Content Unlocking India’s Green Hydrogen Production Potential From 2 to 597 Unlocking India’s Green Hydrogen Production Potential Why in News ? India commissioned its first port-based Green Hydrogen Pilot Project at V.O. Chidambaranar Port, Tamil Nadu. Three ports — Deendayal, Paradip, and V.O. Chidambaranar — declared Green Hydrogen Hubs (MNRE, Oct 2025). Targets: 5 MMT Green Hydrogen production by 2030 ₹8 lakh crore investment 125 GW renewable energy addition 6 lakh jobs ₹1 lakh crore import reduction 50 MMT CO₂ emissions avoided annually Relevance : GS 3 – Environment, Energy, Infrastructure Renewable energy transition & Net Zero 2070 goals. National Green Hydrogen Mission (₹19,744 crore) – decarbonising industry, transport, shipping. Port-based hydrogen hubs (Deendayal, Paradip, Tuticorin). R&D under SHIP with BARC, ISRO, IITs for indigenous tech. ₹8 lakh crore investment, 6 lakh jobs, 50 MMT CO₂ reduction. Strategic exports to Japan, Korea, EU – energy security & Atmanirbharta. Understanding Green Hydrogen Type Source Energy Emissions Example Grey Hydrogen Natural gas (steam methane reforming) High CO₂ Current majority of hydrogen production Blue Hydrogen Fossil fuels + Carbon Capture & Storage (CCS) Moderate Transitional fuel Green Hydrogen Renewable energy (solar/wind) via electrolysis of water ≤2 kg CO₂ eq per kg H₂ Cleanest form Definition (India Standard 2023): Hydrogen qualifies as green if lifecycle emissions ≤ 2 kg CO₂-e/kg H₂. National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) – Overview Launched: January 2023 Outlay: ₹19,744 crore (FY 2023–30) Mission Objectives Make India a global hub for Green Hydrogen production, use, and export. Achieve energy self-reliance (Atmanirbharta) by reducing fossil imports. Enable industrial decarbonisation in hard-to-abate sectors: steel, fertilizer, refining. Create new green jobs and boost domestic manufacturing. Mission Architecture Component Outlay (₹ crore) Objective SIGHT Programme 17,490 Incentives for green hydrogen and electrolyser manufacturing Pilot Projects 1,466 Demonstration in industry, mobility, shipping R&D / Innovation (SHIP) 400 Collaborative research across value chain Other Components 388 Skill, policy, infrastructure, certification Sectoral Implementation (A) Industrial Sector Fertilizers: 7.24 LMT green ammonia procurement auctioned (₹55.75/kg). Steel: 5 pilot projects with PSUs & private firms to test hydrogen-based iron reduction. Refineries: Gradual substitution of grey hydrogen with green hydrogen. (B) Mobility & Transport Road Transport: 37 hydrogen-powered vehicles (15 fuel-cell, 22 ICE) across 10 routes; ₹208 crore support. High-Altitude Mobility: NTPC’s Leh hydrogen project (3,650 m altitude) — world’s highest; reduces 350 MT CO₂/year. Shipping: Tuticorin Pilot (2025): 10 Nm³/hr H₂ plant + EV charging from hydrogen. Green Methanol Bunkering: ₹42 crore project to create Coastal Green Shipping Corridor (Kandla–Tuticorin). Policy and Regulatory Framework Framework Purpose Nodal Agency Green Hydrogen Certification Scheme (GHCI), 2025 Certifies hydrogen as “green” based on lifecycle GHG emissions Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) Open Access & ISTS Waiver Ensures low-cost renewable energy for electrolysis MNRE Skill Development Programme 5,600+ trainees certified in hydrogen tech NSDC + MNRE Hydrogen Hubs Deendayal, Paradip, Tuticorin MNRE / Port Authorities Strategic Hydrogen Innovation Partnership (SHIP) Public–Private R&D platform to co-develop advanced hydrogen technologies. Collaboration with BARC, ISRO, CSIR, IITs, IISc. ₹400 crore R&D Fund + ₹100 crore Start-up Grant Call (2025) (up to ₹5 crore/project). 30+ joint projects under EU–India TTC for hydrogen from waste. Enabling Frameworks Infrastructure: Storage, pipelines, refueling network, port-based hubs. Finance: Viability gap funding, PLI-style incentives under SIGHT. Skill Ecosystem: Workforce development, IIT-based training centres. Policy De-risking: Clear open access, faster approvals, and land allocation for renewable energy zones. Global Partnerships Partner Collaboration Area EU–India TTC R&D, waste-to-hydrogen tech UK Standardization & safety codes Germany (H2Global Stiftung) Export mechanisms, joint tendering Singapore (Sembcorp) Port-based H₂ & NH₃ export hubs World Hydrogen Summit, Rotterdam (2024) India’s first official participation, “India Pavilion” launched Expected Outcomes by 2030 Parameter Target Annual Green H₂ Production 5 MMT Renewable Capacity 125 GW Jobs 6 lakh Emission Reduction 50 MMT CO₂ eq/year Fossil Import Savings ₹1 lakh crore Investment ₹8 lakh crore Challenges High Production Cost: $3–6/kg (target <$1/kg by 2030). Electrolyser Dependency: 80% currently imported (mainly China & EU). Water Use: 9 litres per kg H₂ – stress in arid zones. Infrastructure Gap: Storage, pipelines, safety standards still evolving. Technology Maturity: Need for R&D in solid oxide, PEM, and AEM electrolysers. Way Forward Domestic Manufacturing Push: Scale up electrolyser production via SIGHT. Hybrid RE Parks: Dedicated solar-wind clusters for H₂ generation. Green Hydrogen Corridors: Industrial and mobility linkages (refineries–fertilizer–ports). Export Strategy: Leverage India’s geographic proximity to Japan, Korea, and EU. R&D Acceleration: Advance hydrogen carriers (ammonia, methanol), storage materials, and safety systems. Policy Synchronisation: MNRE–MoP–MoPNG coordination under single-window mechanism. Key Facts Nodal Ministry: Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) Implementing Agency: Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) Certification Body: Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) Ports Declared Hydrogen Hubs: Deendayal, Paradip, V.O. Chidambaranar First Port-Based Hydrogen Pilot: Tuticorin, 2025 World’s Highest H₂ Project: NTPC Leh (3,650 m) Emission Limit for ‘Green’ Tag: ≤2 kg CO₂-e/kg H₂ Conclusion India’s Green Hydrogen Mission exemplifies “Clean Growth for Self-Reliance.” It intertwines climate ambition (Net Zero 2070) with industrial competitiveness and strategic energy security. By integrating policy, technology, investment, and global partnerships, India aims to become the third-largest green hydrogen hub globally, driving the global shift toward decarbonised economies. From 2 to 597 Why in News ? Record achievement: 597 students from Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRS) cleared India’s toughest competitive exams — JEE Main, JEE Advanced, and NEET (2024–25). Massive rise from just 2 students in 2022–23 → 597 in 2024–25, showing transformative success of the EMRS initiative under the Ministry of Tribal Affairs. 101 out of 230 EMRSs offering Class 12 produced successful candidates. Reflects impact of focused educational interventions for Scheduled Tribe (ST) youth. Relevance : GS 2 – Governance, Education, Social Justice EMRS expansion (722 sanctioned, 485 functional) under Ministry of Tribal Affairs. Operationalisation of Articles 46 & 275(1) – education for ST welfare. NESTS-led coaching & digital learning → 597 students cleared JEE/NEET (2025). Promotes gender empowerment, social mobility, and inclusive growth. Aligns with NEP 2020 and shifts from welfare to capability-based education. What are EMRS Schools? Feature Description Implementing Ministry Ministry of Tribal Affairs Managing Body National Education Society for Tribal Students (NESTS) Scheme Launch 1997–98 (under Article 275(1) of the Constitution) Purpose To provide quality residential education (Class VI–XII) to ST students, preparing them for higher education and competitive exams Education Board CBSE-affiliated Facilities Free education, boarding, nutrition, healthcare, sports, and digital classrooms Current Status (2025) 722 sanctioned, 485 functional; 1.38 lakh students enrolled Performance Surge (2022–25) Year IIT–JEE Qualified NEET Qualified 2022–23 2 – 2023–24 16 6 2024–25 219 344 → Growth: ~30× in 3 years, driven by structured coaching and digital learning interventions. State-wise Achievements (2024–25) Top States in JEE (Main + Advanced): Telangana (70), Madhya Pradesh (61), Gujarat (40) Top States in NEET: Gujarat (173), Madhya Pradesh (115), Chhattisgarh (18) Representation from 12 States shows expansion beyond traditional tribal belts. Human Stories of Transformation Jatin Negi (Himachal Pradesh): From Sangla village, cleared JEE Advanced (AIR 421) → B.Tech, IIT Jodhpur. Overcame power cuts, isolation, and personal loss — testament to resilience + institutional mentorship. Padvi Urjasviben (Gujarat): Cleared NEET (AIR 11,926) → MBBS, GMERS Medical College, Junagadh. Broke gender stereotypes in tribal Gujarat village; symbol of educational empowerment of tribal girls. Constitutional & Legal Foundations Provision Relevance Article 46 (DPSP) State to promote educational and economic interests of SCs/STs; protect from injustice/exploitation Articles 15(4) & 15(5) Permit special provisions for advancement of socially & educationally backward classes and STs/SCs in education Article 275(1) Grants-in-aid from Consolidated Fund for ST welfare and educational infrastructure (basis for EMRS funding) Central Educational Institutions (Reservation in Admission) Act, 2006 Mandates 7.5% reservation for STs, 15% for SCs, 27% for OBCs in centrally funded higher education institutions Significance: EMRS is a direct operationalization of Article 46 and 275(1) — combining affirmative action with institutional capacity building. Administrative Mechanism National Education Society for Tribal Students (NESTS) Autonomous body under Ministry of Tribal Affairs. Implements EMRS in coordination with State EMRS Societies. Ensures standardized pedagogy, teacher training, digital infrastructure, and exam readiness. Targeted Academic Support Initiatives (Under NESTS) Initiative Focus Area Key Highlights Centres of Excellence JEE/NEET Coaching 3 Centres (Bhopal, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh); MoU with NGOs for offline coaching Digital Tutoring Competitive Exam Prep Partnerships with Ex-Navodayan Foundation & PACE IIT & Medical iHUB DivyaSampark (IIT Roorkee) STEM Exposure Hands-on science & tech experience centres DTH Channel (CIET–NCERT) Remote Learning Broadcasts content for Classes 9–12 Smart Classrooms (ERNET–MeitY) Digital Learning Infrastructure Wi-Fi enabled, multimedia learning Skill Labs (PMKVY 4.0) Vocational Training SANKALP Project + CBSE Skill Labs Amazon Future Engineers Coding & CS Education 178 teachers trained from 187 EMRSs Atal Tinkering Labs Innovation Ecosystem 26 labs with AI kits, 3D printers, robotics TALASH Programme Career Counseling Tribal Aptitude, Life Skill, and Self-Esteem Hub for guidance Governance & Financials Metric Data (2025) Functional Schools 485 Total Sanctioned 722 Funds Released (2024–25) ₹6,841.8 crore Students Enrolled 1,38,336 Hostel Infrastructure 100% free residential schooling Education Pattern CBSE-based; integration of vocational + digital learning Policy Impact Bridging Educational Divide: Rural–urban and social gaps narrowed in access to elite institutions (IITs, AIIMS, etc.). Women’s Empowerment: Increasing participation of tribal girls in STEM and medicine. Social Mobility: First-generation learners entering India’s top institutions. Localized Development: Schools located in or near tribal belts — reducing dropout and migration. Nation-building Impact: From welfare model to capability model — aligning with “Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas”. Challenges Faculty Shortage: Remote postings lead to uneven teacher distribution. Regional Disparities: Some NE states lag in EMRS functioning. Language Barriers: Medium of instruction transition (tribal → English/CBSE) remains difficult. Limited Awareness: Families often unaware of opportunities beyond Class 10–12. Infrastructure Gaps: Connectivity and digital access in high-altitude or forest regions. Way Forward Teacher Capacity Building: Incentivize postings + digital mentorship network. Outcome-Based Monitoring: Annual JEE/NEET/CBSE tracking via NESTS dashboard. Localized Coaching Partnerships: Expand NGOs & EdTech tie-ups for exam prep. Gender-Focused Support: Scholarship schemes for tribal girls in STEM. Integration with NEP 2020: Introduce multidisciplinary learning & regional language modules. Career Continuity: Create EMRS Alumni Network & mentorship with IIT/NIT/STEM graduates. Key Facts EMRS Scheme: Started 1997–98; major expansion in Union Budget 2018–19. Target Coverage: Every block with >50% ST population & ≥20,000 tribal persons. Funding Source: Grants under Article 275(1) of the Constitution. Nodal Agency: Ministry of Tribal Affairs via NESTS. Education Board: CBSE. Current Functional Schools: 485 (as of July 2025). Top-performing State (2025): Gujarat (173 NEET qualifiers). First-time achievement: EMRS students now in IITs, AIIMS, and top NITs. Conclusion The success of EMRS students — from 2 to 597 achievers in just three years — represents a quiet revolution in tribal education. It marks a shift from access to excellence, proving that when constitutional intent (Articles 46 & 275) meets institutional innovation (EMRS & NESTS), social equity becomes achievable. EMRS has evolved from a welfare instrument to a platform for empowerment, setting the foundation for inclusive nation-building through education.