In order to cut down 40 gigatons of CO2 emissions per year, we require energy transformation to the tune of a massive $4 trillion per year globally. This can be made possible by bringing to the forefront the latent innovations and a large number of IP in the decarbonisation sector, which sits in research labs of India’s top institutions.

To actively solve this issue, Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT Madras) has partnered with IndusDC, India’s first deep-tech focused venture studio to nurture and launch start-ups working towards decarbonisation.

This initiative is geared towards taking ideas straight from research labs to create change in the real world. By enabling a wave of hardware innovation, IIT Madras hopes to propel India to the global forefront of decarbonisation technology leadership.

The first phase of commercialisation is currently underway with IndusDC, founded by IIT Madras Alumni Dr. Kushant Uppal, collaborating with The Energy Consortium, a Centre of Excellence set up at IIT Madras under the Institute of Eminence initiative.

Three Intellectual Properties (IPs) have already been on-boarded, namely next generation cooling, carbon neutral consumer wear and advanced grid scale storage, while three more are currently under evaluation. The vision of this initiative is to replicate this model across institutes in India and take it to a global level.

Elaborating on this partnership, Dr. Kushant Uppal, Founder and CEO, IndusDC, said, “This is a pivotal IP, technology development and start-up incubation agreement with IIT Madras. We are also actively forging partnerships with other esteemed universities in both India and the U.S. Guided by a technical Entrepreneur in Residence (EIR), we navigate from tech demonstrations to prototypes while maturing the technology to TRL7/8 (Technology Readiness Levels). Concurrently, we also define the commercial benchmarks around performance and economics. We expect this partnership to bring to market decarbonization start-ups that will redefine the energy transition landscape for India.”

He further added, “IndusDC is also setting up its first fund of US$ 6 Million (Rs. 50 Crore approximately) to invest in five cutting-edge decarbonisation startups with prime focus on energy efficiency. This dedicated fund will invest in 15 promising ideas and incubate 5 startups, driving them to the coveted Product Market Fit (PMF) stage.”

Highlighting the vision behind this collaboration, Prof. Mahesh Panchagnula, Dean (Alumni and Corporate Relations), IIT Madras, said, “Decarbonization is the greatest need of this hour. This initiative is very timely and will bring together our alumni to serve a greater global cause in a sustainable fashion.”

He also added, added, “Our vision is to see venture studios like this take root in many other spheres of global importance while working with several of our global partner institutions.”

IndusDC will onboard and match ‘Entrepreneurs in Residence’ (EIR) to the lab-stage ideas and mature it to achieve a market-fit product – a process that has been honed by the IndusDC team over decades with experience as founders, executives, and venture investors.

Coming in as a co-founder with each of these start-ups, IndusDC empowers start-ups from inception to growth stage through IP discovery, product management, channel/OEM collaborations, dynamic marketing, streamlined supply chain, pilot production, capital investment, and dedicated fundraising support.

Highlighting how such initiatives can help India build a sustainable future, Prof. Satyanarayanan Seshadri, Faculty Head, The Energy Consortium, IIT Madras, and a Technical Committee Member, IndusDC, said, “Research intensive institutes in India like the IITs have core technology IPs that require a focussed effort to build ventures. Venture studios like IndusDC can create scalable ventures backed by such technologies thus unlocking significant value for these institutions.”

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