This is a part of the company’s plan to raise $13 billion debt to fund expansion of its petrochemical production capacity and gasification project for its refining facilities to improve margins.
In the past two years the company has already tied up over $10 billion of foreign currency financing for this purpose.
While about half of this is ECA backed financing backed by six ECAs, rest is from syndicated loans and foreign currency bonds.
After tying up all its ECA facilities with another 4-5 ECA’s for an additional amount of $1 billion, RIL will have the largest number of ECA relationships globally.
“When we put together our plans for petro chemical and refining expansion we consciously decided that we should diversify our sources of of financing for this volume of financing and that we could not afford to be dependent on any one source of financing,” says V Srikanth, joint chief financial officer at Reliance Industries.
This would be difficult as banks would have constraint on extending their credit limit to a single corporate.
So, there was a need for looking at diversification in terms of financing
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