"Need to make ourselves self-reliant as a country from energy import perspective": Karan Adani on disruptions caused by West Asia crisis
New Delhi [India], March 13 (ANI): Amid disruptions of supply chains caused by the West Asia crisis, Karan Adani, Managing Director of Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ), has stressed on making India self-reliant in energy and said the country has a lot of resources.
Speaking at the India Today conclave here on Friday, he said any commodity which is imported, whether it is crude or gas, will be impacted if there is a supply disruption.
"I think what we need to look at is how do we make ourselves self-reliant as a country from an energy import perspective. Do we have alternatives towards, let's say, LPG? Do we have alternatives towards LNG? That's where we'll have to play our cards for what is right for us as a country. Because India has a lot of resources, whether it is coal, or whether it's even our own production of crude or gas," he said.
"And I think this becomes a classic case where we have to further accelerate our energy independence, how we protect ourselves from that energy dependence," he said.
He was asked about the challenge of oil and gas supply disruptions from Strait of Hormuz due to conflict in West Asia between US and Israel on one side and Iran on the other.
"There is always been something or the other which is going on which is affecting the supply chain. And if you see from 2020 onwards, most countries have moved from globalization of the supply chain to more of a regionalization of the supply chain. Even India did that as well. So that is number one. And in that, having your own infrastructure becomes extremely critical for a country to make sure that your supply chain is stable and reliable. From our perspective, given the current situation, we are fully geared up as a port to handle any and every cargo which comes into India," he said.
"If you look at the group, we are in three big verticals, if I have to club it. The first is the whole energy piece, where as a group we believe that we have to generate energy which is cheapest for the consumer. To prioritize what the government is looking from a long-term perspective. So, that's where in the energy vertical, we are fully integrated--whether it's the transmission, distribution, generation. In generation, it is thermal, we started renewable, now we are starting battery storage. So basically, we keep developing and focus on the energy that is our core competence and obviously next is the data center that we've just announced," he said.
"Today we have a Capex plan of two lakh crores annually for the next five years....so when we look at this kind of growth that we are doing, we looked at ourselves first: What is the risk? Where are we going? Are we doing it in the right way? Are we doing it in the best excellence way? And one of the things that we realised is, it was okay when we were smaller, but now as the Group, the kind of growth that we are envisaging, it is going to be unsustainable for us to continue the way we are operating," he said.
"It is almost a 10-layer organisation. We want to reduce it to six layers--three at HO (Head Office), three at site. And basically, the idea is: focus on what we are good at as an organisation, which is, you know, ability to take decisions much faster, giving trust at the bottom-most person on the ground because they are the ones who are running the assets. And third, to bring in transparency and accountability for the people." (ANI)
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