Greenway Smart Stove: A Cleaner Smarter Stove for 150 Million BoP Households

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Newly minted MBA graduates in their mid-20’s, especially from top-tier business schools, are supposed to be working at a multi-national bank or maybe a Hindustan Lever, right? Not if you are Neha Juneja and Ankit Mathur who decided to take the less beaten path of social entrepreneurship by founding Greenway Grameen Infrastructure.

Zeroing in on the stove

Their journey started innocuously enough. A series of consulting gigs in the environment domain gave Neha and Ankit exposure to rural markets. They internalized that they’d much rather address the problem of lack of access to simple utilitarian consumer products instead of capital-intensive ideas like biomass plants or sanitation infrastructure. After visiting villages in Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Punjab, and Madhya Pradesh, they observed that the centuries-old venerable mud chulha (stove) still ruled the rural kitchen. (The mud chulhas of India provides a pictorial view of the diverse chulhas they saw during their village sojourn.)

Around 70 percent of India’s population use some type of stove. Up until the mid 1990’s, rural India used the mud stove or a kerosene stove or an LPG stove. As the cost of kerosene made the use of kerosene stoves increasingly untenable, and with LPG prices rising disproportionate to rural income, LPG stoves have also become unaffordable for most rural households. Across 150 million (mostly rural) Indian households, the mud chulha continues to be widely prevalent for the only reason that nobody has cared enough about these households to build a better product. Ankit and Neha had found the seeds of their first product for rural customers – a cooking stove that would be significantly cleaner and significantly more efficient, a stove that would reduce harmful emissions and increase the productivity of rural women.

Co-Creation Process = Easy Adoption

“A cooking stove that retails for 1,100 INR? Why would the poor pay so much when they already have a free solution (the mud stove)?” Nearly all of Greenway Grameen’s well-wishers had asked this question. As various social enterprises targeting the Bottom of Pyramid have demonstrated, the poor might be cautious buyers but they do buy new products if they see value. The Greenway Smart Stove is a single-burner high efficiency cooking stove which saves up to 70% in fuel cost (compared to the mud stove), minimizes harmful emissions, and reduces cooking time.

Adopting the co-creation process, the Greenway Grameen team took very early product prototypes to their “beta” villages and invited women to use them. The key advantage of the co-creation process (over a traditional market trial) is that the prototypes are far from being “fully baked” and the product designers are not ’married’ to their designs. This might sound like a subtle difference but it’s an important one. The initial users of the prototypes (village women in this case) became co-designers and provided valuable suggestions on design and usability. In Greenway Grameen’s case, not only did the village women provide some excellent suggestions (many of which made it to the final design), but also gave feedback on pricing. The result is that the Greenway Smart Stove (product’s brand name) is seeing brisk sales. It’s been barely 6 months since product launch and they are already averaging 5,000 unit sales per month with a plan to hit 15,000 per month before the end of 2011.

The Greenway Smart Stove supports different materials as fuel – wood, agro-waste, cow-dung, and charcoal (wood is reportedly the most widely used fuel). Currently a firm in the NCR region manufactures the stove.

Source: TechSangam (link opens in a new window)

Tags
Base of the Pyramid, clean cooking