Ambulance manufacturer accelerates back into profit

Goole-based ambulance manufacturer, O&H Vehicle Technology (OHVT), has posted profitable results for the first time since 2017, 18-months after its acquisition by Venari Group.

O&H Vehicle Technology’s figures for the period ending February 2021 include revenues of over £27m, providing a £2m EBITDA and a £1.4m pre-tax profit.

Established in 1988, O&H Vehicle Technology has been a mainstay of UK ambulance production.

But up to 2019, the business had endured turbulent times due to an increase of ambulances imported from outside the UK.

At the start of 2019, the former O&H owners drafted in industry name, Oliver North, as new managing director to drive the company back to prominence.

The firm underwent a rebrand and a reinvigorated approach to quality and self-sufficiency.

In August 2019, North spearheaded a management buyout of O&H alongside Ken Davy, in-turn providing significant investment into innovative product development and modern, efficient machinery.

In conjunction with the MBO, Venari Group was established as the new parent company of OHVT to provide a strong, fresh identity with a new 60,000 sq ft headquarters in Brighouse, in addition to OHVT’s 64,000 sq ft production facility.

James Houston was recruited in early 2020 as the company’s new group finance director.

 In 2020, Venari and Ford of Britain formed an official alliance to develop the world’s most technologically advanced lightweight ambulance, in answer to NHS ambulance trust’s calls for an increase in technology with a lighter, more agile footprint.

The project has been managed by experienced technical director, Wes Linton, alongside a newly formed Venari engineering team and Ford of Britain’s leading design engineers.

North said: “I couldn’t be more thrilled to announce O&H’s return to full health after a relentless few years of significant improvement.

“But as the UK’s oldest and biggest ambulance manufacturer, and at a time when job creation and improvements in British manufacturing are needed more than ever – it is a job which has proven to be worth fighting for.

 “The team, throughout every corner of production, management and support roles, has been transformed into what I’d say is unarguably the most passionate in the industry, and it shows in abundance with the return of O&H to a full bill of health.

“We can now present the best case in decades to our NHS as to why we do not need to import ambulances built outside of the UK any longer.”

Houston, added: “Joining a company in turnaround was always going to prove exceptionally challenging but then to add in effects from the pandemic, it required an extra layer of resilience and sheer effort from everyone.

“As a board, we’re obsessed with ensuring O&H and Venari as a group can assert and solidify itself as the number one emergency vehicle builder in the UK.

 “O&H Vehicle Technology’s figures now show that we’re officially, once again, the largest ambulance manufacturer in the UK, and it is a position which all of us at the company will strive to consolidate and build upon in the years ahead.”

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