Reimagining Public Sector Analytics
Home News Industry RIL lays $10 billion investment roadmap on clean energy

RIL lays $10 billion investment roadmap on clean energy

The company plans to achieve costs that are lowest in the world to ensure affordability of solar modules and achieve 100GW of solar energy capacity by 2030

Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani (Photo: Screenshot/RIL AGM)

In a major investment bid, Indian multinational conglomerate, (RIL) has laid out a Rs 75,000 crore, or over $10 billion, investment roadmap on adding giga-sized clean energy knowledge and manufacturing verticals to its diversified business empire over the next three years.

According to RIL, the company will “target to achieve costs that are lowest in the world to ensure affordability of our solar modules” and “enable at least 100GW (gigawatt) of solar energy capacity by 2030,” chairman said on Thursday.

“As one of the biggest energy markets in the world, India will play a leading role in transforming the global energy landscape. In 2016, we launched Jio with the aim of bridging the digital divide in India. Now, in 2021, we are launching our new energy business with the aim of bridging the green energy divide in India and globally, Ambani said during the company AGM.

RIL's entry into the solar energy space is likely to take on the established players including Adani Solar, Vikram Solar, Waaree Energies, and Tata Solar. The proposed investment in the space by RIL is also more than six times bigger than the current domestic module manufacturing capacity of 15GW and 14 times larger than the 7GW operational capacity that meets 35% of domestic demand.

“Jamnagar was the cradle of our old energy business. Jamnagar will also be the cradle of our new business,” Ambani said, referring to an integrated manufacturing facility, named Dhirubhai Ambani Green Energy Giga Complex, being set up in the place where the company built the world's largest oil refining complex on 7,500 acres in 1999.

The renewables complex will be set up on 5,000 acres and will be among the largest such integrated facilities in the world. It will house four ‘Giga Factories' for producing solar photovoltaic (PV) modules from scratch, advanced batteries for solar storage projects, an electrolyzer plant for green hydrogen, and fuel cells for hydrogen vehicles.

These facilities envisage an investment of Rs 60,000 crore. An additional Rs 15,000 crore will be invested into creating utilities, ancillary units, and partnerships for creating a new energy eco-system. Two verticals will be set up for providing end-to-end renewable project management solutions and financing.

RIL looks to target the gap in India's solar manufacturing capability, while it plans to breach a target of 175GW by 2022 based on imported equipment. The timing of the plan coincides with the government's Rs 4,500-crore production-linked incentive to encourage domestic manufacturing.

The green hydrogen and fuel cell units will prepare the conglomerate for a market for new-age mobility solutions such as hydrogen vehicles lurking on the horizon, as envisaged in the Budget 2021 national hydrogen mission. The plan fits well with the philosophy of its fuel retail venture with British major BP for offering diversified mobility solutions.

Exit mobile version