In an insightful report by Latitude Media, Promethean Power Systems’ thermal-battery technology is shown to be transforming cold storage for India’s dairy farmers. The system uses a phase-change “thermal battery” to chill milk rapidly, bypassing the limits of unreliable rural grids.
Founded with an MIT grant in 2007, the company settled on dairy collection centres in India after testing other industries.  Their advanced chillers can handle up to 1,000 litres of milk daily, thanks to a 500-litre tank design that is 300% more efficient than earlier models.
The adoption of this tech addresses key issues: India averages six hours to chill milk post-milking, exceeding the four-hour standard, increasing spoilage risks.  With thousands of installations across the country, the model is scaling from pilot to mainstream.
we have created a state-wise map and investment/impact table) for the thermal-battery chilling hubs by Promethean Power Systems in India’s dairy sector. Note: Not all state-level installation data is publicly available, so some entries are estimated/indicative based on published impact reports.
| State | Estimated units installed / capacity | Investment cost per unit | Farmer-income uplift / other impacts | Notes | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maharashtra | ~100 units (village collection hubs) | ~₹5-6 lakh/unit (~US$7,900) | Farmer incomes up ~30% in pilot hubs | Strong grid-interruption zones; women-entrepreneur model applied. | 
| Tamil Nadu / Andhra Pradesh | Estimate ~50-70 units | Similar cost structure | Collections increased 30-40% in hub villages | Technology adopted by major dairies (Hatsun etc) | 
| Uttar Pradesh / Bihar | Emerging rollout; ~20-30 units (estimate) | As above | Potential for income uplift; phosphorus feed & cold-chain gap large | Data mostly from pilot/trial hubs. | 
| National total | >1,200 units as of 2020 (Promethean spec) | – | >150,000 farmers impacted; >30 000 litres diesel saved/day | Scale-up phase; many states still underserved. | 
Key take-aways from the data:
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Investment cost per unit (~₹5 lakh) is relatively modest for dairy co-ops; pay-back possible via higher milk volumes + quality premiums + diesel/fuel savings. 
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Farmer incomes in hub locations show meaningful uplift (30-40%) through higher volume, better quality and reduced spoilage risk. 
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The technology is particularly beneficial in grid-weak rural areas where conventional chilling is prohibitively expensive and spoilage high. 
Recommendations for dairy co-ops / industry stakeholders:
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Prioritise states/regions with grid instability, high small-holder dairy density and weak cold-chain penetration. 
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Consider financing models: leasing or pay-per-litre models reduce upfront burden and match investment to milk volumes. 
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Link cold-chain upgrade with farmer training, quality-testing equipment and aggregation infrastructure to fully capture benefits. 
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Monitor and document impact metrics: milk volume increase, reduction in spoilage/despatch delay, cost savings (fuel/diesel), farmer-income change—these help build business case for expansion and funding. 
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Explore support from state/federal schemes (cold-chain subsidy, dairy infrastructure grants) to reduce effective cost per unit. 
Industry Insight
For India’s dairy sector, the thermal-battery chilling infrastructure offers a dual benefit: it enhances milk quality (reducing spoilage risk for smallholder farmers) and accelerates cost-efficiency by reducing reliance on diesel generators or erratic grids. As a result, cooperatives and collection centres can expand supply reach, stabilize farmer incomes, and position for higher-value processing.
Key take-aways for stakeholders:
- Invest in collection-centre chilling tech as a foundation for value-added dairy growth.
- Prioritise remote/underserved villages where grid instability is highest — the tech offers largest impact there.
- Link infrastructure upgrade with farmer education (on chilling time, hygiene) so quality gains are fully realised.
- Position environmental cost-savings as a strategic asset — in an era of rising ESG/clean dairy demand, such cold-chain advances become competitive differentiators.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Oct 23rd 2025 Lattitude Media