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Asia's richest man, Gautam Adani, made his vast fortune betting on coal as an energy hungry India grew swiftly after liberalizing its economy in the 1990s.
Now, he's now set his sights on becoming the world's biggest renewable energy player - and making a controversial play to take control of India's fiercely independent TV news channel, NDTV.
Adani's foray into the news business prompted the resignation last month of prominent NDTV journalist Ravish Kumar, a frequent foil of India's Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
And it comes in steady decline in press freedom under Modi, in which critical reporters have found themselves behind bars and hounded on social media by BJP supporters. India has fallen 10 places in the Reporters Without Borders press freedom ranks, to 150th of 180 surveyed countries. (India disputes the rankings.)
Since Modi became prime minister, having at times campaigned using a private jet owned by the tycoon, Adani's net worth has shot up nearly 2,000% to $125 billion, according to Bloomberg's Billionaire Index.
He surpassed Amazon boss Jeff Bezos to briefly become the world's second-richest man in September after a surge in the value of his seven listed entities.
Defending his takeover of NDTV, Adani recently told the U.K.'s Financial Times the acquisition was a "responsibility" rather than a business opportunity.
Adani said it was time for India to have a global news conglomerate - and that the channel should support the government when appropriate.
"Independence means if government has done something wrong, you say it's wrong," Adani told the Times. "But at the same time, you should have courage when the government is doing the right thing every day. You have to also say that."
NDTV's two channels, one in Hindi and one in English, stand out among India's myriad rolling news broadcasters for inviting on critics of the government as well as their hard-hitting reporting. It has been hit by a slew of legal cases that its owners said were a result of its reporting.
Kumar has won numerous journalism awards. In September this year, a documentary about his work and eroding press freedoms, "While We Watched," premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, also winning an award.
In a YouTube video after his resignation, Kumar reflected on a "serious threat to democracy" in India. "This day had to come soon or later. There are many news channels in this country, but all of them are 'godi [lapdog] media'," he said.
Rise under Modi
Adani, 60, has backed Modi's policies and aligned his businesses to fit with them.
The college dropout from a middle-class family fits the government's need for "national champions," both to meet domestic goals and as private sector partners in strategic projects outside India, said Mihir Sharma, an economist at the Observer Research Foundation, a New Delhi-based think tank.
"It isn't that government policies are shaped by the Adani Group so much as the Adani Group is a willing and able partner in what the government decides are its priorities," Sharma said, referring to Adani's corporate parent.
Adani's businesses have won multibillion dollar contracts to build ports, highways and power plants. The industrialist's ambitions include developing drones and ammunition, key to the government's goal of boosting military-related exports to $5 billion while slashing costs for expensive imports.
Adani has also invested in agriculture, a huge priority for Modi given the importance of the farm vote.
One of eight children in a middle-class family in Ahmedabad, in Modi's west Indian home state of Gujarat, Adani began his career trading diamonds in the financial hub of Mumbai.
He returned home to join his brother in importing plastics before establishing Adani Enterprises in the 1980s, trading in everything from shoes to buckets.
His career has known ups and downs: He was kidnapped for ransom in 1988 and survived 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai by hiding in the basement of a hotel militants were holding under siege.
From coal to clean
In September, Adani announced plans to invest $70 billion in solar, wind and other green energy projects over the next decade.
Though his wealth was built from coal mining and other heavy industries, early on Adani recognized the promise of renewable energy, said Tim Buckley, director of Australia-based Climate Energy Finance, who has been tracking investments in renewables in Asia for decades.
Adani has capitalized on Indian government incentives promoting self-reliance and achieving net zero global warming emissions by 2070, recently receiving nearly $90 million in government subsidies to produce solar modules.
"I don't think Gautam Adani really thinks about climate science - but what he does do is understand the geopolitical and economic interests of India and he positions himself to solve that problem for his own and India's benefit," Buckley said.
"He wants to be up there with Bill Gates, with Elon Musk. The only way he can do that is by being a credible global billionaire, rather than the biggest fish in the Indian market. Adani Green is what he will want to be his legacy," he added.
Adani's green energy push isn't limited to India. He recently announced plans to build a 10-gigawatt, clean energy project in Morocco that will help meet Europe's energy needs.
Still, he has not yet abandoned his fossil fuel roots.
In December 2021, the Adani Group began exporting coal from Australia's Carmichael mine after years of disputes with environmental groups.
Energy-hungry Bangladesh will soon start receiving a share of its electricity from an Adani coal-fired plant under construction in eastern India.
Adani recently announced plans to invest more than $4 billion in a petrochemicals complex that will include an ethane cracker and a plant that will convert natural gas into plastics.
Critics say such projects run counter to Adani's green energy zeal. The company says such a mix is inevitable given the need to meet soaring demand while India makes a transition to a cleaner future.
"While we are fully committed to clean energy, existential demands dictate that we have to stay the course with traditional fuel sources until reliable alternatives are in place," the company said in a statement.
The statement said use of fossil fuels will be phased out, and "that is why it is our long-term vision to remain focused on clean, reliable, affordable energy."
China's global competitor
In Adani, India has a rival for some of China's big business empires.
Last year, Adani Ports and Special Economic Zones inked a deal with Sri Lanka to develop and run a terminal in Colombo Port, the country's busiest and largest port.
That was a triumph for New Delhi's push for influence in the island nation, where China has invested billions of dollars in infrastructure, including taking over Hambantota, a port in southern Sri Lanka that has struggled to generate profits.
Earlier this year, Adani Ports gained a 70% stake in Israel's Haifa Port, near Haifa Bay Port, which is managed by China's Shanghai International Port Group. The group committed to investing in projects in Tanzania after a Chinese-managed port deal, part of its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, ran into difficulties.
Stretching to expand internationally, the group has had to address concerns over rising debt levels. Adani Enterprises, the group's main listed company, has announced it will seek shareholder approval for a share offering to raise more than $2 billion.
Muzzling a media critic?
Adani's bid to take over NDTV has raised concern he might, given his close ties with Modi, move to stifle the network's often critical stance toward the government.
In a statement, an Adani Group spokesperson that defended the company's strong track record in winning government contracts and pursuing opportunities both inside and outside India.
"Strategic priorities, both domestic and foreign of any country, may be instrumental in creating business opportunities," it said. "If it is attractive enough, we are willing to invest, cutting across geographies and sectors."
RN Bhaskar, a journalist who wrote a biography on Adani, says it was natural for the tycoon to tie his fortunes with those of Modi and his party as they rose to power, just as he earlier was friendly with the rival Congress Party, which governed Gujarat state when many of his early projects began.
"A key element to Adani's success has been his ability to manage relationships. He's close to every politician that is in power," Bhaskar said.
"In India, big business works only through alignment with the government - India is in the same phase as the robber barons and Rothschilds of the 19th Century," he said.
"If tomorrow, an opposition party took over, Adani would be close to them too."