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PRESS: Gen Y entrepreneurs bet big on cleantech innovations (Front page of The Economic Times)

by  Archana Rai & Pankaj Mishra, ET Bureau

It is not everyday that a young consultant at McKinsey & Co, one of the world’s largest management consultancy firms, trades in a job at the firm’s Seattle office for the rough and tumble of business in rural India. But that is just what John Howard did when he launched Duron Energy, a renewable energy company that has just started sales of solar-powered plug and play devices for lighting and battery recharges in villages across Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh.

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Update on Haiti donation effort

We are working very hard to put together a Haiti donation effort.  Duron itself will be donating 50 systems, and we know that many of you would like to contribute as well.  We will post the full details once our partnerships are finalized.   Please stay tuned.

Press: How to Sell Plug & Play Solar in Rural India

By Katie Fehrenbacher, Earth2Tech

A startup based in Bangalore, India, is selling an off-the-shelf device for less than the cost of a one-night stay in an average hotel in downtown San Francisco that can offer rural Indians a way to generate and store solar power, charge cell phones and other appliances, and run a set of LED lights.

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Name change: DWP now Duron

We’re delighted to announce that our company brand (Distributed World Power) and our product brand (Duron) have been merged into the single brand of Duron.  To us, Duron means trust and we will continually strive to earn the trust of our customers and business partners.  Our continued goal is to build Duron into the most trusted solar product brand in India.

Our new website is www.duronenergy.com

Donate a Duron!

Aparajita is located in Lalitpur district, which is in the extreme
southwest part of Uttar Pradesh, known as Bundelkhand region. The
district has 754 villages, Rasio being the remotest.

One of the major problems prevailing is lack of electricity due to which
children are unable to study after sunset, leading to school dropouts.
There are also other instances such as deaths due to poisonous
insects/reptiles bites after dark.

World Vision in partnership with Duron has proposed to provide solar
lights to these villages. The successful implementation of the program
will mean less school dropouts. Vulnerable villagers will also be
protected from poisonous bites by reptiles/insects.  YOU can mean a
whole new world for these underprivileged children.

To donate now, please visit:  http://www.worldvision.in/?duron

Duron announces World Vision partnership

Duron is very proud to announce its partnership with World Vision India.  World Vision is a humanitarian organization working to create lasting change in the lives of children, families and communities living in poverty and injustice.  It is one of the leading NGOs in India with 50 years of experience in the country and present in 24 states.

Learn more about this incredible organization here:  http://www.worldvision.in/

PRESS: Duron Energy eyes rural markets

From Deccan Herald

Bangalore: Duron Energy, a major player in affordable energy generation products, is targeting rural markets in Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh with off-the-shelf solar home systems.

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PRESS: Bangalore firm to light up UP with solar power

By Deepa Jainani, The Financial Express

Lucknow:  The abysmal power situation in Uttar Pradesh may be causing heartburn among senior government officials, who are hard pressed to bridge the demand-supply gap, but for John Howard and Amit Shah, co-founders of Bangalore-based Duron Energy, it provides the biggest opportunity to promote solar energy.

Read the full article online

Over a year at DWP!

I cannot believe that it has been over a year since I have been at DWPower!  Time moves so quickly when you are engaged in the work you are doing.  Having been at DWP for this long, I thought it fitting to spend a few minutes reflecting on why we are doing what we do.

As I considered our work over the past 14 (or so) months, a few choice moments punctuate my experience.  I wanted to share with you my three favorite moments at DWPower to date.

Moment 1: We might be on to something…

For the month of November in 2008, Hasit and I lived in Hardoi, Uttar Pradesh and worked in the surrounding villages.  The entire team had spent the prior few months developing prototypes for the Indian market.  Hasit and I were testing these prototypes with potential customers in the villages around Hardoi.  After an initial interview, we would leave a prototype with a test participant for a week, visiting often to garner feedback and provide support.

One particular test participant was a middle-aged lady with a mentally handicapped husband.  She supported her family by working at the local NGO and tending to her two acres of farmland.  In addition to her husband, she lived with two daughters—about 17 and 12.  She forced her daughters to attend school (against the norms for the village) and encouraged them to study in the evenings.  Unfortunately, her daughters always complained of the light provided by the kerosene—it was too dim to study in and the smoke caused their eyes to burn.

As we visited the household throughout the week that our product was there, we could see them getting used to the light in the house.  On our last day working with that house, as we prepared to collect the product, the woman and her daughters invited us to sit with them for a cup of tea.  As we drank tea and socialized, they began telling us of all the benefits of the product that we had left with them.  The daughters enjoyed studying, the mother was able to cook in light and the whole village used the lit front porch to socialize.  The mother told us of the impact the prototype had on their life in just one week, and that she believed this product would make a huge difference to people in India.

This feedback energized me.  For the first time since I had joined DWP, I had a strong sense that we were on to something…

Moment 2: Making DURONs…

I moved to India to ramp up our office and manufacturing capacity at the end of January in 2009.  Over the next few months the team and I worked with suppliers to develop our supply chain and manufacturing process.  We spent days with different suppliers– perfecting designs, negotiating costs, setting up production processes, etc.

One of the suppliers that we worked most with was our plastic mold maker.  James had designed a beautiful casing for the DURON and we had contracted a local Gujarati mold maker to produce the die tool.  We had pushed him to meet our timeline as the die-making was the longest lead time item.  His office and factory were in the industrial part of Ahmedabad—way off the beaten path that we usually took.  Hasit and I would visit him regularly to ensure that progress was on track.

James actually landed in India the morning that we were supposed to get our first plastic pieces out of the die.  We picked him up from the airport and went straight to the die maker’s facility.  We watched them complete the final polishing (after pulling two all-nighters to complete the die on time) and mount the die.  We watched in awe as the first pieces of plastic came out of the die.  They were misformed (because the die  was not  warm yet) and the color was off (we would later standardize our DURON blue)… but the plastic was forming.  The DURON had turned from napkin sketches, to computer drawings, to hardened steel dies and finally to the physical plastic housing we saw in front of us—we could not have been more thrilled.

These plastic pieces were the last of the material required to build our first batch.  To date, we had made a few test units to confirm the design, but these would be the first units to be produced on the manufacturing line.

I watched the DURON’s get packed and remembered the reaction that our test participant had in Hardoi.  I imagined how people would feel when they brought this box home and opened up their new home energy system.

Later that day, I remember looking at the first 35 packed boxes and preparing them to be shipped out.  It was a memorable moment—seeing the past few months of effort in the form of a product.

Moment 3: Tomorrow!

My third favorite moment is actually right now.  One of the best parts of being a social entrepreneur is that we are always thinking about tomorrow.  The progress of our business is based very much on the decisions we make today and how we implement them in the future.  As a young company, our memory is short and we are able to learn and adapt from yesterday very quickly.

We are careful to learn from the past, but we certainly do not get bogged down by it.  I am learning that an important part of social entrepreneurship is optimism.  We just don’t have time or energy to be pessimistic—it is better to use our effort on finding solutions.

I am currently on a plane back to Ahmedabad and am excited about what tomorrow is going to bring.  There will inevitably be more challenges that we will have to push through, but the opportunity to provide energy to the rural markets motivates me.  I just can’t wait to “make things happen!”

Engineering from the Trenches, Part I

The heat is bearing down on our little two-wheel scooter, the heat and the horns and the dust of the Ahmedabad streets.  Our speed slows to a jerking, unsteady crawl as we weave through the packed streets of the old city.  Somewhere in this packed, jostling expanse is a store that sells oscilloscopes, a fundamental tool for the electrical engineering bench, and we’re making our wobbly way to it.  A huge bus lurches to a stop an inch behind us, releasing an explosive sigh of its air brakes and a deafening blast of its horn.  I can feel the blasts of heat from its engine,  breathing down my neck, and I’m suddenly very aware of the tiny difference between its bumper and my spine.  From my perch on the back of the scooter, I nervously squirm, feeling vulnerable, and tighten my grip on the bike as we force our way through throngs of shoppers, food vendors, speeding motorcyclists, buses, bicycles and children.  Preetam, my friend and fellow engineer is driving the bike, somehow unfazed by this universe of activity surrounding us.  Twisting around in my seat to look behind us, I stare straight into the lazy, implacable eyes of a camel, casually flapping its lips as it pulls a cart through the street.  Staring at the camel’s whiskery face, I think back to my boss’ whiskery face at my first electrical engineering job, heart in my 22-year-old throat as I asked him to buy me an oscilloscope to use debugging electronic circuits. 

Back then, in the immaculate, air-conditioned office, the hard part was making the case that I needed an expensive piece of equipment, and that the increased quality of my work was worth the investment.  Here at DWPower, I’d asked for an oscilloscope and my boss, an engineer himself, said “sure!  If you need one, go get one!”

That was the easy part.

The hard part was coming up.

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