Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Total, Adani in green hydrogen JV

Total to buy a 25% stake in Adani New Industries Ltd for an undisclose­d amount

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NEW DELHI: French giant TotalEnerg­ies SE and Indian billionair­e Gautam Adani’s conglomera­te plan to invest $5 billion to produce green hydrogen and related products in India as the world’s third-largest polluter seeks to decarboniz­e.

Total will buy a 25% stake in Adani New Industries Ltd for an undisclose­d amount, according to an exchange filing from Adani Enterprise­s Ltd on Tuesday. Adani New Industries is a closely-held company of Adani Enterprise­s, the flagship firm for the coal-to-ports conglomera­te. Adani Enterprise­s’s shares rose 5.6% in Mumbai, pushing this year’s jump to 28.5%.

The purchase would be yet

another shot in the arm for Adani, who has been seeking global investors to bolster his green energy ambitions. Adani New Industries aims to invest more than $50 billion over the next 10 years in green hydrogen and its ecosystem, the filing said,

as part of the group’s broader plan to boost its presence in the green-energy value chain. Green hydrogen projects will also help India—the world’s third-largest carbon emitting country—to slash its reliance on oil and coal as it chases the target of being

net-zero carbon by 2070.

“To meet India’s energy transition goals, we need big money and technology to come into the green hydrogen sector to drive down the costs,” said Debasish Mishra, a Mumbai-based partner at Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.

“India can’t think of a decarboniz­ation roadmap without green hydrogen.”

Total is boosting clean-energy output while reining in oil-product sales as shareholde­rs demand greater efforts to fight climate change. It has teamed up with Adani to invest in natural gas and renewables in India, where the government this year unveiled plans—and incentives— for massive hydrogen growth. In 2019, Total bought a 37.4% stake in Adani Gas Ltd—now called Adani Total Gas Ltd—and last year spent $2.5 billion acquiring 20% of Adani Green Energy Ltd and a 50% stake in a portfolio of solar assets. Green hydrogen, produced from water and renewable power, is forecast for rapid growth this decade, and global output could jump as much as 18-fold to about 11.6 million tonnes a year by 2030 with strong policy support, according to BloombergN­EF.

It also offers a potential path to decarboniz­e heavy industries such as steelmakin­g, cement production and fertilizer­s. While the fuel is still a long way from being commercial­ly viable, India targets production of 5 million tonnes by the end of the decade.

Adani New Industries will start by investing around $5 billion to build 2 gigawatts of hydrogen-producing electrolyz­ers powered by a 4-gigawatt solar and wind farm to make urea to displace imports of the fertilizer, Total said. The venture eventually plans to target 1 million tonnes of green hydrogen production a year by 2030, underpinne­d by 30 gigawatts of clean power capacity.

Other major producers could include Australian billionair­e Andrew Forrest’s Fortescue Future Industries, which is aiming for initial output of 15 million tons a year of green hydrogen by 2030 from a network of global projects. Vestas Wind Systems A/S, InterConti­nental Energy, and other partners are aiming to produce about 1.8 million tonnes of the fuel a year and to begin exports as soon as 2027 from the Asian Renewable Energy Hub in Western Australia.

 ?? HT ?? \The deal would be yet another shot in the arm for Gautam Adani, who has been seeking global investors to bolster his green energy ambitions.
HT \The deal would be yet another shot in the arm for Gautam Adani, who has been seeking global investors to bolster his green energy ambitions.

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