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SATURDAY, JULY 05, 2025
Reliance joins Bill Gates, others to invest $144 million in US energy storage co

Global Economy

Reuters
10 August, 2021, 04:05 pm
Last modified: 10 August, 2021, 04:05 pm

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Reliance joins Bill Gates, others to invest $144 million in US energy storage co

The investment comes months after Reliance unveiled a $10 billion green energy plan in its drive to become a net carbon zero company by 2035

Reuters
10 August, 2021, 04:05 pm
Last modified: 10 August, 2021, 04:05 pm
While the company will remain a user of crude oil and natural gas, it is looking to embrace new technologies to convert CO2 into useful products and chemicals. Photo: Reuters
While the company will remain a user of crude oil and natural gas, it is looking to embrace new technologies to convert CO2 into useful products and chemicals. Photo: Reuters

Indian oil-to-telecoms conglomerate Reliance Industries Ltd said on Tuesday it would invest $144 million in US energy storage company Ambri Inc, along with billionaire Bill Gates, investment management firm Paulson & Co and others.

The investment comes months after Reliance unveiled a $10 billion green energy plan in its drive to become a net carbon zero company by 2035, with plans to build four 'giga factories' at Jamnagar in the western Indian state of Gujarat to produce solar cells and modules, energy storage batteries, fuel cells and green hydrogen. 

Reliance, through its wholly-owned unit Reliance New Energy Solar Ltd (RNESL), will acquire 42.3 million shares of preferred stock in Ambri for $50 million, the company said in a statement.

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RNESL and Ambri are also in talks to set up a large-scale battery manufacturing facility in India, the company added.

Designed to last between 4-24 hours, Ambri's energy storage systems "will break through the cost, longevity and safety barriers associated with lithium-ion batteries used in grid-scale stationary storage applications", said the company led by Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani.

Ambri, in a separate statement, said it would use the funds to design and build high-volume manufacturing facilities in the US and internationally that will supply its long-duration battery systems to meet growing demand from the grid-scale energy storage market and large industrial energy customers, such as data centers.

Reliance's entry into the renewable energy business in India will put it in competition with companies such as Adani Green Energy Ltd and Goldman Sachs-backed ReNew Power.

Top News / World+Biz

Reliance Industries / Bill Gates / Mukesh Ambani

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