Gautam Adani

Indian industrialist
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External Websites
Also known as: Gautam Shantilal Adani
Quick Facts
In full:
Gautam Shantilal Adani
Born:
June 24, 1962, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India (age 62)
Top Questions

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Gautam Adani (born June 24, 1962, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India) is an Indian industrialist and founder of the global conglomerate Adani Group.

Adani, who gained great admiration across India for his rags-to-riches biography, rose from a modest mercantile family to become one of the richest individuals in the world. He was briefly the richest person in Asia in 2022, but he lost tens of billions of dollars months later, in 2023, when an activist short-selling firm accused the Adani Group of fraud. He made a recovery in 2024 and, as of October 9, the Adani family’s net worth was $116 billion.

Adani is also among the most controversial of India’s billionaires for his association with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). His close relationship with the party is not coincidental: Adani frequently refers to his business strategy as motivated by “nation building,” which the Adani Group describes on its website as “helping build world-class infrastructure capabilities to help accelerate the growth of India.” Mundra Port and its associated Adani Special Economic Zone, the central components of Adani’s business empire, were attained and developed in cooperation with the Gujarat state government. The BJP led the Gujarat state government during key moments of the Adani Group’s growth, and the relationship resulted in the symbiotic rise of both the BJP and the Adani Group.

Family and personal life

Adani was born into a family of Gujarat Jains. He was the seventh of eight children born to Shantilal Adani, a textile merchant, and Shanta Adani.

In 1986 Adani married Priti Vora, a dentist and later the chairperson of the Adani Group’s philanthropic arm, the Adani Foundation. They have two sons, Karan and Jeet, who also serve in senior positions in the Adani Group conglomerate.

Business career

Adani’s career began in 1978 in Bombay (now Mumbai), where he joined the diamond industry after dropping out of school at the age of 16. In 1979 he began trading diamonds, and by 1982 he had made his first million rupees. That same year he returned to Ahmedabad to work at a plastics factory operated by his brother Mansukhlal.

The family company began importing polyvinyl chloride in 1983 to meet the demands of its business. The union government’s relaxation of import licenses in 1985 proved a boon for the company. As its imports and exports continued to grow, the Adanis set up partnership firms in 1988 to manage the flow and were later aided by the Gujarat State Export Corporation.

In the 1990s Adani continued to benefit from general trends in public policy. In 1991 the government of Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao began implementing a program of economic liberalization, which led to rapid industrial growth in the country. As foreign investment poured into India, Gujarat state leveraged its ports to help attract business, and in 1995 it began selling port projects to private companies to develop as joint ventures. The Adani conglomerate received the contract to develop the port at Mundra, which became operational in 1998.

The port deal, the terms of which removed several environmental and socioeconomic protections to allow for the port’s rapid industrial development, attracted a lot of attention and even resentment toward Adani. About the time that the port became operational, Adani and a business associate were reportedly kidnapped for ransom. Eight suspects were tried for the incident, six in 2005 and two in 2018, but all eight were acquitted because of a lack of evidence.

Start of political association

The business relationship between Adani and the state of Gujarat grew increasingly cordial in the 2000s. Early in the decade, Adani was one of the businessmen in the state who came to the rescue of the embattled chief minister of Gujarat (2001–14), Narendra Modi, who was steeped in controversy despite overseeing the state’s booming economy. Modi faced criticism in particular for doing little to stop the killing of more than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, in the 2002 Gujarat riots. In response to his handling of the riots, Modi came under fire in 2003 from India’s powerful trade association, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), which threatened to disinvest from the state of Gujarat. Adani, however, not only continued to invest in Gujarat throughout the scandal but also helped set up a new organization (Resurgent Group of Gujarat) that diluted the influence of CII in the state. Moreover, he was a founding member of the biennial Vibrant Gujarat summit, which brought together business leaders to encourage collaboration in investing in Gujarat. The rapid industrialization in Gujarat, along with the state’s business-friendly environment relative to the rest of India, became a significant factor in Modi’s later rise to prime minister.

On November 26, 2008, Adani was present for one of India’s worst tragedies of the 21st century. He had been dining in the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower, one of Mumbai’s glitziest hotels, when gunmen besieged the hotel as part of a string of attacks across the city (see Mumbai terrorist attacks of 2008). Along with dozens of other hotel guests, he was rescued by the National Security Guard the following morning.

Relations with BJP-led union government

Modi, meanwhile, continued to favor Adani and his business empire. After he was elected prime minister in May 2014, Modi flew to New Delhi on Adani’s private jet. After being criticized for this, Adani claimed that Modi had paid for the service, but it was nonetheless clear to investors that he stood to benefit from Modi’s rise: stock prices in Adani’s businesses soared.

In July 2014 Adani received his first major reprieve from the new BJP-led union government. He secured environmental clearances for the Adani Group’s special economic zone in Mundra. In January of that year the special economic zone for the Adani Group had been declared illegal by the Gujarat High Court for failing to obtain the clearances years earlier.

Controversy over Adani’s courtship of infrastructure projects grew in 2018, when the union government moved to privatize six airports. Adani won contracts for all six. His successful bids led to accusations of cronyism, but the government maintained that the process had been transparent and that the Adani Group had won fairly by bidding aggressively.

In the years that followed, the Adani Group undertook a series of mergers and acquisitions, augmenting the conglomerate with companies in cement, agribusiness, data tech, and other industries. Its most expansive period took place in the early 2020s. From 2020 to the end of 2022, as a large shareholder of his companies, Adani saw his net worth surge from about $10 billion to $125 billion. In late 2022 Adani reached a deal to gain a controlling share of New Delhi Television Ltd. (NDTV), one of India’s most prominent news media companies.

Hindenburg controversy

In January 2023 a report from the activist short-selling research firm Hindenburg Research alleged that the Adani Group had engaged in significant stock manipulation and fraud. The report triggered a sell-off of investments in the conglomerate, which within days lost more than $50 billion in stock market value (an amount that later swelled to $153 billion before rebounding). In response, the Adani Group accused Hindenburg Research of a conflict of interest and referred to the report and its timing as “a calculated attack on India, the independence, integrity and quality of Indian institutions, and the growth story and ambition of India.”

In 2024 Hindenburg Research released a second report, this time alleging that the chair of India’s market regulatory body, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), had invested in offshore funds linked to Adani’s brother Vinod Adani. As of October 2024 SEBI was conducting an investigation.

Fraud charges

In November 2024 Adani was indicted in New York for his alleged role in a bribery scheme. The U.S Securities and Exchange Commission charged him and seven other defendants, including his nephew Sagar Adani, with allegedly agreeing to pay $250 million to Indian government officials in order to raise funds from American investors and win contracts for his renewable energy business, called Adani Green Energy.

Adam Zeidan