Faculty

Sustainable Energy Company Co-Founded by McIntire Professor Chip Ransler, Darden Alum Named to Fast Company’s ‘World’s Most Innovative Companies of 2024’ List

Husk, founded to address the lack of sustainable, reliable, and affordable power, now serves more than 500,000 individuals and 10,000 micro, small, and medium enterprises through minigrids powered by a combination of solar and biomass energy.

Chip Ransler

Professor Chip Ransler

By Gosia Glinska

Fast Company has named Husk Power Systems, co-founded by Darden alumni Manoj Sinha (Darden ’09) and McIntire Professor Chip Ransler (Darden ’09), to its list of the World’s Most Innovative Companies for 2024, alongside Nvidia, YouTube, OpenAI, and Taylor Swift Productions.

Husk Power Systems, which owns and operates 200 minigrids across India and Nigeria, was ranked first in the energy category and 24th overall for decarbonizing the grid in places with historically unreliable power.

“This recognition,” said Sinha, “is a testament to the passion and efforts of the entire Husk team, who has been working relentlessly for the last 10-plus years and made this honor possible. Together, we are creating a future of energy that will bring renewable electricity and services to rural and peri-urban populations in Asia and Africa and supercharge economic development across thousands of communities.”

Sinha, who serves as Husk’s CEO, co-founded the company in 2008 with Gyanesh Pandey, Ratnesh Yadav, and Ransler to address the lack of sustainable, reliable, and affordable power, which at the time affected 3 billion people around the world.

Today, the company serves more than 500,000 individuals and 10,000 micro, small, and medium enterprises through minigrids powered by a combination of solar and biomass energy.

In addition to providing electricity, the company empowers remote communities by offering them a range of energy-efficient appliances, electronics, and manufacturing machines with financing. The company also actively encourages entrepreneurship by showing its customers how to use electricity to create businesses around devices such as printers, water purifiers or ice cream makers. “When we install minigrids in a community,” said Sinha, “we look at what might be brought in as a set of entrepreneurial activities that will help people use electricity more productively and generate new income sources. That’s how our business model became successful.”

Husk reached profitability in India and Nigeria in 2023. The company also raised $103 million in financing to fund an expansion in sub-Saharan Africa to bring sustainable power to some of the most underserved countries in the world, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia, and Madagascar.

This story was originally published on The Darden Report March 20, 2024.

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