Revenue was down $39m to $186m, while ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) was at $11.6m, down $8.4 million compared with 2019.
Without including non-trading adjustments such as the government wage subsidy, of which the company received $2.8m, ebitda dropped further to $3.7m.
Other aspects of its non-trading adjustments included the cost of the restructuring ($4.3m) and the write-off and loss of revenue from Australasian assets not in line with Scott's new strategy ($13.8m).
Scott said its results reflected "the material impact of Covid-19 on the business", namely the closing of several legacy projects, its restructuring and a write-down of non-core assets.
Restrictions on travel and site access delayed projects during the year and some customers deferred investments.
"Pleasingly, many of these projects are now coming back online, with demand for automation growing in several regions and sectors," Scott's FY20 report said.
The company's balance sheet finished the year with a net cash position of $7.7m, total bank term loans being $11.2m.
Chairman Stuart McLauchlan said he had confidence in the company's new strategy focusing on meat, mining, appliances, industrial automation and materials handling and logistics.
"While the FY20 headline number is not as we would have liked, we are confident that our new strategy will lead to a return to sustainable and profitable returns in the years ahead."
The company noted that after the initial shock of the Covid-19 pandemic, many of its target industries and regions had begun to turn a corner.
"Long-term demand for smart automation and robotic solutions is expected to remain strong, driven by businesses wanting to remove labour costs, increase safety and improve efficiencies."
Last month, Scott announced a $12.5m deal to build an X-ray lamb boning system for Alliance Group at its Lorneville plant near Invercargill.
Scott said of its restructuring a "more efficient organisational footprint will stand the company in good stead" for pandemic-related challenges ahead.
Chief executive John Kippenberger said the company wanted to build longer-term relationships with its clients, such as Alliance, around the world.
"In two existing examples in North America over the past six months, we have moved our engagement from focusing solely on completing one stand-alone system to now having an agreement whereby the customer will take a number of repeat systems over the next three to five years."
Scott Technology shares closed down 2.63 per cent to $1.85 on Friday.
The stock is down 24.75 per cent for the year.