From Wikipedia:
Acquisition of NDTV by the Adani group led by billionaire Gautam Adani, who has close ties to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, raised widespread negative reactions and criticism from prominent Western media outlets like The Guardian, The Washington Post and Bloomberg, among others.[99][100][101][102] The Economist stated that before the acquisition by the Adani group, the news channel was "critical of the government but is now supine."[2] The hostile takeover of NDTV by the Adani Group has raised concerns about the future of independent journalism in India. The Adani Group has a close relationship with the Indian government, and there are fears that it may use NDTV to promote its own interests. [103][104][105][106] The takeover attempt was also described to resemble the takeover of the largest news broadcaster Network18, that had occurred earlier under Mukesh Ambani, another billionaire with close ties to Narendra Modi.[107][108] The Delhi Union of Journalists released a statement raising concerns that two "oligarchs" were taking over independent news broadcasters and stifling critical journalism at the behest of the ruling establishment.[109] Presenter Ravish Kumar resigned from the channel in protest over what he called the new owner's lack of independence from the government.[110]
The takeover by Adani led to resignations by many prominent members of the channel. The list included journalists Ravish Kumar, Sreenivasan Jain, Nidhi Razdan and Sarah Jacob, channel's group president Suparna Singh, Chief Strategy Officer Arijit Chatterjee, Chief Technology and Product Officer Kawaljit Singh Bedi.[111][112][113]
Besides, green hydrogen is an oxymoron.