GAIL (India) would invest about Rs 5,000 crore to build a portfolio of at least 1 gigawatts of renewable energy and establish compressed biogas as well as ethanol plants as it steps up efforts to enlarge the business beyond natural gas.
As part of a push to embrace cleaner forms of energy, GAIL would be laying pipeline infrastructure to connect consumption centers to gas sources and spend as much as Rs 4,000 crore on renewable energy, GAIL Chairman and Managing Director Manoj Jain expressed.
"We are a business that is already eco-friendly - gas. And now we want to leverage our position to go greener in line with the vision of the government and the Prime Minister to cut carbon emissions and pollution," he stated.
While electricity generated from solar energy or through wind power is the cleanest form of energy, converting municipal waste into compressed biogas would supplement the availability of cleaner fuel to automobiles and households.
Also, it plans to build ethanol units that can convert agriculture waste or sugarcane into less polluting fuel that can be doped in petrol, helping cut India's import dependence, he added.
Although the renewable energy push would cost Rs 4,000 crore, establishing at least two compressed biogas plants and an ethanol factory would entail an investment of about Rs 800-1,000 crore, he said.
India, which imports 85 per cent of its crude oil needs, is stepping up efforts to explore novel forms of energy to clean up the skies and decrease dependence on imported fuels.
"We have 120 MW of renewable energy capacity
which we want to scale up to 1GW in next 3-4 years," he stated.
GAIL would offer for a 400 MW solar power capacity being auctioned by SECI (formerly Solar Energy Corporation of India) in Rewa, Madhya Pradesh.
The firm had in 2019, won a bid for 874 MW operational wind power projects of IL&FS for Rs 4,800 crore. But IL&FS'' other partners used the first right of refusal to block GAIL's bid, he said.
"We are open to acquisitions and will look at any asset that makes commercial sense. We had almost got the IL&FS project," he stated.
GAIL has inked up with state-run power gear maker BHEL for renewable energy foray. The partnership looks to leverage the competitive strengths of both firms. GAIL would be the project developer and BHEL would be a project manager and EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) contractor.
Jain said GAIL is building its first compressed biogas (CBG) plant in Ranchi at a cost of Rs 200-300 crore.
The facility would produce five tonnes of CBG per day and approximately 25 tonnes of bio-manure using municipal waste.
"The gas produced will be fed into the city gas network supplying CNG to automobiles and piped natural gas to households. This will help reduce pollution," he stated.
GAIL has presented an expression of interest (EoI) seeking partners for the setting up of CBG plants.
It also plans to build an ethanol manufacturing unit, he said.
The move by GAIL, which commands a 75 per cent market share in gas transmission and more than 50 per cent share in gas trading in India, is seen as part of the government's foresight to make for the energy transition process, under which the share of gas in the energy mix is sought to be elevated to 15 per cent by 2030, from the current 6.2 per cent.
GAIL lately signed an agreement with Carbon Clean Solutions Ltd. Under this, CCSL would initially build four CBG plants using its own funding, technology, and expertise. These plants would be based on 10-year CBG offtake agreements with GAIL or its associated firms.
Depending on the success, the partnership would be scaled up to many more such plants.
GAIL owns and functions a network of 13,340 km of high-pressure trunk pipelines. Additionally, it is working on multiple pipeline projects, aggregating over 7,500 km. It owns a petrochemical plant at Pata in Uttar Pradesh and is setting up a new-fangled one in Maharashtra.