Hydrogen cars, London pubs, and Manchester United: 71-year-old billionaire Sir Jim Ratcliffe is in a race to secure his legacy

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Sir Jim Ratcliffe likes to keep busy. As a reward for working a seven-day week at his €40 billion ($52 billion) petrochemical empire Ineos, the British billionaire treats himself to a flurry of side projects, from owning a London pub and a football club to embarking on a real estate splurge in the remotest parts of Iceland.

The 71-year-old is among the richest people in the U.K., with a net worth estimated at £23.5 billion, according to the latest Sunday Times Rich List.

What do you do with all that wealth? For Ratcliffe, the answer appears to be living out each of his childhood fantasies.

Ratcliffe’s hobbies

The petrochemicals billionaire has a quirky, eclectic mix of ventures, straddling his passions for sports, automobiles, fishing, and drinking.

Ratcliffe was a regular in the Grenadier pub, nestled down a sidestreet in the affluent London neighborhood of Knightsbridge.

It was over a pint in that pub that Ratcliffe decided to reignite the Land Rover Discovery, naming the soon-to-be-released model the Grenadier after his beloved watering hole.

He bought the pub in 2022.

Patrons drink outside the Grenadier Pub in West London at the start of the weekend prior to the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on Monday on September 16, 2022 in London, England.
LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 16: Patrons drink outside the Grenadier Pub in West London at the start of the weekend prior to the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on Monday on September 16, 2022 in London, England. At least 400,000 people are expected to file past the coffin to pay their respects with queues already exceeding 11 hours. Queen Elizabeth II died at Balmoral Castle in Scotland on September 8, 2022, and is succeeded by her eldest son, King Charles III. (Photo by Kiran Ridley/Getty Images)

His most high-profile side hobby, though, was his purchase of a minority share in Manchester United last year, which would see him and his team take over football operations at the club.

From his previous sports projects, such as his ownership of the hugely successful cycling team Ineos Grenadier and football club Nice and his professed lifetime support of the club, Ratcliffe pitched himself as the ideal man to help turn around Manchester United’s fortunes.

Ratcliffe has already overhauled Manchester United's footballing side, installing a new CEO, Omar Barrada, and poaching new sporting director Dan Ashworth from rivals Newcastle United.

He has also quietly bought up 400,000 acres of land in Iceland, where he likes to go fishing.

When asked by The Times if anyone owned more territory than him in the country, Ratcliffe replied: “Possibly the church?”

“All the intensity of everyday life where everything is covered in concrete or tarmac and you’re umbilically attached to your iPhone disappears very quickly in this environment,” Ratcliffe told the publication. “It will be good for my longevity, I hope.”

Legacy building

Looking at Ratcliffe’s investments and judging by his comments, it’s easy to conclude his purchases are simply the expensive trappings of a billionaire designed to help him escape the intensities of running a major global company.

That’s obviously a part of it, says Liz Colfer, associate director and chartered financial planner at wealth management business Five Wealth.