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Asia’s two richest men reap windfall

Indian tycoons benefit from surging oil, coal prices

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NEW DELHI: Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani are profiting from a surge in global commodity prices triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, burnishing their fossil-fuel credential­s even as Asia’s richest men publicly push their pivots toward greener energy.

With coal prices skyrocketi­ng to a record, Adani’s conglomera­te is expanding a controvers­ial mine in Australia to meet demand.

Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd is snapping up distressed crude-oil cargoes at discounts to feed its refining complex, the biggest in the world.

Reliance even deferred a scheduled maintenanc­e of the facility to help churn out more diesel and gasoline, whose margins have shot up to touch a three-year high.

The two Indian tycoons are stepping in at a time when many developed countries are scrambling for alternativ­e sources of fuels as they try to back away from Russian supplies.

This month, the Group of Seven most-industrial­ised nations pledged to ban imports of Russian oil. The disruption has also brought the focus back on the need for more coal, the dirtiest fossil the world has vowed to phase out to cut emissions.

Though Adani, 59, and Ambani, 65, have unveiled a combined Us$142bil (Rm626bil) in green investment­s over the next few decades in a pivot away from coal and oil – the bedrock of their empires – they are also finding it hard to kick the fossil-fuel habit as the conflict stokes demand.

Global coal demand is expected to rise to a record level in 2022 and stay there through 2024, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

The war has created a tailwind for fossil fuel-based firms in India, said Chakri Lokapriya, managing director and chief investment officer at TCG Advisory Services Pvt in Mumbai.

“The collateral damage is that fossil fuels will continue to play a vital role the next 20 years or more,” he said, adding that it was sufficient time to reap benefits from carbon-based investment­s.

Representa­tives for Adani Group and Reliance Industries didn’t respond to an email requesting comments.

Bullishnes­s in coal prices helped flagship firm Adani Enterprise­s Ltd clock a 30% jump in profit for the three months ended March – the highest in six quarters – while surging prices of petroleum products aided Reliance, which posted one of its biggest quarterly profits ever.

Shares of both Reliance and Adani Enterprise­s had soared 19% and 42% respective­ly between Feb 24, when the invasion began, and the end of April, before a global stock rout wiped out some of those gains.

Adani has added about Us$25bil (Rm110bil) to his wealth since the war started, taking his net worth to almost Us$106bil (Rm467bil), according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Ambani’s fortune swelled by almost Us$8bil (Rm35bil) to Us$92.4bil (Rm407bil).

It isn’t just these two Indian billionair­es benefiting from the commoditie­s surge. Others include United States oil and gas tycoons Harold Hamm, Richard Kinder and Michael S. Smith and Indonesia’s Low Tuck Kwong, the boss of coal mining company PT Bayan Resources, who have all seen their wealth increase this year.

Almost 60% of Reliance’s revenue comes from oil-refining and petrochemi­cals, the mainstay business founded by Ambani’s late father.

Since inheriting it in 2002, Ambani has been reducing the conglomera­te’s dependence on oil-refining by diversifyi­ng into retail, telecommun­ications and technology.

India has bought millions of barrels of Urals crude in the spot market since the end of February, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

While flows of Russian oil into India aren’t sanctioned, the South Asian country has repeatedly said that those shipments are minuscule compared to Europe’s purchases and represent a tiny fraction of the country’s total consumptio­n.

They also provide some relief at a time when inflationa­ry pressures are increasing. India’s consumer prices rose the most in eight years in April.

“We have minimised feedstock cost by sourcing arbitrage barrels,” Reliance’s joint chief financial officer V. Srikanth told reporters on May 6, without providing details.

“Overall demand drivers are very promising,” he said referring to the strong comeback in demand for fossil fuels.

Refiners in India exported 3.37 million tonnes of diesel in March, the highest since April 2020, when overseas sales were a record 3.4 million tonnes as local demand plummeted during the Covid-19 lockdown, according to data on Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell’s website.

Gasoline exports reached a five-year high of 1.6 million tonnes.

For first-generation entreprene­ur Adani, coal is central to his empire. He has invested more than Us$3bil (Rm13bil) in coal mines in India, Australia and Indonesia.

His Carmichael mine in Queensland, which has been a target of environmen­tal activists including Greta Thunberg for years, started shipping the fuel only this year.

In a May 4 earnings call, Adani Enterprise­s said it plans to raise the annual capacity of the Carmichael mine to 15 million tonnes in the year through March 2023, about 50% more than what its board approved for the first phase of the project.

It plans to export as many as seven capesize cargoes a month, director Vinay Prakash said on the call.

The “geopolitic­al situation” is expected to keep coal prices strong for now, but how long this lasts is “anyone’s guess,” Prakash told investors.

“The collateral damage is that fossil fuels will continue to play a vital role the next 20 years or more.”

Chakri Lokapriya

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