Childhood inspiration turns engineer’s vision into Kerala’s first self-identified private hydel project

The private hydel plant began supplying power to the Kerala State Electricity Board Limited late last month.

Published Nov 16, 2023 | 5:10 PMUpdated Nov 16, 2023 | 5:10 PM

private hydel project kerala

Rakesh Roy grew up seeing a picturesque mountain stream flowing down a hill near his house at Kambilikandam in the mountainous district of Idukki in Kerala but only once he became an engineer, years later, did he comprehend the height of that nondescript hill and realise the potential of “Parathodu”, the water body.

This realisation by the young engineer has made Mukkudam Small Hydroelectric Project, Kerala’s first self-identified private small hydroelectric project, a reality in Idukki.

The private hydel plant began supplying power to the Kerala State Electricity Board (KSEB) Limited late last month.

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The project

Roy said that he was able to bring the project to fruition with the support of his six friends who graduated with him from FISAT Engineering College in Angamaly some years ago.

Mukkudam is the 12th private small hydel power project in Kerala and the fifth 5th such initiative in Idukki, Roy, who is the CMD of the company, said.

“We are proud to be the first self-identified private small hydroelectric project in the state. The uniqueness of the project is that it was identified by private persons like us in our own land,” he told PTI.

He said that though there was a provision for such projects in the Kerala Small Hydro Power Policy 2012 rolled out in October 2012, he and his partners were the first to submit such a proposal to the government.

Even officials and government departments were initially apprehensive when they were approached with the project proposal as there was no precedence, he said.

The idea behind the project

When asked how he identified the power sector for their first entrepreneurial venture, he said that he and his friends had been aware that power was a potential area since their college days.

“Power cuts and electricity crunch had always been in the news in Kerala. So, even during our college days, we knew that it was a potential area,” he said.

After realising the potential of the mountain stream, he discussed it with his friends who offered him all support to go ahead.

“Since our college days, we knew very well that power is a potential area…When I got an idea about this project, I shared it with my friends…discussed and debated with them…and finally we together and decided to go ahead with this initiative,” Roy said.

Thirty-nine-year-old Roy, a native of Kambilikandam, quit his corporate career when he decided to go ahead with the power project in 2014.

His six friends have been with him as pillars of support throughout these years and invested their hard-earned money in it.

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Setting up of the company

They registered a company and submitted a project report to the state government for a one MW power project in December 2015.

Though they got technical sanction for the project in March 2018, a hydraulic study they conducted at the project site later revealed that it had the potential for a four MW project.

Based on a revised project report submitted to the government, approval was guaranteed for the present project in 2021.

After fighting several challenges — from funding issues and procedural delays to Covid-19 problems — the dream project was commissioned recently and it started supplying power to the KSEB, since late last month.

“The gross head available for the project is 323.7 metres (1,070 feet). The length of the penstock is 1,310 metres. We have two turbine generators of 2 MW each,” Roy explained.

The generators of the small hydel projects were linked to the KSEB’s power grid on 21 October.

“We expect that 11 million (1.1 crore) units of electricity can be generated annually through this power project,” he said.

The struggles

Though some state-run financial institutions were approached for a loan, they were reluctant to sanction funds as they failed to understand the potential and viability of such a project, Roy said.

But two Union government agencies gave them wholehearted support which helped them make it a reality, he added.

He also particularly mentioned the support and encouragement extended by the Thiruvananthapuram-based Energy Management Centre under the Power Department, the nodal agency for Small Hydro Power Projects in the state.

Roy said Kerala has immense potential for small hydropower projects as they are environment-friendly and more viable.

Unni S Sankar, Nitish S J, Renjini M, Cyriac Jose, Faris EM, and Rijo Joseph are the six other partners in the project.

(Disclaimer: The headline, subheads, and intro of this report along with the photos may have been reworked by South First. The rest of the content is from a syndicated feed, and has been edited for style.)

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