| FT, excerpt: 
 Sitting  in his garden in New Delhi last Wednesday, Sushil Kumar Shinde, India’s  outgoing power minister, looked relaxed in an open-necked white shirt,  serenely detached from the  chaos that had over-run his country in the previous 48 hours.  In the aftermath of  a series of rolling blackouts  that left more than 600m people without electricity and heaped further  doubt on his nation’s faltering image as an aspirant economic  superpower, Mr Shinde calmly deflected criticism. “India is an expert in  this sector,” he told a television interviewer, adding: “This is  technological failure, it has nothing to do with the political system.”  When asked how he rated his own six-year tenure, he replied with just  one word: “Excellent.”
 
 It is an assessment few in India are likely to accept.
 
 In fact, the rickety power grid represents only part of a deeper  crisis brewing in this country of 1.2bn. Indian business leaders fear  the troubles of the moribund energy sector could fatally undermine some  of the nation’s banks, unless the government takes decisive action.
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