The founders of the Bengaluru-headquartered company—who run what is reportedly Asia's largest bioCNG plant in Indore, among 100 other tech-led captive biogas plants—believe India has barely scratched the surface of the multi-billion dollar biofuels industry
Mainak Chakraborty did not opt for campus placements at the end of his postgraduate management diploma course at the Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIM-B). He wanted to start something on his own, a for-profit venture that was environment-facing, but was not sure what to do. Soon enough, along with a senior from IIM-B, Sreekrishna Sankar, he realised there was a business opportunity in a problem that was staring IT city Bengaluru in the face: Waste management. This led them to think about converting waste to bioenergy, where they realised technology could play a role and help the engineers put their skillsets to good use.