"Last month, I had an hour-long meeting with the Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and requested him to pass a law that restricts greens from seeking judicial reviews of environmental clearances time and again," group chairman Gautam Adani told a select group of journalists. He was here for the launch of Vizhinjam International Multipurpose Seaport by his group on Saturday.
In 2010, Adani Group had acquired the rights to develop the Carmichael coal mines in the Galilee Basin of Queensland state in Australia involving an investment of USD 15 billion over a period of time. The project, which includes building a rail link and a port at Abbot Point to ship the coal out, has been opposed by green groups ever since.
"We had placed the proposal before the Australian government during an hour-long meeting with the prime minister on November 4. I had met him even yesterday (December 4). I think this is the only lasting solution I can look at.
"Now it is enough. They cannot continue to challenge the project. They cannot go for judicial reviews all the time. In OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) member-nations approvals are not given with closed eyes countries," Adani said.
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corporate investment and whether there are any such precedents to the same, he answered in the affirmative. "Yes, they have done so in the past".
Admitting that his company is facing a unique challenge Down Under, Adani said that "on one side, the government is giving us all approvals and on the other, environment activist groups are seeking judicial reviews and that derails the whole project.
"Even though there is no stay, because of the judicial review, no lender will finance the project. They do not know what will be the outcome".
Stating that the Carmichael coal mines are the world's largest, Adani claimed that the mine can support a minimum 100 million people to have electricity for a century or more.
The controversy has delayed the project by one-and-a-half years during which coal prices have slumped, he said, adding, "We have to revive to the next cycle".
He also said the so-called landlord port concept can't work for transshipment ports such as Vizhinjam and allarpadan.
"If you really want to enter the transshipment business, you've to slash the price by half to compete with Colombo through which India sends and receives a big chunk of its container cargo.
Adani added: "That's why Dubai's DP World has not been
"At Mundra port which is the biggest commercial port and the only one to handle 100 million tonne or more of cargo, we are landlord port as well as operator. We've freedom to do many things including setting rates. That's why we are successful. Ultimately, our aim is to give a final solution to users."
Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone has won the contract to build and operate the country's second container transshipment port at Vizhinjm, which is being built at a cost of Rs 5,552 crore. The project is also the first to get central viability gap funding worth Rs 800 crore.
At Vallarpadam, which operates on the landlord port model, rates are set by a regulator and the operator has to share 33.30 per cent from its annual revenue with the Kochi Port Trust during the 30-year contract.
At Vizhinjam, the state will begin to get revenue share from the 16th year, which will rise by 1 per cent annually to touch 40 per cent at the end of 40th year contract that can be extended by 20 years more, even though half the investment is being borne by the state.