For The Cost Of An iPhone, This Wind Turbine Can Power An Entire House For A Lifetime -->
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For The Cost Of An iPhone, This Wind Turbine Can Power An Entire House For A Lifetime

Indian startup Avant Garde Innovations has developed a low-cost wind turbine that can generate 3-5 kW hours of electricity every day. For the same price as an iPhone, you can now buy a wind turbine that can power your house for a lifetime!


Kerala Chief Minister, Pinarayi Vijayan kicked up a storm by publicly declaring his support for the Athirappilly hydro electric project, which environmentalists said, if it were to go ahead, would create ecologic imbalance in the area and destroy the Athirappilly waterfalls, the largest natural waterfalls in the state.

It's not that the government is blind to the impact that the project could make, but it says it there is no other option but to leverage existing means to check the growing power crisis in Kerala - partially dependent on the private sector for electricity.

The same can be said for other states in India. While Kerala maintains almost 100 % electrical coverage, a vast area of India still remains in the dark.

For a large percentage of the Indian population, electricity still remains a distant dream.

Siblings Arun and Anoop George want to make India's energy crisis a thing of the past. The duo has developed a new solution they say will not even slightly impact the ecological balance.

Avant Garde Innovations, the initiative founded by the brothers from Kerala, has developed a low-cost wind turbine that can generate enough electricity to power an entire house for a lifetime. The size of a ceiling fan, this wind turbine can generate 5 kWh/kW per day — with just a one-time cost of US$750.

The companies ‘What We Do’ statement reads:

Our goal is to eliminate energy poverty, reduce dependence on struggling state power grids and create energy self sufficiency for all the needy ones through distributed, localized and affordable renewable energy. In doing so, we believe we can collectively usher in our world a cleaner environment, new economic prosperity and social change.

Our first offering is a highly affordable small wind turbine suitable for residential, commercial, agricultural, village electrification and other uses, which is aimed for a market launch during 2016.


Incorporated in 2015, Avant Garde claims to be a startup with a ‘green’ heart and soul.

For the startup, opportunity is massive. India is the world's sixth largest energy consumer, accounting for 3.4 per cent of global energy consumption. Federal governments in India, and the central government for that matter, are unable to bear the huge infrastructural cost required to bring electricity to remote villages.

Erecting electric posts and electric lines require huge investments that could cost millions of dollars.

This is where Avant Garde comes into picture. “When small wind turbine generating 1kW energy costs INR 3-7 lakh (US$4,000-10,000), our company plans to sell it at less than NR 50,000 (about US$750). Costs will decrease further through mass production,” Arun said in an interview to The Times of India.


The company launched its pilot project at a church in the capital city of Thiruvananthapuram in January this year. The small wind turbine prototype that it has developed is highly scalable for power capacities of 300 kW or even higher, Arun told e27.

“Our passionate aim is to introduce innovative, affordable and sustainable solutions that take renewable energy self sufficiency and energy empowerment to the next level through a distributed and decentralized approach using pioneering strategies the world has not witnessed yet,” the company says.

They won a spot in the Top 20 Cleantech Innovations in India with this revolutionary product. The company has also made it to the list of 10 clean energy companies from India for the “UN Sustainable Energy For All” initiative under the one billion dollar clean energy investment opportunity directory.

The country ranks 4th in terms of global installed wind power capacity according to the Global Wind Energy Council, after China, the US, and Germany.

There is a definite possibility that if Avant Garde Innovations takes off, Kerala can keep the Athirappilly waterfalls untouched.

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