One System Pushed Back. The Other Handed Over the Keys.
What happened to Adani in Australia is not an accident.
What is happening to him in India is not coincidence.
Australia looked at a powerful conglomerate and said: you may invest, but you will not own the system. Banks refused money. Courts slowed projects. Media questioned numbers. Activists used law like a scalpel. The state did not protect Adani from institutional friction — it applied friction.
Australia: Where Money Can’t Outrun Institutions
When Adani entered Australia with the Carmichael coal mine, he expected resistance. What he probably didn’t expect was a full-body institutional immune response.
Banks said no
More than 50 global banks and insurers walked away. Australian banks refused funding. Not because they hate India. Not because they hate Adani personally. But because:
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Climate risk was real
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Reputational damage was expensive
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Numbers didn’t add up
So Adani did the unthinkable (by corporate standards): he self-funded.
That alone tells you how unfriendly the ecosystem was.
Activists didn’t protest — they litigated
In Australia, activism isn’t just shouting slogans. It’s filing cases, demanding environmental impact data, challenging water licenses, questioning indigenous land rights.
Every approval was dragged through courts.
Every shortcut was challenged.
Every assumption was questioned.
Progress slowed to a crawl.
Media wasn’t on payroll
Australian media didn’t call Adani a “nation builder”.
They called him a coal baron under scrutiny.
They investigated:
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Tax paid (or not paid)
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Coal pricing to related parties
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Royalty shortfalls
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Environmental impact vs promised benefits
And they didn’t stop when governments changed.
Result?
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A coal mine once projected at 60 mtpa shrank to around 10 mtpa
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No tax glory
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No PR halo
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Continuous scrutiny
Australia didn’t block Adani completely.
It simply refused to bend.
That’s what a functioning system looks like.
India did the opposite. It rearranged the road to remove speed breakers.
Now Flip the Mirror: India
Same Adani. Very different background music.
Rules change before the race
In India, Adani didn’t just win tenders.
Tenders evolved to welcome him.
Airport privatization is the perfect example:
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Experience suddenly not required
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No cap on number of airports a single company could win
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50-year concessions
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And voilà — six airports went to one first-timer
Yes, there was a tender.
But when rules are tailored, competition becomes theatre.
Institutions blink
Regulators raise concerns — then step back.
Committees flag risks — then get overruled.
Warnings exist — but decisions proceed anyway.
Everything stays technically “legal”.
But legality becomes a design choice, not a safeguard.
Media sings lullabies
In India, large sections of mainstream TV behave less like journalists and more like brand ambassadors.
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Billionaire losses become “foreign conspiracy”
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Corporate scrutiny becomes “anti-national”
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Questions become “attacks on India”
Adani is not just defended.
He is emotionally adopted.
Banks, infrastructure, exposure — all in
Public-sector banks, LIC, pension funds — all deeply exposed.
Ports, airports, power lines, cement, coal — stacked vertically.
This is no longer business dominance.
This is systemic dependence.
And that’s dangerous in any democracy.
Airports, ports, power, coal, cement, logistics, transmission — all loaded onto a few corporate shoulders. And with that concentration came silent risks the country is now beginning to experience firsthand.
The latest aviation chaos is not an Indigo problem alone — it is a policy outcome. When over 1,000 passengers were stranded across Indian airports for more than 48 hours, when families slept on terminal floors without food, clarity, or accountability, the question wasn’t “Why did Indigo fail?”
Airlines fail everywhere.
The real question was:
Where was the fallback system?
Earlier, India had one — flawed, inefficient, but publicly accountable carriers like Air India and Indian Airlines that could be mobilised during emergencies, mass cancellations, evacuations, or systemic disruptions. Today, after aggressive privatisation and concentration, aviation has become a single-point-failure industry. When a dominant private player collapses operationally, the state shrugs — because it has already sold its insurance policy.
That is exactly where Australia differs.
Australia never allowed one group to become indispensable.
India is proudly building indispensability.
And this is the real mirror for Adani.
In Australia, he struggles because power is fragmented.
In India, he thrives because power is concentrated.
In Australia, Adani negotiates with institutions.
In India, institutions quietly negotiate around him.
This isn’t entrepreneurship. It’s system design.
Privatisation without competition creates monopolies.
Monopolies without accountability create grief.
Grief without accountability becomes national risk.
A country doesn’t grow strong by producing billionaires who cannot fail.
It grows strong when failure — corporate or political — does not collapse daily life.
If Adani cannot sail smoothly in a country where laws push back, media asks questions, and governments don’t flinch — then his unstoppable rise in India should not be worn as a badge of pride. It should ring every alarm bell we have.
Because when airports fail, when power grids wobble, when ports stall, the cost is not paid in stock prices.
It is paid by citizens sleeping on cold terminal floors — while the system looks the other way.
Australia resisted concentration.
India romanticised it.
That difference will decide not Adani’s legacy —
but India’s resilience.



