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Updated - June 23, 2026 at 07:55 AM.
From Kunal Shah’s move from CRED to Meta and the monsoon’s renewed advance across India, to Moody’s warning on water stress risks and the debate over ethanol adoption, here are the key developments shaping business, policy and sustainability today.
Kunal Shah steps down as CRED CEO to lead WhatsApp at Meta
Fintech firm CRED will raise ₹8,550 crore in a Meta-led funding round, the company announced on Monday. As part of the move, founder Kunal Shah will step down as CEO and join Meta to lead WhatsApp globally, while strategy and finance head Miten Sampat takes over as interim CEO. Meta will become a minority investor, with the funds aimed at accelerating CRED’s growth and expansion.
India’s ethanol dream hinges on affordability, not policy push
Industry experts say India may need E100 ethanol prices to fall to around ₹60–65 per litre for mass adoption. While the government and automakers are expanding flex-fuel vehicles and fuel stations, higher vehicle costs and lower fuel efficiency remain hurdles, with consumer savings expected to determine the success of the transition.
Monsoon nears Mumbai as Bay system holds key to wider revival
The southwest monsoon has resumed its advance after a two-week pause, reaching Alibag near Mumbai, with the IMD expecting it to arrive in Mumbai within days. A strengthening Arabian Sea branch and a developing low-pressure system over the Bay of Bengal are likely to bring widespread rain to Maharashtra, Central and East India, while fishermen have been warned to avoid rough seas along both coasts. Meteorologists are also monitoring a possible Bay low-pressure area, though a strengthening El Niño remains a concern.
Moody’s flags water stress risks in India amid rising data centre demand
Moody’s has warned that growing demand from data centres, driven by AI and cloud computing, could increase pressure on already stressed water resources. The ratings agency said India’s fragmented water governance, subsidised pricing and slow water reallocation raise the risk of shortages, fiscal strain and disruptions to industry and public services, while ageing infrastructure and groundwater depletion add to the challenge.
Script and VO: Rowan Barnett
Published on June 23, 2026
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