
India's Quench Chargers Hits 161% Growth Building EVs Inside Out
A Pune startup is engineering every component of its EV chargers from scratch, hitting 161% revenue growth while helping India build a self-reliant electric future. Their chargers already power vehicles from the Himalayas to 48°C desert heat.
India's electric vehicle revolution just got a homegrown engine that works in extreme heat, freezing mountains, and everything in between.
Quench Chargers started as a small project inside Pune's Ador Group in 2021. Five years later, the company just posted 161% year-on-year revenue growth and installed over 2,000 chargers worldwide.
But the real story isn't the numbers. It's what's inside the chargers.
While most Indian charging companies assemble imported parts, Quench engineers everything from the ground up. They design their own power modules, controllers, and software platforms that let operators monitor charger health in real time across dozens of locations.
That engineering matters when a fleet of electric buses needs to charge through Delhi's 48°C summer without failing. It matters at dusty highway stations with unreliable power grids. And it matters in the ultra-cold Himalayas where imported chargers might struggle.

Quench's chargers scale from 30kW for small vehicles to 360kW for heavy fleets, with plans for megawatt-scale charging as India's EV needs grow. Three major Indian car manufacturers now use Quench technology to build their charging networks.
The company's annual capacity currently sits at 1,500+ DC chargers. Their 180kW and 240kW variants include thermal management, dynamic load balancing, and autocharge features that keep vehicles charging even when conditions get tough.
The Ripple Effect
Quench's approach creates benefits beyond just one company's success. By indigenizing critical charging components, they're helping India build technology independence in a sector that will define the country's clean energy future.
Every locally engineered charger means less reliance on imported technology. It means faster repairs when something breaks, because the engineers who designed it are nearby. And it means Indian solutions built specifically for Indian conditions.
Chairman Ravin Mirchandani sees the next phase clearly. "EV charging may be hardware-driven today, but the next phase will be defined by intelligence," he says. The company is already developing software that gives real-time network visibility and predictive maintenance alerts.
As India pushes toward its Viksit Bharat 2047 vision of a developed nation, homegrown charging infrastructure becomes crucial. Quench isn't just installing equipment; they're building the reliable backbone that gives drivers confidence to go electric.
The shift from petrol to electric needs more than good intentions, and India's charging revolution now has the engineering to match its ambition.
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Based on reporting by YourStory India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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