The IT company will spend 22 Crores on the project.
Over a 10-year period, the project is expected to generate biogas equivalent to about 1 million cylinders of domestic LPG. SKG Sangha, a Karnataka-based NGO with experience in implementing biogas projects will be the implementation partner for this project. Through this partnership, Infosys will train the beneficiaries, maintain the biogas digesters, and monitoring their performance.
The project was inaugurated by Sudha Murty, Chairperson of the Infosys Foundation, India, in Channapatna.
Guests of honour, D. K. Suresh, Bangalore Rural MP, and Ramadas Kamath, Executive Vice President, Head Infrastructure, Facilities, Administration, Security, and Sustainability, Infosys; Head of Green Initiatives at Infosys; Bose Varghese; the President of SKG Sangha, Vidya Sagar Devabhaktuni; and the President of the local panchayat, K. P. Raju were also present at the inauguration.
Biogas generated from cow dung is considered a form of renewable energy and offers a clean and smokeless cooking solution to rural households. According to the Ministry of Statistics, India, close to a million deaths a year in India are attributable to household air pollution from traditional modes of cooking.