Navbharat Times

IIT M Engineers lighten up villages in Thar. They seek to brighten lives of 300 million power starved Indians.

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Phalodi News: This is the weekly column by well-known science writer

Pallava Bagla for PTI. Please carry his byline and give creditto PTI)Using cool green tech, IIT-Madras lights up hot-hot PhalodiBy Pallava BaglaNew Delhi, Jun 5 (PTI) Shaitanram, a farmer fromLikhmasar village on the edge of the Thar Desert has for thefirst time this year tasted the benefits of having electricityin his home and says “his five member household has literallyseen a new dawn”.

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IIT-Madras powers Rajasthan villages with game-changer tech

CHENNAI: The highest recorded temperature in India — 51°C — scorched Phalodi in Rajasthan recently. Piling on the misery, the village did not even have power supply. But now, a few houses have got power supply, thanks to an out-of-the-box solution provided by researchers from IIT Madras. The researchers installed a 1-sqm solar panel on rooftops and used lead acid batteries to store power. The game-changer was power-efficient devices that run on direct current. “Each household was given a fan, tubelight and cellphone charger carefully designed for high efficiency,” says Prabhjot Kaur, one of the team members.
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ET: IIT-Madras seeks to brighten lives of 300 million power-starved Indians

With ingenious tech tweak, IIT-Madras seeks to brighten lives of 300 million power-starved Indians.

Shaitanram, a farmer from Likhmasar village on the edge of the Thar Desert has for the first time this year tasted the benefits of having electricity in his home and says “his five member household has literally seen a new dawn”.
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NDTV‎: With IIT’s help, This Rajasthan Village Gets Electricity For First Time

Shaitanram, a farmer from Likhmasar village on the edge of the Thar Desert has for the first time this year tasted the benefits of having electricity in his home and says “his five member household has literally seen a new dawn”.

He is one of the early beneficiaries of a new disruptive technology being spearheaded by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras which promises to brighten the lives of the 300 million Indians who have no access to assured electric supply even today.
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