)
Remeasurements over the year
2024
2023
Experience adjustments on plan assets
(14,849)
(6,317)
Experience adjustments on plan liabilities
(336)
(2,681)
Actuarial gain/(loss) from changes to financial assumptions
15,901
(3,180)
Actuarial gain from changes to demographic assumptions
207
2,303
Experience adjustments on currency
(20)
198
903
(9,677)
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
196
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

26. Pension schemes continued
i) Defined benefit pension schemes continued
Reconciliation of net defined benefit obligation
2024
2023
Net defined benefit obligation at the beginning of the year
(9,144)
8,006
Net financing expense
(215)
(352)
Past service cost
519
—
Settlement loss on assets
17,490
—
Remeasurements over the year
(903)
9,677
Employer contributions
(4,129)
(26,475)
3,618
(9,144)
Liability for defined benefit obligations
The principal actuarial assumptions at 31 December 2024 (expressed as weighted averages):
UK scheme
(% per annum)
US scheme
(% per annum)
Weighted average
(% per annum)
2024
2023
2024
2023
2024
2023
Discount rate
5.50
4.55
5.44
4.77
5.49
4.58
Rate of increase in salaries
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Rate of increase in pensions  
(post May 2000)
3.00
2.90
0.00
0.00
2.59
2.50
Rate of increase in pensions  
(pre May 2000)
4.60
4.60
0.00
0.00
3.97
4.00
UK rate of inflation
3.10
3.00
n/a
n/a
3.10
3.00
In the UK the Retail Price Index is used as the rate of inflation as it is a requirement of the 
UK Scheme’s rules.
The split of the Schemes’ assets were as follows:
Fair value
2024
Fair value
2023
Equities
—
7,825
Property
433
839
Multi-asset credit (quoted)
(15)
3,770
LDI/absolute return bonds/cash
1,412
53,690
Value of Aviva bulk annuities
111,517
74,049
Balancing premium for second bulk annuity
(3,025)
—
US deposit administration contract
16,176
15,193
Total
126,498
155,366
Actual return on Schemes’ assets (excluding settlement loss)
(7,997)
739
The UK Scheme is now primarily invested in the two Aviva bulk annuities, which have insured all 
its liabilities (except for the impact of GMP equalisation and subject to the results of the data 
verification work).
The only change made to the UK Scheme’s demographic assumptions at the 2024 year-end is that 
future improvements in mortality are now based on the CMI_2023 core projection model, which 
places a 15% weighting on 2022’s and 2023’s mortality experience (2023: CMI_2022).
By way of example the respective mortality tables indicate the following life expectancy for UK 
Scheme members:
2024 Life expectancy at age 65
2023 Life expectancy at age 65
Current age
Male
Female
Male
Female
65
22.7
23.5
22.7
23.4
45
24.0
24.9
24.0
24.8
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
197
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

26. Pension schemes continued
i) Defined benefit pension schemes continued
Sensitivity analysis on the Schemes’ liabilities
Approximate effect on liabilities
Adjustments to assumptions
2024
2023
Discount rate
Plus 1.0% p.a.
(16,000)
(20,700)
Minus 1.0% p.a.
18,600
24,500
Inflation
Plus 0.5% p.a.
5,600
6,700
Minus 0.5% p.a.
(5,300)
(6,400)
Life expectancy
Increase of one year in assumed life expectancy
5,000
5,100
The sensitivities disclosed are indicative of how reasonably possible changes would impact the 
liabilities recognised. Further movements in assumptions would result in higher variances accordingly. 
They are approximate and only show the likely effect of an assumption being adjusted whilst all 
other assumptions remain the same. They focus solely on the liability impact and do not reflect likely 
matching movements in the assets.
The sensitivity analysis was determined using the same method as per the calculation of liabilities 
for the balance sheet disclosures, but using assumptions adjusted as detailed above.
Effect of the Schemes on the Group’s future cash flows
The Group is required to agree a Schedule of Contributions with the Trustee of the UK Scheme following 
a valuation which must be carried out at least once every three years. Following the valuation of the 
UK Scheme as at 31 March 2022, the Group estimates that cash contributions to the Group’s defined 
benefit pension schemes during 2025 will be nil (2024: £3,667,000), although there will be a need 
for further contributions when the balancing payment for the second bulk annuity becomes due. 
The next triennial valuation is due with an effective date of 31 March 2025.
The weighted average duration of the defined benefit obligation for the UK Scheme is approximately 
15 years.
ii) Other pension plans
The Group makes a contribution to a number of defined contribution plans around the world to 
provide benefits for employees upon retirement. Total expense relating to these plans in the year 
was £8,343,000 (2023: £7,392,000). 
27. Share-based payments
The Group awards shares under the LTIP, the Save As You Earn scheme (Sharesave plan), the Global 
Employee Share Plan (GESP) and the Share Incentive Plan (SIP). The equity settled share-based 
payment expense included in the income statement for each of the plans can be analysed as follows:
2024
2023
Sharesave plan (a)
604
539
Long Term Incentive Plan (b)
3,193
2,533
GESP/SIP profit-linked share scheme (c)
2,867
2,598
Total expense recognised as employee costs (note 7)
6,664
5,670
Volatility assumptions for equity-based payments
The expected volatility of all equity compensation benefits is based on the historic volatility (calculated 
based on the weighted average remaining life of each benefit), adjusted for any expected changes 
to future volatility due to publicly available information.
a) Sharesave plan
UK employees are invited to join the Sharesave plan when an offer is made each year. All the offers to 
date were made at a 20% discount to market price at the time. There are no performance criteria for 
the Sharesave plan. Employees are given the option of joining either the 3 year or the 5 year scheme.
3 year scheme
5 year scheme
2024
2023
2024
2023
Grant date
4 October
6 October
4 October
6 October
Share price at grant date
330p
304p
330p
304p
Exercise price
254p
243p
254p
243p
Shares granted under scheme
422,120
407,482
170,027
115,093
Vesting period
3 years
3 years
5 years
5 years
Expected volatility
29.4%
31.1%
29.4%
31.1%
Risk free rate
3.88%
4.48%
3.87%
4.40%
Expected dividends expressed as a dividend yield
2.24%
2.26%
2.24%
2.26%
Probability of ceasing employment before vesting
2.00%
2.00%
2.00%
2.00%
Fair value
105p
97p
117p
109p
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
198
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

27. Share-based payments continued
Volatility assumptions for equity-based payments continued
a) Sharesave plan continued
Movements in the number of share options outstanding and their weighted average prices are as follows:
2024
2023
Average option 
price per share
Options
Average option 
price per share
Options
At 1 January 
221p
2,460,589
220p
2,538,426
Granted
254p
592,147
243p
522,575
Exercised
261p
(321,324)
243p
(429,946)
Forfeited
226p
(207,306)
229p
(170,466)
At 31 December 
223p
2,524,106
221p
2,460,589
Of the 2,524,106 outstanding options (2023: 2,460,589), 85,540 are exercisable (2023: 120,220). 
The Group received proceeds of £840,000 in respect of the 321,324 options exercised during the 
year: £2,000 was credited to share capital and £838,000 to share premium. The weighted average 
share price at date of exercise was 326p (2023: 310p).
The weighted average remaining life of 1,680,977 (2023: 1,640,383) awards outstanding under the 
3 year plan is 1.7 years. The weighted average remaining life of 843,129 (2023: 820,206) awards 
outstanding under the 5 year plan is 3.2 years.
b) Long Term Incentive Plan
The LTIP is a performance share plan under which shares are conditionally allocated to selected 
members of senior management at the discretion of the Remuneration Committee on an annual 
basis. Following shareholder approval of the LTIP at the Company’s AGM on 18 May 2000, awards 
of shares are made to executive directors and senior managers each year. 
2019 LTIP plan
Following shareholder approval of the 2019 LTIP plan at the Company’s AGM on 26 April 2019, 
awards of shares have been made annually to executive and senior managers. Previously, a third 
of these awards vested under a TSR performance condition, a third under an EPS performance 
condition and a third under a Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) performance condition. For the 2023 
awards onwards, 30% of these awards vest under a TSR performance condition, 30% under an EPS 
performance condition, 30% under a Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) performance condition and 
10% under an ESG performance condition.
TSR measures the change in value of a share and reinvested dividends over the period of measurement. 
The actual number of shares transferred will be determined by the number of shares initially allocated 
multiplied by a vesting percentage. The actual number of shares transferred will be 25% at the 50th 
percentile rising to 100% at the 75th percentile.
The EPS performance condition is satisfied with 25% (15% for pre 2023 awards) of the awards 
vesting if the EPS growth is 9% over the vesting period up to a maximum of 100% vesting if EPS 
growth exceeds 35%.
Vesting of awards under the ROIC condition is determined by calculating the growth in ROIC, on a 
cumulative basis, over the performance period. For the 2022, 2023 and 2024 awards, the awards will 
vest by comparing the average ROIC over the performance period against a set of pre-defined targets.
The ESG performance condition is satisfied with an absolute reduction in scope 1 and 2 CO2 emissions 
with targets aligned to the accredited, published 2030 SBTI targets.
The performance period for the 2021 awards ended on 31 December 2023. Messrs. PricewaterhouseCoopers 
LLP as independent actuaries certified to the Remuneration Committee that there was a 13.8% 
vesting of this award as the Group’s EPS growth was 17.1% over the performance period. The TSR 
and ROIC elements of the scheme did not vest as the performance criteria were not met. 
The performance period for the 2022 awards ended on 31 December 2024. Messrs. PricewaterhouseCoopers 
LLP as independent actuaries certified to the Remuneration Committee that there was a 55.8% vesting of 
this award as the Group’s EPS growth was 41.2% over the performance period and the Group’s growth in 
economic profit was 48.2%. The TSR element of the scheme did not vest as the performance criteria were 
not met. 
2024
2023
Grant date
21 March
24 March
Share price at grant date
333p
307p
Shares granted under scheme
1,651,166
1,543,337
Vesting period
3 years
3 years
Expected volatility
26.0%
28.4%
Risk free rate
4.0%
3.3%
Expected dividends expressed as a dividend yield
0.0%
0.0%
Probability of ceasing employment before vesting
5% p.a.
5% p.a.
Fair value of awards under TSR performance conditions
170p
190p
Fair value of awards under EPS and ROIC performance conditions
333p
307p
Outstanding 
at start of year
Granted 
during year
Vested 
during year
Lapsed
Outstanding 
at end of year
2021 Award
810,872
—
(110,545)
(700,327)
—
2022 Award
1,211,676
—
—
(94,599)
1,117,077
2023 Award
1,543,337
—
—
(153,292)
1,390,045
2024 Award
—
1,651,166
—
(34,876)
1,616,290
3,565,885
1,651,166
(110,545)
(983,094)
4,123,412
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
199
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

27. Share-based payments continued
2019 LTIP plan continued
The weighted average remaining life of awards outstanding is one year.
c) Global Employee Share plan (GESP) and the Share Incentive Plan (SIP)
These discretionary profit-linked shares schemes are annual schemes based on the prior year profit 
of participating Rotork companies. The value of the award to each employee is based on salary and 
length of service and can be up to £3,600. 
28. Financial instruments
Financial risk and treasury policies
The Group Treasury department maintains liquidity, identifies and manages foreign exchange risk, 
manages relations with the Group’s bankers and provides a treasury service to the Group’s businesses. 
Treasury dealings such as investments, borrowings and foreign exchange are conducted only to 
support underlying business transactions.
The Group has clearly defined policies for the management of credit, foreign exchange and interest 
rate risk. The Group Treasury department is not a profit centre and, therefore, does not undertake 
speculative foreign exchange dealings for which there is no underlying exposure. Exposures resulting 
from sales and purchases in foreign currency are matched where possible and the net exposure may 
be hedged.
a) Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk of financial loss to the Group if a customer or counterparty to a financial 
instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations, and arises principally from the Group’s 
receivables from customers and cash on deposit with financial institutions. 
Management has a credit policy in place and exposure to credit risk is both monitored on an ongoing 
basis and reduced through the use of credit insurance covering over 80% of trade receivables at any 
time. Credit evaluations are carried out on all customers requiring credit above a certain threshold, 
with varying approval levels set around this depending on the value of the sale. At the balance sheet 
date there were no significant concentrations of credit risk.
Goods are sold subject to retention of title clauses, so that in the event of non–payment the Group 
may have a secured claim.
The Group maintains an allowance for impairment in respect of non–insured receivables where 
recoverability is considered doubtful.
The Group Treasury Committee meets regularly and reviews the credit risk associated with 
institutions that hold a material cash balance. As well as credit ratings, counterparties and 
instruments are assessed for credit default swap pricing and liquidity of funds.
Exposure to credit risk 
The carrying amount of financial assets represents the maximum credit exposure. The maximum 
exposure to credit risk at the reporting date was:
Carrying amount
2024
2023
Trade receivables
149,479
152,842
Cash and cash equivalents
149,983
146,372
299,462
299,214
The maximum exposure to credit risk for trade receivables at the reporting date by currency was:
Carrying amount
2024
2023
Sterling
18,738
23,613
US dollar
39,076
30,291
Euro
41,558
46,378
Other
50,107
52,560
149,479
152,842
Allowance for expected credit loss against trade receivables
The following table shows the expected credit loss (ECL) that has been recognised for trade receivables:
Gross 
2024
Provision 
2024
Gross 
2023
Provision 
2023
Not past due
122,311
—
118,229
—
Past due 0–30 days
19,261
—
23,077
(32)
Past due 31–60 days
5,339
(121)
6,684
(96)
Past due 61–90 days
1,800
(67)
2,084
(106)
Past due more than 91 days
4,791
(3,835)
4,796
(1,794)
153,502
(4,023)
154,870
(2,028)
b) Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will not be able to meet its financial obligations as they fall 
due. The Group’s approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, as far as possible, that it will always 
have sufficient liquidity to meet its liabilities when due, under both normal and stressed conditions, 
without incurring unacceptable losses or risking damage to the Group’s reputation.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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200
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

28. Financial instruments continued
Financial risk and treasury policies continued
b) Liquidity risk continued
The Group is highly cash generative and uses monthly cash flow forecasts to monitor cash 
requirements and to optimise its return on investments. Typically the Group ensures that it has 
sufficient cash on hand to meet foreseeable operational expenses; it also maintains a £5,000,000 
uncommitted undrawn overdraft facility (2023: £5,000,000) on which interest would be payable 
at base rate plus 2.0% (2023: 2.0%), a €5,000,000 uncommitted undrawn overdraft facility 
(2023: €5,000,000) on which interest would be payable at base rate plus 1.1% (2023: 1.1%), 
a $5,200,000 uncommitted undrawn overdraft facility (2023: nil) on which interest would be 
payable at the bank’s cost of funds plus 1.1% and a CNY 40,000,000 (2023: nil) uncommitted 
undrawn overdraft facility on which interest would be payable the bank’s cost of funds plus 
1.1%. There are additional facilities of INR 750m, payable at base rate plus 2% (2023: 2%) and 
USD $10m, payable at base rate plus 1.25% (2023: 1.25%) that are used to manage local working 
capital requirements and treated as overdrafts. They remain undrawn.
The Group holds a £75,000,000 committed Revolving Credit Facility which matures in December 2027. 
At 31 December 2024 this committed facility was fully undrawn, resulting in £75,000,000 being available.
The following are the contractual maturities of financial liabilities, including interest payments 
and excluding the impact of netting agreements:
Analysis of contractual cash flow maturities
31 December 2024
Carrying 
amount
Contractual 
cash flows
Less than 
12 months
1–2 years
2–5 years
More than 
5 years
Lease liabilities
24,609
28,795
5,212
4,613
6,846
12,124
Trade and other payables  
and accrued expenses
77,311
77,311
77,311
—
—
—
Foreign exchange contracts
446
446
362
84
—
—
Non-redeemable preference shares
40
40
—
—
—
40
102,406
106,592
82,885
4,697
6,846
12,164
Analysis of contractual cash flow maturities
31 December 2023
Carrying 
amount
Contractual 
cash flows
Less than 
12 months
1–2 years
2–5 years
More than 
5 years
Lease liabilities
11,917
13,220
3,604
3,134
5,367
1,115
Trade and other payables  
and accrued expenses
65,073
65,073
65,073
—
—
—
Foreign exchange contracts
553
553
538
15
—
—
Non-redeemable preference shares
40
40
—
—
—
40
77,583
78,886
69,215
3,149
5,367
1,155
Where a counterparty experiences credit stress the foreign exchange contracts may be settled on a 
net basis but standard practice is to settle on a gross basis and the undiscounted gross outflow in 
respect of these contracts is £88,700,000 (2023: £102,500,000) and the gross inflow is £89,300,000 
(2023: £102,800,000).
c) Market risk
Market risk arises from changes in market prices, such as currency rates and interest rates, and 
may affect the Group’s results. The objective of market risk management is to manage and control 
market risk within suitable parameters.
i) Currency risk
The Group is exposed to foreign currency risk on sales and purchases that are denominated in a 
currency other than the business unit’s functional currency. The currencies primarily giving rise to this 
risk are the US dollar and related currencies and the euro. The Group hedges up to 75% of forecast 
US dollar or euro foreign currency exposures using forward exchange contracts. In respect of other 
non-sterling monetary assets and liabilities the exposures may also be hedged up to 75% where this 
is deemed appropriate.
As part of the Group’s cash management some of the overseas subsidiaries have loan and deposit 
balances where their intra-group counterparty is in the UK. The balances are typically in local 
currency for the subsidiary so the UK holds a foreign currency current asset or liability which is 
usually hedged through the use of foreign exchange swaps. At the balance sheet date only the 
‘forward’ part of the swap remains and this is designated as a cash flow hedge to match the 
currency exposure of the intercompany loan asset.
The Group classifies its forward exchange contracts (that hedge both the forecast sale and purchase 
transactions and the intercompany loan and deposit balances) as cash flow hedges and states them 
at fair value. The net fair value of foreign exchange contracts used as hedges at 31 December 2024 
was a £603,000 asset (2023: £326,000 asset) comprising an asset of £1,049,000 (2023: £879,000) 
and a liability of £446,000 (2023: £553,000). Forward exchange contracts in place at 31 December 
2024 mature in 2025 and 2026.
Changes in the fair value of foreign exchange contracts that economically hedge monetary assets 
and liabilities in foreign currencies, and for which no hedge accounting is applied, are recognised in 
the income statement.
Sensitivity analysis
It is estimated that, with all other variables held equal (in particular other exchange rates), a general 
change of one cent in the value of euro against sterling would have had an impact on the Group’s 
operating profit for the year ended 31 December 2024 of £250,000 (2023: £150,000) and a change 
of one cent in the value of US dollar against sterling would have had an impact on the Group’s 
operating profit for the year ended 31 December 2024 of £650,000 (2023: £500,000). Larger 
changes would have a linear impact on operating profit. The method of estimation, which has been 
applied consistently, involves assessing the transaction impact of US dollar and euro cash flows and 
the translation impact of US dollar and euro profits.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
201
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

28. Financial instruments continued
Financial risk and treasury policies continued
c) Market risk continued
i) Currency risk continued
Sensitivity analysis continued
The following significant exchange rates applied during the year:
Average rate
Closing rate
2024
2023
2024
2023
US dollar
1.28
1.24
1.25
1.27
Euro
1.18
1.15
1.21
1.15
ii) Interest rate risk
The Group does not undertake any hedging activity in this area. 
All cash deposits are made at prevailing interest rates and the majority is available with same day 
notice, though deposits are sometimes made with a maturity of no more than three months. The 
main element of interest rate risk concerns sterling, US dollar, euro and Renminbi deposits, all of 
which are on a floating rate basis.
The interest rate profile of the Group’s financial liabilities (excluding leases) at 31 December was 
as follows:
2024
2023
Fixed rate financial liabilities
40
40
Floating rate financial liabilities
—
—
40
40
The fixed rate financial liabilities comprise preference shares. 
The weighted average interest rate of the fixed and floating rate financial liabilities are 9.5% 
(2023: 9.5%) and nil (2023: nil respectively.
The maturity profile of the Group’s fixed rate financial liabilities (excluding leases) at 31 December 
was as follows:
2024
2023
In more than five years
40
40
40
40
d) Capital risk management
The primary objective of the Group’s capital management is to ensure it maintains sufficient capital 
in order to support its business and maximise shareholder value. The Group has an asset-light business 
model and uses cash generated from operations to either invest organically or by acquisition. The Group 
manages its capital structure and makes adjustments to it in light of changes in economic and 
market conditions. To maintain or adjust the capital structure, the Group may adjust the dividend 
payment to shareholders or issue new shares.
The Group defines capital as net cash/(debt) plus equity attributable to shareholders. There are no 
externally imposed restrictions on the Group’s capital structure. The reconciliation of the Group’s 
definition of capital employed is shown in note 2. The Group’s reconciliation of net debt to net cash 
is shown below.
Notes
2024
2023
Total borrowings including lease liabilities
20
(24,649)
(11,957)
Total cash and cash equivalents
17
149,983
146,372
Group net cash
125,334
134,415
Reconciliation of changes in assets and liabilities arising 
from financing activities
Repayment of lease liabilities
4,217
3,699
Increase in lease liabilities
(16,924)
(7,069)
Effect of exchange rate fluctuations
15
249
Changes in financial liabilities arising from financing activities
(12,692)
(3,121)
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
3,611
31,602
Net (decrease)/increase in net cash
(9,081)
28,481
Net cash at start of year
134,415
105,934
Net cash at end of year
125,334
134,415
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

28. Financial instruments continued
Financial risk and treasury policies continued
e) Fair values
The fair values of financial assets and liabilities, together with the carrying amounts shown in the 
balance sheet, were as follows:
Carrying 
amount 
2024
Fair value 
2024
Carrying 
amount 
2023
Fair value 
2023
Loans and receivables
Trade receivables
149,479
149,479
152,842
152,842
Financial assets
Cash and cash equivalents
149,983
149,983
146,372
146,372
Designated cash flow hedges
Foreign exchange contracts:
– Financial assets
1,049
1,049
879
879
– Financial liabilities
(446)
(446)
(553)
(553)
Financial liabilities at amortised cost
Trade and other payables and 
accrued expenses
(77,311)
(77,311)
(65,073)
(65,073)
Preference shares
(40)
(40)
(40)
(40)
Lease liabilities
(24,609)
(24,609)
(11,917)
(11,917)
198,105
198,105
222,510
222,510
Fair value hierarchy
The fair value of the Group’s outstanding derivative financial assets and liabilities consisted of foreign 
exchange contracts and swaps and were estimated using year end spot rates adjusted for the forward 
points to the appropriate value dates, and gains and losses are taken to other comprehensive income, 
and estimated using market foreign exchange rates at the balance sheet date. All derivative financial 
instruments are categorised as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy.
The other financial instruments are classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy and are valued as follows. 
Cash and cash equivalents, trade and other payables, and trade receivables are carried at their 
book values as this approximates to their fair value due to the short-term nature of the instruments.
Bank loans and lease liabilities are carried at amortised cost as it is the intention that they will not 
be repaid prior to maturity, where this option exists. The fair values are evaluated by the Group 
based on parameters such as interest rates and relevant credit spreads.
29. Leases
The Group leases many assets including land and buildings, vehicles, machinery and IT equipment. 
Information about leases for which the Group is a lessee is presented below.
Right-of-use assets
The right-of-use assets are disclosed as non-current assets and are part of the property, plant and 
equipment balance of £90,302,000 at 31 December 2024.
Land and 
buildings
Plant and 
equipment
Total
Balance at 1 January
9,230
2,216
11,446
Depreciation charge for the year
(3,717)
(1,186)
(4,903)
Additions to right-of-use assets
15,425
1,499
16,924
Right-of-use assets disposed of
—
(4)
(4)
Foreign exchange differences
(120)
434
314
Balance at 31 December
20,818
2,959
23,777
Lease liabilities
2024
2023
Maturity analysis – contractual undiscounted cash flows
Less than one year
5,212
3,604
One to five years
11,459
8,501
More than 5 years
12,124
1,115
Total undiscounted lease liability at 31 December
28,795
13,220
Interest cost associated with future periods
(4,186)
(1,303)
Lease liabilities included in Consolidated balance sheet at 31 December
24,609
11,917
Current
4,329
3,131
Non-current
20,280
8,786
Amounts recognised in the income statement
The Group has elected not to recognise a lease liability for short term leases (leases with an expected 
term of 12 months or less) or for leases of low value assets. Payments made under such leases are 
expensed on a straight-line basis. In addition, certain variable lease payments are not permitted to 
be recognised as lease liabilities and are expensed as incurred.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
203
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

29. Leases continued
Amounts recognised in the income statement continued
2024
2023
Leases under IFRS 16
Interest on lease liabilities
761
495
Expenses relating to short-term leases and leases of low-value assets
2,228
2,485
Depreciation of right-of-use assets
4,902
4,148
Amounts recognised in statement of cash flows
2024
2023
Total cash outflow for leases
6,455
6,184
30. Capital commitments
Capital commitments at 31 December for which no provision has been made in these accounts were:
2024
2023
Contracted
1,019
933
31. Contingencies
2024
2023
Performance guarantees and indemnities
6,509
8,194
The performance guarantees and indemnities have been entered into in the normal course of business. 
A liability would only arise in the event of the Group failing to fulfil its contractual obligations.
Subsidiary audit exemptions
Rotork plc has issued guarantees over the liabilities of the following companies at 31 December 2024 
under Section 479C of Companies Act 2006 and these entities are exempt from the requirements of 
the Act relating to the audit of individual accounts by virtue of Section 479A of the Act.
•	
Bifold Fluidpower Limited (01787729)
•	
Bifold Group Limited (06186844)
•	
Flowco Limited (02891839)
•	
Rotork Midland Limited (02819224)
•	
Rotork Americas Holdings Limited (12320359)
•	
Rotork Controls Limited (00608345)
•	
Rotork Overseas Limited (01010160)
•	
Rotork UK Limited (01090344)
32. Related parties
The Group has a related party relationship with its subsidiaries and with its directors and key 
management. A list of subsidiaries is shown on pages 208 to 210 of these financial statements. 
Transactions between two subsidiaries for the sale and purchase of products or the subsidiary 
and parent Company for management charges are priced on an arm’s length basis.
Key management emoluments
The emoluments of those members of the Rotork Management Board, including directors, 
who are responsible for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the Group were:
2024
2023
Emoluments including social security costs
8,234
6,713
Pension contributions
272
261
Share-based payments
1,363
1,628
9,869
8,602
No directors are members of defined contribution schemes and therefore no cash has been paid into 
defined contribution schemes on their behalf.
The aggregate amount of gains made by directors on the exercise of share options was £104,000 
(2023: £95,000).
The aggregate amount of remuneration for all directors can be found in the Directors’ Remuneration 
Report in the Single figure table on pages 145 to 146.
33. Post balance sheet events
On 10 March 2025 Rotork agreed to acquire 100% of the equity interest in Noah Actuation Co. Ltd., 
a company headquartered in Seoul, South Korea for an enterprise value of £44m. The acquisition will 
expand Rotork’s electric actuator offering and is fully aligned to the Growth+ strategy. Completion is 
expected in the coming days and therefore the initial accounting for the business combination has 
not yet been completed. Further information will be provided in the condensed consolidated interim 
financial statements of the Group for the period ended 30 June 2025.
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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204
Notes to the Group financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

2024
2023
Notes
£000
£000
Non-current assets
Property, plant and equipment
c
6
10
Investments
d
43,205
43,205
Amounts owed by Group undertakings
355,432
322,995
Deferred tax assets
e
808
284
Total non-current assets
399,451
366,494
Current assets
Amounts owed by Group undertakings
57,812
44,161
Other receivables
f
280
447 
Cash and cash equivalents
—
—
Total current assets
58,092
44,608
Total assets
457,543
411,102
Current liabilities
Trade payables
257
288
Current tax
8,008
7,888
Amounts owed to Group undertakings
108,076
29,950
Other payables
g
9,023
4,876
Total current liabilities
125,364
43,002
Non-current liabilities
Preference share capital
g
40
40
Total non-current liabilities
40
40
Total liabilities
125,404
43,042
Net assets
332,139
368,060
Equity
Issued equity capital
i
4,232
4,306
Share premium
21,842
21,004
Capital redemption reserve
1,792
1,716
Retained earnings
304,273
341,034
Total equity
332,139
368,060
The Company reported a total comprehensive income for the financial year of £77,998,000 
(2023: £77,489,000).
These Company financial statements, company number 00578327, were approved by the Board 
of Directors on 10 March 2025 and were signed on its behalf by: 
K Huynh and B Peacock
Directors
Issued 
equity 
capital
£000
Share 
premium
£000
Capital 
redemption 
reserve
£000
Retained 
earnings
£000
Total 
equity
£000
Balance at 31 December 2022
4,304
19,959
1,716
319,139
345,118
Total comprehensive income for the year
—
—
—
77,489
77,489
Equity settled share-based 
payment transactions 
—
—
—
2,282
2,282
Share options exercised by employees
2
1,045
—
—
1,047
Own ordinary shares acquired
—
—
—
(2,444)
(2,444)
Own ordinary shares awarded under 
share schemes
—
—
—
3,388
3,388
Dividends
—
—
—
(58,820)
(58,820)
Balance at 31 December 2023
4,306
21,004
1,716
341,034
368,060
Total comprehensive income for the year
—
—
—
79,998
79,998
Equity settled share-based 
payment transactions 
—
—
—
4,046
4,046
Share options exercised by employees
2
838
—
—
840
Own ordinary shares acquired
—
—
—
(10,348)
(10,348)
Own ordinary shares awarded under 
share schemes
—
—
—
3,134
3,134
Share buyback programme
(76)
—
76
(50,326)
(50,326)
Dividends
—
—
—
(63,265)
(63,265)
Balance at 31 December 2024
4,232
21,842
1,792
304,273
332,139
Rotork plc Company balance sheet 
At 31 December 2024
Rotork plc Company statement of changes in equity 
At 31 December 2024
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
205
Xxxxx
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
Rotork plc Company balance sheet and statement of changes in equity
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

a) Accounting policies
The following accounting policies have been applied consistently in dealing with items which are 
considered material in relation to the financial statements. Notes a to j relate to the Company rather 
than the Group. Except where indicated, values in these notes are in £000.
Basis of preparation
The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention. 
The Company has applied Financial Reporting Standard 101 ‘Reduced Disclosure Framework’ (FRS 101) 
issued by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) incorporating the Amendments to FRS 101 issued by 
the FRC in July 2015, and the amendments to Company law made by The Companies, Partnerships 
and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2015. In these financial statements, the Company 
has applied the exemptions available under FRS 101 in respect of the following disclosures:
•	 a Cash Flow Statement and related notes; 
•	 comparative period reconciliations for share capital and tangible fixed assets; 
•	 disclosures in respect of transactions with wholly-owned subsidiaries; 
•	 disclosures in respect of capital management;
•	 the effects of new but not yet effective IFRSs; and
•	 disclosures in respect of the compensation of Key Management Personnel. 
Notes to the Company financial statements
The Company produces consolidated financial statements which have been prepared in accordance 
with UK-adopted international accounting standards. As the consolidated financial statements of 
the Company include the equivalent disclosures, the Company has also taken the exemptions under 
FRS 101 available in respect of the following disclosures:
•	 IFRS 2 Share Based Payments in respect of Group settled share based payments; 
•	 the disclosures required by IFRS 7 and IFRS 13 regarding financial instruments; and
•	 the disclosures required by IAS 12 Income Taxes in connection with Pillar Two.
Where the Company enters into financial guarantee contracts to guarantee the indebtedness of 
other companies within the Group, the Company considers these to be insurance arrangements, and 
accounts for them as such. In this respect, the Company treats the guarantee contract as a contingent 
liability until such time as it becomes probable that the Company will be required to make a payment 
under the guarantee. The Company accounts for intra-group cross guarantees under IFRS 9.
As permitted by s408 of the Companies Act 2006 the Company has elected not to present its own 
profit and loss account or statement of comprehensive income for the year. The profit attributable 
to the Company is disclosed in the footnote to the Company’s balance sheet.
Audit fees
Amounts receivable by the Company’s auditor and its associates in respect of services to the 
Company and its associates, other than the audit of the Company’s financial statements, have not 
been disclosed as the information is required instead to be disclosed on a consolidated basis in the 
consolidated financial statements.
Going concern
The directors are satisfied that the Company has sufficient resources to continue in operation for a 
period of not less than 12 months from the date of this report. Accordingly, the directors continue to 
adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements. Assumptions relating to going 
concern for the Company are aligned to the Group as described on page 178.
Investments in subsidiaries
Investments are measured at cost less any provision for impairment and comprise investments in 
subsidiary companies.
Property, plant and equipment
Property, plant and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and accumulated 
impairment losses.
Plant and machinery are depreciated by equal annual instalments by reference to their estimated 
useful lives and residual values at annual rates of between 10% and 33%. Depreciation methods, 
useful lives and residual values are reviewed at each balance sheet date.
Post-retirement benefits
The Company participates in a UK Group pension scheme providing benefits based on final pensionable 
salary. The assets of the scheme are held separately from those of the Company. The sponsoring 
employer for the Group pension scheme is Rotork Controls Ltd. No contractual agreement or policy is 
in place for charging to individual Group entities the net defined benefit cost for the plan as a whole. 
As a result, in accordance with IAS 19, the amount charged to the profit and loss account represents 
the contributions payable to the scheme in respect of the accounting period.
Classification of preference shares
In line with the requirements of IFRS 9, Financial Instruments, the cumulative redeemable preference 
shares issued by the Company are classified as long-term debt. The preference dividends are charged 
within interest payable.
Deferred taxation
Deferred tax is provided on temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and 
liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for taxation purposes. The following 
temporary differences are not provided for: the initial recognition of goodwill, the initial recognition 
of assets or liabilities that affect neither accounting nor taxable profit other than in a business 
combination, and differences relating to investments in subsidiaries to the extent that they will 
probably not reverse in the foreseeable future. The amount of deferred tax provided is based on 
the expected manner of realisation or settlement of the carrying amount of assets and liabilities, 
using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date.
A deferred tax asset is recognised only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profits 
will be available against which the temporary difference can be utilised.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
206
Notes to the Company financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
Notes to the Company financial statements
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

a) Accounting policies continued
Foreign currencies
Transactions in foreign currencies are recorded using the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the 
transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated using 
the rate of exchange at the balance sheet date and the gains or losses on translation are included in 
the profit and loss account. 
Share-based payments
The Company has adopted IFRS 2 and its policy in respect of share-based payment transactions 
is consistent with the Group policy shown in note 1 to the Group financial statements. Costs in 
relation to share-based awards made to other Group company employees are recharged to each 
subsidiary company.
Dividends
Interim dividends are recorded in the financial statements when they are paid. Final dividends 
are recorded in the financial statements in the period in which they are approved by the 
Company’s shareholders.
Critical judgements and key estimation uncertainties
Estimates and judgements are regularly evaluated and are based on historical experience and 
other factors, including expectations of future events that are believed to be reasonable under 
the circumstances.
The Company makes estimates and assumptions concerning the future. The resulting estimates will, 
by definition, seldom equal the actual results. The estimates and assumptions that have a risk of 
causing a material adjustment to the carrying amount of assets and liabilities in the next financial 
year are listed below.
There are no critical accounting estimates or judgements requiring evaluation.
b) Personnel expenses in the Company profit and loss account
2024
2023
Wages and salaries (including bonus and incentive plans)
9,044
6,799
Social security costs
1,579
1,109
Pension costs
259
209
Share-based payment charge
2,067
1,799
12,949
9,916
During the year there were 42 (2023: 34) employees of Rotork plc including the two (2023: two) 
executive directors.
Share-based payments
The share-based payment charge relates to employees of the Company participating in the Long Term 
Incentive Plan (LTIP). The disclosures required under IFRS 2 can be found in note 26 to the Group 
Financial Statements. The table below sets out the movement of share options under the LTIP for 
employees of the Company.
Outstanding 
at start of year
Granted 
during year
Vested 
during year
Lapsed
Outstanding 
at end of year
2021 Award
377,220
—
(14,404)
(362,816)
—
2022 Award
639,693
—
—
(21,256)
618,437
2023 Award
691,961
—
—
(99,816)
592,145
2024 Award
—
726,260
—
—
726,260
1,708,874
726,260
(14,404)
(483,888)
1,936,842
The weighted average remaining life of awards outstanding at the year end is one year.
c) Property, plant and equipment in the Company balance sheet
Plant and 
equipment
Cost
At 1 January 2024 and 31 December 2024
19
Depreciation
At 1 January 2024
9
Charge for the year
4
At 31 December 2024
13
Net book value 
At 31 December 2024
6
At 31 December 2023
10
d) Investments in the Company balance sheet
Shares in Group companies
2024
2023
At 31 December
43,205
43,205
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
207
Notes to the Company financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

d) Investments in the Company balance sheet continued
The Company has the following investments in wholly-owned subsidiaries. The principal activities 
of all the subsidiary undertakings are those of the Group, except as indicated below:
D  Dormant company  H  Holding company  N  Active non-trading company
Subsidiary
Incorporated in
Registered address
100% owned by Rotork plc
G.H. Chaplin & Co 
(Engineers) Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Analysis Limited N
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Cleaners Limited N
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Control and Safety Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Instruments Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Nominees Limited N
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Widcombe (Developments) Limited D England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Controls Limited
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Overseas Limited H
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Rotork Controls Limited
Rotork Actuation (Shanghai) Co., Ltd
China
Building G, No.260 Liancao Road, Minhang 
District, Shanghai, PRC 201108
Rotork Trading (Shanghai) Co., Ltd
China
Room 1177, No. 400, Middle Zhejiang Road, 
Huangpu District, Shanghai, PRC
Rotork Flow Technology 
(Suzhou) Co., Ltd
China
Building A, No. 88, Yinhe Road, Eastsouth 
Street, Changshu, Jiangsu Providence, PRC
Rotork Controls (India) 
Private Limited
India
28B, Ambattur Industrial Estate (North Phase), 
Ambattur, Chennai 600 098, India
Rotork UK Limited
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Valvekits Limited H
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Americas Holdings Limited N
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
75% owned by Rotork Controls Limited
Rotork Saudi Arabia LLC
Saudi Arabia
LC07, Al-Khobar, 31671 Dammam, Kingdom 
of Saudi Arabia
100% owned by Rotork Overseas Limited
Rotork Australia Pty Limited
Australia
21-23 Décor Drive, Hallam, VIC, 3803, Australia
Rotork Controls Comercio 
De Atuadores LTDA
Brazil
Condomínio Industrial Veccon Zeta Estrada 
Mineko Ito n˚ 4.30, Sumaré, São Paulo, 
13178-542, Brazil
15175445 Canada Inc.1
Canada
2-6725 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario 
Canada L5N 5V, Canada
Subsidiary
Incorporated in
Registered address
Rotork Controls (Canada) Limited
Canada
2-6725 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario, 
L5N-5V3, Canada
Rotork Andina SpA
Chile
Canal La Punta 8770, Bodega 32, Renca, Santiago
Bifold Group Limited H
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Midland Limited
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Rotork Motorisation SAS
France
75, rue Rateau 93126 La Courneuve Cedex, France
Rotork Controls 
(Deutschland) GmbH N
Germany
Siemensstr. 33, 40721 Hilden, Germany
Rotork Germany Holdings GmbH H
Germany
Mühlsteig 45, 90579 Langenzenn, Germany
Rotork Limited
Hong Kong
5/F, Manulife Place, 348 Kwun Tong Road, 
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Rotork Controls Italia Srl
Italy
Via Portico 17, 24050, Orio al Serio, 
Bergamo, Italy
Rotork Japan Co Limited
Japan
2-2-24 Sengoku, Koto-ku, Tokyo, 135-
0015 Japan
Rotork Middle East FZE
Jebel Ali Free Zone
PUB-LC 07, near R/A 08, PO Box 262903, Jebel 
Ali Free Zone, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Rotork (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd
Malaysia
1-17-1, Menara Bangkok Bank, Berjaya 
Central Park, No 105, 50450 Jalan Ampang, 
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Rotork Actuation Sdn Bhd
Malaysia
1-17-1, Menara Bangkok Bank, Berjaya 
Central Park, No 105, 50450 Jalan Ampang, 
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Rotork Gears Holding BV H
Netherlands
Nijverheidstraat 25, 7581 PV Losser, Netherlands
Robusta Miry Brook BV H
Netherlands
Herikerbergweg 88, 1101CM, 
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Rotork Norge AS
Norway
Ormahaugvegen 3, 5347 Ågotnes, Norway
Rotork Polska Zoo
Poland
Zabrze, Plutonowego Ryszarda Szkubacza 8, 
41-800 Zabrze, Poland
Rotork Rus Limited 2
Russia
127254 Moscow, Rustaveli street, 14, bld. 6, 
space 1/4
Rotork Controls (Singapore) 
Pte Limited
Singapore
426 Tagore Industrial Avenue, Sindo Industrial 
Estate, Singapore 787808
Rotork Africa (Pty) Limited
South Africa
136 Kuschke Street, Meadowdale, Germiston, 
Gauteng 1601 South Africa
Rotork Controls Korea Co., Ltd
South Korea
Room 515, 42 Jangmi-ro, Bundang-gu, 
Seongnam-si, Gyeonggi-do, 13496, 
Republic of Korea,
Rotork Annual Report 2024
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208
Notes to the Company financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Subsidiary
Incorporated in
Registered address
Rotork YTC Limited
South Korea
81 Hwanggeum-ro, 89 Beon-gil, Yangchon-
eup, Gimpo-si, Gyeonggi-do, 1048, 
Republic of Korea,
Rotork Controls (Iberia) SL
Spain
Larrondo Beheko Etorbidea, Edificio 2, 48180 
Loiu Bizkaia, Spain
Rotork Sweden AB
Sweden
Box 80, 791 22 Falun, Sweden
Rotork AG H
Switzerland
Fuchsacker 678, 9426 Lutzenberg, Switzerland
Rotork Inc H
USA
675 Mile Crossing Blvd., Rochester NY 14624, 
United States
Rotork Controls de Venezuela SA
Venezuela
Av. San Felipe Edif, La Castellana Caracas 
(Chacao) Miranda Zona Postal 1060, Venezuela
Rotork Turkey Akıs¸ Kontrol  
Sistemleri Ticaret Limited Sirketi 
Turkey
Aydınli Mh. Melodi Sk., Bilmo Küçük Sanayi 
Sitesi, No:35/1-2, Tuzla, Istanbul, 34953, Turkey
100% owned by 15175445 Canada Inc
13688682 Canada Inc 1
13887987 Canada Inc 1
13887928 Canada Inc 1
Canada
Canada
Canada
2-6725 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario 
Canada L5N 5V, Canada
2-6725 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario 
Canada L5N 5V, Canada
2-6725 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario 
Canada L5N 5V, Canada
33.33% owned by each of 13688682 Canada Inc, 
13887987 Canada Inc and 13887928 Canada Inc
Hanbay Inc1
Canada
2-6725 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario 
Canada L5N 5V, Canada
100% owned by Valvekits Limited
Circa Engineering Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Rotork Trading 
(Shanghai) Co Limited
Centork Trading (Shanghai) Co. Ltd
China
Room C-02, 1/F, West Area No. 2 Building, No. 
29 Jiatai Road, Free Trade Zone, Shanghai, China
100% owned by Rotork UK Limited
Prokits Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Flowco Limited
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Rotork Controls Italia Srl
Rotork Instruments Italy Srl
Italy
Via Portico 17, 24050, Orio al Serio, 
Bergamo, Italy
Rotork Fluid Systems Srl
Italy
Via Padre Jacques Hamel, 55016 Porcari, 
Lucca, Italy
Subsidiary
Incorporated in
Registered address
100% owned by Rotork Gears Holding BV
Rotork Gears BV
Netherlands
Nijverheidstraat 25, 7581, 
PV Overijssel, Netherlands
Rotork BV
Netherlands
Mandenmakerstraat 45, 3194, 
DA Hoogvliet, Netherlands
100% owned by Rotork Inc
Rotork (Thailand) Limited
Thailand
35/8 Soi Ladprao 124 (Sawasdikarn), Ladprao 
Road, Plubpla Sub-district, Bangkok Metropolis, 
Wangtonglang District, Thailand
Rotork Controls Inc
USA
675 Mile Crossing Blvd., Rochester,  
NY 14624, USA
Remote Control Inc
USA
77 Circuit Drive. North Kingstown,  
RI 02852, USA
Ranger Acquisition Corporation H
USA
The Corporation Trust Company, Corporation 
Trust Center, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, 
DE 19801 USA
100% owned by Ranger Acquisition Corporation
Fairchild Industrial Products Company USA
3920 West Point Blvd, Winston-Salem, 
NC 27103, USA
100% owned by Fairchild Industrial Products Company
Fairchild Industrial Products  
(Sichuan) Company Limited D
China
Room 1201, Complex Square, No.88 West 
Shenghe No.1 Road, High Tech Zone, Chengdu, 
Sichuan, China. 610041
Fairchild India Private Limited D
India
56-C/BB, Janakpuri, New Delhi-110058 IN, India
100% owned by Bifold Group Limited
Bifold Fluidpower (Holdings) Limited H
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Bifold Fluidpower (Holdings) Limited
Bifold Fluidpower Limited
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
MTS Precision Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Marshalsea Hydraulics Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
Bifold Company 
(Manufacturing) Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Bifold Fluidpower Limited
Fluidpower (Stainless Steel) Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Rotork Germany Holdings GmbH
Max Process GmbH 
Germany
Rastenweg 10, 53489 Sinzig, Germany
d) Investments in the Company balance sheet continued
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
209
Notes to the Company financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Subsidiary
Incorporated in
Registered address
Schischek GmbH
Germany
Mühlsteig 45, 90579 Langenzenn, Germany
Rotork GmbH
Germany
Mühlsteig 45, 90579 Langenzenn, Germany
100% owned by Rotork AG
Schischek Limited D
England and Wales
Rotork House, Brassmill Lane, Bath, BA1 3JQ
100% owned by Robusta Miry Brook BV
Rotork Servo Controles de Mexico 
S.A. de C.V
Mexico
Centeotl 223, Colonia Industrial San Antonio, 
Delegación Azcapotzalco, Federal District, 
02760, Mexico
1	
Amalgamated into Rotork Controls (Canada) Limited with effect from 1 January 2025.
2	
Non-trading entity. Dormant-pending liquidation
e) Deferred tax assets and liabilities in the Company balance sheet
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are attributable to the following:
Assets 
2024
Liabilities 
2024
Net 
2024
Assets 
2023
Liabilities 
2023
Net 
2023
Tangible fixed assets
6
—
6
6
—
6
Employee benefits
362
—
362
203
—
203
Other items
440
—
440
75
—
75
808
—
808
284
—
284
Movements in the net deferred tax balance during the year are as follows:
2024
2023
Balance at 1 January
284
51
Credited to the income statement
524
233
808
284
There is an unrecognised deferred tax liability for temporary differences associated with investments 
in subsidiaries. Rotork plc controls the dividend policies of its subsidiaries and consequently the 
timing of the reversal of the temporary differences. The value of temporary differences associated 
with unremitted earnings of subsidiaries for which deferred tax has not been recognised is 
£357,208,000 (2023: £320,839,000). 
A deferred tax asset has not been recognised in relation to capital losses of £7,632,000 
(2023: £7,559,000), due to uncertainty over the offset against future capital profits in the 
companies concerned. There is no expiry date in relation to this asset.
d) Investments in the Company balance sheet continued
f) Other receivables in the Company balance sheet
2024
2023
Prepayments
271
423
Other receivables
9
24
280
447
g) Other payables in the Company balance sheet
2024
2023
Other taxes and social security
790
518
Other payables
4,207
3,054
Accruals
4,026
1,304
9,023
4,876
The Company has a £17,000,000 unused uncommitted gross overdraft facility (2023: £17,000,000) 
and is part of a UK banking arrangement, see note h.
h) Contingencies in the Company
The UK banking arrangements are subject to cross-guarantees between the Company and its 
UK subsidiaries. These accounts are subject to a right of set-off. The performance guarantees and 
indemnities have been entered into in the normal course of business. A liability would only arise 
in the event of the Group failing to fulfil its contractual obligations.
i) Capital and reserves in the Company balance sheet
Details of the number of ordinary shares in issue and dividends paid in the year are given in note 18 
to the Group financial statements.
j) Related parties
The Company has taken advantage of the exemption not to disclose transactions with related parties 
that are wholly owned by a subsidiary of the Company. The following table provides the total amount 
of transactions that have been entered into with non-wholly owned related parties for the relevant 
financial year and outstanding balances at the year end.
Related party
2024
2023
Rotork Saudi Arabia LLC
Group charges
591
193
Amounts due by
740
193
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
210
Notes to the Company financial statements continued
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

2024
2023
2022
 2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Revenue
754,428
719,150
641,812
569,160
604,544
669,344
695,713
642,229
590,078
546,459
Cost of sales
(382,494)
(380,054)
(350,079)
(306,394)
(320,234)
(357,718)
(384,253)
(358,090)
(328,410)
(296,944)
Gross profit
371,934
339,096
291,733
262,766
284,310
311,626
311,460
284,139
261,668
249,515
Overheads
(236,075)
(190,329)
(168,126)
(157,056)
(171,207)
(189,683)
(188,542)
(198,167)
(167,891)
(145,129)
Operating profit
135,859
148,767
123,607
105,710
113,103
121,943
122,918
85,972
93,777
104,386
 
Adjusted operating profit1 
178,406
164,475
143,245
128,080
142,543
151,005
146,015
130,162
120,588
125,272
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets
(2,604)
(2,110)
(7,051)
(9,001)
(14,110)
(18,841)
(20,284)
(27,183)
(26,811)
(20,886)
Defined benefit scheme settlement loss
(18,009)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Other adjustments
(21,934)
(13,598)
(12,587)
(13,369)
(15,330)
(10,221)
(2,813)
(17,007)
—
—
Operating profit
135,859
148,767
123,607
105,710
113,103
121,943
122,918
85,972
93,777
104,386
Net interest 
4,602
1,871
495
221
(537)
(2,953)
(2,170)
(5,386)
(2,707)
(2,517)
Profit before taxation
140,461
150,638
124,102
105,931
112,566
118,990
120,748
80,586
91,070
101,869
Tax expense
(35,663)
(37,150)
(30,901)
(25,686)
(26,808)
(29,096)
(29,004)
(24,973)
(23,897)
(27,012)
Profit for the year
104,798
113,488
93,201
80,245
85,758
89,894
91,744
55,613
67,173
74,857
Dividends
63,265
58,820
55,384
75,515
33,926
52,287
48,288
45,218
43,876
43,765
Basic EPS
12.1p
13.2p
10.9p
9.2p
9.8p
10.3p
10.5p
6.4p
7.7p
8.6p
Adjusted Basic EPS1
15.9p
14.6p
12.7p
11.3p
12.5p
13.0p
12.6p
10.6p
10.0p
10.4p
Diluted EPS
12.1p
13.2p
10.8p
9.2p
9.8p
10.3p
10.5p
6.4p
7.7p
8.6p
1	
Adjusted operating profit is the Group’s operating profit excluding the amortisation of acquired intangible assets and other adjusting items as defined in note 1.
The ten year trading history presented above is unaudited.
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
211
Ten year trading history
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

The tables below show the split of shareholder and size of shareholding in Rotork plc.
Ordinary shareholder by type
Number of 
holdings
%
Number of 
shares
%
Individuals
2,725
82.23
18,004,720
2.13
Bank or nominees
547
16.51
819,890,723
96.87
Other company
18
0.54
1,769,200
0.21
Other corporate body
24
0.72
6,716,622
0.79
3,314
100
846,381,265
100
Range
Number of 
holdings
%
Number of 
shares
%
1-1,000
1,156
34.90
473,451
0.06
1,001-2,000
428
12.91
630,652
0.07
2,001-5,000
515
15.54
1,688,606
0.20
5,001-10,000
340
10.26
2,484,906
0.29
10,001-50,000
462
13.94
9,972,984
1.18
50,001-100,000
80
2.41
5,672,647
0.67
100,001 +
333
10.05
825,458,019
97.53
3,314
100
846,381,265
100
Source: Equiniti.
Dividend information
In respect of each of the last six years, the table below details the amounts of interim and final 
dividends declared or, in the case of the 2024 final dividend, proposed and subject to shareholder 
approval at the 2025 AGM.
Interim dividend
 (p)
Final dividend 
(p)
Total dividends 
(p)
2024
2.75
5.00 1
7.75
2023
2.55
4.65
7.20
2022
2.40
4.30
6.70
2021
2.35
4.05
6.40
20202
—
6.30
6.30
20192
2.30
3.90
6.20
Shareholder and dividend information presented above is unaudited.
1	
Subject to shareholder approval at the 2025 AGM.
2	
On 31 March 2020, the Board decided to withdraw the recommendation to pay the 2019 final dividend of 3.90p per share. 
This was to reflect the exceptional set of circumstances imposed by COVID-19 at the time. The Board subsequently decided 
to pay the 3.90p per share in full in September 2020 as an interim dividend. To aid year-on-year comparisons the table 
above presents this dividend as the 2019 Final dividend reflecting the year to which it related.
Financial calendar
11 March 2025
Preliminary announcement of annual results for 2024
24 April 2025
Ex-dividend date for proposed final 2024 dividend 
25 April 2025
Record date for proposed final 2024 dividend
2 May 2025
Announcement of trading update
2 May 2025
Annual General Meeting to be held at Bailbrook House Hotel, 
Eveleigh Avenue, London Road West, Bath, Somerset, BA1 7JD
3 June 2025
Payment date for final 2024 dividend1
5 August 2025
Announcement of interim financial results for 2025
19 November 2025
Announcement of trading update
1	
Subject to shareholder approval at the 2025 AGM.
Rotork Annual Report 2024
rotork.com
212
Share register information
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements

Rotork plc’s commitment to environmental issues is reflected in 
this Annual Report, which has been printed on Symbol Freelife 
Satin and Arena, an FSC® certified material.
This document was printed by Park Communications using its 
environmental print technology, which minimises the impact 
of printing on the environment.
Vegetable-based inks have been used and 99% of dry waste is 
diverted from landfill. The printer is a CarbonNeutral® company.
Both the printer and the paper mill are registered to ISO 14001.
Group General Counsel 
& Company Secretary 
Stuart Pain
Registered Office
Rotork plc  
Rotork House  
Brassmill Lane  
Bath BA1 3JQ
Company Number
00578327
Registrars
Equiniti
Aspect House  
Spencer Road  
Lancing  
West Sussex BN99 6DA
Stockbrokers
J.P. Morgan Cazenove
25 Bank Street  
Canary Wharf  
London E14 5JP
Morgan Stanley
20 Bank Street  
Canary Wharf  
London E14 4AD
Financial Advisers
Rothchild & Co
New Court  
St Swithin’s Lane  
London EC4N 8AL
J.P. Morgan Cazenove
25 Bank Street  
Canary Wharf  
London E14 5JP
Morgan Stanley
20 Bank Street  
Canary Wharf  
London E14 4AD
Auditor (until 30 April 2024)
Deloitte LLP
2 New Street Square  
London EC4A 3BZ
Auditor (from 30 April 2024)
KPMG LLP
66 Queen Square 
Bristol  
BS1 4BE
Financial Public Relations
FTI Consulting
200 Aldersgate  
Aldersgate Street  
London EC1A 4HD
rotork.com
Rotork Annual Report 2024
213
Xxxxx
Strategic report
Corporate governance
Financial statements
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