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Tereos
View on WikipediaTereos is a cooperative conglomerate, primarily active in the processed agricultural raw materials, in particular sugar, alcohol and starch markets. It has 44 factories in 9 countries, including Brazil, India, Indonesia, Kenia, Tanzania, Belgium and France[1] and employs about 20.000 people.
Key Information
The company is headquartered in Moussy-le-Vieux, France.
History
[edit]In 1932, the Origny-Sainte-Benoite cooperative distillery was founded in the Aisne department of northern France by a number of farmers under the leadership of Paul Cavenne. The factory processed 400 tonnes of sugar beet per day. About twenty years later, Jean Duval, managing director of the cooperative, converted the distillery into a sugar factory, which was able to process 900 tonnes of sugar per day.
In the 1990s, the Origny cooperative merged with that of Vic-sur-Aisne, which operate a sugar plant that handled 5,500 tonnes of sugar beet per day. The new entity was named SDA (Sucreries et Distilleries de l’Aisne). A year later, it acquired the Berneuil sugar factory in south-western France.
The acquisition of the leading French sugar producer, Béghin-Say from the Italian company Edison, in 2002, marked a turning-point. The combination of the two companies made the new cooperative group a French market leader with 9,500 cooperative growers. Tereos was born.
In 2006, Tereos merged with the cooperative group SDHF (Sucreries et Distilleries des Hauts de France). This extended the Group's business and strengthened its leadership on the French market.
In 2008, Tereos acquires, via subsidiary Syral, 5 starch and glucose factories in West-Europe from Talfiie (Tate & Lyle Food & Industrial Ingredients Europe), subsidiary of the company Tate & Lyle.[2]
In 2016, the Connantre sugar beet cooperative (Tereos Group) joined forces with the cooperative, APM Déshy, allowing Tereos to expand its business into alfalfa processing, with four dehydration plants in north-eastern France (in Anglure, Aulnay-aux-Planches, Montépreux and Pleurs).
Tereos SCA was created in 2018. The 12,000 cooperative grows now all belong to a single cooperative.[3]
In 2021, Tereos was ranked fifth overall on FoodTalks' Top 50 Global Sweetener Companies list.[4]
In January 2022, Tereos announced the sale of its 11% stake in its joint venture with Axereal dedicated to malt as well as the closure of its sugar activities in Romania. In February, Tereos also announced the closure of its activities in Mozambique.[5]
In February 2023, Tereos announced the sale of its activities in Romania to two local players.[6]
Activities
[edit]The Tereos product portfolio covers the markets of food, animal feed, green chemistry, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, paper and cardboard, and energies.
Controversies
[edit]In recent years Tereos has been mired in controversy after several news reports highlighted the company's involvement in a number of dubious events. In 2019, a complaint was filed against the firm for allegedly supplying an artificial sweetener to Syria, where it is being used to make weapons. In 2020, the region of Wallonia accused the company of a leak in its sugar beet refinery, causing 50-70 tonnes of fish to die in the Belgian territory.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ Our company: Tereo (in Dutch), Tereos Aalst website
- ^ Tereos reprend cinq usines au groupe Tate & Lyle, Agra presse, 14 mai 2007
- ^ "History". Tereos. Retrieved 2023-03-08.
- ^ Huang, Lemon. "2021年全球甜味剂企业50强". FoodTalks (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-01-24.
- ^ Hamaide, Sybille De La (2022-01-12). "EXCLUSIVE Tereos to exit malt business, eyes Romanian sugar unit closure". Reuters. Retrieved 2023-05-22.
- ^ "Sugar maker Tereos to sell Romanian business to local investors". Reuters. 2023-02-01. Retrieved 2023-05-22.
- ^ Major pollution of Scheldt river came from France
Tereos
View on GrokipediaTereos is a French cooperative group specializing in the industrial processing of agricultural raw materials, including sugar beet, sugarcane, cereals, and alfalfa, to produce sugar, ethanol, starch, sweeteners, animal feed, and bioenergy.[1]
Established through the merger of local cooperatives in the early 20th century, with roots tracing back to a 1932 distillery in Origny-Sainte-Benoîte, the group has expanded globally and ranks as the world's second-largest sugar producer by volume.[2][3]
Headquartered in Moussy-le-Vieux, France, Tereos unites over 10,300 grower partners across more than 20 industrial sites in Europe, Brazil, and other regions, generating revenue through diversified operations that emphasize plant-based solutions for food, energy, and industrial needs.[4][3]
While recognized for innovations in sustainable agriculture and commitments to net-zero emissions, the company has encountered controversies, including a 2020 river pollution incident resulting in a substantial fine and criticisms over job reductions in France amid high sugar prices.[2][5][6][7]
Overview
Founding and Cooperative Model
Tereos traces its origins to 1932, when a group of farmers in Origny-Sainte-Benoîte, in the Aisne department of northern France, established a cooperative distillery under the leadership of Paul Cavenne to collectively process sugar beets.[2] Initially, the facility handled 400 tonnes of sugar beets per day, reflecting the farmers' aim to gain control over the processing and marketing of their agricultural produce amid limited industrial options.[2] This initiative embodied the core principles of agricultural cooperation prevalent in interwar France, where producers pooled resources to enhance bargaining power and ensure stable outlets for their crops.[2] In the 1950s, under the direction of Jean Duval, the Origny distillery transitioned into a full sugar factory, increasing capacity to 900 tonnes per day and solidifying its role in beet processing.[2] This evolution maintained the cooperative's farmer-centric foundation, with subsequent mergers—such as with the Vic-sur-Aisne cooperative in the 1990s—expanding operations while preserving member ownership and supply commitments.[2] The formation of the modern Tereos group in 2002, following the acquisition of Béghin-Say, integrated these roots with broader industrial assets, yet retained the cooperative structure involving approximately 9,500 growers at that stage.[2] Tereos operates as a société cooperative agricole (SCA), owned by its farmer-members who supply raw materials like sugar beets and hold the share capital, ensuring alignment between production and processing interests.[8] Governance follows a democratic model with "one person, one vote" in regional assemblies, where over 11,200 members elect 134 regional councillors across six regions, a third of whom renew annually.[8] These councils feed into a Cooperative Board of 18 members advising on agricultural and industrial matters, while a nine-member Board of Directors—elected from members plus two independent advisors—sets strategy and remuneration policies.[8] This structure fosters solidarity and fairness among members, balancing local agricultural ties with operational efficiency, as evidenced by the 2018 unification into a single SCA entity to streamline decision-making without diluting farmer control.[2][8]Global Presence and Operations
Tereos operates 38 industrial plants across 14 countries, employing 15,600 people worldwide as of the 2024/25 fiscal year.[9] Headquartered in Moussy-le-Vieux, France, the cooperative group processes agricultural raw materials including sugar beets, sugarcane, cereals, and alfalfa into sugar, starch, sweeteners, ethanol, and related products.[1] Its operations emphasize proximity to raw material sources, leveraging a network of over 10,300 cooperative members primarily in Europe to support local farming communities.[3] This structure enables the group to serve markets in food, energy, and industrial applications while adapting to regional agricultural conditions. In Europe, Tereos maintains its strongest presence, with key facilities in France, Belgium, Germany, the Czech Republic, and Italy focused on beet sugar extraction and cereal processing.[10] French sites form the core, handling beet campaigns that yield refined sugar and byproducts like pulp for animal feed, while wheat processing at the Lillebonne plant produces 300,000 cubic meters of ethanol and 300,000 tons of distillers dried grains with solubles (DDGS) annually from 820,000 tons of wheat.[11] Starch and sweeteners operations, under subsidiaries like Syral, span multiple Western European locations, supporting sweetener derivatives for food and non-food industries. The Europe Campus near Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport coordinates these activities, fostering collaborative industrial management.[2] Brazil represents Tereos's largest non-European operation, where its subsidiary Tereos Internacional ranks as the second-largest sugar producer, centered in São Paulo state.[12] Sugarcane mills process raw cane into sugar, ethanol, and bioenergy, with cogeneration facilities at six plants producing about 1,500 gigawatt-hours of electricity yearly from bagasse, sufficient to cover operational needs and supply excess to the grid.[13] Additional sites include the Palmital corn starch plant, expanding starch derivatives production.[2] Operations in Asia and other regions include starch and sweetener facilities in India and Indonesia, tailored to local grains like corn and cassava, alongside emerging activities in countries such as Romania and Kenya for diversified processing.[14] These sites prioritize market proximity, enabling customized supply chains for regional customers in food manufacturing and biofuels. Overall, Tereos's global setup balances cooperative roots in Europe with industrial-scale expansion in high-volume cane regions, contributing to 5.9 billion euros in revenue for 2024/25.[1]Leadership and Governance
Tereos operates as a société coopérative agricole (SCA), a French cooperative legal form owned by approximately 11,200 farmer members, primarily sugar beet growers, who elect representatives to oversee strategic decisions and remuneration policies.[8] This model emphasizes long-term resilience through member involvement, with regional assemblies electing 134 regional councillors across six regions, who in turn form a Cooperative Board of 18 members to advise on agricultural activities via specialized commissions for beets, potato starch, animal feed, alfalfa, and innovation.[8] The Board of Directors, comprising nine members elected by cooperative members plus up to two independent advisory directors, holds responsibility for agricultural, industrial, commercial, and financial management, including strategy formulation and member compensation.[8] Gérard Clay has served as Chairman since his election on 23 June 2022, having previously chaired the Supervisory Board from 18 December 2020; the board operates through committees on compensation and appointments, ethics and CSR, finance, audit, risk, and diversification to ensure oversight and alignment with cooperative principles.[8] Day-to-day operations are directed by the Management Committee under the Managing Director, Olivier Leducq, appointed on 19 September 2023 following prior leadership transitions, including interim roles by Gérard Clay and predecessors like Jorge Boucas.[15][8] Leducq, with prior experience leading Tereos's global sugar operations, implements board-defined strategies, focusing on execution across the group's diversified segments while maintaining the cooperative's emphasis on member value extraction and sustainable practices.[15] This bifurcated structure separates strategic governance from operational management, fostering accountability to members amid market volatility in commodities like sugar and ethanol.[8]Historical Development
Origins and Early Expansion (1932–1980s)
Tereos originated in 1932 with the establishment of the Origny cooperative distillery in the Aisne department of northern France. A group of local farmers, under the leadership of Paul Cavenne, formed the cooperative to process sugar beets into alcohol, initially handling 400 tonnes per day. This initiative reflected the broader challenges faced by French beet growers, many of whom had shifted from distilleries to sugar production amid economic pressures and the dominance of state-supported sugar factories.[2][16] In the 1950s, the cooperative underwent significant modernization under managing director Jean Duval. The Origny facility was converted from a distillery into a full sugar factory, increasing daily beet processing capacity to 900 tonnes and enabling integrated production of sugar alongside alcohol. Concurrently, a new distillery was inaugurated in Morains, located in the Marne department of eastern France, expanding the cooperative's footprint into adjacent regions and diversifying its alcohol output from beet-derived feedstocks.[2] Through the 1960s and 1970s, the Origny cooperative continued to consolidate its role in France's sugar beet sector by enhancing processing efficiencies and aligning with national agricultural policies that supported cooperative models for raw material transformation. This period saw incremental investments in infrastructure to meet rising domestic demand for sugar and ethanol, positioning the entity as a key regional processor before larger-scale mergers in subsequent decades. By the early 1980s, these developments had solidified the cooperative's operational base, with multiple facilities contributing to France's beet-to-sugar value chain.[2][17]International Growth and Acquisitions (1990s–2000s)
In the 1990s, Tereos initiated its international expansion amid the liberalization of Eastern European markets following the fall of the Iron Curtain. In 1990, the cooperative established initial operations in the Czech Republic to capitalize on opportunities in beet sugar production. This was followed in 1992 by the acquisition of an 80% stake in TTD, a domestic sugar manufacturer, enabling Tereos to produce and distribute sugar across Central Europe and establishing a foothold outside France.[2][18] The early 2000s marked a strategic pivot toward diversification beyond Europe, driven by anticipated reforms to the European Union's sugar regime that threatened domestic quotas. In 2002, Tereos acquired Guarani, a Brazilian firm operating two sugarcane processing plants in São Paulo state, representing its first major entry into the Southern Hemisphere and the ethanol-rich sugarcane industry; this purchase positioned the group to process over 4 million tons of cane annually at the time.[2] Concurrently, Tereos consolidated its European presence through targeted acquisitions in the starch sector. In 2007, partnering with French cereal cooperatives, it purchased five starch and glucose facilities from Tate & Lyle across Western Europe (including sites in the UK, Belgium, and France), forming the Syral subsidiary and elevating Tereos to the third-largest starch producer in Europe with an annual capacity exceeding 1 million tons. That same year, it entered a joint venture with Spanish cooperative Acor to bolster Iberian operations in sweeteners and derivatives. These moves reflected a dual strategy of organic scaling in high-growth regions like Brazil and defensive consolidation in mature markets to mitigate regulatory pressures.[2]Recent Strategic Shifts (2010s–Present)
In the early 2010s, Tereos accelerated its expansion in high-growth markets, particularly Brazil, through targeted acquisitions and infrastructure investments to enhance processing capacity in sugar, starch, and bioenergy. In 2010, the company acquired five sugarcane mills from the Moema Group, adding significant volume to its Brazilian operations, and established Tereos Internacional by integrating its Brazilian subsidiary Açúcar Guarani with European cereal processing and Indian Ocean sugarcane assets.[19][2] This was complemented by the 2011 acquisitions of Halotek for cassava starch in Brazil and the Haussimont plant for potato starch in France, alongside a major investment plan financed by Brazil's BNDES for production and cogeneration upgrades.[2] By 2013, the Palmital corn starch plant in Brazil became operational, and in 2014, Tereos launched Tereos Commodities to streamline global white sugar distribution.[2] Mid-decade efforts consolidated market positions, with Tereos acquiring Petrobras's stake in Guarani in 2016 to become its sole owner and the third-largest player in Brazil's sugar market, while expanding Commodities to include ethanol trading.[2] Further diversification included a 2016 merger with APM Déshy for alfalfa processing in France and 2018 investments in Brazilian logistics via VLI partnership, alongside the establishment of an Europe Campus for operations and an R&D center in Singapore.[2] These moves reflected a strategy leveraging cooperative strengths for vertical integration and export growth amid volatile commodity markets.[20] Entering the 2020s, Tereos shifted toward portfolio optimization and sustainability amid debt reduction pressures and regulatory demands, divesting non-core assets to refocus on profitable segments like sugar, sweeteners, and renewables. Notable sales included its Romanian operations to local investors in 2023 and its UK production site plus B2C business to T&L Sugars in 2024, enabling concentration on industrial-scale operations in core regions.[21][22] This refocusing aligned with the 2022 launch of the SUSTAIN' 2030 roadmap, structured around five pillars—agriculture, industry, society, and shared value creation—committing to 90% certified sustainable raw materials by 2030 (up from 60% in 2017), regenerative practices on over 30% of farmland, and biodiversity protection.[23][24] Sustainability integration deepened with a January 2025 CSR roadmap approval, embedding goals into governance, including 20 industrial decarbonization projects over the prior two years and green financing like USD 155 million loans tied to ESG performance.[25][26][27] Partnerships, such as supplying wheat-derived dextrose for bioplastics with Futerro, underscored a pivot to circular economy innovations, balancing profitability with environmental imperatives in bioenergy and derivatives.[28] By fiscal 2024/25, 65% of processed sugarcane achieved international sustainability certification, a 26% year-over-year increase, supporting resilience against climate and market volatilities.[5]Core Business Segments
Sugar Production and Processing
Tereos derives the majority of its sugar output from processing sugar beets in Europe and sugarcane in Brazil, positioning it as the world's second-largest sugar producer by volume.[2] In Europe, the company ranks as the second-largest processor of sugar beets, converting the root crop into crystalline sugar, molasses, and byproducts such as animal feed and biogas through a multi-stage industrial process involving washing, slicing, hot water diffusion for juice extraction, purification via carbonatation or chromatography, evaporation, and multi-effect crystallization.[29] [30] Key European facilities include the Connantre plant in France, upgraded in capacity to handle 27,000 metric tons of beets per day following expansions for enhanced extraction efficiency and reduced water use, and the Artenay factory, which processes 11,500 tons daily.[30] [31] In the Czech Republic, via subsidiary Tereos TTD, five factories produce up to 370,000 tonnes of sugar annually from local beet supplies.[32] In Brazil, Tereos focuses on sugarcane processing at mechanized mills under its Guarani subsidiary, crushing stalks to extract juice, which undergoes clarification, evaporation, and centrifugation to yield raw and refined sugar, with residues fermented into ethanol.[33] The company sources from over 300,000 hectares of cultivated land, processing around 20.9 million tons of cane in the 2020/21 season to generate 1.9 million tons of sugar, with 67% of feedstock allocated to sugar in the 2023/24 campaign amid a 19% production increase to approximately 1.9 million metric tons.[33] [34] [35] Operations emphasize high-throughput milling, with expectations for stable crushing volumes near 19-21 million tons in recent seasons despite climatic challenges like drought.[36] [37] Efficiency improvements across sites include advanced extraction technologies, such as BMA-supplied plants in France that minimize water consumption and CO2 emissions during beet processing.[38] Tereos also produces specialty sugars, including organic variants from dedicated beet plots in France since 2019, processed at facilities like Attin to meet growing demand for non-GMO, EU-origin products.[39] Overall, these operations yield diverse sugar forms—granulated, liquid, and specialty—for food, beverage, and industrial applications, supported by integrated supply chains from farmer cooperatives.[1]Starch, Sweeteners, and Derivatives
Tereos produces a range of starch-based products, including native starches derived primarily from corn, wheat, and potatoes, which serve applications in the food, pharmaceutical, and industrial sectors such as corrugated board and paper manufacturing.[40] The company also manufactures sweeteners through the hydrolysis of starches into glucose syrups, high-fructose syrups, and other liquid sweeteners, alongside derivatives like modified starches, maltodextrins, and polyols used in food processing, beverages, and non-food industries.[40] These products are processed at facilities in Europe and Brazil, with operations emphasizing traceability and adaptation to market demands for plant-based ingredients.[4] In fiscal year 2023/24, the Starch, Sweeteners, and Renewables division generated revenues of €2,352 million, representing a 6% decline from the prior year amid fluctuating raw material costs and demand shifts.[41] By fiscal year 2024/25, revenues fell further to €1,779 million, a 24% decrease, attributed to lower volumes in starch and sweeteners alongside ethanol market pressures.[9] In Brazil, Tereos Starch & Sweeteners processed approximately 197,100 tonnes of corn during 2023/24, supporting production of native starches and syrups as the third-largest provider in that market.[42] Derivatives such as cyclodextrins and resistant starches are developed for specialized uses, including pharmaceutical encapsulation and nutraceuticals, with production integrated into starch processing lines to optimize efficiency.[40] The segment benefits from co-products like animal feed generated during starch extraction, enhancing overall resource utilization across 48 industrial sites globally as of recent operations.[43] Recent challenges include reduced European starch output due to softening demand, prompting capacity adjustments while maintaining ISO 50001 certification at production sites for energy management.[44][45]Bioenergy, Ethanol, and Renewable Fuels
Tereos produces ethanol primarily from agricultural feedstocks such as sugar beets, wheat, and sugarcane, with significant operations in France, Brazil, and Ukraine. In France, the company holds an installed ethanol production capacity of 788,000 metric tons annually, representing nearly half of the country's total capacity, derived mainly from beet pulp and grain processing.[46] In Brazil, Tereos allocates approximately 30% of its sugarcane crush to ethanol production, yielding an estimated 520 million liters during the 2022/23 harvest, while ranking as the second-largest producer of biomass-derived energy per ton of cane in the sector.[47][48] In Ukraine, through its Tereos TTD subsidiary, it generates up to 140 million liters of alcohol annually from sugar factory byproducts.[32] Globally, Tereos reported producing 480 million liters of ethanol in the 2022/23 fiscal year.[27] The company's renewable energy efforts leverage biomass residues, including bagasse from sugarcane and vinasse, to generate power and heat. In Brazil, these activities produced 1,226 GWh of renewable energy from sugarcane biomass in 2022/23, supporting self-sufficiency and excess sales to the grid.[27] Approximately half of the energy consumed across Tereos' European plants originates from renewable sources, augmented by biogas production from industrial effluents via anaerobic digestion units capable of processing up to 110 cubic meters per hour.[49][30] These initiatives align with ethanol's role in reducing transport emissions by up to 65% compared to fossil fuels, with projections for further improvements to 90% by 2030 through advanced feedstocks and processes.[50] Recent developments include partnerships to expand biomethane production, such as a February 2025 agreement with Lénéo to construct a 200 GWh-per-year facility at the former Morains distillery site in France, utilizing agricultural waste to inject renewable gas into the network.[51] In Brazil, investments financed by Proparco since 2021 have optimized low-carbon energy generation from biomass, enhancing efficiency without relying on unsubstantiated emissions claims.[52] These efforts reflect Tereos' integration of bioenergy into its cooperative model, prioritizing verifiable output metrics over broader sustainability narratives.Ancillary Products and Diversification
Tereos produces a range of ancillary products derived from processing residues and co-products of its core operations, primarily for animal nutrition. These include dehydrated and pressed sugar beet pulp, wheat gluten feed, corn gluten feed, and native or modified proteins such as corn gluten and wheat gluten, sourced from wheat, corn, and potato processing.[53] Fibre-rich ingredients like wheat bran, corn fibres, and potato pulp are also extracted for use in feeds for ruminants, swine, and poultry.[54] These products leverage by-products from sugar, starch, and ethanol production, enhancing resource efficiency by valorizing agricultural residues that would otherwise require disposal.[55] In diversification efforts, Tereos has expanded into plant-based proteins under the Ensemble™ brand, launched in 2022, targeting the growing market for meat alternatives and functional foods. These products, manufactured at the Marckolsheim site in France, use five primary ingredients—wheat protein, chickpeas, sunflower oil, potato fibre, and vegetable stock—to create high-protein, fibre-rich items low in salt and saturated fats, with sales projected to increase tenfold by 2027.[56] [57] The initiative responds to rising demand for sustainable protein sources, supported by €4 million in funding for expansion in 2024.[58] Organic product lines represent another diversification pillar, initiated to meet increasing consumer demand for certified organic goods. In 2019, Tereos became Europe's first producer of organic beet sugar at its Attin plant, starting with 200 hectares from 30 growers and expanding to 500 hectares by 2020; it also launched organic alfalfa dehydration at Pleurs with 60 hectares initially, scaling to nearly 100 hectares the following year.[59] Organic wheat processing began in 2019, alongside compressed organic sugar beet pulp for animal feed, and in 2020, COSMOS-certified 96% high-purity organic alcohol was introduced from French sugar beets.[60] Further diversification includes pharmaceutical-grade ethanol, produced at sites like Artenay and Origny for bulk active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), complying with pharmacopeial standards for medical and nutraceutical applications.[61] Partnerships, such as with Biesterfeld in 2025 for pharma, nutraceuticals, and personal care distribution, underscore efforts to enter higher-value markets beyond commodities.[62] These strategies mitigate volatility in core segments like sugar and ethanol by tapping into growth areas such as organics (global organic agriculture expanding at rates exceeding conventional farming) and plant-based innovations, while a dedicated Diversification Committee oversees related assets and research.[8][63]Financial and Economic Performance
Key Financial Metrics and Trends
Tereos' consolidated revenues peaked at €7.14 billion in fiscal year 2023/24 (ended March 31, 2024), reflecting a 9% increase from €6.56 billion in 2022/23, driven by higher sugar prices and volume growth across segments.[64] Adjusted EBITDA for the same period reached €1.128 billion, a 15% rise from the prior year, underscoring operational efficiency amid favorable market conditions including post-pandemic supply chain recoveries and energy price volatility.[64] Recurring EBIT stood at €836 million, achieving an 11.7% margin.[42] In fiscal year 2024/25 (ended March 31, 2025), revenues declined sharply to €5.93 billion, while adjusted EBITDA fell 29% to €801 million and recurring EBIT dropped to €405 million (6.8% margin), primarily due to normalizing sugar and starch prices following the peak of global commodity cycles influenced by the Russia-Ukraine conflict.[9][65] Despite the downturn, the €801 million EBITDA represented the company's third-highest annual figure historically, highlighting resilience in cost management and diversified revenue streams from bioenergy and sweeteners.[3] The following table summarizes key metrics for recent fiscal years:| Fiscal Year | Revenue (€ billion) | Adjusted EBITDA (€ million) | Recurring EBIT (€ million) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022/23 | 6.56 | 980 | N/A |
| 2023/24 | 7.14 | 1,128 | 836 |
| 2024/25 | 5.93 | 801 | 405 |