Wednesday, August 07, 2024

An Indian billionaire has an audacious plan to take down part of China's economic master plan

Story by habraham@insider.com (Hannah Abraham) • 20h • 


Karan Adani, the CEO of Adani Ports, plans to take over the operation of a growing number of seaports in the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia. NOAH SEELAM/Getty Images© NOAH SEELAM/Getty Images

The Indian billionaire Karan Adani announced plans to challenge Chinese dominance in global seaports.

Adani Ports has received "in-principle" approval for a $2 billion project in Da Nang, Vietnam.

Adani Group has plans for ports in the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia, Bloomberg said.

Karan Adani, the son of one of Asia's richest men, wants to loosen China's grip on seaports and transform India into a major trading hub.

"We are working on making India the center point of the overall supply chain from east to west," he said in an interview with Bloomberg for its "Inside Adani" series.

Adani, the CEO of Adani Ports, said that the company had received an "in-principle" approval from the Vietnamese government for a $2 billion greenfield project in Da Nang.

This would be the latest addition to the Adani Ports' portfolio. In 2022, it won a joint bid on the Israeli government's tender to buy the Haifa Port for $1.2 billion.

It also owns port assets in Colombo, Sri Lanka, and the Port of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.
Loosening China's grip

India has long had fears over China surrounding it with ports. The trade infrastructure in the Indian Ocean is often referred to as China's "string of pearls."

China's Belt and Road Initiative (also referred to as the New Silk Road) involves buying up multiple ports across the world to build a sea route running from the coast of China through the major transit route of the Indian Ocean and the busiest maritime points of the Middle East, and ending in Europe.

The Washington Post reported the majority of investments in Chinese-owned ports had been made by companies owned by the Chinese government, which would make the Chinese Communist Party the biggest operator of the ports that fuel global supply chains.

The Council on Foreign Relations says that China operates or has ownership stakes in at least one port on every continent except Antarctica. Ninety-two out of the 101 ports were active as of 2023.

The Financial Times cited a report by the Qianzhan Industrial Research Institute saying that China invested at least $40 billion in coastal port infrastructure between 2016 and 2021.

The outlet also said that China had 76 port terminals able to support large ships carrying more than 14,000 20-foot containers, while southern and southeastern Asian countries had just 31 between them.

Fortune India reported that 75% of India's transshipped cargo was handled by ports outside the country.

The Adani Group wants to change that.

Making India the world's factory

The company has openly aligned its business interests with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's development agenda of making India the world's factory.

Earlier this month, it welcomed the first mother ship in the first phase of its port in Vizhinjam harbor, a project undertaken with the state government of Kerala in India.

Expected to be completed in 2028, the seaport aims to handle up to half of India's container-transshipment needs.

According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Adani Enterprises, the group's main company, reported revenue of $11.6 billion in 2024, and Adani's father, Gautam Adani, owns a 75% stake.

The 62-year-old is worth over $80 billion and announced his succession plan on Monday — naming his sons, Karan and Jeet, and nephews Pranav and Sagar as heirs to the Adani Group.

The Adani family has previously faced scrutiny for its close ties to Modi and allegations of preferential treatment from the Modi government.

The Adanis frame the association as a desire to improve the country, with the chairman's message on the Adani Group website promising to "foray into sectors where the country needs to establish a foothold" and affirming that it will "look at these opportunities as part of our national duty."

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