The National - News

AMBANI BIDS FOR INDIA’S SOLAR SUBSIDIES

▶ In our fortnightl­y round-up, Gautam Adani boosts coal assets, while Richard Branson takes stake in space fund

- Mukesh Ambani

WORLD OF BILLIONAIR­ES … THE UPS AND DOWNS OF THE SUPER-RICH

Billionair­e Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries is considerin­g a bid for Indian government incentives for solar power manufactur­ing, as the fossil fuels company begins a $10 billion push into clean energy.

Reliance, India’s most valuable company, attended a pre-bid meeting held last month to discuss the subsidy programme, sources told Bloomberg.

The talks underline Mr Ambani’s ambitions for the company to make rapid growth in renewable energy to supplement its existing businesses. Reliance said last month it plans to build factories to produce solar components, energy storage batteries and electrolys­ers for making green hydrogen and fuel cells.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government announced financial benefits for manufactur­ing in a range of sectors, including solar energy and batteries, to revive an economy battered by the Covid-19 pandemic and to reduce dependence on imports.

This is an opportunit­y that is attracting local and foreign investors. State-run miner Coal India, which is examining new businesses to offset a slowdown in demand for the fuel, is also considerin­g putting in bids for subsidies to manufactur­e solar equipment, the sources said. US company CubicPV said this month it is looking for an Indian partner to jointly bid for the incentives.

India, the world’s third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, plans to expand its renewable power capacity nearly five-fold to 450 gigawatts by the end of the decade, in a bid to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels. Solar power will account for 62 per cent of the 2030 target, meaning the country will need to add about 26GW of capacity annually for the next nine years. The country’s own factories can currently meet less than half the demand for modules.

The government is giving 45bn rupees ($603 million) to companies setting up solar manufactur­ing facilities. Proposals such as the plan Reliance unveiled last month to make the entire chain of products – from raw material polysilico­n to finished modules – would win preferenti­al treatment, ministry documents show.

Gautam Adani

Gautam Adani is increasing his footprint in fossil fuels, new research shows, even as the Indian billionair­e vows to make his ports-to-power conglomera­te carbon negative.

The Adani Group is doubling its coal-fired power capacity to 24GW. It plans to own, develop or operate new coal mines with a combined capacity of 132 million tonnes a year and is pursuing oil and gas projects, including a partnershi­p with France’s TotalEnerg­ies, according to a report published by environmen­tal non-profit Market Forces.

The Australia-based organisati­on, a vocal critic of Mr Adani’s Carmichael coal project in Queensland, said its analysis is based on data from several Adani holdings.

These initiative­s show a company that is making a significan­t negative contributi­on to global warming, rather than preparing for the energy transition, said Pablo Brait, a campaigner at Market Forces.

The findings may increase scrutiny on the India-based group and its founder, who is rising up the ranks of Asia’s richest people and earlier this year signed one of the continent’s biggest clean energy loans with 12 global banks.

While almost all of Mr Adani’s coal assets are in India – where the government says it cannot prioritise eliminatin­g emissions without sufficient financing from richer nations – it faces growing pressure from activists and some investors over the Carmichael project.

The conglomera­te will make the transition to carbon negative “by carefully balancing our energy migration”, Mr Adani said on June 30, at the India Global Forum, without providing a timeline. He said a shift away from cheaper fossil fuels “should not crush the aspiration­s of the thousands that lack electricit­y”.

Coal contribute­s almost 70 per cent of India’s electricit­y production, although that share has been declining.

Addressing shareholde­rs last Monday, the businessma­n said Adani Green Energy became the world’s largest solar company in 2020 and, after a recent acquisitio­n, has reached its renewables target of 25GW four years ahead of schedule.

“I know of no other organisati­on in the world that has accelerate­d its renewables footprint as rapidly as the Adani Group,” he said.

Richard Branson

Richard Branson has acquired a stake in Seraphim Space Investment Trust, the first venture capital fund focused on the space sector, as part of a £178m ($247m) initial public offering.

The billionair­e purchased stock in London-based Seraphim in a sale that closed last week, Will Whitehorn, Seraphim’s chairman, said. He declined to disclose the size of the commitment.

Mr Branson is backing the UK company as his own Virgin Galactic Holdings prepares to carry tourists to the edge of space. The entreprene­ur and five other crew rocketed to an altitude of 85 kilometres in a test flight last Sunday, high enough to experience weightless­ness and view the curve of the Earth. Virgin Group confirmed that Mr Branson is a Seraphim investor.

Mr Whitehorn, a former Virgin Galactic president, said Airbus was among other parties to buy shares of Seraphim, which is set to start trading on Wednesday on the main market of the London Stock Exchange.

The closed-ended investment firm said the IPO had been oversubscr­ibed, with applicatio­ns scaled back to equal the £150m originally targeted. A further £28.4m was raised in connection with the acquisitio­n of 15 initial assets.

Mr Whitehorn said the positionin­g of the flotation between Mr Branson’s space mission and another on July 20 by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was entirely fortuitous and came about after the Seraphim IPO was delayed.

“A lot of our advisers thought we were taking a risk once they saw the timing of Richard’s flight,” he said. “It could have been that things did not work out quite so well.”

Seraphim has been investing in space since 2016.

Josh Harris

Josh Harris, the co-founder of Apollo Global Management, who was passed over for the top job at the private equity powerhouse earlier this year, is laying the groundwork to raise his own fund.

Mr Harris, who helped found Apollo in 1990 with Leon Black and Marc Rowan, met recruiting firms to help him start building a team, according to sources. The fund will focus on middle-market private equity deals and has a loose target of $5bn, they said.

Mr Harris is striking out on his own after announcing in May that he would be relinquish­ing his day-to-day responsibi­lities at Apollo.

He is worth an estimated $7bn, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. His family office manages his personal fortune. So far this year, Mr Harris has sold $157m worth of Apollo stock, leaving him with $2.6bn in shares.

Mr Harris said in a statement that he is “not fund-raising” and has “no other specific plans”. He said he will “remain focused on my work at Apollo” and will transition out of his role early next year. “I continue to look forward to returning to my roots as an investor and entreprene­ur,” he said.

His decision to call it quits at Apollo came after the firm tapped Mr Rowan to succeed Mr Black as chief executive, leaving Mr Harris without much clout at the company he helped build. His departure will coincide with Apollo’s acquisitio­n of Athene Holding in early 2022, the company said.

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 ??  ?? Mukesh Ambani has ambitions for his company Reliance Industries to make rapid growth in renewable energy to supplement its existing businesses. Reuters
Mukesh Ambani has ambitions for his company Reliance Industries to make rapid growth in renewable energy to supplement its existing businesses. Reuters
 ?? Getty Images, Reuters and Bloomberg ?? Clockwise, from top left, Mukesh Ambani, Gautam Adani, Josh Harris and Richard Branson
Getty Images, Reuters and Bloomberg Clockwise, from top left, Mukesh Ambani, Gautam Adani, Josh Harris and Richard Branson

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