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The Hydro One Pleasant Transfer Station is seen here in Brampton, Ont.Tim Fraser/The Globe and Mail

Hydro One says a mild winter and storm-related costs weakened its financial results in the electric utility's first full quarter as a publicly traded company.

Revenue dropped by 7 per cent or $122-million to $1.67-billion in the three months ended March 31, compared with $1.81-billion a year earlier.

Net income fell 9 per cent to $208-million, or 35 cents per share. Adjusted earnings also equalled 35 cents per share, which compared with 38 cents per share a year earlier.

The company began trading its shares on the Toronto Stock Exchange in November after the Ontario government sold about 15 per cent of its equity in the province's primary electrical grid operator.

Its 2015 fourth quarter was also affected by the unusually warm winter – which depressed demand for electricity.

The first quarter of 2016 also included costs to recover from an ice storm in March and lost revenue due to the sale of Hydro One Brampton in late 2015.

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