Menu
Log in
Log in
  • Home
  • Green ATMs Expand their Reach in India

Green ATMs Expand their Reach in India

  • 28 Nov 2019 12:14 PM
    Message # 8142828
    LUB Karnataka (Administrator)

    For Chennai-based Vortex Engineering, this makes for a huge business opportunity. With its portfolio of innovative automated teller machines (ATMs), the company is all set to aid banks in reaching out to unbanked and under-banked regions. The company is backed by investors like Tata Capital, Aavishkaar, Ventureast, Oasis and IFC. Vortex has ATMs that are tailor-made for the Indian rural milieu. Its indigenous Gramateller ATM can run on solar power, has a builtin uninterrupted power supply (UPS), doesn’t need air-conditioning, prints receipts in regional languages, is designed to work in extreme temperatures and can operate through biometric authentication. Its Ecoteller model is a low-cost, low-power-consuming machine.

    As reported in various media and on the company’s website, “Conventional ATMs are designed [for] a developed-world scenario — they require airconditioning and consume 1,500 to 2,000 watts of power. It is an unviable and expensive proposition to install them in rural or semi-urban areas [in India] where the transaction amounts are low and operational costs are high. The people in these areas, therefore, end up traveling 15 to 30 miles to access banking services,” says Mr V Vijay Babu, CEO of Vortex. According to Babu, the overall cost (installation, operations, etc.) of Vortex ATMs works out to 35% to 50% less than conventional ATMs, which typically cost around US$6,000.


    Vortex currently has more than 800 ATMs deployed in the country. Of these, over 300 are solar. “We have orders to set up 9,000 ATMs in the next two years. We opened our second manufacturing facility in January this year, upgrading our capacity from 100 ATMs to 900 ATMs per month. We closed last fiscal [year] with a turnover of US$2 million and are targeting US$7 million this year,” adds Babu. The company also has been exporting its machines to SAARC (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation) nations and a few African countries over the past six months. Mr Babu’s optimism is rooted in pure numbers. “Though India has seen a four-fold increase in the number of ATMs in the past four years — from 25,000 in January 2008 to 100,000 in December 2012 - [the country’s] ATM industry is largely underdeveloped. It is also the fastest growing ATM market in world… expected to touch 250,000 by 2015.”

    Other players are not far behind. NCR Corporation has rolled-out a host of new ATMs with features including solar power, biometric readers and a text-to-speech engine that provides detailed instructions for the visually challenged user. Mr Ashok Shankar, solutions deployment manager for NCR India, was quoted in the press thus: “The market dynamics have changed significantly in the last year.… As part of the new announcement by the ministry of finance, PSU banks will roll out over 60,000 ATMs in rural India by 2014. Our new ATMs particularly address the challenges that banks could face in rural India.”

    The opportunity comes with its set of challenges, though. “Unless financial literacy is in place, chances of people adopting these modes of technology seem bleak. RBI is taking proactive steps in this direction, which will hopefully address the behavioral and psychological barriers that people have,” according to business and financial services experts.

    According to Mr Babu of Vortex, loading cash in ATMs that are geographically dispersed in semi-urban and rural areas is a huge logistical challenge. But he believes that it is a short-term concern. “As the ATM density increases, this problem will get addressed automatically.”



Copyright© 2019-20 LUB Karnataka. All Rights Reserved.

Powered By 
Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software