Hindustan Times (East UP)

Aramco unit to invest in India’s chemicals mkt

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

RIYADH: Saudi Basic Industries Corp. is seeking to play a bigger role in India as the nation’s netzero target boosts solar power and electric vehicles, creating demand for specialty plastics and chemicals.

India’s $178 billion chemicals market is already the sixthlarge­st in the world and is set to expand further over the next few years as rising disposable incomes and changes in consumptio­n patterns boost the use of cars to consumer goods, according to ratings agency ICRA.

That’s prompting India’s biggest oil refiners and Sabic’s parent, Saudi Aramco, to invest billions of dollars in oil-tochemical­s projects in the country. Additional­ly, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s pledge to reach net-zero by 2070 will speed up India’s transition to electric vehicles, boosting the use of plastics in batteries and charging infrastruc­ture.

Both charging stations and batteries “need sophistica­ted materials” and “we have the right materials” for both, Janardhana­n Ramanujalu, Sabic’s vice president and regional head of South Asia, Australia and New Zealand, said in an interview.

Sabic’s resins can reduce the weight of components from dashboards to tailgates by as much as 40%, which allows the vehicles to go further with a single charge. It’s also keen on supplying material for building floating solar plants -- an area that could see rising interest as acquiring land for solar parks becomes challengin­g.

“In the long run, these are the ways one has to be innovative to put a lower burden on the environmen­t,” he said, adding that floating solar panels that cover dams and reservoirs will not only check evaporatio­n losses in a water-starved nation, but also avoid land conflicts and preserve valuable resources.

The Riyadh-based company supplies fertilizer chemicals such as di-ammonium phosphate to India and sources a range of chemicals from the country. It also sees the South Asian nation as a market for its other specialty fertilizer products and is open to forging joint ventures and partnershi­ps with Indian enterprise­s.

“It’s a big market opportunit­y and we will play this comprehens­ively, which means not just produce in India for India, we will take what is available here,” Ramanujalu said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India