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India logs lowest-ever rate of $3.08/kg for green hydrogen

Milestone in clean energy sector; eyes $2/kg

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Former NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant. File Photo
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India has recorded its lowest-ever discovered price for green hydrogen at Rs 279 (about $3.08) per kg in a tender for the supply of 10,000 tonnes per year to Numaligarh Refinery Limited in Assam, former NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant said.Kant said the milestone, supported by government incentives and declining renewable energy costs, signalled a significant leap in the country’s clean energy sector and brought India closer to its ambitious target of producing green hydrogen at $2 per kg. “This milestone boosts cost-competitiveness and marks rapid sector progress. India’s ambition to achieve green hydrogen at $2 per kg is not a distant dream anymore,” the former G20 Sherpa said.
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Kant said the rising crude prices remained a key challenge for the nation, with every $10 per barrel increase potentially adding $13–14 billion to India’s annual import bill, widening the current account deficit, and exerting pressure on the rupee.

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“Geopolitical uncertainties are expected to continue testing the country’s energy security. India’s next step isn’t just adding clean capacity, but delivering reliable clean power at home: high-PLF solar-wind hybrids, Electric vehicle momentum, modern grids, large-scale batteries & pumped hydro storage, and firm low-carbon base-load like nuclear. We need it all,” he said.

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India is among the world’s top three energy consumers and electricity demand continues to grow every year. The total electricity generation has increased from 1,739.09 billion units (BU) in 2023–24 to 1,829.69 BU in 2024–25, a growth of 5.21 per cent. For 2025–26, the generation target has been set at 2,000.4 BU.

Green hydrogen has emerged as a key pillar of India’s clean energy transition, particularly for sectors where reducing emissions is difficult, such as steel, fertilisers, refining, shipping and heavy transport.

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Green hydrogen is produced using renewable energy such as solar or wind power, instead of fossil fuels. In this process, water is split into hydrogen and oxygen through electrolysis, using electricity from solar panels or wind turbines. According to standards notified by the government, hydrogen made this way is considered “green” if the total emissions from the process are very low, not more than 2 kg of CO₂ equivalent for every 1 kg of hydrogen produced, taken as an average over last 12-month period. Green hydrogen can also be produced by converting biomass (like agricultural waste) into hydrogen, as long as emissions remain below the same limit.

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