[Assam] Assamese innovator designs 40 user friendly machines-AT

Ram Sarangapani assamrs at gmail.com
Tue Sep 5 01:09:17 EDT 2006


Manoj,

Thank you for forwarding this piece of good news. Bhuban da is right. I read
the AT and the Sentinel fairly regularly (on the net), but have not seen any
mention of Bharali over the years. Must have just missed it!

But Bharali does deserve kudos for the innovations.

--Ram da


On 9/4/06, Manoj Das <dasmk2k at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> *Assamese innovator designs 40 user friendly machines
> *By Ajit Patowary
>  GUWAHATI, Sept 4 – Working out the problems in a small workshop at North
> Lakhimpur town in the State's flood-ravaged Lakhimpur district, this
> 40-year-old innovation wizard has so far designed and manufactured 40 long
> sought-for machines. He is now a technical expert-cum-role model for the
> National Innovation Foundation (NIF) of the country.
>
> He is Uddhab Kumar Bharali, a mechanical engineer of the 1988 batch of the
> Institute of Engineers (India). He started his UKB Agrotech, a house-machine
> design and research firm, around 1992 on his own, spending some hopeless
> years running after those in the corridors of power seeking support to set
> up a machine designing-cum-training firm. His first machine was the modern
> dheki, the re-designed Assamese paddy grinder, which could be operated by
> turning a wheel.
>
> But to emerge as the real innovator, he had to borrow an amount of Rs
> 30,000 from a private moneylender at a monthly interest rate of 10 per cent
> on the principal amount. In the meantime, he had to shoulder the burden of a
> family loan of Rs 11 lakh. With the amount he borrowed, he developed the
> green arecanut-peeling machine in 2001.
>
> Bharali had to accept the challenge of developing the arecanut peeler
> thrown by the then Chief Innovation Officer (CIO) of the Gyan-NE, the NE
> branch of the NIF, to secure NIF support. Till then developing a green
> arecanut peeler was thought to be impossible by the innovators worldwide.
> Bharali could develop the machine within 20 days. The innovation of Bharali
> was so appreciated that when its live demonstration was held on the Guwahati
> IIT campus, Karnataka-based Dharma Technology acquired its technology for a
> period of five years since 2001, for the state of Karnataka. The same
> company also procured the machine for marketing in Singapore and Chile, said
> Bharali.
>
> Then came the cassava-peeling machine in early 2002. This machine has a
> tremendous demand in South Africa and Central American countries. As, in
> these countries, which have been facing famine-like situations, cassava
> flour is considered to be the best nutritious food.
>
> By this time, he was successful in receiving the support of the NIF. And
> with such support, Bharali started working on a series of machines and thus
> came the 'Safed Musli Peeler', the 'Passion-fruit Gel Extractor', 'Aloebera
> Gel Extractor', the 'Dhoop Making Machines', the 'Bamboo-craft Machines',
> the 'Paddy Thrasher', the 'Stevia Pulveriser', the 'Garlic-peeling Machine'
> and finally the 'Pomegranate De-seeder'. The last named machine has found
> market all over the world.
>
> Bharali is the first man in the world to develop the 'Cassava Peeler', the
> 'Arecanut Peeler' and the 'Pomegranate De-seeder'. The Discovery Channel
> telecast his innovation of the third machine in January last. In his list of
> innovations, one more machine—'Jatropha De-seeding Machine'— was also added
> recently.
>
> Now Bharali is engaged in developing a device that can mechanise bamboo
> splitting for weaving tarza walls. The NEDFi has sponsored this venture.
>
> Bharali has by now received 33 national and international assignments,
> which include the ones for sugarcane-peeling, mango-peeling, mini tea plant
> with the capacity to produce 100 kgs of processed tea per day and bamboo
> artisan craft machine. A company from Nairobi has placed the order for the
> mini tea plant with him, while he received the order for the bamboo artisan
> craft machine from a South African company through the Beijing-based
> International Network for Bamboo and Rattan. He has also received several
> other assignments from International Fund for Agricultural Development.
>
> Of late, he has received an assignment for manufacturing a ginger-peeling
> machine from Nepal through the NIF and another assignment for a
> potato-peeling and slicing machine from the UK, Bharali said.
>
> He attributes the popularity of his innovations to their designs that make
> more production possible with less consumption of power. Moreover, his
> machines do not require any foundation, he said.
>
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