Exclusive: Military experts raise concerns over change to protocols on Pakistan border to allow project that was handed to billionaire Gautam Adani.
The Indian
government relaxed national security protocols along the Pakistan border to
make way for a renewable energy park, a project ultimately handed to one of
India’s richest men, Gautam Adani, official documents reveal.
The Adani
Group is constructing the Khavda plant, the largest renewable project in the
world, in the state of Gujarat. The conglomerate is controlled by Adani, whose
close relationship with the prime minister, Narendra Modi, has recently been
under intense scrutiny.
In November,
the US government charged the billionaire with fraud for his alleged
involvement in a multimillion-dollar bribery scheme involving renewable power
from the Khavda complex. He has denied the claims.
The Adani
Group has dominated India’s growing green energy sector and Khavda is at the
heart of the conglomerate’s ambitions for renewable energy. The plant is seen
as sufficiently important to India’s energy self-reliance and renewable pledges
for it to be launched by Modi himself in 2020.
Now,
national security concerns have been raised over the project after private
communications and confidential government minutes seen by the Guardian showed
the defence ministry amended security protocols on behalf of developers to make
sensitive territory on the India-Pakistan border commercially viable.
The Adani
Group is constructing solar panels and wind turbines 1km (0.6 miles) from the
border with Pakistan in the Rann of Kutch, on land leased out by the government
of Gujarat. The Rann of Kutch was targeted in past India-Pakistan conflicts and
is adjacent to Sir Creek, a disputed territory with Pakistan. The two countries
have gone to war four times.
Previous national defence protocols did not allow any major construction beyond existing villages and roads up to 10km from the border with Pakistan, preventing any large-scale installation of solar panels.
But
documents show that the Gujarat government, which is controlled by Modi’s
Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), lobbied at the highest levels for the protocols
to be relaxed to make land in the Rann of Kutch available for both solar and
wind construction.
According to
official communications, a letter was written prior to April 2023 by Gujarat
officials to the prime minister’s office, requesting the matter be raised with
the ministry of defence.
A
confidential government meeting was then convened in Delhi on 21 April 2023 to
discuss the solar proposal from the Gujarat government. It was attended by the
director general of military operations and officials from Gujarat and from the
ministry of renewable energy.
“Apprehensions”
around the implications of solar panels for tank mobilisation and security
surveillance along the international border were raised by senior military
officials, according to the confidential minutes of the meeting. However, the
developers gave assurances “that solar platforms would be adequate in
mitigating any threats from enemy tank movements”.
Other
requests made by military officials for adjustments to solar panel size were
rejected by developers on the basis they were not “financially viable”.
At the end of the meeting, the defence ministry agreed with a “mutual consensus” to allow for solar panels and wind turbines to be built as close as 1km to Pakistan, in order to make the land economically viable for renewable energy.
By 8 May
2023, the Modi government had formalised this decision. A notification was
issued to all ministries confirming a relaxation of the guidelines around
infrastructure development, which applied not only on the India-Pakistan
border, but also on land adjoining Bangladesh, China, Myanmar and Nepal. It
signalled a significant alteration in India’s strategic posturing along its
entire volatile border.
Military
experts have raised concerns about the security implications of the decision to
relax the border regulations and build one of India’s most valuable private
energy assets so close to Pakistan.
Ajai Shukla,
a retired Indian army colonel and defence analyst, said: “It is strategically
unwise to create a hybrid wind and solar power generation asset within easy
striking distance of the India-Pakistan border.
“By changing
border defence norms and protocols to make cheaper land available for
commercial exploitation, the military is effectively taking on even more
expansive defence responsibilities for private commercial benefit.”
According to
a senior serving officer, the policy change was met with surprise and concern
among army ranks. The Guardian understands that senior army officials
overseeing operations in the area were not consulted about the decision.
Two senior
officers, who were not authorised to speak to the media, questioned how the
military could mobilise in the event of any security threat or incursion from
Pakistan, as has taken place in the Rann of Kutch in the past.
“What
happens if there is the need to lay mines, anti-tank and anti-personnel? What
about the concept of space and surprise in offensive and defensive operations?”
asked one officer.
Another
questioned the assurance given by developers that solar panels would be enough
to stop enemy tanks. “We have compromised the professional requirements to
defend Indian territory,” he said.
How the deal was done
At the time
that the meeting in Delhi was convened in April 2023, the 230 sq km (90 sq
miles) of land closest to Pakistan had been allotted to a state-run enterprise,
Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI). But by August, after the ministry of
defence agreed to relax the border rules – making the land 10 times more
valuable for renewable construction – it was in the hands of the Adani Group.
Confidential
communication states that SECI was encouraged to “surrender” the land at a meeting
chaired by Modi’s renewable energy minister, RK Singh, in early May. SECI
handed back the land to the Gujarat government in a letter dated 17 July 2023,
clearly stating it had not been made aware of beneficial changes to border
protocols and maintaining it was not “commercially viable”.
The Adani
Group, however, had been informed. Two weeks before SECI had agreed to give up
the land, the company wrote to Gujarat officials expressing interest in
acquiring it, in light of the “revised” border protocols, in a letter seen by
the Guardian.
It was a
Gujarat government committee, led by the BJP chief minister, Bhupendra Patel,
that reallocated the land in August. Several state-run entities put in bids,
but ultimately another 255 sq km was given over to the Adani Group, on top of
the 190 sq km it had already leased.
The decision
was highly lucrative for the Adani Group. Khavda now occupies 445 sq km, an
area four times the size of Paris, and at its peak, the company claims the park
will generate 30GW of renewable energy – enough to power entire nations such as
Belgium, Chile or Switzerland. Google will be among its customers.
In a
statement, an Adani spokesperson said: “We are fully compliant with all the
state and central government laws and regulations and have secured all the
necessary approvals from the relevant competent authorities.
“The land
allocation for the project adheres to policy guidelines and is based on the
credentials and performance of Adani Green Energy, India’s largest renewable
energy company.”
The Indian government did not respond to request for comment.
Opposition
politicians have repeatedly accused the Modi government, and BJP state
governments, of entering into corrupt deals and favouring the Adani Group. This
has been particularly prevalent in Adani’s home state of Gujarat, where the
allegations go back decades to when Modi was chief minister. The Adani Group
denies any special treatment by the Modi government.
In November,
a US indictment accused Adani and his executives of involvement in an alleged
scheme to pay $265m (£215m) in bribes to Indian government officials between
2020 and 2024 in an attempt to obtain lucrative solar energy supply contracts.
The majority
of these “corrupt” deals cited by US investigators related to renewable energy
that would allegedly be generated at Adani’s Khavda plant and sold to state
governments at inflated prices.
The Andhra
Pradesh state government is looking to cancel one of the biggest deals, to buy
7GW of solar power from Adani’s Khavda plant, while France’s TotalEnergies,
which paid $444m for a stake in the project, said it was suspending all further
investment in the conglomerate. The Adani Group has denied all allegations as
“baseless” and said it was seeking all “possible legal recourse”.
In December,
India’s parliament was brought to a standstill when Rahul Gandhi, the leader of
the opposition, accused the prime minister of handing over the country to
Adani.
“The prime
minister is protecting Mr Adani and the prime minister is involved in corruption
with Mr Adani,” said Gandhi. “Adani has hijacked India … The country is in
Adani’s grip.”
Courtesy
: The Guardian, 12th Feb 2025
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