Air pollution in India is among the highest in the world and poses a serious threat to the population’s health. The traditional burning of rice straw is a huge contributor. The rice straw waste itself is valuable because it can be recycled into green energy and bio fertilizer.
The Biomass India Partnership is a new initiative with the aspiration to become the leading Indian forum for biomass up-cycling. Biomass India is facilitating the development of programs to eliminate the practice of burning agriculture and contribute to the creation of a waste-to-value ecosystem for sustainable products that impact across a wide range of environmental, social, health and economic outcomes.
The technology of the biomass plant has been tested in the province of Punjab, where a biomass plant has been successfully operating since 2018. After demonstrating success of the first two plants HKG is planning to help scale up the number of plants to 130 facilities in India in the next ten years in collaboration with the Biomass India Partnership. To indicate the need for biogas plants: The Indian Ministry of New & Renewable Energy is aiming for 5,000 facilities across the country.
HKG is co-founder of Biomass India along with NL Works, the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, FMO, and Grameena Vikas Kendram Society for Rural Development (GVK Society).
HKG has proposed LT Foods to become its local partner for the first commercial-scale biomass facility. LT Foods would play a key role in the success of the project through its local presence, knowledge of rice farming and a vast farmer network across key basmati rice growing areas. Both LT Foods & HKG plan to advance the partnership and facilitate the local ownership of the first biomass plant.
This partnership aligns with LT Foods ongoing farmer engagement program, which focuses on ’Sustainability Grown Paddy,’ meeting the objective of farmer’s economic growth and positive social & environmental impact.
The Dutch Fund for Climate and Development (DFCD) has approved a €350,000 grant for Humankind Group (HKG) as part of a €1.5 million development package to prepare for the construction of two biomass plants in India.
The project has been put forward by the World Wide Fund for Nature Netherlands, which manages together with SNV Netherlands Development Organisation the DFCD’s Origination Facility to develop new projects for the investment fund.
The grant supports in completing the groundwork for a multi-million investment. Once the project development phase is completed, the DFCD is expected to invest around €20 million in debt and equity to finance the building of the two biomass plants.
Commenting on the occasion, Chairman of LT Foods Mr. V K Arora said, “LT Foods focuses on best business practices and processes for Environment, Social, and Economic Sustainability. This proposed Project aligns well with LT Foods’s on-going farmer engagement and environment programs along with its sustainability initiatives.”
Commenting on the occasion, President of The Humankind Group Mr. Ken Hollen said
,“HKG believes the program it is developing in collaboration with LT Foods, DFCD & other participants have the potential to contribute importantly to the development of a new industry in India that will enable the country to use its agricultural resources towards a more sustainable future, large scale reduction in CO
2 emission and other important development impacts.”