Reliance Industries is ready for the next level of growth as the historic fossil fuel-heavy conglomerate pivots a green path agenda while consolidating its telecom business that turned data-dark India into a data-rich nation, its chairman Mukesh Ambani said.
In the firm’s latest annual report, he said in a world of volatility and uncertainty, India is shining as a beacon of stability and prosperity.
India’s most valuable company, which over the past decade added telecom, retail, and finance to its core business of oil and chemicals, is now pivoting a green pathway, targeting net zero carbon emissions from its operations by 2035.
Ambani said the launch of Jio 4G mobile telephony services in 2016 “turned a data-dark India into a data-rich nation, supplying every Indian home with affordable, high-speed 4G data”.
“And this year, Jio has further enhanced the country’s digital infrastructure by rolling out its True5G network across India in world-record time,” he said, adding the launch of the affordable smartphone JioBharat will go a long way in making India ‘2G-mukt’.
On retail, he said as India’s largest retailer, Reliance Retail is perfectly positioned to serve the consumption needs of a fast-growing economy.
While its all-encompassing range of products gains traction, its new commerce initiative is not just home deliveries of groceries to electronics but also supporting small indigenous merchants and kirana shop owners, he said.
The world now realising the enormous potential of India saw marquee names investing in Reliance Retail Ventures Ltd at USD 100 billion valuation, he said.
While consumer facing businesses grow, Reliance continues to invest in traditional fossil fuels. Its gas field in Bay of Bengal meets about 30 per cent of India’s needs while world’s largest single-site refinery at Jamnagar in Gujarat ensures a steady supply of fuel to both India and offshore markets.
All this while it invests in recycling and circular economy.
“Reliance has become the first Indian company to chemically recycle plastic waste-based pyrolysis oil into circular polymers,” he said.
This is in addition to recycling of polyester and polyolefins, and converting PET bottles and plastic waste into road laying material.
“As we work towards our goal of attaining net carbon zero by the year 2035, the development of the Dhirubhai Ambani Green Energy Giga Complex in Jamnagar is progressing rapidly,” he said. “This giga complex will be one of the largest end-to-end integrated renewable energy manufacturing facilities globally.”
Besides generating electricity from renewable sources like sunlight, it will produce solar modules and electrolysers to produce green hydrogen.
Reliance, he said, is also exploring multiple technologies for capture and recycling of carbon.