Mission on Advanced and High-Impact Research (MAHIR) was launched recently to leverage Emerging Technologies in Power Sector. It is a joint effort by the Ministry of Power and New and Renewable Energy. Read here to learn more.
In the last nine years, the Indian Power Sector has transformed into a vibrant and financially viable sector. Given that India is going to grow by more than 7% in the coming years, the electricity demand is going to increase by close to 10%.
In addition, India is aiming for an energy transition following the vision of Mission Life. This requires not only massive investment but also a transformational approach driven by research and innovation.
The Ministry of Power and the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy have jointly launched a National Mission to quickly identify emerging technologies in the power sector and develop them indigenously, at scale, for deployment within and outside India.
Mission on Advanced and High-Impact Research (MAHIR)
The National Mission, titled “Mission on Advanced and High-Impact Research (MAHIR)” aims to facilitate indigenous research, development, and demonstration of the latest and emerging technologies in the power sector.
By identifying emerging technologies and taking them to the implementation stage, the Mission seeks to leverage them as the main fuel for future economic growth and thus make India a manufacturing hub of the world.
The Mission will be funded by pooling financial resources of the Ministry of Power, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, and the Central Public Sector Enterprises under the two Ministries.
- Any additional funding needed will be mobilized from the Government of India’s budgetary resources.
- Planned for an initial period of five years from 2023-24 to 2027-28, the Mission will follow the technology life cycle approach of Idea to Product.
The Mission will catalyze national priorities such as achieving Net Zero emissions and promoting initiatives like Make in India and Start-up India.
- It will also contribute towards achieving the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
MAHIR will work towards Industry-Academia-Government collaboration to create an ecosystem for innovation and translation of research in the power sector.
- MAHIR will work with premier institutions such as IITs, IIMs, NITs, IISERs, and Universities on the one hand, and public and private power sector start-ups and established industries with the government acting as an enabler for creating an innovation ecosystem.
Mission Objectives
The key objectives of the Mission are as follows:
- To identify emerging technologies and areas of future relevance for the Global Power Sector and take up indigenous end-to-end development of relevant technologies
- To provide a common platform for Power Sector Stakeholders for collective brainstorming, and synergetic technology development and devise pathways for the smooth transfer of technology
- To support pilot projects of indigenous technologies (developed especially by Indian Start-ups) and facilitate their commercialization
- To leverage foreign alliances and partnerships to accelerate research and development of advanced technologies and to build competencies, capabilities, and access to advanced technologies through bilateral or multilateral collaborations, thereby facilitating the exchange of know-how and Technology Transfer.
- To seed, nurture and scale up scientific and industrial Research and development and to create a vibrant and innovative ecosystem in the Power Sector of the country
- To make our Nation among the leading countries in Power System related Technologies and Applications development
Areas Identified for Research
To begin with, the following eight areas are identified for research:
- Alternatives to Lithium-Ion storage batteries
- Modifying electric cookers/pans to suit Indian cooking methods
- Green hydrogen for mobility (High-Efficiency Fuel Cell)
- Carbon capture
- Geothermal energy
- Solid-state refrigeration.
- Nanotechnology for EV battery
- Indigenous CRGO technology
Structure of the MAHIR
The Mission will have a two-tier structure – a Technical Scoping Committee and an Apex Committee.
Technical Scoping Committee (TSC)
- Chaired by the Chairperson of the Central Electricity Authority
- Will identify ongoing and emerging research areas globally, recommend potential technologies for development under the Mission, justify the techno-economic advantages, provide research outlines, and conduct periodic monitoring of approved research projects.
- Will survey and identify the ongoing and emerging areas of research globally and will make recommendations to the Apex Committee.
- The TSC shall identify the potential technologies that can be considered for development under the Mission.
- The TSC will bring out the relevance of the technology for the future of the Power Sector and justify the Techno-economic advantage of indigenous development of Technology and come out with a roadmap for market creation for Technology.
- The TSC will also provide a broad range of specifications desired from the final product.
- Periodic monitoring of the approved research projects will also be carried out by the TSC.
Apex Committee
- Chaired by the Union Minister for Power and New and Renewable Energy will deliberate on the technology and products to be developed and approve the research proposals.
- The Apex committee will also look into international collaborations.
- It will approve the research proposals and monitor the progress of the research.
- The technology/product to be developed under the Mission will be deliberated by the Apex Committee.
- The final approval of all the research proposals/projects shall be given by the Apex Committee.
- If the TSC recommends international collaboration for the development of technology, the same shall also be taken up by the Apex Committee for discussion with the collaborating country.
- Approval of any collaboration, the technology to be developed and agreement to be entered into with the collaborative country will be decided by the Apex Committee.
Significance of the MAHIR
Under the Mission, once research areas are identified and approved by the Apex Committee, the proposals for outcome-linked funding will be invited from companies/organizations across the globe.
- The selection of the proposal shall be done through a Quality cum Cost-Based Selection (QCBS) basis.
- The organizations of the Ministries may also co-develop the technologies with the selected Research Agency.
- The IPR of the technology developed would be shared by the Government of India and the Research Agency.
The Mission shall also fund pilot projects of technologies developed by Indian startups and facilitate their commercialization through the Central Public Sector Enterprises under both Ministries.
- The start-ups will have to share the IPR with the Government of India / Central Power Research Institute.
- The Mission will also facilitate international collaboration for smooth know-how and Technology Transfer exchange.
- The Mission will also seek collaboration with the best laboratories in the world for the joint development of technologies.
-Article written by Swathi Satish
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