Lighting Up is the Future
Almost ten ago, I met a brilliant elderly gentleman named Kantisen Shroff - he is an Bombay-settled entrepreneur that built a large industry during his life and caught the sustainability bug well before it became fashion. He moved back to Kutch, a desert area in western Gujarat (India), from where his ancestors come. He is the scion of a movement to revive the traditions of Kutch and to bring innovation to the lives of many - through new forms of desert/low-water/saline agriculture, the revival of handicraft, innovations in the collection and use of organic waste, and in micro-scale power. He has been instrumental in the vision that has helped Kutch rebound from a pounding earthquake in 2001.
It was in a meeting with Kanti Kaka (as he is affectionately known) that I first began
to understand the potential of rural, decentralized power. Many years ago, a ill-thought out plan of bringing salinity saving greenery to Kutch resulted in the introduction of a species of thorny brush, which grew voraciously to cover 40% of the Banni grasslands. In 2004, Kanti Kaka devised a machine to fix carbon dioxide and use the brush as fuel for a 1MW biomass powerplant - what he called "A way to provide uninterrupted power, generate employment, and bring a reasonable income;" he envisioned one of these plants for each cluster of small villages - saying that decentralization was the way to providing the empowering services that people needed for their access to a better life. It turns out that the government subsequently banned the cutting of brush because people were also cutting native species of trees at the same time.
Fast forward to today in India, and we're beginning to see the first thought-through enterprises that are figuring out the business models that make this work. I've been infatuated with the brilliant guys behind Husk Power Systems, a start-up who have received immense fanfare in the past eighteen months - but one of many such enterprises building and operating small-scale powerplants that run on biomass and provide 24-hour electricity to villages who have little or no access to the grid. I'm told that their plants hit cash-flow break even within a year, and people pay more than they do for state grid power - no small feat.
This is just the very beginning. As micro-scale technology becomes more reasonable, subsidies for green tech come into play, and subsidies for old fuels subside, such enterprises - providing power from all forms imaginable - wind, biomass, stirling engines, solar, etc will be viable. All ancillary industries such as power monitoring, smart grids, etc will find rural application if the people develop innovations that are designed for low-cost, low-margin, decentralized operations.
The same is happening in water.
If there was ever a time to act on some latent interest in such things - it is now. I just received an email as I was writing this about the Global Social Benefit Incubator's focus on Electricity Solutions this year - worth the look right here at SocialEdge. If you have the appetite, there are tons of little start-ups looking for great talent - reach out to them and commit to some time as a volunteer - you'll learn more than you can imagine and will likely find your way into the beginning of an industry that might just be your passion.







