Reliance conglomerate of India is backing out of its commitment of buying $15 billion worth stake in Saudi Aramco.
Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest businessman’s group, Reliance announced $15 billion deal for Saudi Aramco to buy a 20 percent stake in its oil refining and chemicals unit. But now Reliance is switching its investment towards renewable energy, throwing away its commitment with Aramco, state-run Saudi oil giant.

The deal was announced more than two years ago by Reliance chairman Mukesh Ambani, Asiaโs richest man, and touted as the biggest foreign investment in the conglomerateโs history.
But Reliance and other major Indian firms have since poured billions of dollars into green power as the government pushes to reduce its dependence on imported fossil fuels and as the countryโs cities are assailed by pollution.
Saudi Aramco is the worldโs biggest oil-producing company and vies with Apple for the title of the most valuable firm on the planet.
Ambani in June this year pledged to invest $10 billion in renewable energy over the next three years.
Reliance said in a late-night statement Friday that due to its โevolvingโ portfolio of businesses, the two firms had โmutually determined that it would be beneficial for both parties to re-evaluate the proposed investmentโ.
It was withdrawing a legal application that would have paved the way for Saudi Aramco to take the stake in its oil-to-chemicals division, it added.
The unit includes Relianceโs refining, petrochemicals and fuels marketing businesses, among them the giant Jamnagar refinery in Gujarat, Prime Minister Narendra Modiโs political powerbase.
Reliance recently announced it would build four โgiga factoriesโ at Jamnagar making solar panels, storage batteries, and hydrogen-related products to create one of the largest integrated renewable energy manufacturing facilities in the world.
The Mumbai-headquartered firmโs rise was powered by its oil and petrochemicals businesses but in recent years it has diversified into areas ranging from telecoms to retail.

