• CERAWEEK
  • March 10 - 14, 2025

Siddharth Mayur

h2e Power Systems Private Limited

Founder, Managing Director & CEO

A first Generation Social Entrepreneur, Siddharth was born in a family of farmers. He along with Mr. Amarnath Chakradeo founded h2e Power with a mission to provide energy independence to Indian Villages & to small marginalised Farmers. His search for the holy grail of clean energy brought him to Fuel Cell technology, which he is now using to develop solutions that will help the energy transition & provide a sustainable clean energy alternative to the world. He has Founded India's first Fuel Cell company, which is helping India leap frog to the Hydrogen Economy. Siddharth's company is setting up a global scale Manufacturing facility in India & Germany to cater to the growing demand for good quality & in-expensive Fuel Cell generators & Electrolysers. h2e is developing applications primarily targetting Oil & Gas, Electric mobility, Green Hydrogen & Agriculture. In order to develop a total solution Siddharth has co-Founded a Salt Battery Company, which combines with Fuel Cell systems to provide grid independent in-expensive power. Leave this world better than you found is the personal Vision that drives Siddharth & his company to innovate & develop solutions that can provide 24x7 clean, green, reliable & affordable energy to all.

Sessions With Siddharth Mayur

Thursday, 12 March

  • 10:30am - 11:20am (CST) / -

    Bringing Electricity to Underserved Populations

    Power & Renewables

    Among the Sustainable Development Goals adopted in 2015 by all 193 United Nations member states was “universal access to affordable, reliable, and modern energy services by 2030.” For decades, however, numerous institutions have attempted to solve the issue of energy access across sub-Saharan Africa, India, and developing Asia, yet few have seen progress. The situation in Africa is particularly intractable; in 2030 the region is projected to still account for 90% of the global population without electricity access. Which approaches to ensuring energy access have worked—and which haven’t? How should governments, the private sector, and development organizations collaborate while avoiding the creation of detrimental dependencies on foreign aid and international debt? To what extent should environmental considerations be weighed? What technologies and business models can be gainfully adopted to accelerate energy access?

  • 11:30am - 03:30pm (CST) / -