Coal Gasification in India

📰 UPSC Current Affairs — GS Paper III · Economy & Energy

Coal Gasification in India — Meaning, Process, Scheme, UPSC Notes (2025–26)

A comprehensive UPSC current affairs guide on Coal Gasification — covering the definition, working process, applications of syngas, India’s strategic importance, and the Union Cabinet’s landmark ₹37,500 crore Coal Gasification Scheme, with key facts, benefits, and exam-oriented analysis.

✍️ By Legacy IAS Faculty 📅 Updated: May 2026 ⏱️ ~10 min read 🎯 GS Paper III + Essay
🔴  In News:  Union Cabinet approves ₹37,500 crore Coal Gasification Scheme — one of India’s most significant energy policy decisions in recent years
⚡ Quick Answer — What is Coal Gasification?

Coal gasification is a thermo-chemical process that converts coal or lignite into syngas (synthesis gas) — a mixture of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂) — under high temperature and pressure in the presence of oxygen and steam. Unlike direct combustion, it is a cleaner method of using coal. Syngas can produce power, fertilisers (urea, ammonia), chemicals (methanol, DME), liquid fuels, and hydrogen. India aims to gasify 100 million tonnes of coal by 2030. The Union Cabinet recently approved a ₹37,500 crore scheme to gasify approximately 75 million tonnes of coal and lignite, targeting investments of ₹2.5–3 lakh crore and 50,000 jobs.

What is Coal Gasification?

Coal gasification is a thermo-chemical process that converts coal or lignite into synthesis gas (syngas) — primarily a mixture of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂). It is fundamentally different from burning coal directly (combustion), in that it converts coal into a gaseous form that can be used as a cleaner, more versatile industrial feedstock.

The key distinction from direct combustion is controlled conversion: rather than simply releasing energy as heat, gasification transforms the carbon-rich material into usable gas that can be further processed into chemicals, fuels, and electricity — with significantly lower direct emissions than coal burning.

401 Bn T
India’s coal reserves — one of world’s largest
47 Bn T
India’s lignite reserves
55%+
Coal’s share in India’s energy mix
100 MT
Coal gasification target by 2030
₹37,500 Cr
New Cabinet-approved scheme outlay
50,000
Direct & indirect jobs expected

How Does Coal Gasification Work?

The coal gasification process involves a series of chemical reactions under specific conditions. Coal or lignite is fed into a gasifier where it reacts with controlled quantities of oxygen (or air) and steam under high temperature (700–1,600°C) and elevated pressure. This breaks down the carbon-rich coal into its constituent gaseous elements.

Step-by-Step Process

⛏️
Coal / Lignite Input
Raw material fed into gasifier
🔥
Gasification Reactor
High temp & pressure + O₂ + Steam
💨
Raw Syngas
CO + H₂ + CO₂ + impurities
🧹
Gas Cleaning
Remove sulphur, particulates, CO₂
Clean Syngas
Ready for downstream products

Key Chemical Reactions in Gasification

ReactionEquationSignificance
Partial OxidationC + ½O₂ → COMain reaction generating carbon monoxide
Water Gas ReactionC + H₂O → CO + H₂Steam reacts with carbon to produce syngas components
Water Gas ShiftCO + H₂O → CO₂ + H₂Increases hydrogen yield; used to adjust syngas composition
MethanationCO + 3H₂ → CH₄ + H₂OConverts syngas to synthetic natural gas (SNG)
📌
Key distinction for UPSC: Coal Gasification ≠ Coal Combustion. Combustion burns coal directly to produce heat/electricity with high emissions. Gasification converts coal into syngas — a versatile feedstock with significantly fewer direct emissions — which can then be used for power, chemicals, or fuels. This makes gasification a cleaner way to use coal, though still carbon-intensive compared to renewables.

Applications of Syngas — What Can It Produce?

Syngas (CO + H₂) is one of the most versatile industrial feedstocks in the world. It can be converted into a wide range of end products through downstream chemical processes, making it a strategic raw material for multiple industries.

Product CategorySpecific ProductsStrategic Relevance to India
Power & EnergyElectricity, Synthetic Natural Gas (SNG)Reduces LNG imports; dispatchable baseload power
FertilisersUrea, Ammonia, Ammonium NitrateIndia imports ~₹50,000 Cr+ of fertilisers annually — gasification can substitute
ChemicalsMethanol, Dimethyl Ether (DME)Methanol as fuel additive; DME as LPG substitute
Liquid FuelsSynthetic petrol, diesel (via Fischer-Tropsch)Reduces crude oil import dependence
HydrogenIndustrial hydrogen (Blue Hydrogen)Foundation for India’s hydrogen economy; feedstock for refineries and steel
⚠️
UPSC Note — Blue Hydrogen Connection: When coal gasification is combined with Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), the hydrogen produced is classified as Blue Hydrogen — a lower-emission alternative to hydrogen produced from fossil fuels without CCS (Grey Hydrogen). This connects coal gasification to India’s National Green Hydrogen Mission and broader climate policy debates.

Why Coal Gasification is Strategically Important for India

India’s decision to invest heavily in coal gasification is not arbitrary — it is grounded in a convergence of energy security concerns, import substitution imperatives, and industrial policy goals.

  • 🔋 Energy Security: India holds approximately 401 billion tonnes of coal and 47 billion tonnes of lignite — among the world’s largest. Coal contributes more than 55% of India’s energy mix. Gasifying this abundant domestic resource reduces dependence on imported LNG, coking coal, and fossil fuel-based chemicals.
  • 💰 Import Substitution: India’s import bill for LNG, urea, ammonium nitrate, ammonia, coking coal, methanol, and DME stood at approximately ₹2.77 lakh crore in FY2025. Coal gasification can domestically produce all of these, saving foreign exchange and reducing current account pressure.
  • 🌍 Geopolitical Resilience: The ongoing West Asia conflict has demonstrated the vulnerability of global supply chains for LNG and petrochemicals. Domestic coal gasification insulates India from price volatility and supply disruptions caused by geopolitical events.
  • 🌱 Cleaner Coal Utilisation: Gasification produces significantly fewer particulate emissions and sulphur dioxide compared to direct coal combustion. It also enables carbon capture more efficiently, offering a potential pathway to lower-emissions use of India’s vast coal reserves during the energy transition.
  • 🏭 Industrial Diversification: Coal-bearing regions (Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh) currently have limited economic activity beyond coal extraction. Gasification-based industries can transform these regions into chemical and energy production hubs.
  • 🇮🇳 Atmanirbhar Bharat Alignment: Coal gasification directly supports the Atmanirbhar Bharat initiative by substituting imports with domestically produced syngas derivatives, strengthening industrial self-reliance in chemicals, fertilisers, and fuels.

Coal Gasification Scheme 2025 — Cabinet Approval & Key Features

The Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, approved the “Scheme for Promotion of New Surface Coal/Lignite Gasification Projects for Production of Syngas and Downstream Products” — one of India’s most significant energy and industrial policy decisions in recent years.

💰
Total Financial Outlay
₹37,500 Crore
Government incentive to catalyse private investment across 25 projects
⛏️
Gasification Target
~75 Million Tonnes
Coal and lignite gasification across all supported projects
🏗️
Expected Private Investment
₹2.5–3 Lakh Crore
Total investment mobilisation across the value chain
👥
Employment Generation
~50,000 Jobs
Direct and indirect employment across 25 projects in coal-bearing regions
💸
Financial Incentive Structure
Up to 20% of plant & machinery cost, disbursed in 4 equal instalments linked to project milestones
📋
Project Selection
Transparent and competitive bidding process benchmarking project cost, coal input, and syngas output
📜
Coal Linkage Reform
Coal linkage tenure extended to 30 years under “Production of Syngas leading to Coal Gasification” sub-sector in NRS linkage auction framework
💵
Revenue Generation
Expected to generate ₹6,300 crore annually from 75 million tonnes of gasification (plus downstream GST and levies)

Financial Incentives & Caps — Scheme Architecture

To ensure equitable distribution of incentives and prevent concentration of benefits, the scheme has established clear caps at three levels:

₹5,000 Cr
Maximum incentive per single project
₹9,000 Cr
Maximum per single product category (excl. SNG and Urea)
₹12,000 Cr
Maximum per single entity or group across all projects
Additionality Principle: The incentives under this scheme are additional to — and do not restrict access to — other Central or State Government schemes, including those under the commercial coal mining regime. This stacking principle is designed to maximise the attractiveness of investment in coal gasification projects.

30-Year Coal Linkage — Structural Reform

A critical accompanying structural reform is the extension of coal linkage tenure to 30 years under the “Production of Syngas leading to Coal Gasification” sub-sector in the Non-Regulated Sector (NRS) linkage auction framework. This addresses one of the most significant investment barriers in coal-based industries — long-term feedstock security. Without a guaranteed coal supply over a 30-year horizon, private investors cannot justify the capital expenditure required for gasification plants. This reform provides the policy certainty necessary to unlock large-scale private investment.


Strategic & Economic Benefits of the Coal Gasification Scheme

Import Substitution — The Economic Case

India’s import dependency in key chemical and fuel categories represents a major structural vulnerability. The scheme directly targets substitution of the following imports:

Import CategoryCurrent Import ScenarioHow Coal Gasification Helps
LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas)India is one of the world’s largest LNG importers; exposed to global price spikesSynthetic Natural Gas (SNG) from coal gasification substitutes LNG domestically
Urea (Fertiliser)India imports significant urea volumes; fully subsidised by governmentAmmonia/urea from syngas reduces import bill and fertiliser subsidy burden
AmmoniaRaw material for multiple industries; import-dependentSyngas directly produces ammonia for fertilisers and industrial use
MethanolIndia has a Methanol Economy Programme but limited domestic supplyMethanol produced from syngas supports fuel blending and chemical industries
Coking CoalIndia imports ~50 MT of coking coal annually for the steel sectorSyngas-based steelmaking (DRI process) can reduce coking coal dependence
Dimethyl Ether (DME)Emerging LPG substitute; limited domestic supplyDME from syngas as a cooking fuel for rural and industrial use

India’s combined import bill for LNG, urea, ammonium nitrate, ammonia, coking coal, methanol, and DME stood at approximately ₹2.77 lakh crore in FY2025. The scheme targets significant reduction in this import exposure over a 10–15 year horizon.

🌍
Geopolitical Context: The ongoing West Asia conflict has repeatedly disrupted global LNG and petrochemical supply chains, causing price spikes and supply shortages. For India — heavily dependent on these imports — the vulnerability is significant. Coal gasification using domestic reserves directly addresses this geopolitical supply chain risk, a theme that connects to GS Paper II (International Relations) and GS Paper III (Energy Security).

UPSC Exam Angle — Analysis, Connections & Mains Strategy

GS Paper III Connections

  • Energy Security: India’s dependence on coal for 55%+ of its energy mix; gasification as a cleaner transition pathway while maintaining energy security — a nuanced position between coal dependence and decarbonisation.
  • 🌱Environment: Gasification vs combustion — comparative emissions; connection to India’s NDC targets and COP commitments; Blue Hydrogen if CCS is added; the tension between coal utilisation and climate goals.
  • 🏭Infrastructure & Industry: Syngas as a feedstock for India’s chemical and fertiliser industries; methanol economy; Make in India manufacturing ecosystem for chemicals.
  • 💰Economy: Import substitution saving ₹2.77 lakh crore in imports; current account deficit implications; investment mobilisation of ₹2.5–3 lakh crore; revenue generation of ₹6,300 crore annually.

GS Paper II Connections

  • 🌍International Relations: West Asia geopolitical disruptions affecting India’s LNG supply; energy diplomacy; India’s strategic autonomy in energy.
  • 🏛️Governance: Competitive bidding framework for project selection; 30-year coal linkage reform as a policy certainty measure; additionality principle ensuring scheme benefits stack with other incentives.

Previous Year Question Pattern

YearQuestion ThemeConnection to Coal Gasification
2023India’s energy transition challengesGasification as bridge technology between coal dependence and renewables
2022Import substitution and Atmanirbhar BharatSyngas replacing LNG, urea, methanol imports
2021Energy security and geopolitical vulnerabilitiesCoal gasification reducing exposure to global supply chain disruptions
2020Chemical industry and Make in IndiaSyngas as feedstock for domestic chemical industry development
✍️
Legacy IAS Mains Answer Framework for Coal Gasification: (1) Define coal gasification and distinguish from combustion; (2) Explain India’s strategic rationale — vast reserves, import dependence, geopolitical vulnerability; (3) Present the scheme’s key features — outlay, target, incentives, structural reforms; (4) Analyse multi-dimensional benefits — import substitution, energy security, employment, revenue; (5) Acknowledge challenges — carbon emissions, high capital cost, technology dependence, water intensity; (6) Way forward — CCS integration, renewable energy synergies, regional economic development. This structure works for both 10-mark and 15-mark questions.

Challenges & Critical Perspective

  • 🌫️Carbon Emissions: Coal gasification, while cleaner than combustion, is still a fossil fuel process. Without Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), it generates significant CO₂ — creating tension with India’s climate commitments and NDC targets.
  • 💧Water Intensity: Gasification is a water-intensive process, requiring large volumes of steam. In water-stressed coal-bearing regions like Vidarbha and Jharkhand, this could pose significant resource conflicts.
  • 💸High Capital Cost: Coal gasification plants require substantial upfront investment. The ₹2.5–3 lakh crore investment target is ambitious and dependent on sustained government incentives and policy stability.
  • 🔧Technology Dependence: India currently lacks mature indigenous gasification technology. Early projects may be dependent on imported technology and equipment, limiting the immediate Atmanirbhar Bharat benefit.
  • 📉Economic Viability: The economics of coal gasification depend critically on the price of alternative imports (LNG, urea). If global prices fall significantly, the economic case for domestically gasified syngas weakens.

⭐ Key Takeaways — Coal Gasification for UPSC 2025–26
  • Coal gasification converts coal/lignite into syngas (CO + H₂) through a thermo-chemical process using oxygen and steam — it is NOT combustion.
  • Syngas is a versatile feedstock — produces power, SNG, urea, ammonia, methanol, DME, liquid fuels, and hydrogen.
  • India has 401 billion tonnes of coal + 47 billion tonnes of lignite — gasification leverages this abundance strategically.
  • India’s import bill for substitutable products (LNG, urea, ammonia, methanol, coking coal, DME) was ₹2.77 lakh crore in FY2025.
  • India’s target: gasify 100 million tonnes of coal by 2030; the new scheme covers 75 million tonnes.
  • Cabinet-approved scheme outlay: ₹37,500 crore; expected private investment: ₹2.5–3 lakh crore.
  • Financial incentive: up to 20% of plant & machinery cost, disbursed in 4 instalments linked to milestones.
  • Incentive caps: ₹5,000 Cr per project; ₹9,000 Cr per product category; ₹12,000 Cr per entity/group.
  • Key structural reform: 30-year coal linkage tenure for gasification projects — provides long-term investment certainty.
  • Expected outcomes: 50,000 jobs, ₹6,300 Cr annual revenue, and reduced geopolitical supply chain vulnerability.

Frequently Asked Questions — Coal Gasification UPSC

What is coal gasification?
Coal gasification is a thermo-chemical process that converts coal or lignite into synthesis gas (syngas) — a mixture primarily composed of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂) — by reacting it with oxygen and steam under high temperature and pressure. Unlike direct combustion (which burns coal to produce heat), gasification converts coal into a versatile gaseous feedstock that can be used to produce power, fertilisers, chemicals, liquid fuels, and hydrogen. It is considered a cleaner method of utilising coal compared to direct combustion.
What is syngas and what can it be used for?
Syngas (synthesis gas) is a mixture of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂) produced from coal gasification. It is an extremely versatile industrial feedstock that can be used to produce: (1) Power and Synthetic Natural Gas (SNG); (2) Fertilisers — urea, ammonia, ammonium nitrate; (3) Chemicals — methanol, dimethyl ether (DME); (4) Liquid fuels through Fischer-Tropsch synthesis; and (5) Hydrogen — for industrial use and as the foundation for Blue Hydrogen (when combined with Carbon Capture and Storage). This versatility is a key reason for India’s strategic interest in coal gasification.
What is India’s coal gasification target by 2030?
India has set a target to gasify 100 million tonnes of coal by 2030. The recently approved Cabinet scheme — “Scheme for Promotion of New Surface Coal/Lignite Gasification Projects” — directly contributes to this target by supporting gasification of approximately 75 million tonnes of coal and lignite across 25 projects, with a government outlay of ₹37,500 crore to catalyse private investment of ₹2.5–3 lakh crore.
What are the key features of India’s new Coal Gasification Scheme 2025?
The Union Cabinet-approved Coal Gasification Scheme 2025 has the following key features: Total outlay of ₹37,500 crore; target of 75 million tonnes of coal/lignite gasification; financial incentive of up to 20% of plant and machinery costs (disbursed in 4 milestone-linked instalments); project selection through competitive bidding; incentive caps of ₹5,000 crore per project, ₹9,000 crore per product category, and ₹12,000 crore per entity/group; a structural reform extending coal linkage tenure to 30 years; expected private investment of ₹2.5–3 lakh crore; 50,000 jobs; and ₹6,300 crore in annual coal revenue.
How is coal gasification different from coal combustion?
Coal combustion burns coal directly in the presence of air/oxygen to produce heat and electricity, generating large amounts of CO₂, sulphur dioxide (SO₂), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and particulate matter. Coal gasification, by contrast, converts coal into syngas through a controlled chemical reaction with limited oxygen and steam — it does not burn the coal directly. Gasification produces fewer direct particulate emissions and sulphur dioxide; the syngas can be cleaned before use; and if Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) is added, it can produce Blue Hydrogen with significantly reduced net CO₂ emissions. Gasification also produces a versatile feedstock (syngas) rather than just heat.
Why is coal gasification important for India’s energy security?
Coal gasification is important for India’s energy security for several reasons: India has massive domestic coal reserves (401 billion tonnes of coal + 47 billion tonnes of lignite) but imports ₹2.77 lakh crore worth of LNG, urea, ammonia, methanol, coking coal, and DME annually. Coal gasification can substitute these imports with domestically produced syngas derivatives, reducing foreign exchange outflow and insulating India from global price volatility. The ongoing West Asia conflict has highlighted how geopolitical events disrupt India’s energy supply chains. With domestic coal, India controls the resource, the supply chain, and the pricing — a fundamental shift in energy security.
What are the challenges of coal gasification in India?
The key challenges of coal gasification in India are: (1) Carbon emissions — gasification is still a fossil fuel process; without Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), it generates significant CO₂, creating tension with India’s climate commitments; (2) Water intensity — gasification requires large volumes of water/steam, problematic in water-stressed coal-bearing regions; (3) High capital cost — large upfront investment requirements with long gestation periods; (4) Technology dependence — India lacks mature indigenous gasification technology and may need to import equipment; (5) Economic viability — dependent on import price of alternatives; cheaper global LNG or urea prices could undermine the economic case for domestic gasification.
How is coal gasification connected to the Methanol Economy and Blue Hydrogen?
Coal gasification connects to two of India’s major industrial policy initiatives: (1) Methanol Economy — India has a national programme to blend methanol in petrol and use it as a cooking fuel substitute. Methanol is produced from syngas, making coal gasification a key feedstock source for India’s methanol ambitions. (2) Blue Hydrogen — when the hydrogen component of syngas is separated and the CO₂ from the process is captured using Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), the result is “Blue Hydrogen” — a lower-emission form of hydrogen. This connects coal gasification to India’s National Green Hydrogen Mission and the broader global hydrogen economy debate.

Master Current Affairs for UPSC with Legacy IAS

Get structured GS Paper III preparation, expert current affairs analysis, and personalised mentorship — designed for serious UPSC aspirants.

Book a Free Consultation View All Courses

Book a Free Demo Class

May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.