American technology firm, Honeywell, has said it has ready-to-use catalyst-coated membranes for the production of Green Hydrogen in India. The company is presently in talks with an undisclosed list of manufacturers in India, to supply this chemistry technology for the electrolysis of green hydrogen.
Honeywell’s interest in being a supplier is significant in light of India’s Green Hydrogen Mission. In August, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy set an emission limit of 2kg of carbon dioxide for every kilogram of hydrogen produced, for the latter to be classified as ‘green’. This makes India one of the first countries to define what constitutes Green Hydrogen.
More recently, Union Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari warned of a 10 percent additional goods and services tax (GST) on diesel vehicles as a means of pushing consumers to embrace cleaner fuels and leave petrol and diesel vehicles behind. Gadkari later took to social media platform X, to clarify that there was no such formal proposal present.
Part of this plan to embrace clean fuels is the National Green Hydrogen Mission, which aims to produce 5 million metric tonnes (MMT) of green hydrogen with a renewable energy capacity addition of 125 GW across the country.
To achieve these numbers, the Indian government envisions investments to the tune of Rs 8 lakh crore and the creation of 600,000 jobs. It expects the cumulative reduction in fossil fuel imports to lie in the range of Rs 1 lakh crore.
At present, the US technology major is working with Indian industrial giants like Reliance Industries, the Tata Group and Adani Group to help them adopt sustainable technology via clean fuels and carbon capture. The company has a presence in India at plants in Pune, and R&D centres in Bengaluru and Madurai.
Honeywell is focusing its sustainability technology development in the field of avionics, building technology, performance materials and safety and productivity solutions.
Tags: Companies, Green Hydrogen, Honeywell, Indian
Recent Posts
Zero-carbon ammonia for shipping faces challenges
Wärtsilä signs lifecycle agreement for 7 Capital Gas LNG carriers
ABS releases report on nuclear LNG carrier design
NTPC develops indigenous catalyst for methanol production
Huangpu Wenchong receives AIP from CCS for ships using methanol and ammonia
Climate change will cause India’s GDP to decline by 24.7% by 2070: ADB
Masdar and EMSTEEL complete project using green hydrogen to produce steel
DNV Grants HHI AiP for ammonia DF large container vessel