Reliance Industries looks to buy Norwegian solar module maker REC

By Gaurav Grover | Jul 08, 2021

Share

Mukesh Ambani at the company's annual general meeting last month, had announced plans for the 5,000-acre Dhirubhai Ambani Green Energy Giga complex in Jamnagar.

Two sources with knowledge of the development said Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) is looking to buy Norwegian solar module maker REC Group as part of an oil refinery's 75,000 crore push towards clean energy.

Mukesh Ambani at the company's annual general meeting last month, had announced plans for the 5,000-acre Dhirubhai Ambani Green Energy Giga complex in Jamnagar. The complex will house a giant integrated photovoltaic (PV) plant for solar energy.

Annual solar panel production capacity is of 1.8 GW and has installed around 10 GW of capacity globally, By the Norway's REC Group which was founded in1996 has regional hubs in North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific.



In an email response, a RIL spokesperson declined to "comment on media speculation and rumours."

“The company is continually evaluating on the various opportunities,” said a spokesperson.

A spokesperson for REC Group said the company "generally does not comment on market rumours."

Although India plans to develop 175 GW of renewable energy, including 100 GW of solar, the solar equipment space is dominated ET Solar, Chint Solar and GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Ltd Chinese manufacturers. The manufacturing capacity is only 15 GW for solar modules and 3 GW for solar cells in India.

Also Read: 
IDBI Bank launches automated loan processing system for MSME

Comments

Recently Post

Modi Meets Xi: Trump’s Tariffs, Strategic Autonomy, and the Future of Asia’s Power Balance

Google Claims Gemini AI Uses Just ‘Five Drops of Water’ Per Prompt, Sparks Debate

Fired by Elon Musk, Ex-Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal Launches ‘Deep Research API’ to Rival ChatGPT

Trump’s 50% Tariff on India: A Big Blow to ‘Make in India’ and Exports

Intel CEO Under Fire: Trump, China Links, and the Future of US Chip Security

India Now Faces Highest US Tariff at 50%: How It Compares Globally & What’s Next

India-US Trade Talks Collapse: Tariffs, Russia Ties & Export Risks Explained