Green Hydrogen — Complete UPSC Notes

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

🌿 Green Hydrogen

Meaning · Benefits · Production Methods · Applications · India's Policy · National Green Hydrogen Mission · Green Hydrogen Standard · Updated Current Affairs · PYQs · MCQs

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What is Green Hydrogen?
Definition · Physical properties · Why "green" · The key distinction
Definition Green Hydrogen is hydrogen produced by electrolysis of water (H₂O) using electricity from renewable energy sources (solar, wind, hydel) — releasing zero greenhouse gases. The only byproduct is oxygen (O₂). The word "green" refers exclusively to the method of production, not to any colour of the gas itself.
🧬 Physical Properties of Hydrogen Gas
Appearance: Colourless, odourless, tasteless, non-toxic gas
Weight: Lightest and simplest element in the universe
Abundance: Most abundant element in the universe
Combustibility: Highly combustible (burns cleanly, producing only water)
Flammability range: 4–75% in air (much wider than methane 5–15%) — safety concern
Energy density: ~120 MJ/kg — 2–3× more than petrol (~44 MJ/kg)
Storage temperature (liquid): -253°C (extremely low — below LNG's -163°C)
Invisible flames: Hydrogen flames are not visible to naked eye — safety risk
⚗️ The Electrolysis Equation
Electrolysis: Splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen using electrical current:

2H₂O → 2H₂ + O₂
At cathode (−): 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → H₂ (reduction)
At anode (+): 2H₂O → O₂ + 4H⁺ + 4e⁻ (oxidation)

Key: When renewable electricity is used (solar/wind), the entire process is zero-carbon → Green Hydrogen.
The byproduct oxygen can be sold for industrial/medical use — monetisation opportunity.
Simple Way to Remember — What Makes Hydrogen "Green" Hydrogen itself is colourless — there's no such thing as physically "green" hydrogen. The colour refers to the source of electricity used in production:
Renewable electricity (solar/wind) + water → GREEN hydrogen (zero carbon)
→ Natural gas + steam → GREY hydrogen (high carbon)
→ Natural gas + steam + CCS → BLUE hydrogen (low carbon)
→ Nuclear electricity + water → PINK hydrogen (near-zero carbon)
Think of it as: "Green" = made the green way = renewable electricity.
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The Hydrogen Colour Code — All Types Compared
Green · Grey · Blue · Pink · Turquoise · Why the distinction matters
Grey blue green hydrogen comparison — grey releases CO2 from natural gas, blue stores CO2 underground, green uses renewable electricity and water

Grey vs Blue vs Green Hydrogen. Grey (left): Natural gas → steam methane reforming → hydrogen + CO₂ released into atmosphere. Cheapest (~$1–2/kg), dirtiest. Accounts for ~95% of global H₂. Generates 830 MT CO₂/year. Blue (centre): Same SMR process from natural gas → but CO₂ is captured and pumped underground for permanent storage (CCS). More expensive than grey but lower carbon. Not fully zero-emission. Green (right): Water + green electricity (solar/wind) → electrolysis → hydrogen + oxygen. Only O₂ as byproduct. Truly zero-carbon. Currently most expensive ($4–7/kg) but rapidly falling with declining renewable costs. India's NGHM targets this exclusively.

TypeProduction RouteCO₂ EmissionsCost (approx.)Share of global H₂
⬜ GreySteam Methane Reforming (SMR) of natural gas / Coal gasification — CO₂ releasedHigh (~10 kg CO₂ per kg H₂)$1–2/kg (cheapest)~95%
🔵 BlueSMR of natural gas + Carbon Capture & Storage (CCS) undergroundLow (some leakage possible)$2–4/kg~2–3%
🟢 GreenElectrolysis of water using renewable electricity (solar, wind, hydel)Zero$4–7/kg (falling fast)~1% (growing)
🩷 PinkElectrolysis of water using nuclear electricityNear-zero (nuclear has no CO₂)$4–6/kg<1%
🩵 TurquoiseMethane pyrolysis: CH₄ split into H₂ + solid carbon (not CO₂)Near-zero (solid carbon, not gas)$2–4/kg<1%
🟤 BrownCoal gasification without CCS — dirtiest methodVery high$1–2/kgPart of grey
UPSC Colour-Code Mnemonic Grey = Grimiest (fossil fuels + CO₂ out) — 95% of today's H₂
Blue = Between grey & green (fossil + CCS — CO₂ buried)
Green = Greatest (renewable electricity + water = zero CO₂)
Pink = Power plant (nuclear electricity + electrolysis)
Turquoise = Twisted (methane → H₂ + solid carbon, not CO₂ gas)
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Green Hydrogen Production — Electrolysis Methods
Alkaline · PEM · Solid Oxide · Comparison · Electrolyzer technology
Electrolytic cell showing how water is split into hydrogen (cathode) and oxygen (anode) using platinum electrodes and external battery or renewable electricity source

Electrolytic Cell — How Green Hydrogen is Produced. An electrolytic cell splits water (H₂O) into its components using electricity. Power source (centre): A battery or renewable electricity source (solar/wind/nuclear) drives the process. Anode (+, left): Water molecules are oxidised — OH⁻ ions give up electrons → oxygen gas (O₂) bubbles upward. Reaction: 2OH⁻ + H₂O + 2e⁻ → O₂ released. Cathode (−, right): H⁺ ions gain electrons → hydrogen gas (H₂) bubbles upward. Reaction: 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → H₂ released. Both electrodes are platinum (expensive catalyst). Electrolyte is water. Key insight: When the power source is renewable electricity, the process becomes completely zero-carbon — this is GREEN hydrogen. The oxygen released can be captured and sold commercially (hospitals, industry) — a valuable by-product. Scale this up with a 100 MW solar farm → industrial-scale green hydrogen production.

Method 1: Alkaline Electrolysis — Most Mature Technology
How it works: Uses an alkaline solution (KOH — Potassium Hydroxide OR NaOH — Sodium Hydroxide) as the electrolyte. Water is split using DC current. Two electrodes (cathode and anode) separated by a porous membrane (diaphragm).

Operating temperature: 60–80°C (relatively low)
Efficiency: 63–71%
Maturity: Most commercially proven — been used for decades
Advantages: Most mature and commercially proven; low cost; long operational life; no precious metal catalysts needed (uses nickel electrodes)

Disadvantages: Slow response to variable power input (challenge with intermittent solar/wind); requires expensive nickel/platinum electrodes; produces lower purity H₂; liquid electrolyte management complex

UPSC note: Most widely deployed globally today — cheapest electrolyzer type. Good for baseload renewable power.
Method 2: Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) Electrolysis — Advanced Technology
How it works: Uses a solid polymer membrane (e.g., Nafion) as the electrolyte instead of liquid. Water fed to anode; protons (H⁺) pass through membrane to cathode; electrons travel through external circuit; H₂ produced at cathode.

Operating temperature: 50–80°C
Efficiency: 67–82% (higher than alkaline)
Response time: Very fast — ideal for variable renewable input
Advantages: Higher efficiency; very pure hydrogen (99.9%+); compact and modular; fast response to power fluctuations (ideal for solar/wind); high operating current density

Disadvantages: High cost — membrane (Nafion) and precious metal catalysts (platinum, iridium) are expensive; shorter lifespan than alkaline; acidic environment

UPSC note: Best suited for pairing with intermittent renewables (solar, wind) due to fast response. Costs falling rapidly — major focus of R&D. Same membrane concept as PEM fuel cell.
Method 3: Solid Oxide Electrolysis (SOEC) — High-Temperature Technology
How it works: Uses a solid ceramic material (e.g., yttria-stabilised zirconia) as electrolyte. Operates at very high temperatures (700–1000°C). Steam (not liquid water) is fed to cathode; oxygen ions move through ceramic to anode; H₂ produced at cathode.

Operating temperature: 700–1000°C (very high — requires heat source)
Efficiency: 74–81% electrical efficiency; higher if waste heat available
Special feature: Can do co-electrolysis — split both water AND CO₂ simultaneously to produce H₂ and CO (syngas)
Advantages: Highest efficiency (especially with waste heat); can use industrial waste heat; co-electrolysis of water + CO₂ (syngas for chemicals); potential for very low energy consumption

Disadvantages: Very high operating temperatures; specialised ceramic materials; thermal cycling causes degradation; complex and expensive; still largely at pilot/demonstration stage

UPSC note: Ideal for pairing with nuclear reactors or solar concentrators (high-temp heat sources). Promising for future industrial-scale hydrogen production. Co-electrolysis is a unique distinguishing feature.
FeatureAlkalinePEMSolid Oxide (SOEC)
ElectrolyteKOH/NaOH solution (liquid)Polymer membrane (Nafion)Ceramic (solid)
Temperature60–80°C50–80°C700–1000°C
Efficiency63–71%67–82%74–81%+
MaturityMost mature (commercial)Commercial (growing fast)Pilot/demonstration stage
Response timeSlowFast (ideal for solar/wind)Slow (needs steady heat)
Key advantageLow cost, provenHigh purity H₂, fast responseHighest efficiency; co-electrolysis
Key challengeSlow response to variable powerExpensive membrane & catalystsVery high temp; complex materials
Best paired withSteady renewable power (hydro)Intermittent renewables (solar/wind)Nuclear / solar concentrators
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Why Green Hydrogen? — Benefits & Advantages
Energy storage · Zero emissions · Versatile · Industrial decarbonisation · Trade
Why hydrogen infographic: infinite supply, no carbon footprint, easily transported, high energy density, clean power, long-term storage

Why Green Hydrogen? — A Versatile, Zero-Emission Energy Carrier. Six pillars that make green hydrogen special for UPSC: (1) Infinite supply (∞) — made from water, which covers 70% of Earth's surface. (2) No carbon footprint (droplet) — produced from water using renewable electricity — zero CO₂. Can be produced from multiple renewable sources (solar, wind, hydro, nuclear). (3) Easily transported (ship) — in large volumes by pipeline, tanker, or as ammonia/LOHC (liquid organic hydrogen carrier). Unlike electricity, H₂ can be shipped internationally. (4) High energy density (center circle) — more energy per kg than petrol, batteries, or biomass. (5) Clean power at point of use (lightning) — fuel cells convert H₂ to electricity with only water vapour. (6) Long-term storable (piggy bank) — unlike electricity (which must be used immediately), H₂ can be stored for months or years — bridges seasonal gaps in renewable energy. This makes it the ideal companion to solar and wind.

✅ Advantages of Green Hydrogen
1. Zero emissions: Only water vapour as byproduct — no CO₂, NOₓ, SOₓ, PM
2. Long-duration energy storage: Stores excess solar/wind for months — solves renewable intermittency problem that batteries cannot
3. Monetisation of byproduct oxygen: O₂ produced in electrolysis can be sold to hospitals (medical O₂), steel plants, water treatment — revenue stream
4. Flexible energy carrier: Used in fuel cells (electricity), direct combustion, chemical feedstock, blending with gas
5. Energy security: Reduces fossil fuel imports — India can produce H₂ domestically using abundant solar/wind
6. Export opportunity: Countries with cheap renewables (India, Middle East, Australia) can export green H₂ to energy-hungry Japan, South Korea, Europe
7. Industrial decarbonisation: Replaces grey H₂ in fertilisers, steel, refining — hard-to-abate sectors
❌ Disadvantages / Challenges
1. High production cost: Green H₂ costs $4–7/kg vs grey H₂ at $1–2/kg. Renewable electricity + electrolyzers are expensive. "Green premium" makes it uncompetitive currently.
2. High energy consumption: Electrolysis is energy-intensive — only ~70% of electricity input is converted to usable H₂ energy
3. Storage challenges: Must be stored at -253°C (liquid) or 700 bar (compressed gas) — both technically demanding and costly
4. Safety concerns: Highly flammable (4–75% range), colourless, odourless, invisible flames. Risk of hydrogen embrittlement in pipelines
5. Infrastructure gap: No green H₂ pipeline network, refuelling stations, or distribution system at scale
6. Electrolyzer manufacturing scale: Global electrolyzer capacity must grow 50–100× to meet 2030 targets — supply chain constraints
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Applications of Green Hydrogen
Transport · Industry · Grid · Residential · Blending · Trade
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Transportation
FCEVs (Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles): longer range (500–700 km), faster refuelling (3–5 min) than battery EVs. Buses, trucks, trains, ships, aircraft. India: FCEV buses (Tata, Ashok Leyland), hydrogen train (160 kmph, 600 km). CA
Energy Storage & Grid
Stores excess solar/wind during peak production → converts back to electricity via fuel cells when needed. Long-duration storage (months/years) — complements batteries. Crucial for grid stability. High Yield
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Industry (Hard-to-Abate)
Steel: Replace coal in DRI (Direct Reduced Iron). Fertilisers: Green ammonia (H₂ + N₂) replaces grey H₂ in Haber-Bosch. Refining: Hydroprocessing. Chemicals: Methanol, petrochemicals. These sectors cannot easily electrify — H₂ is the key. High Yield
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Residential & Commercial
Fuel cells generate electricity for buildings. Heating and cooking — replacing natural gas. Combined Heat and Power (CHP) systems using H₂ for near-100% efficiency. Data centres, hospitals, schools — clean backup power.
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Hydrogen Blending
Blend green H₂ with natural gas in existing pipelines — up to 20% blend without major infrastructure changes. Reduces carbon footprint of gas grid. HCNG (H₂+CNG) used in Delhi buses. Transition strategy while building pure H₂ infrastructure. CA
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International Trade
Countries with cheap renewables (India, Australia, Chile) produce green H₂ → export to Japan, South Korea, Germany. Can be shipped as liquid H₂, green ammonia, or LOHC. India's NGHM explicitly targets export. Japan signed MoU with India. CA
Green Ammonia — Key Derivative (High Yield for UPSC) Green Ammonia = NH₃ made from Green H₂ + Nitrogen (N₂) using Haber-Bosch process powered by renewable energy. Ammonia is: (1) Easier to transport and store than H₂ (liquid at -33°C vs H₂'s -253°C); (2) Used directly as fertiliser (urea base); (3) Can be re-converted to H₂ at destination. India's NGHM specifically targets green ammonia as an export commodity. Companies: ACME Solar, Greenko, NTPC — all building green ammonia plants for export to Japan/South Korea.
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Green Hydrogen in India — Policy Framework
Green Hydrogen Standard · BEE · SIGHT · ₹19,744 crore · Energy independence 2047
India's Strategic Vision India aims to be energy-independent by 2047 (100th Independence Year — Amrit Kaal) and achieve Net Zero by 2070. Green Hydrogen is central to this vision — it can replace fossil fuels across transport, industry, and power, while creating export income and millions of green jobs.
📋 Green Hydrogen Standard for India CA
India established a Green Hydrogen Standard — defining what qualifies as green hydrogen:

Definition threshold: Well-to-gate emissions of not more than 2 kg CO₂ equivalent per kg of hydrogen. This covers the full production process — from water treatment to electrolysis to compression.

Scope: Covers water treatment, electrolysis, gas purification, drying, and compression of hydrogen. Includes both electrolysis and biomass-based methods.

Nodal Authority: Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) under the Ministry of Power is responsible for accrediting agencies that monitor and certify green hydrogen production projects.

Why it matters: Enables India to certify green hydrogen for export — countries importing green H₂ require certification of its zero-carbon credentials. Essential for trade with Japan, South Korea, EU.
💰 India's Financial Commitment
$2 billion incentive scheme: India sanctioned a ~$2 billion (≈₹16,000+ crore) incentive scheme to boost green hydrogen production and improve affordability.

Current cost in India: $4–5 per kg of green hydrogen (global average $4–7/kg). Target: below $2/kg by 2030 to be competitive.

NGHM outlay: ₹19,744 crore from FY 2023–24 to FY 2029–30.

Total investment target: ₹8 lakh crore+ (public + private) — government money is catalytic seed funding to attract private investment.

Ideal production locations: Thar Desert (Rajasthan) and Ladakh — among cheapest solar power in the world → lowest cost green H₂. Gujarat (Kutch), Andhra Pradesh also targeted.
India InitiativeDetailsUPSC Relevance
National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM)Jan 2023; ₹19,744 crore; MNRE; 5 MMT/year target by 2030Most important — ministry, outlay, target, SIGHT programme
SIGHT ProgrammeStrategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition: (1) Incentivise electrolyzer manufacturing; (2) Incentivise green H₂ productionFull form + two components often asked
Green Hydrogen StandardMax 2 kg CO₂eq per kg H₂; BEE under Ministry of Power is nodal authorityDefinition threshold + BEE role
HCNG ProgrammeHydrogen-CNG blend (18:82); DTC Delhi buses; improves efficiency, reduces NOₓNear-term transition strategy using existing infrastructure
Green Hydrogen valleys/hubsVisakhapatnam, Paradip, Tuticorin ports as export hubsLocation-based question potential
FCEV busesTata Motors + Ashok Leyland FCEVs demonstrated under FAME schemePrivate sector + FAME scheme linkage
Indian Railways H₂ train160 kmph speed, 600 km range; planned for Haryana routesHigh-yield current affairs fact
Green Ammonia exportACME Solar, Greenko, NTPC building green ammonia plants for Japan/S.KoreaGreen H₂ derivative; international trade angle
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National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) — Complete Details
Jan 2023 · ₹19,744 crore · MNRE · 5 MMT · SIGHT · Key targets
National Green Hydrogen Mission outcomes: 5 MMT green hydrogen by 2030, 6 lakh new green jobs, 50 MMT CO2 abatement, 60-100 GW electrolyzer installations, 125 GW renewable energy, 8 lakh crore investment

National Green Hydrogen Mission — Outcomes by 2030 (MNRE). Six quantified targets: ① 5 MMT (Million Metric Tonnes) of green hydrogen production capacity per annum by 2030 — makes India a major producer. ② 6 lakh new green jobs — in manufacturing electrolyzers, H₂ production, logistics, R&D. ③ 50 MMT of CO₂ abatement cumulatively — significant contribution to India's NDC climate pledges and Net Zero 2070 goal. ④ 60–100 GW electrolyzer installations — India targets becoming a global electrolyzer manufacturing and export hub (PLI for electrolyzers). ⑤ 125 GW of dedicated renewable energy for green H₂ production — synergy with India's 500 GW RE target by 2030. ⑥ Over ₹8 lakh crore in investments — public (₹19,744 crore govt) + private. This budget is one of the largest clean energy missions globally, signalling India's commitment to the hydrogen economy.

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Launch & Budget
Launched: January 2023
Outlay: ₹19,744 crore (FY 2023–24 to FY 2029–30)
Ministry: MNRE (Ministry of New and Renewable Energy)
Goal: Make India a global green H₂ hub
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Quantified Targets (2030)
→ 5 MMT green H₂/year
→ 60–100 GW electrolyzers
→ 125 GW renewable energy
→ 6 lakh green jobs
→ 50 MMT CO₂ abatement
→ ₹8 lakh crore+ investment
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SIGHT Programme
Strategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition
Component 1: Incentivise domestic electrolyzer manufacturing
Component 2: Incentivise green H₂ production
Reduces cost → makes green H₂ competitive
📋 PYQ — UPSC Prelims2015
With reference to 'fuel cells' in which hydrogen-rich fuel and oxygen are used to generate electricity, consider the following statements:
1. If pure hydrogen is used as a fuel, the fuel cell emits heat and water as by-products.
2. Fuel cells can be used for powering buildings and not for small devices like laptop computers.
3. Fuel cells produce electricity in the form of Alternating Current (AC).
  • (a) 1 only ✓ Correct
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 1 and 3 only
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3
Explanation: Statement 1 ✓ — CORRECT. When pure hydrogen is used as fuel in a fuel cell, the electrochemical reaction produces only water (H₂O) and heat as byproducts. No CO₂ is emitted. H₂ + O₂ → H₂O + electricity + heat. Statement 2 ✗ — WRONG. Fuel cells can power both large installations (buildings, data centres, multi-MW power plants) AND small portable devices (laptops, military equipment, drones). The statement incorrectly restricts fuel cells to only buildings. Statement 3 ✗ — WRONG. Fuel cells produce Direct Current (DC) — not Alternating Current (AC). An inverter is needed to convert DC to AC for household use. This is the same as solar panels, which also produce DC. Only statement 1 is correct → answer is (a).
📋 PYQ — UPSC Prelims2023
With reference to "Green Hydrogen", which of the following statements is/are correct?
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: All three statements are correct about green hydrogen. Statement 1 ✓ — Green hydrogen CAN be used in internal combustion engines (ICEs). Hydrogen ICEs and HCNG (Hydrogen + CNG blend) are practical applications. Delhi's DTC runs HCNG buses. Pure hydrogen ICE vehicles are also being developed. Statement 2 ✓ — Green hydrogen can be blended with natural gas in existing pipeline networks (up to 20% without significant infrastructure modification). This blending reduces the carbon footprint of natural gas for heat generation in industry, homes, and power plants — a key transition strategy. Statement 3 ✓ — The most well-known application: green hydrogen in fuel cells converts H₂ + O₂ → electricity + water (H₂O). Zero-emission power generation. Used in FCEVs, stationary power, data centres. All statements are correct → answer is (c).
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Challenges in Green Hydrogen Adoption
Cost · Storage · Safety · Infrastructure · Way forward
ChallengeDetailWay Forward
High production costGreen H₂ at $4–7/kg vs grey H₂ at $1–2/kg. Green premium makes it uncompetitive without subsidy. Electrolyzer capital costs are high.Falling solar/wind costs (solar now cheapest electricity). SIGHT programme incentives. Scale manufacturing (electrolyzer PLI). Target: <$2/kg by 2030.
High energy consumptionElectrolysis efficiency ~70%: 1 kg H₂ needs ~55 kWh electricity. Round-trip efficiency (H₂ → electricity) only ~40–50% — significant energy loss vs direct electricity use.Use excess/stranded renewable energy that would otherwise be curtailed. Improving electrolyzer efficiency through R&D. SOEC at high efficiency when waste heat available.
Storage & transportLiquid H₂ must be kept at -253°C — far colder than LNG (-163°C). High-pressure gas storage needs heavy tanks (700 bar). Hydrogen embrittlement of steel pipelines.Ammonia (NH₃) as H₂ carrier — easier to store/transport (liquefies at -33°C). LOHC (Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carriers). Metal hydrides. New H₂-compatible pipeline materials.
Safety concerns4–75% flammability range (vs 5–15% for methane). Invisible, odourless flames. Diffuses rapidly. Embrittlement of metals. High pressure storage risks.H₂ sensors, leak detectors, safety standards. Odorants to be added. Special H₂-compatible materials. International safety codes being harmonised.
Infrastructure gapNo H₂ pipeline network, refuelling stations, port terminals at scale. Massive capex required — "chicken and egg" problem (no infrastructure → no demand; no demand → no investment).Start with captive users (fertiliser plants, refineries) near production sites. Step-by-step: industrial use first, transport later. Port-based export hubs (Vizag, Paradip, Tuticorin).
Electrolyzer manufacturingGlobal electrolyzer production capacity needs to scale 50–100× by 2030. Currently dominated by EU, China. India must build domestic capacity.PLI (Production-Linked Incentive) scheme for electrolyzers. MNRE targets India becoming a global electrolyzer export hub. Attract global manufacturers to set up in India.
Grey H₂ dominance95% of current H₂ is grey. Industries are locked in. Carbon price needed to make green H₂ competitive. Mandating shift is politically sensitive.Minimum green H₂ mandate for refineries, fertiliser plants. Carbon pricing. Gradually raising mandated share of green H₂ in industrial use.
Way Forward — UPSC Mains Points 1. R&D investment: Focus on cheaper electrolyzers, novel catalysts (non-platinum), better storage materials
2. Private sector participation: PPP models; PLI for electrolyzers; green H₂ auctions
3. Green H₂ mandate: Mandate large industrial users (refineries, steel, fertilisers) to shift to green H₂
4. International trade facilitation: MoUs with Japan, South Korea, EU; green H₂ certification (Green Hydrogen Standard)
5. Geography advantage: Thar Desert, Ladakh — build green H₂ facilities where renewable energy is cheapest globally
6. Standardisation: National and international H₂ codes, safety standards, measurement protocols
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Current Affairs — Green Hydrogen (2023–2025)
UPSC 2026 relevance · India milestones · Global developments · SDG linkage
🇮🇳 India — 2023–2025 Developments
NGHM Cabinet approval & launch (Jan 2023): ₹19,744 crore; SIGHT programme. India's most ambitious clean energy mission. High Yield

Green Hydrogen Standard notified (2023): BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) designated nodal authority. Threshold: <2 kg CO₂eq/kg H₂. Enables certification for export. CA

First green ammonia export shipment: Indian companies (ACME Solar, Greenko) shipped test batches of green ammonia to Japan. Signals India's export ambitions. CA

Electrolyzer PLI scheme: Production-Linked Incentive for electrolyzer manufacturing — attract global companies to produce in India; reduce imported electrolyzer costs. CA

Indian Railways H₂ train: Hydrogen-powered train with 160 kmph speed, 600 km range — unveiled for Haryana (Jind-Sonipat) route. CA

Green hydrogen hubs: Vizag, Paradip, Tuticorin designated as export hubs. Dedicated green H₂ industrial clusters being set up with integrated RE capacity.
🌍 Global — 2023–2025 Developments
EU Green Hydrogen Accelerator (REPowerEU): EU targeting 10 MT domestic + 10 MT imported green H₂ by 2030. Major market for India's exports. CA

US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) — H₂ Production Tax Credit: $3/kg tax credit for cleanest H₂ (≤0.45 kg CO₂/kg H₂) in USA. Massive boost to US green H₂. Competitive pressure for India to reduce costs. CA

G20 Hydrogen Principles: India's G20 Presidency 2023 advanced global hydrogen cooperation. G20 Hydrogen Working Group agreed on interoperability of H₂ standards. CA

IEA Global Hydrogen Review 2024: Green H₂ costs fell 30% in 2023 due to cheaper renewables. By 2030, could reach $2–3/kg in India. Target competitive with grey H₂ by 2035–2040. CA

Germany-India H₂ partnership: Germany designated India as a priority green H₂ partner. DEG (German development bank) investing in India green H₂ projects. CA

First green steel using H₂ (SSAB, Sweden): World's first fossil-free steel delivered using green H₂ in DRI process. Tata Steel, JSW Steel studying India rollout.
SDG Linkages — Green Hydrogen (Important for Mains) SDG 7: Affordable and Clean Energy — green H₂ enables clean energy access at scale
SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure — electrolyzer manufacturing, H₂ infrastructure
SDG 13: Climate Action — decarbonisation of hard-to-abate sectors
SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth — 6 lakh green jobs under NGHM
SDG 17: Partnerships for Goals — India-Japan, India-Germany, India-EU H₂ trade partnerships
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Practice MCQs — Green Hydrogen
UPSC-style · 7 questions · Click an option to reveal answer
🌿 Click any option to check your answer
Q1. The Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) has been designated as the nodal authority for India's Green Hydrogen Standard. Under which ministry does BEE function?
  1. (a) Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE)
  2. (b) Ministry of Power
  3. (c) Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas
  4. (d) Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change
The Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) functions under the Ministry of Power. BEE was established in 2002 under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001. It is the nodal agency for implementing energy efficiency and conservation programmes in India. Under India's Green Hydrogen Standard (notified 2023), BEE is responsible for accrediting agencies that monitor and certify green hydrogen production projects. This certification enables India to export green hydrogen with credible zero-carbon proof. Students often confuse this — they assume MNRE (which implements NGHM) also runs BEE, but BEE is under Ministry of Power. MNRE ≠ Ministry of Power (though both are critical for energy transition).
Q2. What does India's Green Hydrogen Standard define as the maximum threshold for green hydrogen?
  1. (a) Not more than 5 kg CO₂ equivalent per kg of hydrogen (well-to-gate)
  2. (b) Not more than 1 kg CO₂ equivalent per kg of hydrogen (only from electrolysis)
  3. (c) Not more than 2 kg CO₂ equivalent per kg of hydrogen (well-to-gate, including electrolysis and biomass-based methods)
  4. (d) Zero emissions only — any CO₂ emission disqualifies it from being green hydrogen
India's Green Hydrogen Standard defines green hydrogen as having a well-to-gate emission of not more than 2 kg CO₂ equivalent per kg of hydrogen. "Well-to-gate" covers the entire production chain from input to the final compressed hydrogen — including water treatment, electrolysis, gas purification, drying, and compression. The standard includes both electrolysis and biomass-based production methods. The nodal authority is BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) under the Ministry of Power. This 2 kg threshold is slightly more permissive than the EU's threshold (≤1 kg CO₂eq/kg H₂ for renewable H₂) — India's standard allows for the current state of technology while setting a clear direction. Option (d) is wrong: while green H₂ aims for near-zero carbon, a small amount of embedded emissions from materials, processes etc. is recognised.
Q3. Which electrolysis method is best suited for pairing with intermittent renewable sources like solar and wind for green hydrogen production, and why?
  1. (a) Alkaline electrolysis — because it is the most mature and lowest-cost technology
  2. (b) Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) electrolysis — because it has fast response times and can handle variable power input efficiently
  3. (c) Solid Oxide Electrolysis (SOEC) — because it operates at high temperatures, improving efficiency with solar heat
  4. (d) Alkaline electrolysis — because it produces the purest form of hydrogen
PEM (Proton Exchange Membrane) electrolysis is best suited for pairing with solar and wind energy because of its fast response time. Solar and wind power are intermittent — they fluctuate rapidly (a cloud can cut solar output in seconds). PEM electrolyzers can adjust their output very quickly to match these fluctuations, making them the ideal partner for variable renewable energy. In contrast, Alkaline electrolyzers have slow response times — they struggle to handle rapid power fluctuations without damage. SOEC operates at 700–1000°C and requires steady high-temperature heat sources (like nuclear or concentrated solar) — not suitable for variable power from standard solar panels. PEM also produces very high purity hydrogen (99.9%+). Its main disadvantage is cost (expensive Nafion membrane and platinum/iridium catalysts).
Q4. India's SIGHT programme under the National Green Hydrogen Mission has two components. Which of the following correctly describes both?
  1. (a) (1) Subsidies for FCEV purchase and (2) Building H₂ refuelling stations
  2. (b) (1) Funding R&D in electrolyzer technology and (2) Training scientists in hydrogen fuel cells
  3. (c) (1) Setting up green hydrogen export ports and (2) Building international H₂ trade agreements
  4. (d) (1) Incentivise domestic manufacturing of electrolyzers and (2) Incentivise green hydrogen production
SIGHT stands for Strategic Interventions for Green Hydrogen Transition. It has two components: Component 1: Incentivise domestic manufacturing of electrolyzers — financial incentives (like PLI) for companies that manufacture electrolyzers in India, reducing dependence on imported equipment and building an export-capable manufacturing sector. Component 2: Incentivise green hydrogen production — financial incentives for companies that produce green hydrogen in India, making it cost-competitive with grey hydrogen (which currently costs $1–2/kg vs green H₂'s $4–7/kg in India). Together, SIGHT targets both sides of the equation: the equipment needed to make green H₂ (electrolyzers) and the green H₂ production itself. This is a classic "demand pull + supply push" policy design.
Q5. Consider the following statements about Solid Oxide Electrolysis (SOEC) for green hydrogen production:
1. It operates at temperatures between 700°C and 1000°C.
2. It can perform co-electrolysis of both water and CO₂ simultaneously.
3. It is the most commercially mature electrolyzer technology currently available.
Which is/are correct?
  1. (a) 1 only
  2. (b) 1 and 2 only
  3. (c) 2 and 3 only
  4. (d) 1, 2 and 3
Statement 1 ✓ — SOEC operates at 700°C to 1000°C — very high temperatures. This is why it's called a "high-temperature" electrolysis method. It uses a solid ceramic material (yttria-stabilised zirconia) as the electrolyte. Statement 2 ✓ — SOEC uniquely enables co-electrolysis — the simultaneous conversion of water (H₂O) AND carbon dioxide (CO₂) into hydrogen (H₂) and carbon monoxide (CO), producing syngas (H₂ + CO) — a valuable chemical feedstock. This is a distinctive feature not available in alkaline or PEM electrolysis. Statement 3 ✗ — WRONG. The most commercially mature technology is Alkaline electrolysis (been commercially deployed for decades). SOEC is still largely at pilot and demonstration stage — it is the least mature of the three technologies, though highly promising for the future (especially when paired with nuclear heat or industrial waste heat). Answer: 1 and 2 only → (b).
Q6. "Green Ammonia" is considered a key derivative for green hydrogen trade. Why is ammonia preferred over liquid hydrogen for international transport?
  1. (a) Ammonia is more energy-dense than liquid hydrogen and does not need any conversion at the destination
  2. (b) Ammonia does not require any cooling during transport, unlike liquid hydrogen which requires cryogenic systems
  3. (c) Ammonia liquefies at -33°C (far easier than liquid H₂ at -253°C), can use existing LNG/LPG infrastructure, and can be converted back to hydrogen at the destination or used directly as a fuel or fertiliser
  4. (d) Ammonia is produced from green hydrogen without any additional processing, making it the most direct form for trade
Green Ammonia (NH₃) is made from green H₂ + nitrogen (N₂) using the Haber-Bosch process powered by renewable energy. It is preferred for H₂ transport because: (1) Ammonia liquefies at just -33°C — far easier than liquid H₂ which requires -253°C (near absolute zero). The difference in cryogenic challenge is enormous. (2) Existing LPG/LNG tankers and port infrastructure can be adapted to handle ammonia — no need to build entirely new infrastructure. (3) At the destination, ammonia can be cracked back into hydrogen (NH₃ → N₂ + 3H₂) using heat — or used directly as a fuel or fertiliser. (4) Ammonia is already a commodity — global ammonia trade ($70 billion) infrastructure exists. Option (a) is partly wrong — ammonia has lower energy density per kg than H₂. Option (b) is wrong — ammonia DOES need cooling (to -33°C), just much less extreme than H₂. India-Japan green ammonia shipments are already underway (ACME Solar, Greenko).
Q7. A fuel cell produces electricity in which form of current, and what is/are the only byproducts when pure hydrogen is used?
  1. (a) Direct Current (DC); only water and heat are produced
  2. (b) Alternating Current (AC); only water vapour is produced
  3. (c) Direct Current (DC); water, heat, and traces of CO₂ are produced
  4. (d) Alternating Current (AC); water, heat, and oxygen are produced
A fuel cell produces Direct Current (DC) — not Alternating Current (AC). DC must be converted to AC by an inverter for most household and grid applications. When pure hydrogen is used as fuel in a hydrogen fuel cell, the only byproducts are water (H₂O) and heat. The electrochemical reaction: H₂ + ½O₂ → H₂O + electricity + heat. No CO₂, no NOₓ, no SOₓ — truly zero emission at point of use. Note that oxygen is NOT a byproduct of a fuel cell — oxygen is an INPUT (reactant) at the cathode, not an output. Oxygen is a byproduct of electrolysis (water splitting), not of the fuel cell. This was tested in UPSC Prelims 2015 — statement that fuel cells produce AC current was false, and statement restricting fuel cells to only buildings (not laptops) was also false.
⚡ Quick Revision — Green Hydrogen
TopicKey Facts for UPSC
DefinitionH₂ produced by electrolysis of water using RENEWABLE electricity (solar/wind/hydel). Zero CO₂. Only byproduct = oxygen. "Green" = production method, not colour of gas.
Electrolysis equation2H₂O → 2H₂ + O₂ (using electricity). At cathode: H₂ produced. At anode: O₂ produced. O₂ can be monetised (hospitals, industry).
Colour CodeGrey (SMR + CO₂ released, 95% of global H₂) | Blue (SMR + CCS underground) | Green (electrolysis + renewables, zero CO₂) | Pink (electrolysis + nuclear) | Turquoise (methane pyrolysis → solid carbon, not CO₂).
Electrolysis MethodsAlkaline (most mature, KOH/NaOH, low cost, slow response) | PEM (fast response, high purity, best for solar/wind, expensive Nafion + Pt catalyst) | SOEC (700–1000°C, highest efficiency, co-electrolysis of H₂O + CO₂, pilot stage)
AdvantagesZero emissions; long-duration energy storage (months/years); O₂ byproduct monetisable; versatile (transport, industry, grid, residential, export); energy security; industrial decarbonisation (steel, fertilisers, refining).
DisadvantagesHigh cost ($4–7/kg vs grey $1–2/kg); high energy consumption; storage difficulty (-253°C liquid or 700 bar gas); safety (flammable 4–75% range, invisible flames); infrastructure gap; electrolyzer scale-up needed.
ApplicationsFCEVs (500–700 km range); Railways (India: 160 kmph H₂ train, 600 km); Stationary power; Industry (steel DRI, green ammonia, refining); Grid storage; HCNG blending; International trade (green ammonia).
NGHMJan 2023; ₹19,744 crore; MNRE; 5 MMT/year by 2030; 60–100 GW electrolyzers; 125 GW RE; 6 lakh jobs; 50 MMT CO₂ abatement; ₹8 lakh crore investment. SIGHT = (1) Electrolyzer manufacturing + (2) H₂ production incentives.
Green H₂ StandardMax 2 kg CO₂eq per kg H₂ (well-to-gate). BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) under Ministry of Power is nodal authority. Covers electrolysis + biomass-based methods.
Green AmmoniaGreen H₂ + N₂ → NH₃ (Haber-Bosch with renewable energy). Easier to transport than liquid H₂ (-33°C vs -253°C). Can use existing LNG infrastructure. Key export commodity. India-Japan shipments underway.
India geographyThar Desert (Rajasthan), Ladakh, Kutch (Gujarat), Andhra Pradesh — cheapest solar → lowest cost green H₂. Export hubs: Vizag, Paradip, Tuticorin ports.
Key PYQ FactsFuel cells produce DC (not AC). When pure H₂ used → only water + heat (no CO₂). Fuel cells can power both buildings AND laptops. H₂ from natural gas via SMR (not electrolysis). Green H₂ can be used in ICE, blended with gas, and in fuel cells — all three correct (2023 PYQ).
🚨 5 UPSC TRAPS — Green Hydrogen:

Trap 1 — "Green hydrogen is a green-coloured gas" → WRONG! Hydrogen is completely colourless, odourless, and tasteless. The colour labels (green, grey, blue etc.) refer ONLY to the production method. "Green" means it was produced using renewable energy. There is no physical difference in the gas itself — grey hydrogen and green hydrogen look, smell, and behave identically. The distinction is entirely in the carbon footprint of production.

Trap 2 — "BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) is under MNRE" → WRONG! BEE is under the Ministry of Power — not MNRE. MNRE implements the NGHM (National Green Hydrogen Mission). BEE was established under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001, under the Ministry of Power. BEE is the nodal authority for India's Green Hydrogen Standard — accrediting agencies that certify green H₂ projects. This Ministry confusion is a frequent UPSC trap.

Trap 3 — "Alkaline electrolysis is best for pairing with intermittent solar/wind" → WRONG! PEM electrolysis is best for pairing with intermittent solar/wind because of its fast response time. Alkaline electrolyzers have SLOW response times — they cannot handle rapid power fluctuations from solar panels (which can dip immediately when a cloud passes). PEM can adjust output rapidly. Alkaline is best for steady, baseload renewable power (like hydroelectric).

Trap 4 — "Solid Oxide Electrolysis (SOEC) is the most mature electrolyzer technology" → WRONG! SOEC is the LEAST mature — still at pilot/demonstration stage. Alkaline electrolysis is the most mature (commercially deployed for decades). PEM is second (rapidly scaling up commercially). SOEC is the most promising for the future (highest efficiency, co-electrolysis) but the least commercially proven today.

Trap 5 — "Oxygen is a byproduct of hydrogen fuel cells" → WRONG! Oxygen is a byproduct of electrolysis (water splitting to make H₂) — NOT of fuel cells. In a fuel cell, oxygen is an INPUT (reactant) — it is fed into the cathode to combine with H⁺ and e⁻ to produce water. The byproducts of a fuel cell using pure H₂ are: water and heat. Oxygen is INPUT, not OUTPUT. The reverse is true for electrolysis: oxygen is an OUTPUT. These are reverse processes — students confuse what goes IN vs what comes OUT for each.

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