Hindustan Times (East UP)

PSUs seek partners for greenhydro­gen projects

Global efforts are on to cheaply produce green hydrogen to help countries attain net-zero emission

- Kalpana Pathak kalpana.p@livemint.com AFP

MUMBAI: As the race to reach emission goals intensifie­s, staterun energy companies are hunting for partners to tie up and build green-hydrogen facilities to run their refineries and sell the fuel commercial­ly.

Indian Oil Corp. Ltd (IOCL), Bharat Petroleum Corp. Ltd, Hindustan Petroleum Corp. Ltd, NTPC Ltd and Gail (India) Ltd, among others, plan to set up green hydrogen facilities over the next three years.

While IOCL has issued a global tender to develop green hydrogen generation facilities on a build-own-operate basis at its refineries in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, and Panipat, Haryana, Gail has floated global tenders to procure an electrolyz­er.

Gail has shortliste­d three sites, including one at Vijaipur in Madhya Pradesh, and will take around 14 months to set up the 10-megawatt facility.

State electricit­y producer NTPC has also announced a 5MW green hydrogen plant.

“We have on a pilot basis started mixing hydrogen in natural gas in one of the cities. The hydrogen we plan to produce can be sold to fertilizer units which, as per government mandate, are required to use hydrogen as fuel,” Gail chairman and managing director Manoj Jain said last month.

IOCL, on the other hand, plans to develop a green hydrogen generation facility with a 5,000 MT annual capacity for its refinery in Mathura and a 2,000 MT annual capacity for its refinery in Panipat.

Green hydrogen is produced by a process that does not emit greenhouse gases. Global efforts are on to cheaply produce green hydrogen, the fuel that can help countries attain their net-zero emission targets.

Refineries use large quantities of hydrogen for de-sulfurizat­ion to make petrol, diesel and other chemicals. Currently, is made at the refinery via steam reforming of natural gas, resulting in high CO2 emissions. Therefore, refiners are setting up large-scale electrolyz­ers to produce green hydrogen from water and decarboniz­e hydrogen production.

It is anticipate­d that the green hydrogen demand in India for applicatio­ns such as refineries, fertilizer­s and city gas grids will grow to 2 million tonnes per annum by 2030, in line with the nation’s green hydrogen mission. This would call for investment­s upward of $60 billion.

“Hydrogen is the cheapest source of energy available to mankind. At the cost of around $1-1.50 per kg, there is no reason for the world to use fossil fuel at all, and damaging the survival of our planet,” said Pashupathy Gopalan, an investor in Ohmium Internatio­nal, a renewable energy startup. The firm is planning to bring down the cost of hydrogen to $1 per kg by 2025.

BPCL collaborat­ed with Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) to scale up alkaline electrolyz­er technology for green hydrogen production this month. Currently, electrolyz­er plants are imported.

 ?? ?? It is anticipate­d that the green hydrogen demand in India will grow to 2 million tonnes per annum by 2030.
It is anticipate­d that the green hydrogen demand in India will grow to 2 million tonnes per annum by 2030.

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