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RIL Plans to Build itself into New Energy Company

Billionaire Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries Ltd has a 15-year vision to build itself as a new energy company that aims to recycle CO2, create value from plastic waste and has an optimal mix of clean and affordable energy, analysts said.

 

While the oil-to-chemical conglomerate has in recent times seen focus on consumer business, RIL's core oil-to-chemical (O2C) business is well placed to generate sustained free cash flow, BofA Securities said in a report.

 

"Until demand normalises, RIL is looking to maximise throughput, focus on cost by leveraging deep petrochemical integration and continue to focus on domestic fuel marketing," it said. Future of O2C is new energy company and partnerships.

 

"RIL has a 15-year vision to build itself as one of the world's leading new energy and new material companies. It also intends to be a net carbon zero company by 2035. To achieve this, the company is open to work with global financial investors, reputed technology partners and start-ups working on futuristic solutions," it said.

 

This new energy business based on the principle of carbon recycling and circular economy is a multi-trillion opportunity for India and the world. The brokerage said a key focus for RIL is renewable energy, and for that it intends to build an optimal mix of clean and affordable energy with hydrogen, wind, solar, fuel cells and battery.

 

"It intends to use proprietary technology, recycle CO2, create value from plastic waste; RIL is also looking to make its operations cleaner and more customer-centric," it said. Reliance has the largest single-site refinery at Jamnagar in Gujarat with crude processing capacity of 1.24 million barrels per day.

 

The brokerage said RIL is looking to make CO2 as a recyclable resource, rather than treating it as an emitted waste. While the company will remain a user of crude oil and natural gas, it is looking to embrace new technologies to convert CO2 into useful products and chemicals.

 

"One viable application RIL has found for such 'end of life-cycle' plastic waste is in road construction. Road constructed with post-consumer, non-recyclable plastic waste ensures enhanced durability, higher resistance to deformation, increased resistance to water-induced damages and improved stability and strength," it said.

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