The Scotsman

Petrochemi­cals entreprene­ur worth £21bn named wealthiest person in UK

- By TESS DE LA MARE

0 Jim Ratcliffe, 65, the chief executive of Ineos, one of the world’s largest manufactur­ers of chemicals and oil products topped the list with a fortune of £21.05 billion A “publicity-shy” chemicals entreprene­ur is now the richest man in Britain after his wealth leapt £15.3 billion in a single year, while Sir Philip Green and Jamie Oliver saw their fortunes slide.

Jim Ratcliffe, 65, chief executive of Ineos, topped the Sunday Times Rich List with a fortune of £21.05 billion, leapfroggi­ng his way from 18th place year.

Mr Ratcliffe, whose firm is currently locked in a legal battle with the Scottish Government over its moratorium on fracking, emerged in pole position after additional details led to a “substantia­l revaluatio­n” of his assets.

Ineos director Andy Currie and finance director John Reece shared in his fortunes, joining Ratcliffe in the top 20, taking joint 16th place with fortunes of £7 billion each.

At second place were the Hinduja brothers, Sri and Gopi, worth £20.64 billion.

Their fortune jumped by £4.44 billion on 2017, with their India-based car manufactur­er Ashok Leyland and Mumbai-based Indusind Bank having a particular­ly successful year.

British-american industrial­ist-turned-media mogul Sir Len Blavatnik, 60, came in third place with £15.26 billion to his name. He was knighted this year for services to philanthro­py – recent donations include £50 million to fund the Tate Modern’s new wing, and £5m towards the Victoria and Albert Museum’s new entrance as well as funding the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University.

This year is the 30th anniversar­y of the Rich List, with the top 20 now worth a combined £218.6 billion – increasing their cumulative wealth by £33.5 billion in the last year.

Of the 1,000 people on the list, 145 are billionair­es.

There are now 141 women on the list, with Charlene de Carvalho-heineken of the brewing dynasty ranked highest at number six.

She and her financier husband Michel de Carvalho – vice-chairman of Citigroup – increased their wealth by almost 20 per cent over the past year to £11.1 billion.

Elsewhere, Arcadia boss Sir Philip Green’s fortune took a tumble – his reputation was dragged through the mud following the collapse of BHS after he sold it to a man twice declared bankrupt for just £1.

It later emerged that the department store’s two pension schemes had a combined shortfall of £571 million, risking the future of their 19,000 members.

Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver exited the list completely following a rocky year for his eponymous restaurant empire.

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