Sunday, August 31, 2008
TIE CleanTech SIG Mumbai - Presentations online
1. Mr. Ragupathy talking about Green Building opportunity in India
2. Vivek Mehra talking about Yes Bank's role in CleanTech
3. Prof. Rangan Banerjee giving technology landscape in CleanTech in India
I hope you will enjoy these presentations.
Manoj
Distributed Energy - Solution for India's energy problems
Fortunately, renewable energy solutions are usually very modular in nature and fit very well in a distributed infrastructure setting, be it solar, wind, biomass or small hydro. If we see from an Indian lens, renewables is more an enabler of distributed energy generation rather than a cleaner energy source (which may matter more for developed world). It being clean is a by-product for us, which is good since then there is no conflict.
India is by and large a sunny country with potential for lot of solar power year round which can be captured using lower technology intensive solutions like micro Solar Thermal. India has large arable land (55% of land is arable which is best in the world) part of which can be used for energy plantation if agriculture yields are increased. Weeds like Babool can be a great source for biomass power because water requirements are very low for Babool and can grow on wastelands (55 million hectares in India is wasteland). India has huge Agri-waste (600 million tonnes) which can be used locally for power generation using either biomass gasification or bio-methanation route. Biomass is a natural solar cell and storage issues, which exist in Solar PV, do not exist because nature stores energy as plant material which can be used for base-load /on-demand power unlike in Solar PV. We do not need West’s complex Solar PV technologies if we can concentrate on growing and efficiently using our biomass resources. The good thing is that economically too, the distributed energy sources like biogas plants are cost competitive to grid electricity if you take into account also the grid cost.
India has about 20 million agriculture pumps which are grossly inefficient. Of these 20 million, 5 million run on diesel which make them very costly to operate (farmers usually pay minimal amount for grid connected electric pumps but they have to pay for diesel). There is an opportunity to create distributed sources of energy which can power these diesel pumps on a standalone basis. The cost of running a diesel pump can be very high (given that it costs close to 30-40 cents/KWh of electricity).
Distributed sources of energy therefore can be very useful in Indian context which may not make sense from developed world perspectives. They usually prefer very high concentrated scale of operation because of good grid connectivity and primary urban power demand. In India, I see first Diesel Generators going out of fashion once the distributed clean energy solutions start coming which are easy to operate, generate power on-demand and are affordable. I think it is time somebody starts thinking replacing DGs given that 25k MW of power is generated by DGs in India. Entrepreneurs are you listening?
TIE CleanTech SIG Mumbai launch
If you want to use this platform to speak to an audience, spread the knowledge or can help in core activities of the SIG, please contact me at manoj@nexusindiacap.com
Thanks
Manoj
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Coffee with Nexus
Nexus India Capital, a leading venture capital firm in India, wants to make sure that they are accessible to entrepreneurs. This group aims to bring together entrepreneurs who are interested in participating at our monthly event, "Coffee with Nexus", which is a limited seat event held in Mumbai, India every month. If you are an entrepreneur who is struggling with scalability issues or lost in term sheet or thinking of starting a fresh business and need VC validation, come and attend our “Coffee with Nexus” event.
Join “Coffee with Nexus” LinkedIn Group: http://www.linkedin.com/e/gis/721417
Next Event: September 24, Wednesday, 3-5PM
Location:
Nexus India Capital Advisors
201 B Phoenix House
462, S. B. Marg, Lower Parel
Mumbai 400013
Monday, August 25, 2008
CleanTech event in Mumbai
Date: Aug. 30, Saturday, 10AM-12:30PM
Venue: Nehru Planetarium,
Hall of Quest,
Worli, Dr.A.B.Road,
Mumbai – 400018
1. 9:30AM-10AM : Registration
2. 10:00AM-10:15AM : Event introduction - Sandeep Singhal, MD, Nexus India Capital
3. 10:15AM-11AM : “CleanTech Technology Landscape in India” – Prof. Rangan Banerjee, Head of Energy Systems Department, IIT-Mumbai
4. 11AM-11:30AM : “Green Building Opportunity in India” - Mr. S Raghupathy, Head of CII-Green Business Center, Hyderabad
5. 11:30AM-12PM : “Role of banks in CleanTech ecosystem” – Vivek Mehra, Country Head, Sustainable Investment Banking & Private Equity, Yes Bank
Rita Soni, Country Head, Responsible Banking, Yes Bank
6. 12PM-12:30PM : Networking over snacks and coffee
This is a paid event and hence following fees are applicable. The fees can be paid at the event reception.
Per Session Fees
TiE Members – 250
Non-Members – 400
Students – 100
Package Discount for all 3 sessions
TiE Members – 600
Non-Members – 900
Students - 200
Please RSVP as soon as possible as seats are limited. Also please forward this to folks you know who will be interested in this.
RSVP: manoj@nexusindiacap.com
anahita@tiemumbai.org
Other events to follow:
1. CDM workshop - September
2. Building and scaling a CleanTech company in India : A leading CleanTech company CEO – October
3. CleanTech Business Plan competition - October