Companie

TMC government proactively sought investments, says Vedanta’s Anil Agarwal

PTI Kolkata | Updated on July 27, 2021

He says within 14-15 days of formation of the government in Bengal, he got two communications for investment in the State

Vedanta chairman Anil Agarwal on Monday said the Mamata Banerjee government had contacted him within a fortnight of her party’s return to power seeking investments from his industrial group in West Bengal.

Agarwal, speaking at an open virtual discussion with Indian Chamber of Commerce, appreciated the change of mindset of governments at the Centre and in the State with their proactive approach towards investors.

“It is remarkable. Within 14-15 days of formation of the government in Bengal, I got two communications for investment in the State,” he said but did not elaborate.

On PSU divestment

Agarwal also appreciated Central ministers for valuing what industry wants and said the government can divest 60-70 per cent stake in PSUs as hive-off would take time.

The value creation in the PSUs can be at least 3-4 times, he added.

Agarwal expressed bullishness about the power sector. “If efficiently produced, it will cost about ₹1 a unit,” the head of the $12 billion revenue group said.

In February this year, Agarwal had said that Vedanta had partnered with London-based global investment firm Centricus for creating a $10 billion fund that will invest in stake sale of public sector companies by the Indian government.

Vedanta is a diversified natural resources company with interests in zinc-lead-silver, Iron ore, steel, copper, aluminium, power, oil and gas.

The Bengal government had also sent feelers to Tata group when it came to fresh investment.

State Industry Minister Partha Chatterjee had said the government was working on inviting investments in the State.

Published on July 27, 2021

Follow us on Telegram, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Linkedin. You can also download our Android App or IOS App.

  1. Comments will be moderated by The Hindu Business Line editorial team.
  2. Comments that are abusive, personal, incendiary or irrelevant cannot be published.
  3. Please write complete sentences. Do not type comments in all capital letters, or in all lower case letters, or using abbreviated text. (example: u cannot substitute for you, d is not 'the', n is not 'and').
  4. We may remove hyperlinks within comments.
  5. Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name, to avoid rejection.