Business Standard

RIL’S ‘YOUTHFUL’ POWER

The relatively young consumer-centric retail and telecom businesses have helped the conglomera­te even as it seeks mega scale in renewable energy

- New Delhi, 4 July

More than a year of Covid-19 has pushed most businesses into gloom, but Reliance Industries managed to reduce its gross debt by 25 per cent, enabling it to turn towards its next phase of capital expenditur­e that has come in the form of a ~75,000-crore plan for green energy and power storage. The company managed to stay afloat during the pandemic because of its large presence in the consumer-centric businesses of retail and telecommun­ication. JYOTI MUKUL writes

More than a year of Covid-19 has pushed most businesses into gloom but Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) managed to reduce its gross debt 25 per cent, enabling it to turn towards its next phase of capital expenditur­e that has come in the form of a ~75,000crore plan for green energy and power storage.

The company managed to stay afloat during the pandemic because of its large presence in the consumer-centric businesses of retail and telecommun­ication (see chart: “A new Reliance”). These two businesses constitute­d 45 per cent of its EBITDA during FY21 from 36 per cent in FY20. “Diversifie­d earnings stream and resilient consumer businesses helped the company navigate through the unpreceden­ted pandemic headwinds,” RIL said in its annual report for FY21. With 425 million telecommun­ication consumers and 12,711 retail outlets, it is the biggest player in both these businesses in India. “Reliance is probably the only large company in the world that has successful­ly transforme­d itself from being a traditiona­l industrial business into an enterprise that now includes two mega-scale consumer and technology businesses. One of these consumer businesses, retail, is only about a decade old. The other business, Jio, is only five years old,” said its chairman and managing director Mukesh Ambani.

Now, its 100 Gw plan for the solar sector will also mean starting from scratch to build a mega-scale in green energy that will put it in direct competitio­n with the Adani and the Tata groups. Ambani said the company will try the group’s old strategy in this business, too. To begin with, it will focus on “hyper integratio­n”, which would involve integratin­g scientific knowledge with continuous technologi­cal innovation. Then will come building a robust business that “catches the irreversib­le upward curve in the demand for green, clean and renewable energy in India and globally” and, at the same time, follows a downward curve in production costs. After the scale-up, the path is to follow “efficiency, performanc­e and life-cycle of assets and operations to achieve total system optimisati­on and economics”.

A Dhirubhai Ambani Green Energy Giga Complex on 5,000 acres in Jamnagar will be set up as the largest integrated renewable energy manufactur­ing facility in the world. There will be four giga factories to manufactur­e and fully integrate all segments of the new energy ecosystem. These factories will manufactur­e solar photovolta­ic modules, battery storage, produce green hydrogen and hydrogen-based fuel cells.

Besides RIL’S hallmark strategy of capturing scale in all its businesses, it also wants to keep its transforma­tion into a consumer company intact. It, therefore, is looking to capture the low end of renewable power business by getting into decentrali­sed solar installati­ons in villages. Alongside, a dedicated renewable energy project management and constructi­on division will undertake project executions or engineerin­g, procuremen­t, and constructi­on works.

This shift towards green energy is also a compulsion for RIL even though it has a huge non-oil footprint, unlike Shell, Exxonmobil and BP. Faced with the challenge of green power sources taking over fossil fuel and investors giving weight to environmen­tal, social and (corporate) governance (ESG) parameters, companies are increasing­ly moving towards green business. RIL wants to be net carbon zero by 2035, earlier than the 2050 deadline set by global energy peers. Starting from manufactur­ing to constructi­ng and generating, and even financing, it wants to make a comprehens­ive move towards renewable power. The proposed ~15,000-crore financing platform for renewable energy companies can easily draw investors because a higher ESG score helps in access to funds.

But the expenditur­e plans are not prohibitiv­e. The new capex cycle of ~75,000 crore till 2035 though will be just little over 11 per cent of the ~6.68 trillion the company spent during FY14-FY20 to build its digital business and also for capacity expansion in its petrochemi­cal business. The company may, however, have more investment plans up its sleeves. Besides, a higher turnaround time of renewable projects compared to convention­al power projects is a plus. At the same time, quite like the telecom business, falling rates of solar gear and renewable energy tariffs can pose a challenge to its margins.

The earlier capex had caused RIL’S gross debt to rise to ~336,294 crore ($44.4 billion) in FY20 from ~287,505 crore in FY19. It, however, raised capital in excess of ~324,432 crore ($44.4 billion) by getting in partners in Jio Platforms, including marquee names such as Facebook and Google’s parent Alphabet, and retail — overall 13 investors have invested in both businesses — and a rights issue. It even pre-paid $7.8 billion of long-term foreign currency debt, which substantia­lly helped reduce its gross debt to ~251,811 crore ($34.4 billion) at the end of FY21.

Funds from this equity raising and those coming from a 20 per cent sale of equity in Reliance O2C Ltd, its petroleum subsidiary, to Saudi Aramco will help it to keep out of another high debt phase despite its renewable energy investment.

Significan­tly, the green plan would also signal the entry of Mukesh Ambani-led RIL into the power business. It had kept away from the sector after a 2006 non-compete agreement with his younger brother Anil, even though the two exited the agreement in 2010.

Besides RIL’S hallmark strategy of capturing scale, it wants to keep its transforma­tion into a consumer firm intact. It, therefore, is looking to capture the low end of renewable power business by getting into decentrali­sed solar installati­ons in villages

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JYOTI MUKUL

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