Happy New Year 2016
Aspiration Energy wishes all a very happy new year, 2016
After a successful inaugural footprints event, SICCI and CIIE, this time along with TiE is hosting the second edition of “Footprints“, to celebrate Climate Change Action in Manufacturing Industry on 28th August, 2015 at 6 PM. PROGRAMME AGENDA: Date: 28th August, 2015 Time: 6.00 p.m. Venue: My Fortune, Chennai Welcome Address: Mr. Jawahar Vadivelu, President, SICCI Theme Address: Mr. Bhoovarahan Thirumalai, Chairman, SICCI Energy Committee Speech By: Mr Srivats Ram, Managing Director, Wheels India Limited Speech By: Mr. Ranganath N K, Managing Director, Grundfos Pumps India Pvt. Ltd. Interactions Vote of Thanks Mr Ranganath N K, will be talking about the green initiatives at his organisation. He is noted for his focus on water and energy conservation. Mr. Ranganath is the Managing Director of Grundfos Pumps India Pvt. Ltd, since its inception in 1998. About Mr. Ranganath: Managing Director, Grundfos Pumps India Pvt. Ltd. since its inception in 1998. Mr. Ranganath’s focus has been on water and energy conservation. Ex-Chairman of the CII – Tamilnadu Council Ex-President of the Madras Management Association The EX-Chairman of the board of AEEE Member of the Working Group on ‘Land & Water’ constituted by the Planning Commission, New Delhi for the Formulation of Twelfth Five Year Plan 2012 – 2017 Mr Srivats Ram, will be talking about his experience in automobile industry and his organisation\’s green initiatives. He serves as Managing Director of Wheels India Limited. He has over 3 decades of work experience in Vehicle and Component Industry. He serves as the President of The Automotive Component Manufacturers Association of India (ACMA). About Mr. Srivats Ram: Managing Director, Wheels India Limited Chairman and Managing Director, Sundaram Hydraulics Limited Director, TVS & Sons Pvt Limited Director, Axles India Limited President, Automotive Component Manufacturer’s Association (ACMA) – 2010-11 President, TKM Suppliers’ Association – 2006-2009 Senior Vice President, Madras Management Association – 2012-13 President, Madras Management Association – 2013-14 23 years experience in Automotive Industry It is easy to leave carbon footprints and move on, while it requires conscious effort to try and rub some of those carbon footprints and leave green ones instead. This series of event is all about taking that extra mile and make little changes that will make our planet a better place to live. While it takes more effort to start not green and move towards green, it is easier for new entrepreneurs to start their venture greener way. SICCI, TiE and CIIE invites everyone this event. To register for the event, please click here Viji Suresh, Aspiration Energy
SICCI and CIIE together are hosting an event, \”Footprints\”, to celebrate Climate Change Action in Manufacturing Industry on 23rd June, 2015 between 6.30 PM to 8.30 PM. This event is supported by HSBC and Infuse Ventures. Venue: My Fortune, Cathedral Road Being the first event in the series that are planned to follow, Mr. Bharat Joshi, The honorable British Deputy High Commissioner, Chennai has agreed to inaugurate the Footprints event. Inaugural address – 6.00 – 6.30 PM: By Mr. Bharat Joshi, The honorable British Deputy High Commissioner, Chennai Mr. Bharat Joshi\’s, varied career has been spent dealing with a full range of HMG objectives, including promoting political and economic reform and improved human rights; improved UK prosperity through trade; climate change and UN policy issues. A major part of his portfolio in Chennai is focused on enhancing the trade and investment partnership between the UK on the one hand, and Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Pondicherry on the other. Address – 7.00 – 7.45 PM: Mr. V. Narasimhan, ED – Foundry Division, Brakes India Limited. Mr. V. Narasmihan, will share with us the Case studies and success stories of climate change mitigation/energy efficiency action taken at Brakes India Limited. Mr. Narasimhan, is actively involved with Confederation of Indian Industry as Chairman of TPM Club India for five years and Co-Chairman of the Manufacturing Competitiveness Committee of CII – Southern Region in 2012. He is a member of the Working Group on “Green Manufacturing” constituted by the Planning Commission for the Twelfth Five Year Plan. He has been nominated as an advisor to the Deming Prize Committee by the Union of Japanese Scientists & Engineers. He is very much interested in Environmental Management & Corporate Social Responsibility and a very keen golfer and avid sports enthusiast. Address – 7.45 – 8.30 PM: Mr. S. N. Eisenhower, Director – Operations, Saint Gobain Glass India. Mr. S. N. Eisenhower, will share with us the Case studies and success stories of climate change mitigation/energy efficiency action taken at Saint Gobain Glass, India Mr. Eisenhower, is a proud pioneer in promoting green initiatives inside the organisation he works for. He also has been elected the chairman of CII Tamil Nadu State council for 2015-2016. Networking and Dinner – 8.30 – 9.30 PM It is easy to leave carbon footprints and move on, while it requires conscious effort to try and rub some of those carbon footprints and leave green ones instead. This series of event is all about taking that extra mile and make little changes that will make our planet a better place to live. While it takes more effort to start not green and move towards green, it is easier for new entrepreneurs to start their venture greener way. SICCI, CIIE invites everyone to step in to this event and step out greener in mind, heart and practice. To register for the event, please click here Viji Suresh, Aspiration Energy
When they named it as Green \”Power\” Market Development Group, I was skeptical. Solar Energy vs Solar Power – the long standing debate, came to my mind. But, they invited me to talk about Solar Heat, and actively listened. Overall, the audience was appreciative of the different direction that we are taking in terms of solar heaters for the industry. Some myths of solar thermal, mistaken with Solar Thermal Plants was raised, and I am happy to dispel them. My take on \”Solar Thermal Power vs Solar Thermal Energy\”. ~Bhoo, Aspiration Energy
It has been a month since I wrote a blog post. I noticed that there were few interesting programs I attended during the month of October and November but missed out writing about them. Thought of sharing it now, it is better to be late than never 🙂 I attended 2 events within a span of 3 days – both focused on our field: The first was a stakeholder Workshop – II on “Vision and Action Plan for development of decentralized solar thermal in India ” on October 14, 2014 in New Delhi. This was conducted by Shakti Foundation and Greentech knowledge solutions. Sameer Maithel, spoke about the Chasm in Industrial Process Heat. How real! How insightful! Yes, we have such huge number of leads – we are talking with who-is-who of the industry – TVS, Tata, Godrej, ITC, Mahindra, and so on. But, even in our sales cycle – it is a chasm – the technical evaluation gets over, the commercial evaluation gets over – but before it translates to Purchase Order, there is a Chasm. The chasm is one of getting all the stakeholders together and making them fully motivated to transact. I am happy to see that the industry is seeing this Chasm and making efforts to close it. We can all read this book: Crossing the chasm The second was a Workshop on monitoring, design and certification of solar process heat on 16 October 2014 in New Delhi. This was conducted by So-Pro India. Tarun Kapoor, Joint Secreatry of MNRE attended both the sessions. This shows the growing interest in our chosen area. I am very happy that this often neglected area is grabbing attention. Both sessions talked about how we can get policy / market awareness and credibility changes to grow the market for Solar Heating. There was a significant focus on Solar Heat for Industrial Process (SHIP) So-Pro event was 100% focused on Industrial process heat. One thing of great note here – like in any business, the quality of entrepreneurs and eco-system during the initial period determines the growth of the industry. In that sense, it is great to be part of this community – the people who were present were tachnically, commercially and behaviorally so competent to understand issues, their solutions and way to take this industry forward. Great to be part of this community.
“Sun and Wind alter global landscape, leaving utilities behind“, says The New York Times. We are just trying to get to Germany with our solar heating innovations. Energy Wende is a great term. In fact BMWi – the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy – is renamed so from “Ministry of Economics and Technology” recently. Shows such a great importance Germany gives for Energy. I am happy that Aspiration Energy is chosen for the 2014 version of the IGMTP – The German-Indian Manager training program.
The Step-up, Step-down trap… This is the way the most energy systems in the world are built today – Electricity grids take the voltage all the way up to 11 KV (11000V), 33 KV (33000V) and 66 KV (66000V). Your home consumption may be at 230V (India) or 110 V (USA) and so on. But, we use a transformer next to the consumption point and step it down. Same way, many companies run long steam lines or thermic fluid lines that are generated in a central boiler plant – at 150 Deg C to 250 Deg C. This high temperature steam/thermic fluid pipe is very similar to the high voltage grid. But, the end use is usually at lower temperature levels. Much like our electricity – where our usage voltage is low. Say, metal pre-treatment is at 60-70 Deg C. Washing is at 50 Deg C and so on. If we can interrupt it at lower temperature level and produce energy, why should we not do it? That is what we have done in our Wheels India Padi installation. We stop the high temperature thermic fluid lines, and instead run the low temperature process using solar heaters that produce the requisite lower temperatures.
Comprehensive tariff order on solar power – TNERC This is good in more than one way for the solar developers. How will Tangedco fund it without massive tariff rationalization is the usual question that lingers in my mind. If not funded well, the payments will stutter and hence development may not happen. I am not seeing escalation specified clearly or may be I am missing something. As always, the reverse – higher the volume or capacity better pricing offer, unique to India and some developing countries is intriguing. Conventional wisdom says otherwise. Main comment is on the opposite view – Tangedco is ready to procure at 6.48. Alright. At generation end! Alright! So, tangedco absorbs transmission losses here. So, why can\’t we waive transmission losses for solar developers or make it concessional – some direct PPAs with end customers with group captive will immediately happen if that is done without much loss to the Government compared to this. Either way transmission loss is absorbed by tangedco, but higher tariff will be paid by the end user. Better, right? ~Bhoo
Actor and environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio addresses the UN summit meeting on climate change. DiCaprio was recently named a United Nations Messenger of Peace. ‘This disaster has grown beyond the choices that individuals make. This is now about our industries, and governments…’ he tells the summit. DiCaprio – “Thank you, Mr Secretary General, your excellencies, ladies and gentleman, and distinguished guests. I’m honored to be here today, I stand before you not as an expert but as a concerned citizen, one of the 400,000 people who marched in the streets of New York on Sunday, and the billions of others around the world who want to solve our climate crisis. As an actor I pretend for a living. I play fictitious characters often solving fictitious problems. I believe that mankind has looked at climate change in that same way: as if it were a fiction; as if pretending that climate change wasn’t real, would somehow make it go away. But I think we all know better than that. Every week, we’re seeing new and undeniable climate events, evidence that accelerated climate change is here right now. Droughts are intensifying, our oceans are acidifying with methane plumes rising up from the ocean floor. We are seeing extreme weather events and the West Antarctic and Greenland ice-sheets melting at unprecedented rates, decades ahead of scientific projections. None of this is rhetoric, and none of it is hysteria. It is fact. The scientific community knows it, Industry knows it, governments know it, even the United States military knows it. The chief of the US navy’s Pacific command, admiral Samuel Locklear, recently said that climate change is our single greatest security threat. My Friends, this body – perhaps more than any other gathering in human history – now faces this difficult but achievable task. You can make history … or you will be vilified by it. To be clear, this is not about just telling people to change their light bulbs or to buy a hybrid car. This disaster has grown BEYOND the choices that individuals make. This is now about our industries, and governments around the world taking decisive, large-scale action. Now must be our moment for action. We need to put a pricetag on carbon emissions, and eliminate government subsidies for oil, coal, and gas companies. We need end the free ride that industrial polluters have been given in the name of a free-market economy, they do not deserve our tax dollars, they deserve our scrutiny. For the economy itself will die if our ecosystems collapse. The good news is that renewable energy is not only achievable but good economic policy. This is not a partisan debate; it is a human one. Clean air and a livable climate are inalienable human rights. And solving this crisis is not a question of politics. It is question about own survival. This is the most urgent of times, and the most urgent of messages. Honoured delegates, leaders of the world, I pretend for a living. But you do not. The people made their voices heard on Sunday around the world and the momentum will not stop. And now it’s YOUR turn, the time to answer humankind’s greatest challenge is now. We beg you to face it with courage. And honesty. Thank you.”
Comprehensive tariff order on solar power – TNERC This is good in more than one way for the solar developers. How will Tangedco fund it without massive tariff rationalization is the usual question that lingers in my mind. If not funded well, the payments will stutter and hence development may not happen. I am not seeing escalation specified clearly or may be I am missing something. As always, the reverse – higher the volume or capacity better pricing offer, unique to India and some developing countries is intriguing. Conventional wisdom says otherwise. Main comment is on the opposite view – Tangedco is ready to procure at 6.48. Alright. At generation end! Alright! So, tangedco absorbs transmission losses here. So, why can’t we waive transmission losses for solar developers or make it concessional – some direct PPAs with end customers with group captive will immediately happen if that is done without much loss to the Government compared to this. Either way transmission loss is absorbed by tangedco, but higher tariff will be paid by the end user. Better, right?