Mukesh Chairman Reliance Industries

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Mukesh Chairman Reliance Industries

CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS features an interview with Mukesh Ambani, Chairman Reliance Industries, in his first television interview in nearly a decade. Ambani discusses his views on the global financial crisis and the international energy market. He also discusses the key drivers of the world economy including emerging markets and why he is ‘extremely bullish’ on India.

Mukesh D. Ambani, Chairman Reliance Industries, is a Chemical Engineer from the Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai. He has pursued MBA from Stanford University, USA. He joined Reliance in 1981 and initiated Reliance’s backward integration journey from textiles into polyester fibres and further into petrochemicals, petroleum refining and going up-stream into oil and gas exploration and production. He created several new world-class manufacturing facilities involving diverse technologies that have raised Reliance’s petrochemicals manufacturing capacities from less than a million tonnes to about twenty million tonnes per year. He led the creation of the world’s largest grassroots petroleum refinery at Jamnagar, with a current capacity of 33 million tonnes per year integrated with petrochemicals, power generation, port and related infrastructure. Further, he steered the setting up of another 27 million tonnes refinery next to the existing one in Jamnagar with an aggregate refining capacity of 1.24 million barrels of oil per day at any single location in the world which has transformed Jamnagar as the ‘Refining Hub of the World’.

CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS features an interview with Mukesh Ambani, Chairman Reliance Industries, in his first television interview in nearly a decade. Ambani discusses his views on the global financial crisis and the international energy market. He also discusses the key drivers of the world economy including emerging markets and why he is ‘extremely bullish’ on India.

Mukesh Ambani hasn’t given a television interview in almost a decade. He has never let TV cameras into his 27-story home in Mumbai. Until now. Ambani is the richest man in India, the 2nd richest man in all of Asia. He is the chairman of India’s largest company, Reliance Industries, which his father started in 1980, making textiles. Today, their revenues come mostly from energy, though they are making big bets in retailing and telecommunications as well, says Fareed Zakaria.

Fareed Zakaria: Tell me, you have a vantage point to look at the global economy. You run India’s largest company. Where do you think we are, five years after the financial crisis began?

MUKESH AMBANI: Well, I’m more optimistic than most. And, my view is that this year, we will see the beginning of a recovery, particularly in the U.S.

And you think that that’s because just the inherent strengths of the U.S. economy?

There has been a fundamental transformation in the energy scene in the US. For many decades, we have heard that the U.S. will be independent of foreign imports of energy. Realistically, I can now tell you that it is my judgment that this will happen in the next five or seven years, The U.S. has truly found non-conventional energy in shale oil and gas which is really, really bringing benefit not only to the population in the U.S. but, really, to across the world.

You’ve invested in solar? Do you think, in the next 10 or 15 years, the costs will come down dramatically?

Absolutely. I think so. And I think that, ultimately, the way I think about energy is that we will transit from what I call a hydrocarbon present, which is coal, oil and natural gas, over the next many decades, into a fully renewable, sustainable future.

And solar really will be at the heart of it.

Let me ask you about the hydrocarbon present. You run the largest refinery in the world in Jamnagar. What will happen, if there were a military strike on Iran? What would happen to the price of oil, in your estimation?

Well, I think that the world is a lot more saner. My own view is that if we see small blips, I think that we have a resilient enough system. And today, there if — there is enough spare capacity, right, in the system to take care of eventualities.

You were very bullish about the United States, probably more bullish than a lot of Americans. What about the other key drivers of the world economy? Because a lot of people say, look, China is slowing down, Brazil has slowed down, India has slowed down? What do you think of the emerging markets story?

Mukesh Chairman Reliance Industries

I think that China is maintaining steady growth. It’s not decelerating. Europe has found its own transition path. And they will transgress through the financial system in an orderly way, India has had some slow growth, but I am really very optimistic on India. I think that.

Why is that? Explain that, because in — when people look at India today, they see growth is at 5.5 percent now. You talk to foreign investors and they say the infrastructure is terrible, the government, you know, doesn’t do enough reform, it’s very difficult to operate in India. You look at all that and you’re not — you’re not — you’re still bullish?

Well, I’m very bullish on India because it’s really the aspirations of a billion people. And ours is a country where all the billion count. There are some countries in the world where one person counts. There are some countries where the politburo of 12 people count, right. The beauty of India is that all our billion people count. And they have aspirations. And it is really a bottom-up story. It’s not a top-down story. So, yes, we will, adjust with what happens in the rest of the world, but we are on a long-term growth trajectory. And this is just not growth in terms of GDP numbers, right. This really is for well being of each and every Indian. And that’s the aspiration.

Do you think that one of the problems India has to deal with is inequality? It is still one of the poorest countries in the world, and yet it has the second largest number of billionaires in Asia. People worry about the growing inequality.

If you think about inequality, that’s not only a problem in our country. It’s really the problem all across the world. Income comes from opportunity. You take our own example, as Reliance. My father started Reliance with 100, right. When I joined Reliance in 1980, uh, the market value of Reliance was $30 million or $40 million. And in 30 years, right, the opportunities that were provided, uh, by this country has enabled us to create wealth for India. My father was a big believer that any business that has the sole purpose of making money is not worth doing, right. Business must serve a larger societal purpose. Reliance raised all its money from capital markets and from individual small shareholders. So we’ve created a million millionaires just by investing in Reliance out of ordinary Indians. And that is the process of creating wealth for the country. Once you create opportunity, wealth comes.

But do you agree, you — you’ve heard all this criticism, that you, in particular, have responsibility. You are the richest Indian. You run the largest company in India. You live in this fabulous house that was, you know, talked about much. Do you see yourself as having a special responsibility?

Yes, of course. The way I think about these things is I really have my father as — as — as my role model. And he started off, uh, with nothing. And one of the things that he said to me is that you really don’t know, Mukesh, what it is to be poor, right. And make sure that you maintain everybody’s self-respect. So when you give, people hold their hand on this basis, don’t give on that basis, right. When you give, and if people hold their hand like this, that means they bless you. That’s the way to give. And in a certain sense, some amount of anonymous giving or doing things that change societies, doing things that leave a lasting impact, and even if it be creation of businesses, creation of jobs, right, creation of sustainable institutions that last beyond you, is the best way that you can contribute to India.

Source: “CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS”

This discussion airs on CNN/ International on Monday, February 11, 2012 at 5:30PM IST


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