Posts Tagged ‘Husk Power’

Man on Wire: A Social Entrepreneur’s Delicate Balancing Act

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

Question: What do a 24-year old French performance artist and a 35-year old Indian electrical engineer have in common?

Answer: Each has mastered a delicate balancing act, integral to his survival.

In August 1974, a young French high-wire artist named Philippe Petit performed perhaps the most astounding stunts in modern history: he covertly strung a tightrope between the two towers of New York’s World Trade Center.  For more than an hour, he balanced 1,350 feet above the ground, evading arrest and capturing the attention of millions of New Yorkers.  Quite literally, Petit’s balancing act was his career – his life depended on its successful execution.  His story was re-told in the Academy Award-winning 2008 documentary, Man on Wire.

Fast forward to 2005; Gyanesh Pandey had heard “no” before.  They said it was impossible. They—the scientists at India’s premier research institutions—told him that rice husk waste was chemically unsuitable to be used as a fuel. Sugarcane worked; bagasse too, but the predominant agricultural waste of India’s poorest regions didn’t burn hot enough, or clean enough, to power electricity generators.

Pandey, however, was not one to take no for an answer. An electrical engineer working in the semiconductor industry, he spent his weekends building a series of test gasifiers, each version more appropriate for the rice husk fuel he knew was out there. Finally, after a seemingly endless series of dead ends, he arrived at a design that could work. Excited at the potential of his creation, he looked for money to build it out in his family’s native village, Tamkuha, in the northern Indian state of Bihar. Finding no takers, Pandey liquidated his 401(k)—paying a penalty —and set up the gasifier, filtering system, retrofitted diesel engine, and wiring scheme with the help of his partner and college friend, Ratnesh Yadav. In August 2007, they inaugurated the plant and brought electricity to Tamkuha for the very first time.  With a second plant in a nearby village, Gyanesh and Ratnesh launched a new company, Husk Power Systems.

Gyanesh is a charismatic leader with a mission he calls “power to empower.” He has used his increasingly public profile and the power of his mission to raise a substantial amount of philanthropic funding. This funding—which has come from foundations and business plan competitions—is crucial to Husk Power as scales its business model. The company also benefits from offers of volunteer support from all over the world, including people willing to travel to Bihar to work for free. The mission of providing affordable, renewable power in communities that otherwise lack access to formal energy services clearly is compelling.  Staying mission-focused – and pursuing the money that comes with it – is a priority.

But the company’s operating margins are also quite attractive. The village power plant systems should pay for themselves within two to three years; with that in mind, the business has attracted risk capital from Acumen Fund and investors like Bamboo Finance and Draper Fisher Jurvetson.  Of course, the projections depend on good management – especially from those at the top.

Making things even more complicated, enter the government.  In 2009, India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy granted Husk Power a capital expense subsidy, making the company’s financials economically compelling for investors, even impact investors. But even more exciting is the fact that Gyanesh and his team are working with the government of Bihar to write the regulations for how rural biomass gasification can benefit from these exact government subsidies as they scale. If successful, the mandate for government funding will grow these systems more rapidly than either the compelling mission or the attractive margins would by themselves.

Without grants and private investment, Husk Power would not have gotten started, but without the mandate from the government of Bihar, the company is unlikely to scale.

Managing that balancing act, even with both feet firmly planted on terra firma, is as harrowing for the social entrepreneur as it is for the tightrope walker.  A few false steps – should I meet the government?  Which is the wrong funding?  Is the volunteer really going to add value? – and the show’s over.

At Acumen Fund, we’ve walked the tightrope to scale and sustainability alongside more than 50 firms in the past 10 years.  Some have made it; others have not.  One thing we’ve learned along the way, is that there is no single path to scale for the successful impact investee.  Rather, social entrepreneurs must purposefully navigate the path to scale keeping in mind three diversions: mission, margin and mandate.

To learn more about the paths to scale, pick up a copy of the newly released SOCAP11 special edition of Innovations Journal, focused exclusively on the impact investing space.  You’ll find an essay (page 69!) entitled Mission, Margin, Mandate: Multiple Paths to Scale.

Rob Katz is a Portfolio Manager, Knowledge in Acumen Fund’s India office.  This post originally appeared on NextBillion.net.

Seen & Heard – What You Might Be Missing

Friday, June 24th, 2011

Seen & Heard is a collection of recent headlines in the news about our world, our work, and the spaces and places in between. In each post, we also share a list of job openings at Acumen Fund and in our sector. Seen & Heard appears twice a month on the blog. For those of you who like keeping a pulse on the latest news as it’s happening, please consider following us on Twitter and Facebook! Finally, if you have ideas for how we can improve Seen & Heard, please don’t be shy and leave a comment below to let us know. Thanks for reading!

Headlines

  • Acumen announces an investment in Orb Energy, a company providing affordable solar solutions to households in India
  • Acumen hosts the 3rd annual World Metrics Day

Articles of the Week

AF and AF Family in the News

India in the News

Other Relevant Articles

Jobs

Jobs at Acumen Fund

Other Jobs – Do you know people on the job market? Tell them about these other opportunities:

For more job postings, check out NextBillion’s Career Center, ANDE’s Jobs in the Network, GIIN’s Job Board, and SocialEdge Job Listings.

Click here for previous versions of Seen & Heard.

Seen & Heard contributed by Taylor Ray, Business Development Fellow in Acumen Fund’s New York office.

Husk Power Systems wins Ashden Award for Sustainable Energy

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

Image: Greg Barker MP, UK with Gyanesh Pandey, Husk Power, India/ Photo credit: The Ashden Awards

The Ashden Awards for Sustainable Energy recognized Husk Power Systems last week for its work in rural electrification and empowerment in Bihar, India. To date, the company has set up 65 rice husk based power generation plants, which serve over 25,000 households in one of the poorest regions of India. Acumen is thrilled for Husk Power, and we enthusiastically join the team in celebrating this well-deserved honor.

The company lives by the Sankrit slogan, ‘Tamaso ma jyotir gamaya’ or ‘From darkness to light,’ In this spirit, the team has made it its mission to lead a revolution in electrification, helping the low-income people of Bihar out of the oppressive cycle of poverty by lighting their lives. In the process, the company has provided employment to over 300 people from the local area, redefined the idea of frugal engineering, and is in the process of setting up ‘Husk Power University’, a facility to provide formal education and training to operators and mechanics who are from the communities that the company serves. And the company is just getting started!

While the team provides electricity over 130 villages without breaking a sweat, I assure you this is no easy task. Congratulations are due to the hardworking team on the ground at Husk Power Systems. Gyanesh, Ratnesh, Manoj, Rama, Satish, Alok, Puneet, Mario…here’s to you!

Karthik Chandrasekar is a Portfolio Manager in Acumen’s India office.

Seen & Heard – What You Might Be Missing

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Seen & Heard is a collection of recent headlines in the news about our world, our work, and the spaces and places in between. In each post, we also share a list of job openings at Acumen Fund and in our sector. Seen & Heard appears twice a month on the blog. For those of you who like keeping a pulse on the latest news as it’s happening, please consider following us on Twitter and Facebook! Finally, if you have ideas for how we can improve Seen & Heard, please don’t be shy and leave a comment below to let us know. Thanks for reading!

Headlines

Articles of the Week

AF and AF Family in the News

Impact Investing in the News

India in the News

Other Relevant Articles

Jobs

Jobs at Acumen Fund

Other Jobs Do you know people on the job market? Tell them about these other opportunities:

For more job postings, check out NextBillion’s Career Center, ANDE’s Jobs in the Network, GIIN’s Job Board, and SocialEdge Job Listings.

Click here for previous versions of Seen & Heard.

Seen & Heard contributed by Taylor Ray, Business Development Fellow in Acumen Fund’s New York office.

Photo of the Week: Party Light

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

There’s a village called Hathaudi in the district of Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India. You can reach it in about a three hour drive from Patna. If you need to hire a car, just ask, I can help. That day it took us five hours to get there because of the traffic.

Coming from the main road you might want to go and see the recently built biomass plant of Husk Power Systems (HPS). The road that goes to the plant is not great, the bumps and the cows slow you down. But this gives you time to look around. On the side of the road you might notice the poles which have been erected for electricity.

To reach the power plant, you have to cross the village of Hathaudi . There is one central road with houses on both sides that takes you to the plant. It is a straight road of a kilometer or so. The road goes through the very center of the village. If you happen to arrive when is dark, you can see the bulbs powered by HPS .

Now, you might be imagining shops open, kids studying, women doing housework, men working a few more hours at night. That is what people think about in bringing light to a village. The mind of the western reader runs, almost automatically, toward the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Yes, western reader, the MDGs  are indeed on their way to being met, thanks to HPS, but what feels truly great to me is what else is being achieved.

We arrive in the village of Hathaudi and it is totally dark outside. In front of the car, all of a sudden, there is a crowd of people. Somebody comes toward the driver saying we can’t proceed – not now. We’re invited to get off the car and join the crowd, or wait. We get out, and start walking through the crowd.

There is a party going on. A man is celebrating the memory of his deceased father by offering food to the whole village. The distribution is efficient, it has to be with so many people. Guests are arranged in lines leaving room for us to pass. There are kids, elders, men, women – everyone.  They are all enjoying the atmosphere and the light of the bulbs, hanging up there, making the party possible.

Mario Ferro is an Acumen Fund Global Fellow in the Class of 2011, working in Bihar, India with Husk Power Systems. Check out his personal blog, “Imagine there is no”