Hydrogen Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen — Complete UPSC Notes

Hydrogen Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen — Complete UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS
GS Paper III · Science & Technology · Energy · Environment

Hydrogen Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen

Complete UPSC notes — Working of fuel cells, types of hydrogen (Green/Grey/Blue/Pink/Turquoise), production methods, applications, National Green Hydrogen Mission, challenges, PYQs and MCQs — with all 4 images.

Overview — Hydrogen as Fuel & Fuel Cells
Definition · Why hydrogen · UPSC relevance · Key facts
Definition A Hydrogen Fuel Cell is a device that converts the chemical energy stored in hydrogen directly into electrical energy through an electrochemical reaction with oxygen — producing only water and heat as byproducts. It is not a battery (does not store energy) — it generates electricity continuously as long as hydrogen fuel is supplied.
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Hydrogen — Basic Facts
Lightest and most abundant element in the universe. On Earth, NOT found in free state — must be extracted from compounds (water, hydrocarbons). Colourless, odourless, and invisible. 2–3× more energy-dense than petrol.
Fuel Cell vs Battery
Battery: Stores electricity — runs out, needs recharging. Fuel cell: Generates electricity continuously from hydrogen fuel. Faster refuelling, higher range, lighter weight (no heavy cell stack). More like a combustion engine but electrochemical.
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Why UPSC Asks This
GS-III: Energy, environment, technology. Connects to: National Green Hydrogen Mission, India's renewable energy targets, Net Zero 2070, SDGs, decarbonisation of industry. Very high frequency in recent prelims and mains.
Simple Analogy A hydrogen fuel cell works like a reverse electrolysis. Electrolysis uses electricity to split water into H₂ + O₂. A fuel cell combines H₂ + O₂ to produce electricity + water. Instead of burning hydrogen (like petrol in an engine), it combines it electrochemically — much more efficiently — like a very clean, silent, efficient generator.
FeatureHydrogen Fuel CellBattery EVPetrol/Diesel Engine
Energy sourceHydrogen gas (H₂)Stored electricityFossil fuels (hydrocarbons)
ByproductOnly water (H₂O)None at point of use (but upstream grid emissions)CO₂, NOₓ, PM, SOₓ
Efficiency>60% electrical efficiency~85–90%~25–30% (theoretical limit)
RangeHigh (500–800 km)Medium (300–500 km improving)High (500–800 km)
Refuelling time~3–5 minutes30 min–8 hours (fast charge)~5 minutes
NoiseVery quiet (no combustion)Very quietNoisy (combustion)
ScalabilityEasy — add more H₂ supplyNeeds larger/heavier batteryEasy (fuel tank)
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Working of Hydrogen Fuel Cells
Anode · Cathode · PEM · Electrochemical reactions · Voltage
Electrolytic cell diagram showing water splitting into hydrogen and oxygen using platinum electrodes and battery — the reverse process of a fuel cell

Electrolysis — How H₂ is Made (Reverse of Fuel Cell). This diagram shows an electrolytic cell splitting water (H₂O) into hydrogen (H₂) and oxygen (O₂) gas using electrical energy and platinum electrodes. ANODE (left, positive): OH⁻ ions lose electrons → 2OH⁻ + H₂O + 2e⁻ → oxygen gas released. CATHODE (right, negative): H⁺ ions gain electrons → 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → hydrogen gas released. The electrolyte is water; the electrodes are platinum. A battery or renewable energy source drives this reaction. Key connection to fuel cells: A fuel cell runs this process IN REVERSE — it takes hydrogen (H₂) and oxygen (O₂) and combines them electrochemically to produce electricity + water. Green hydrogen uses renewable electricity (solar/wind) for this electrolysis instead of fossil-fuel electricity.

Step-by-Step Working of a Hydrogen Fuel Cell (PEM Type) A hydrogen fuel cell converts chemical energy → electrical energy via electrochemistry. The most common type is the Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cell.
🔵 At the ANODE (oxidation)
Hydrogen gas (H₂) enters the fuel cell at the anode side.
Contact with platinum catalyst causes H₂ to split into:
Protons (H⁺) and Electrons (e⁻)
This is called oxidation.
H₂ → 2H⁺ + 2e⁻
→ Protons pass through the Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) (e.g., Nafion membrane)
→ Electrons CANNOT pass through PEM — they travel through the external circuit → this electron flow = electric current = electricity!
🟢 At the CATHODE (reduction)
Oxygen gas (O₂) enters at the cathode side.
Contact with platinum catalyst causes O₂ to split into oxygen atoms (with negative charge).
This is called reduction.
O₂ + 4e⁻ → 2O²⁻
The oxygen atoms then combine with:
→ Protons (H⁺) from the membrane
→ Electrons (e⁻) from the external circuit
2H⁺ + 2e⁻ + O₂ → H₂O
Result: Only water (H₂O) and heat produced. Zero carbon emissions!
Quick Memory Summary — Fuel Cell Working H₂ (anode) → splits into H⁺ + e⁻ (platinum catalyst)
→ H⁺ crosses PEM membrane | e⁻ flows through external circuit = ELECTRICITY
→ At cathode: O₂ + e⁻ + H⁺ → H₂O (water)
Voltage per cell: ~0.7V. Stack many cells → higher voltage → fuel cell stack
ComponentFunctionMaterial
AnodeWhere H₂ oxidation occurs. H₂ → 2H⁺ + 2e⁻Porous carbon with platinum catalyst
CathodeWhere O₂ reduction occurs. O₂ + 4e⁻ + 4H⁺ → 2H₂OPorous carbon with platinum catalyst
PEM (Proton Exchange Membrane)Allows only H⁺ protons to pass; blocks electrons (forcing them through external circuit)Nafion (polymer electrolyte)
Platinum CatalystSpeeds up both oxidation (anode) and reduction (cathode) reactionsExpensive — major cost driver; research on non-platinum catalysts ongoing
External CircuitCarries electrons from anode to cathode → electricity generatedCopper wires; connected to load (motor, device)
Fuel Cell StackMultiple cells connected in series to achieve higher voltage (single cell ≈ 0.7V)Scales up power capacity modularly
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Types of Hydrogen — The Colour Code
Green · Grey · Blue · Pink · Turquoise · Which is best?
Comparison of Grey hydrogen (from natural gas with CO2 emissions), Blue hydrogen (from natural gas with CO2 captured underground), and Green hydrogen (from water using renewable electricity, releases only oxygen)

The Three Main Hydrogen Types Compared. Grey Hydrogen (left): Made from natural gas (steam methane reforming) — CO₂ released into atmosphere. Cheapest but dirtiest. Accounts for ~95% of global production today. Blue Hydrogen (centre): Same process as grey — natural gas + steam — but CO₂ is captured and stored underground (Carbon Capture and Storage/CCS). Cleaner than grey but expensive (CCS adds cost) and still uses fossil fuels. Not fully zero-carbon. Green Hydrogen (right): Made by splitting water (electrolysis) using green electricity from renewable sources (solar, wind) — releases only O₂ as byproduct. Truly zero-carbon. Currently most expensive but costs are falling rapidly. India's National Green Hydrogen Mission targets green hydrogen exclusively.

ColourProduction MethodCO₂ EmissionsCostUPSC Key Point
⬜ Grey Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) of natural gas OR Coal gasification High — CO₂ released into atmosphere Cheapest (~$1–2/kg) ~95% of global H₂ today. Produces 830 MT CO₂/year globally. Largest contributor to GHG from H₂ sector.
🔵 Blue SMR of natural gas + Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Low — CO₂ captured and stored underground Medium (~$2–4/kg) Not fully zero-carbon (some emissions escape). Transition fuel. Still uses fossil fuels but stores CO₂ underground.
🟢 Green Electrolysis of water using renewable electricity (solar, wind) Zero — only O₂ byproduct High (~$4–7/kg, falling) India's National Green Hydrogen Mission target. Truly clean. Costs falling with solar/wind getting cheaper. The goal.
🩷 Pink Electrolysis using nuclear power Very low (nuclear has no CO₂) Medium-High High capacity factor (nuclear is base-load, unlike intermittent solar/wind). More stable H₂ production. No renewable energy needed.
🩵 Turquoise Methane pyrolysis — methane split into H₂ + solid carbon (not CO₂) Near-zero (solid carbon is by-product, not gas) Medium Produces solid carbon (usable industrially). No CO₂ released. Emerging technology — reactors/blast furnaces heat methane.
🌙 White Naturally occurring H₂ in geological formations Zero Exploration-dependent Rarely discussed in UPSC but emerging area. Limited quantities found naturally underground.
Mnemonic — Hydrogen Colours Green = Greenest (renewable electrolysis) | Grey = Grimiest (fossil + CO₂ released) | Blue = Between (fossil + CCS) | Pink = Power plant (nuclear) | Turquoise = Tricky (methane pyrolysis, solid carbon)
📋 PYQ — UPSC Prelims2023
With reference to "Green Hydrogen", consider the following statements:
1. It can be used directly as a fuel for internal combustion engines.
2. It can be blended with natural gas and used as a fuel for heat generation.
3. It can be used in the hydrogen fuel cells to generate electricity.
  • (a) 1 and 2 only
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 1, 2 and 3 ✓ Correct
  • (d) 3 only
Explanation: Statement 1 ✓ — Hydrogen CAN be used in internal combustion engines (ICEs). In fact, HCNG (Hydrogen + CNG mixture) is used as transportation fuel in conventional engines, improving combustion efficiency and reducing emissions compared to pure CNG. Statement 2 ✓ — Green hydrogen can be blended with natural gas for heat generation in industrial processes, homes, and power plants. This is a key short-term transition strategy to reduce fossil fuel use. Statement 3 ✓ — This is the most well-known application: green hydrogen in hydrogen fuel cells generates electricity electrochemically, producing only water as byproduct. All three statements are correct.
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Methods of Producing Hydrogen
SMR · Electrolysis · Thermochemical · Biological
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1. Steam Methane Reforming (SMR)
Natural gas (methane) + high-temperature steam → H₂ + CO₂. Most common — ~95% of global H₂. Cheap but uses fossil fuels and emits CO₂. Produces grey hydrogen. If CCS added → blue hydrogen.
2. Electrolysis of Water
Electrical current splits H₂O into H₂ + O₂. Produces very pure hydrogen. Key to green hydrogen when powered by renewables (solar, wind). Electrolyzer is the key equipment. Cost depends on electricity cost.
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3. Thermochemical Processes
High-temperature heat extracts H₂ from water or hydrocarbons through multiple chemical reactions. Heat source: nuclear plants or solar concentrators. Complex — still being scaled up. Includes thermochemical cycles (Sulfur-Iodine cycle).
MethodInputH₂ TypeEmissionsStatus in India
Steam Methane Reforming (SMR)Natural gas + steam + heatGrey (without CCS) / Blue (with CCS)High CO₂ without CCSCurrently dominant. India uses SMR for industrial H₂ (fertilisers, refineries).
Coal GasificationCoal + steam + oxygenGrey/BrownHighest CO₂ of all methodsUsed in some industries. Very carbon-intensive.
Electrolysis (Green)Water + renewable electricityGreenZeroFocus of National Green Hydrogen Mission. Target: 5 MMT by 2030. 60–100 GW electrolyzers.
ThermochemicalWater/hydrocarbons + high-temperature heatVariesLow if solar/nuclear heatResearch stage in India. IITs and CSIR labs working on it.
Biomass gasificationBiomass (agricultural waste, wood)Bio-hydrogenNear-zero (carbon neutral)Emerging. India has large biomass availability.
Biological/PhotobiologicalMicroorganisms, sunlightBio-hydrogenZeroResearch stage globally. Very promising long-term.
📋 PYQ — UPSC Prelims2022
Which of the following is/are the possible consequence/s of heavy sand mining in riverbeds? (rephrased for context — actual PYQ)
[Note: The actual PYQ on hydrogen:]
With reference to hydrogen fuel, consider the following statements:
1. Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cells produce electricity, with water and heat as the only byproducts.
2. PEM fuel cells are used to power the space vehicles.
3. Hydrogen fuel is produced from natural gas through a process called electrolysis.
  • (a) 1 only
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 1 and 2 only ✓ Correct
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3
Explanation: Statement 1 ✓ — PEM (Proton Exchange Membrane) fuel cells produce electricity with only water and heat as byproducts — this is the key advantage (zero carbon emissions). Statement 2 ✓ — PEM fuel cells and alkaline fuel cells have been used to power NASA space vehicles and shuttles. Space applications were among the earliest uses of fuel cells (NASA used them since the 1960s in Apollo and Gemini missions). Statement 3 ✗ — WRONG. Hydrogen is NOT produced from natural gas through electrolysis. From natural gas, hydrogen is produced through Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) — a thermochemical process. Electrolysis is used to produce hydrogen from water (H₂O), splitting it into H₂ and O₂ using electricity. This is a classic UPSC trap — confusing SMR (natural gas → H₂) with electrolysis (water → H₂).
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Why Hydrogen? — Benefits & Utility
Versatile · Zero emissions · Energy security · Industrial decarbonisation
Why hydrogen infographic showing: infinite supply, no carbon footprint from multiple sources, easily transported in large volumes, high energy density, produces clean power, can be stored in large quantities for long periods

Why Hydrogen? — A Versatile, Zero-Emission, Efficient Energy Carrier. Six key advantages shown: (1) Infinite supply — hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe (∞ symbol). (2) No carbon footprint — can be produced from multiple clean sources (droplet icon). (3) Easily transported in large volumes — by ship, pipeline, or truck (cargo ship icon). (4) High energy density — hydrogen has more energy per kg than petrol, batteries, or biomass (compared in the central circle). (5) Clean power and/or heat at point of use — electrochemical conversion produces only water vapour (lightning bolt). (6) Can be stored in large quantities and for long periods — unlike electricity, can bridge seasonal gaps (piggy bank icon). This makes hydrogen the ideal complement to intermittent renewables like solar and wind.

✅ Benefits of Hydrogen Fuel Cells
Zero emissions: Only water vapour as byproduct — truly clean at point of use
High efficiency: >60% electrical efficiency vs 25–30% for internal combustion engines
Reliable backup power: Modular architecture; instant refuelling (unlike batteries)
Energy security: Reduces dependence on fossil fuel imports — can be produced domestically from renewables
Versatile: Transportation, stationary power, portable electronics, industrial processes
Long-duration storage: Unlike batteries, H₂ can be stored for months/years — ideal for seasonal energy storage
Quiet operation: No combustion noise — ideal for hospitals, schools, urban areas
🎯 Industrial Uses of Hydrogen (Current)
Hydrogen is already widely used in industry — green hydrogen could decarbonise these sectors:

Refining industry: Hydroprocessing, desulphurisation of fuels
Ammonia manufacturing: Haber-Bosch process (fertilisers) — huge consumer of H₂
Methanol manufacturing: Chemical feedstock
Steel making: Direct Reduced Iron (DRI) — replacing coal/coke with H₂
Chemical industry: Petrochemicals, pharmaceuticals
Green hydrogen can replace grey hydrogen in all these — massive decarbonisation potential. High Yield
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Applications of Hydrogen Fuel Cells
FCEVs · Stationary power · Portable power · Railways · Shipping
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Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEVs)
Much higher range (500–800 km) and faster refuelling (3–5 min) than battery EVs. Toyota Mirai, Hyundai Nexo are leading FCEV models. India: Tata Motors & Ashok Leyland developed FCEV buses (under FAME scheme). CA
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Railways
Indian Railways unveiled hydrogen fuel cell train — top speed 160 kmph, range 600 km per fill. Germany's Coradia iLint was the world's first hydrogen passenger train (2018). Decarbonises non-electrified rail routes. High Yield CA
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Stationary Power
Clean backup, off-grid and supplemental power for data centres, telecom towers, hospitals. Bloom Energy installed fuel cells at Tata Power data centre (India) — 1 MW+ clean energy. Apple uses Bloom Energy fuel cells in North Carolina data centre.
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Portable Power
Small fuel cells power portable electronics (smartphones, laptops, tablets) for days. Instant recharge via fuel cartridge replacement. Military applications: UAS/drones, soldier equipment (UPS and DFA Aviation). Quiet + low heat = ideal.
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Industrial Decarbonisation
Steel making using H₂ instead of coal (Direct Reduced Iron/DRI). Ammonia plants shifting from grey to green H₂. Refineries using green H₂ for hydroprocessing. Key for India's Net Zero 2070 path.
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Shipping & Aviation
H₂ and ammonia (made from green H₂) as maritime fuels — reducing shipping emissions (~2.5% of global GHG). Aviation exploring liquid H₂ for aircraft. Long-term decarbonisation of "hard-to-abate" sectors. CA
India-specific Applications (High Yield for UPSC)Indian Railways hydrogen train: 160 kmph, 600 km range per fill — unveiled for Haryana routes
Tata Motors & Ashok Leyland FCEV buses: Demonstrated under FAME scheme
Bloom Energy at Tata Power data centre: 1 MW+ clean stationary power
Green hydrogen clusters: Being developed across India — especially Thar Desert (Rajasthan), Ladakh (cheap renewable energy)
HCNG buses: Delhi running HCNG (Hydrogen + CNG blend) buses — blend improves efficiency, reduces pollution
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National Green Hydrogen Mission
Launched 2023 · ₹19,744 crore · 5 MMT target · MNRE · Key outcomes
National Green Hydrogen Mission outcomes infographic: 5 MMT green hydrogen by 2030, 6 lakh new green jobs, 50 MMT CO2 abatement, 60-100 GW electrolyzer installations, 125 GW renewable energy, over 8 lakh crore investments

National Green Hydrogen Mission — Outcomes by 2030. Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) infographic showing six key targets: (1) 5 MMT (Million Metric Tonnes) of green hydrogen per annum production capacity by 2030. (2) 6 lakh new green jobs created in the green hydrogen ecosystem. (3) 50 MMT of carbon abatement cumulatively — significant contribution to India's climate commitments. (4) 60–100 GW electrolyzer installations — India aims to be a global electrolyzer manufacturing hub. (5) 125 GW of renewable energy dedicated to green hydrogen production. (6) Over ₹8 lakh crore (₹8 trillion) in investments — public + private combined. These targets make India's green hydrogen mission one of the most ambitious in the world, aligned with India's Net Zero 2070 target and SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy).

Mission Overview The National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) was launched in January 2023 with an outlay of ₹19,744 crore (FY 2023–24 to FY 2029–30).
Ministry: Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE)
Aim: Make India a global hub for production, use, and export of green hydrogen and its derivatives (like green ammonia).
Target: 5 MMT (million metric tonnes) green hydrogen production capacity per annum by 2030
NGHM TargetFigureSignificance
Green H₂ production5 MMT per annum by 2030Make India self-sufficient + export-ready. Reduces crude oil import bill.
Electrolyzer capacity60–100 GW installationsIndia to become global electrolyzer manufacturing hub — export electrolyzers too.
Renewable energy dedicated125 GWSolar & wind to power green H₂ production — synergy with India's 500 GW RE target.
New jobs created6 lakh green jobsSkill development, employment in manufacturing, supply chain, operation.
Carbon abatement50 MMT cumulatively by 2030Significant contribution to India's NDC commitments & Net Zero 2070.
Total investment₹8 lakh crore+ (public + private)Huge economic opportunity; government ₹19,744 crore is seed/catalytic funding to crowd in private investment.
Crude oil import reduction~₹1 lakh crore annuallyIndia spends ~$100 billion/year on oil imports — green H₂ can substitute in transport and industry.
📋 SIGHT Programme (under NGHM)
SIGHT = Strategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition
Two components:
Component I: Incentivise domestic manufacturing of electrolyzers
Component II: Incentivise green hydrogen production
Financial incentives to reduce cost of green H₂ — make it competitive with grey H₂ by 2030.
Targets: ₹1–2 per kg cost reduction through scale and technology.
🌍 NGHM — Strategic Importance
Energy security: Reduces fossil fuel import dependence
Climate commitment: Supports India's NDC, Net Zero 2070, SDG 7
Economic opportunity: Global green H₂ market could be $600+ billion by 2050
Export potential: India can export green H₂ to Japan, South Korea, Europe
Ideal geography: Thar desert (Rajasthan) and Ladakh have cheapest solar energy in the world — lowest cost green H₂ potential
Industry decarbonisation: Fertiliser, steel, refining sectors mandated to shift to green H₂
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Challenges in Adoption of Hydrogen Fuel
Cost · Storage · Infrastructure · Safety · Production scale
ChallengeDetailsSolutions Being Explored
High production costGreen H₂ costs $4–7/kg vs grey H₂ at $1–2/kg. Electrolysis is energy-intensive. Grey H₂ from fossil fuels is currently much cheaper.Falling renewable energy costs (solar now cheapest electricity). Scale effects in electrolyzer manufacturing. SIGHT programme incentives. Target: <$2/kg by 2030.
Storage difficultiesH₂ must be kept at -253°C as liquid (colder than LNG at -163°C) — extremely energy-intensive. High-pressure gas storage (700 bar) needs heavy tanks. Safety risks from high flammability and pressure.High-pressure composite tanks; metal hydrides (absorb H₂ like a sponge); liquid organic hydrogen carriers (LOHC); underground geological storage.
Infrastructure gapVirtually no H₂ refuelling stations in India. Need pipeline network, fuelling stations, carrier vehicles. Huge upfront capital investment required for H₂ economy infrastructure.NGHM includes R&D on distribution. Start with captive users (fertiliser plants, refineries). Step-by-step rollout — trucks before passenger cars.
Safety concernsH₂ is highly flammable (4–75% flammability range in air vs 5–15% for methane). Colourless, odourless — flames invisible to naked eye. Embrittlement of steel pipes (H₂ makes metals brittle). High diffusivity — escapes quickly.H₂ sensors, leak detection systems. New H₂-compatible pipeline materials. Safety standards, codes being developed internationally. Strict handling protocols.
Platinum catalyst costPEM fuel cells require platinum — scarce and expensive (~$30,000/kg). Raises fuel cell cost significantly. India has limited platinum reserves.Research on non-platinum catalysts (nickel, iron-based). Reducing platinum loading through nanotechnology. Alkaline fuel cells (non-platinum) as alternative.
Grey H₂ dominance95% of current H₂ is grey — produces 830 MT CO₂/year. Industry locked in to fossil fuel-based H₂. Changing supply chains takes time and investment.Minimum Green H₂ mandate for large industrial users (refineries, fertiliser plants). Carbon pricing makes grey H₂ more expensive relative to green.
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Current Affairs — Green Hydrogen & Fuel Cells (2023–2025)
UPSC 2026 relevance · India milestones · Global developments · Policy
🇮🇳 India Developments
National Green Hydrogen Mission (Jan 2023): Launched with ₹19,744 crore outlay. SIGHT programme. Target: 5 MMT by 2030. High Yield

Indian Railways hydrogen train: Unveiled for Haryana routes (Jind-Sonipat). 160 kmph speed, 600 km range. Made by RDSO in collaboration with firms. CA

Green hydrogen valley hubs: Visakhapatnam, Paradip, Tuticorin ports earmarked for green H₂ export hubs. CA

HCNG buses in Delhi: Delhi Transport Corporation running HCNG (18% H₂ + 82% CNG) buses — reduced NOx, PM. CA

Green ammonia from India: Multiple companies (ACME, Greenko) investing in green ammonia (from green H₂ + N₂) for export to Japan, South Korea. CA

Electrolyzer manufacturing PLI: Production-Linked Incentive for electrolyzer manufacturing — attract global firms to manufacture in India for domestic + export use.
🌍 Global Developments
Green H₂ cost trajectory: IEA projects green H₂ could reach $1/kg by 2050 in best locations. India (Thar, Ladakh) among cheapest globally. CA

EU Green Deal and hydrogen: Europe targeting 10 MT green H₂ production domestically + 10 MT imports by 2030 (REPowerEU). Major opportunity for India exports.

Japan hydrogen strategy: Japan targeting 3 million tonnes H₂ per year by 2030. Major importer — signed deal with India for green H₂ supply.

Hydrogen Council: Global CEO initiative — 140+ companies committed to hydrogen economy. $500 billion investment commitments.

G20 and hydrogen: India's G20 Presidency 2023 pushed hydrogen as key energy transition topic. Global Biofuels Alliance also includes hydrogen.

Steel decarbonisation: POSCO (South Korea), ArcelorMittal, SSAB (Sweden) all piloting green H₂ steel. TATA Steel also investing. Huge decarbonisation opportunity.
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Practice MCQs — Hydrogen Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen
UPSC-style · Click an option to reveal answer
⚡ Click any option to check your answer
Q1. In a Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cell, what is the role of the membrane?
  1. (a) It allows both protons and electrons to pass through, creating an electrical circuit
  2. (b) It splits hydrogen molecules into protons and electrons using a platinum catalyst
  3. (c) It allows only protons (H⁺) to pass from anode to cathode while blocking electrons — forcing electrons through the external circuit to generate electricity
  4. (d) It separates hydrogen and oxygen gases to prevent them from reacting explosively
The Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) is the critical component that makes a fuel cell work. It is a special polymer electrolyte membrane (e.g., Nafion) that has a unique selective permeability: it allows only H⁺ protons to pass from the anode to the cathode, but blocks electrons. Since electrons cannot cross the membrane, they are forced to travel through the external circuit (wires connected to the load) — this electron flow creates the electric current (electricity). At the cathode, the protons that crossed the membrane and the electrons that came through the external circuit both meet oxygen atoms and combine to form water (H₂O). Option (b) describes the role of the platinum catalyst (not the membrane). The PEM is what separates the anode and cathode halves of the cell.
Q2. "Blue hydrogen" is different from "grey hydrogen" primarily because:
  1. (a) Blue hydrogen is produced from water using renewable electricity, while grey hydrogen is produced from natural gas
  2. (b) Blue hydrogen uses the same natural gas feedstock as grey hydrogen, but the CO₂ emissions are captured and stored underground using Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS)
  3. (c) Blue hydrogen is produced using nuclear energy, making it carbon-free
  4. (d) Blue hydrogen is produced by methane pyrolysis, generating solid carbon instead of CO₂
Blue hydrogen uses the SAME production process as grey hydrogen — Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) of natural gas. The ONLY difference is that in blue hydrogen production, the CO₂ generated is captured before it reaches the atmosphere and stored permanently underground using Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS). This makes blue hydrogen a low-carbon (not zero-carbon) fuel — some leakage of CO₂ can occur. Blue hydrogen is more expensive than grey hydrogen because CCS technology adds cost. Option (a) describes green hydrogen (renewable electricity + water electrolysis). Option (c) describes pink hydrogen (nuclear electricity + electrolysis). Option (d) describes turquoise hydrogen (methane pyrolysis + solid carbon). Remembering the colour code: Grey = dirty, Blue = grey + CCS, Green = renewable + water.
Q3. The National Green Hydrogen Mission was launched in January 2023. Which ministry implements it and what is the production target?
  1. (a) Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas; 10 MMT by 2030
  2. (b) Ministry of Science and Technology; 3 MMT by 2025
  3. (c) Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE); 5 MMT green hydrogen per annum by 2030
  4. (d) Ministry of Heavy Industries; 5 MMT by 2035
The National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) is implemented by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) — it's a clean energy initiative, not an oil/gas or science ministry scheme. It was launched in January 2023 with an outlay of ₹19,744 crore over FY 2023–24 to FY 2029–30. The production target is 5 MMT (Million Metric Tonnes) per annum by 2030. Key outcomes: 60–100 GW electrolyzer installations, 125 GW dedicated renewable energy, 6 lakh new green jobs, 50 MMT cumulative carbon abatement, ₹8 lakh crore+ investments. The SIGHT (Strategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition) programme under NGHM provides financial incentives for both electrolyzer manufacturing and green hydrogen production.
Q4. Which of the following correctly describes "turquoise hydrogen"?
  1. (a) Hydrogen produced by electrolysis of water using nuclear electricity
  2. (b) Hydrogen produced from natural gas with CO₂ sequestered underground
  3. (c) Hydrogen produced from biomass through biological processes
  4. (d) Hydrogen produced by methane pyrolysis — splitting methane into hydrogen and solid carbon (not CO₂)
Turquoise hydrogen is produced through methane pyrolysis — a process that uses heat (in reactors or blast furnaces) to split methane (CH₄) into hydrogen gas (H₂) and solid carbon. This is fundamentally different from steam methane reforming (SMR) which produces H₂ + CO₂ (a greenhouse gas). In methane pyrolysis, carbon comes out as a solid (carbon black) — which can be used industrially (tyres, carbon fibre, etc.) instead of being emitted as CO₂. This makes turquoise hydrogen near-zero carbon. Option (a) describes pink hydrogen (nuclear + electrolysis). Option (b) describes blue hydrogen (natural gas + CCS). Option (c) describes biological/bio-hydrogen. The colour system can be confusing — a useful cross-check: turquoise is between blue and green, and turquoise hydrogen is cleaner than blue but uses a different pathway than green.
Q5. Which of the following statements about hydrogen as a fuel is INCORRECT?
  1. (a) Hydrogen has 2–3 times more energy density per kg than petrol
  2. (b) Hydrogen in its natural state is abundantly available in the Earth's atmosphere in free form
  3. (c) Hydrogen fuel cells achieve electrical efficiency exceeding 60%, much higher than internal combustion engines
  4. (d) Hydrogen can be used as a blend with CNG (HCNG) to improve combustion efficiency and reduce emissions
Statement (b) is INCORRECT. While hydrogen IS the most abundant element in the universe and extremely common in the Earth's crust and oceans, it is NOT found in free form on Earth. Almost all hydrogen on Earth exists in compounds — primarily water (H₂O) and hydrocarbons (CH₄, oil, gas, coal). Therefore, hydrogen must be extracted, produced, and stored before use — it is not directly available like sunlight or wind. This is a crucial distinction: hydrogen is an energy carrier (like a battery), not an energy source. You must put energy in to make hydrogen, then get energy out when you use it. The other statements are correct: (a) ✓ Hydrogen has ~120 MJ/kg vs ~44 MJ/kg for petrol — about 3× more energy per kg; (c) ✓ Fuel cell efficiency exceeds 60% vs 25–30% for ICEs; (d) ✓ HCNG is being used in Delhi and other cities.
Q6. Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) is most closely associated with which type of hydrogen production?
  1. (a) Grey hydrogen — because SMR of natural gas releases CO₂ into the atmosphere, making it the dirtiest common H₂ production method (accounts for ~95% of global H₂ today)
  2. (b) Green hydrogen — because steam is a clean, renewable energy source
  3. (c) Pink hydrogen — because SMR uses high-temperature steam from nuclear reactors
  4. (d) Turquoise hydrogen — because SMR produces solid carbon as a byproduct
Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) produces grey hydrogen. The process: natural gas (methane, CH₄) + high-temperature steam (800–1000°C) reacts over a nickel catalyst → H₂ + CO₂ + CO. The CO₂ and CO are released into the atmosphere → making it grey hydrogen. SMR currently accounts for ~95% of global hydrogen production and generates approximately 830 million tonnes of CO₂ per year globally. If Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) is added to the same SMR process, it becomes blue hydrogen. Option (b) is wrong: "steam" from water is just the process — the fuel is still natural gas (fossil). Option (c) is wrong: pink hydrogen uses nuclear electricity for electrolysis, not SMR. Option (d) is wrong: turquoise hydrogen uses methane PYROLYSIS (not reforming with steam) and produces solid carbon (not CO₂).
⚡ Quick Revision — Hydrogen Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen
TopicKey Facts for UPSC
Hydrogen — BasicsLightest, most abundant element. NOT free in nature on Earth — must be extracted. 2–3× more energy-dense than petrol. Colourless, odourless, invisible flames. Energy CARRIER (not source).
Fuel Cell — WorkingH₂ (anode) + platinum catalyst → H⁺ + e⁻. H⁺ crosses PEM membrane. e⁻ flows through external circuit = ELECTRICITY. At cathode: O₂ + H⁺ + e⁻ → H₂O. Only byproducts: water + heat. Single cell: ~0.7V. Stack cells for more voltage. Efficiency: >60%.
Green HydrogenElectrolysis of water using renewable electricity (solar/wind). Zero carbon. Currently expensive ($4–7/kg) but costs falling. India's main target under NGHM.
Grey HydrogenSteam Methane Reforming (SMR) of natural gas OR coal gasification. CO₂ released. Cheapest ($1–2/kg). ~95% of global H₂ today. 830 MT CO₂/year from grey H₂ globally.
Blue HydrogenSame as grey (SMR/natural gas) but CO₂ captured and stored underground (CCS). Low-carbon but not zero-carbon. More expensive than grey. Transition fuel.
Pink HydrogenElectrolysis using nuclear electricity. Near-zero carbon. High capacity factor (nuclear is steady base-load unlike intermittent solar/wind). Stable production.
Turquoise HydrogenMethane pyrolysis — CH₄ heated → H₂ + solid carbon. Solid carbon (not CO₂ gas) as byproduct. Near-zero emissions. Carbon usable industrially.
Production MethodsSMR (most common, grey); Electrolysis (green — water + renewable electricity); Thermochemical (high-temp heat from nuclear/solar concentrators); Biomass gasification; Biological/photobiological (R&D stage).
ApplicationsFCEVs (Toyota Mirai, Hyundai Nexo, Indian buses); Stationary power (data centres, telecom towers — Bloom Energy); Portable power (military, electronics); Railways (Indian Railways 160 kmph H₂ train, 600 km range); Shipping; Industrial (steel, fertilisers, refining).
National Green Hydrogen MissionJan 2023; ₹19,744 crore; MNRE; Target: 5 MMT/year by 2030; 60–100 GW electrolyzers; 125 GW RE; 6 lakh jobs; 50 MMT CO₂ abatement; ₹8 lakh crore investment. SIGHT programme for incentives.
ChallengesHigh cost (green H₂ $4–7/kg vs grey $1–2); Storage (needs -253°C as liquid); Safety (highly flammable, invisible flames); Infrastructure (no refuelling network); Platinum catalyst cost; Grey H₂ dominance (95%).
India HCNGHydrogen + CNG blend (18:82 ratio). Used in Delhi DTC buses. Improves combustion efficiency of CNG. Less polluting. Easier to introduce than pure H₂ (uses existing CNG infrastructure).
Key InstitutionsMNRE (NGHM policy); CSIR labs + IITs (fuel cell R&D); Tata Motors, Ashok Leyland (FCEV buses); Indian Railways (H₂ train); RDSO; Bloom Energy (stationary fuel cells in India).
🚨 5 UPSC TRAPS — Hydrogen Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen:

Trap 1 — "Hydrogen is produced from natural gas through electrolysis" → WRONG! Electrolysis splits WATER (H₂O) into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity. Natural gas (methane) is converted to hydrogen through Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) — a thermochemical process using heat and steam. This was directly tested in a 2022 PYQ. Grey/blue H₂ = from natural gas via SMR. Green H₂ = from water via electrolysis.

Trap 2 — "Hydrogen is abundantly available in free form in Earth's atmosphere" → WRONG! Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, but on Earth it is almost entirely bound in compounds (water, hydrocarbons). It is NOT freely available in Earth's atmosphere (unlike solar energy or wind). It must be extracted, produced, and stored — hence it is an energy CARRIER, not an energy SOURCE.

Trap 3 — "Blue hydrogen is produced from water using nuclear electricity" → WRONG! That describes PINK hydrogen. Blue hydrogen = grey hydrogen production (natural gas via SMR) + Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS). Blue and green are the most confused pair. Green = water + renewables. Blue = natural gas + CCS. Pink = water + nuclear. Know the full colour code.

Trap 4 — "The National Green Hydrogen Mission is implemented by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas" → WRONG! NGHM is implemented by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) — not the petroleum ministry. The mission is about CLEAN hydrogen from renewable sources, not fossil fuels. MNRE also handles solar, wind, and other renewables. Launched January 2023 with ₹19,744 crore outlay, target 5 MMT by 2030.

Trap 5 — "A hydrogen fuel cell stores electrical energy like a battery" → WRONG! A fuel cell is NOT a battery — it does not store electricity. It GENERATES electricity continuously as long as hydrogen fuel is supplied. A battery stores electrochemical energy internally and runs out. A fuel cell is more like an engine — it converts fuel (H₂) to electricity in real-time. This is why FCEVs refuel in minutes (like petrol cars) rather than needing hours to recharge (like battery EVs). The hydrogen STORAGE tank is separate from the fuel cell itself.

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