Bringing Business Back Home: Biomass Energy of Sri Lanka
How to Build an Inclusive Business | A Business Call to Action Blog Series | May 2018
By Lucky Dissanayake, Founder of the Biomass Group
Lucky Dissanayake, Founder of the Biomass Group
In 2006, my London-based publishing house, Dakini Books, published the critically acclaimed ‘Global Warning – The Last Chance for Change’,  Paul Brown's fact-based book on climate change and its consequences for  the planet and humanity. This book gave me phenomenal insight into what  to expect in the next 20 years, and more importantly what we need to do  if humanity is to even have a chance. 
 
 I am an entrepreneur. I published this book at a time in my life when  I felt I had taken my small publishing house as far as I could. I wanted  to do something completely different. I thought, “Why not renewable  energy?"
 
 Despite the fact that I had spent my entire career in the media  industry, knew nothing about renewable energy, and didn’t expect anyone  to consider investing in me, my thoughts persisted. I felt I would  regret it if I didn’t at least try. My parents had also just retired and  moved to Sri Lanka, my huge extended family of relatives there seemed  to have a wedding almost every month, and all stars seemed to be aligned  and pointing to the land of my birth: Sri Lanka!
Between 2009 and 2011, I spent 2 years, at my own expense, attending  conferences on renewable energy in order to learn about the industry.  Solar and PV were too expensive (in 2009) and wind was not an option for  Sri Lanka, but waste, biogas and biomass seemed to have potential. As  part of an MBA research project, I then hired London Business School to  look at renewable energy options in Sri Lanka. The report confirmed my  suspicion: Sri Lanka – lush with fuelwood – was very well-suited for  biomass energy.
 
 The agro-energy sector in Sri Lanka, although poorly organized, had  immense potential. Biomass is already a widely-used energy source for  household cooking in rural Sri Lanka, but it is unsustainable in its  present form; most households rely on forest-based fuelwood which leads  to deforestation. My vision was to develop a totally sustainable and  responsible supply chain for biomass and develop an out-grower system in  which unorganized smallholder farmers (especially home gardens) are  linked with existing supply chains. Out-grower schemes, although  prevalent in the tea & coconut sectors, were not yet common in the  biomass sector.
 
 My biggest challenge these last 5 years has been to raise funding; Sri  Lanka is a small, developing island with a relatively low population of  21 million people, and investors do not see it as a worthwhile  investment destination. In 2010, in the face of these challenges, I  reached out to those nearest to me and received support from ten friends  and family members. Thus began Biomass Group.  With funding in place, I set about addressing the most crucial issue in  biomass – achieving security of supply at a consistent price. We  started small, raised more funds and eventually set up a holding company  in Singapore in 2012. Today Biomass Group has 26 individual investors  and even institutional funding from multi-donor funded companies like  InfraCo Asia.
 
 The Biomass Group is a  vertically integrated renewable energy company that develops biomass  resources to make chips, pellets and power. The primary biomass fuel  used is Gliricidia sepium, a rapidly growing, short-rotation tree that  is found growing wild throughout Sri Lanka. It is a nitrogen-fixing tree  and is used as a shade tree, soil improver, and as “live fencing” by  smallholders. We started by introducing Gliricidia sepium into home  gardens as a live fence and into other crops, like coconut, as an  intercrop. We currently work with 60,000 smallholder farmers. Our aim is  to work with 500,000 farmers by 2022.
 
 My two years of research revealed that many biomass businesses failed  simply because they did not focus on developing a sustainable and  reliable supply chain. Taking these lessons into consideration, our  entire focus has been on ensuring a strong supply chain.  Through  Biomass Supplies, a wholly-owned subsidiary incorporated in 2013, we  source supply from smallholder farmers and plantation owners and in the  process generate millions of tons of commercial biomass.
 
 Our out-grower model has the added value of  delivering socio-economic impact for all the supply partners with whom  we work. There are about 2 million smallholder farmers in Sri Lanka.  Farmers are often poor, living at the base of the economic pyramid, and  exploited by myriad middlemen, yet they are the people who actually do  the work. Everywhere in the developing world, the perception is that  rural development is the exclusive responsibility of the government. I  have a different view. I believe we all as entrepreneurs have a shared  responsibility in rural development. And it makes good business sense!  Biomass puts this belief into action by connecting low-income rural  communities to global value chains and achieving a healthy profit in the  process.  
 
 Sustainability has lot to do with inclusivity. We maintain positive,  long-term relationships with all our farmers and they are the center of  our operations. In the beginning, farmers were wary of our intentions  and gaining their trust was not easy. Over these last 4 years, however,  we have organized more than 700 training programs for the benefit of  farmers and involved as many farmers as possible. We share knowledge  with communities on how Gliricidia can increase soil productivity while  reducing erosion and controlling pollution associated with the use of  chemical fertilizers. Farmers no longer need to spend money on chemicals  and the water table is no longer poisoned from chemical fertilizer and  pesticide run-off. In addition to sharing knowledge, our training  programs often serve as farmer forums where farmers can discuss their  problems and find solutions. From time to time, when we have to take  important business decisions, we use these forums to gather input from  our farmers.
 
 When the civil war ended in Sri Lanka in 2009, the country had a high  unemployment rate among young men and women. Programs strived to include  them in the workforce, but very few reached women. Whereas paddy field  farming, construction and other main industries are usually the domain  of men in Sri Lanka, women are often responsible for the home gardens.  Through our work at the home garden level, we were able to directly  engage women in war affected areas with few other economic  opportunities. Now, more than 80% of our registered smallholder farmers  are women. 
 
 By encouraging women to participate in the business and by placing value  on what is traditionally seen as ‘women’s work’, we challenge cultural  stereotypes. Any additional income that women earn is a supplement to  household income and is usually spent on family well-being and on  children’s education in particular. Our aim is to double the per capita  income of our farmers by 2020.
 
 We are committed to connect Food, Fuel and Livelihood Development in  rural Sri Lanka. We adhere to responsible environmental, social  and governance standards while delivering economic benefits. We believe  in an inclusive business model where no distinction is made between  gender, religion or social status. We have created an innovative  approach to sustainable biomass production, simultaneously mitigating  climate change, enhancing food production, promoting soil conservation,  and advancing economic, social and environmental well-being at the  smallholder level.  We work hard every day to drive our business and  values forward and we are creating a world-class biomass business from  Sri Lanka!
  
 Biomass Supplies, a Sri Lankan subsidiary of Biomass Group – the  visionary renewable energy company – is developing Sri Lanka’s abundant  sustainable energy resources through innovative partnerships with the  country’s smallholder farmers. Biomass has joined the Business Call to  Action (BCtA) with a commitment to boost the incomes of 40,000 farmers –  at least 70 percent of them women – by 2018 and improve their yields  through training in sustainable agriculture practices. Read more about  their BCtA commitment here. 
