Blitz Bureau
India’s green-hydrogen push is moving from ambition to architecture. A national certification scheme is now in place to measure and verify the carbon intensity of home-made hydrogen, and state agency SECI has signed supply agreements for green ammonia — the practical building blocks of a new clean-fuel economy.
Under the six SECI agreements, manufacturers will supply about 670,000 tonnes a year of green ammonia to fertiliser companies, out of some 724,000 tonnes allocated. In parallel, the renewable-energy ministry is pressing for domestic production of critical inputs — electrolyser parts, catalysts and polysilicon — to cut import reliance as capacity scales.
Standards and offtake come first: certification and firm buyers are what turn a hydrogen target into bankable projects.
At a Glance
- Green ammonia: ~670,000 tpa contracted via SECI (of ~724,000 tpa)
- Buyers: Fertiliser companies
- Focus: Domestic electrolyser and component manufacturing
The honest challenge is scale: production today is small against the mission’s headline target, and closing that gap will take steady demand, competitive electrolyser costs and reliable clean power. Certification and guaranteed offtake tackle exactly those barriers by giving producers a market and a measurable standard.
The constructive path is to widen anchor demand — fertiliser, refining, steel and shipping — while building component manufacturing at home, so each new plant lowers costs for the next and India climbs the clean-fuel value chain.












