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08 APRIL 2016 AL CIRCLE

Tech start-up Trestor's "Swachh Machine" to dispense drinking water in exchange for used aluminium cans and bottles

3MINS READ
Chandigarh-based start-up Trestor is building a machine that can provide clean drinking water to people, especially the urban poor. However, to get 300 ml of water, a person has to put an used plastic bottle or an aluminium beverage can or aerosol can into the machine.

Developed in just 95 days by two final year students of IIT-Bombay — Anurag Meena and Satyendra Meena — the machine, built to capitalise on Government of India's Swachh Bharat campaign, is being marketed by Trestor.

Trestor was founded by serial entrepreneur Kunal Dixit in the year 2014.

Leveraging technology to help create healthy, responsible communities, Trestor has developed this machine to involve people in keeping public places clean and provide them with ready access to clean drinking water.

“Through our ‘Swachh Machine’, we intend to inculcate a culture of cleanliness among people by incentivising them for every used bottle or aluminium can they put in the machine, in lieu of which they will be rewarded with a digital value token called ‘trest’. This can also be exchanged for 300 ml of clean drinking water,” Dixit said. He plans to roll out the initiative in partnership with government agencies and private companies in the coming months.

The ‘trest’ is available in the form of a digital token on the Trestor app. It can also be collected physically from the vending machine and used at select kirana stores.

With a storage and recycling unit at the bottom and an RO water filtration unit at the top, the machine is equipped with a 7-inch interactive touch screen and internet connectivity. It also has an NFC and Bluetooth interface for unhindered connectivity and a notification system for administrators to alert them on usage and maintenance.

The recycling unit, which has separate compartments for plastic bottles and aluminium cans, can handle containers of a maximum capacity of 1 litre. The collected waste is crushed to minimise space.

Once the compartment reaches 80 per cent of its storage capacity, an automated notification is sent to the machine administrator. The container is easily detachable and can be directly emptied in a carriage vehicle for recycling.

The company has already signed contracts with various third-party manufacturers for the production of the vending machine that costs INR 50,000 to INR 1 lakh. The company plans to manufacture 5,000 of these machines every month.

Started with a project cost of $1.5 million, Trestor is at present a bootstrapped start-up but is looking at raising funds from PE and VC funds soon. The company’s mentors include Nandan Nilekani and Pramod Verma.


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