Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

India invests $2.3B in green hydrogen

- SIBI ARASU

BENGALURU, India — The government has approved $2.3 billion to support production, use and exports of green hydrogen, aiming to make India a global hub for the nascent industry.

The funding, announced last week is a first step toward establishi­ng the capacity to make at least 5 million metric tons of green hydrogen by the end of this decade.

Green hydrogen is hydrogen that is produced through the electrolys­is of water, powered by electricit­y generated from renewable sources of energy. Most of the world’s hydrogen is produced using fossil fuels, especially natural gas.

The aim of the funding initiative is “to make green hydrogen affordable and bring down its cost over the next five years. It will also help India reduce its emissions and become a major exporter in the field,” said Anurag Thakur, India’s minister for informatio­n and broadcasti­ng.

He said the financing would also help add about 125 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity by 2030. As of October, India had about 166 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity.

Other aims are to create more than a half million jobs, attract more private investment into the sector, reduce fossil fuel imports and cut greenhouse gas emissions by 50 million metric tons.

Many of India’s leading renewable energy companies, including companies owned by the Adani Group, Reliance Industries and JSW Energy; public sector companies like Indian Oil and NTPC Limited; and renewable-only companies such as Renew power are investing in production of green hydrogen.

Green hydrogen now amounts to a small fraction of global hydrogen use, estimated to be about 70 million tons per year. Most commercial­ly produced hydrogen is gray hydrogen, produced using fossil fuels, and blue hydrogen that is also made using fossil fuels but with the use of carbon capture systems to reduce emissions. The production of green hydrogen results in the emission of little to no greenhouse gases.

In providing policy incentives for green hydrogen production, India is following the lead of many other countries such as China, the European Union and the United States. Energy analysts expect manufactur­ing costs for green hydrogen to fall significan­tly in the next few years and estimate the green hydrogen market will grow 20-fold to $80 billion by 2030.

“A robust policy framework, requisite financial support and an enabling ecosystem for technology developmen­t are essential to displace the country’s convention­al fuel mix with green hydrogen and enhance its industrial competitiv­eness in an increasing­ly decarboniz­ing world,” said Shreyans Jain, an India-based sustainabl­e business strategy consultant who closely tracks developmen­ts in the green hydrogen industry.

 ?? (AP/Altaf Qadri) ?? A thick blanket of smoke envelops young ragpickers searching for reusable material at a garbage dump in New Delhi, India.
(AP/Altaf Qadri) A thick blanket of smoke envelops young ragpickers searching for reusable material at a garbage dump in New Delhi, India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States