
India’s renewable energy transition received a significant boost as the Government continues to expand the National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) alongside key solar deployment schemes and strengthened monitoring mechanisms. The update was shared by Union Minister of State for New and Renewable Energy, Shri Shripad Yesso Naik, in a written reply to the Rajya Sabha.
With an approved outlay of ₹19,744 crore, the National Green Hydrogen Mission aims to position India as a global leader in green hydrogen production, utilisation and export. As of November 2025, the government has awarded major capacities under its incentive-linked programmes:

- 18 companies have secured a cumulative green hydrogen production capacity of 8,62,000 tonnes annually.
- 15 companies have been awarded a combined electrolyser manufacturing capacity of 3,000 MW per annum.
- Two refineries have received procurement-linked incentives for 20,000 tonnes of green hydrogen per year.
- Pilot projects in steel, transport and shipping sectors have been sanctioned to enable early-market deployment and technology validation.
Alongside the hydrogen mission, the government is also advancing multiple solar-focused programmes including the Pradhan Mantri Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana (PMSG: MBY), PM-KUSUM, and the recently approved New Solar Power Programme for Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTG) habitations under PM JANMAN and DAJGUA. These initiatives are enabling rooftop solar adoption and solar mini-grid development, especially across rural and remote regions, through targeted financial support.
To ensure timely completion of large-scale renewable projects—including wind, solar and bioenergy installations—the government has strengthened oversight and coordination mechanisms. These include:
- Regular inter-ministerial review meetings with state and central agencies
- Deployment of the National Renewable Energy Portal (NREP) for real-time project tracking
- Competitive bidding guidelines with prescribed execution timelines
- Monthly stakeholder consultations with private developers to resolve implementation challenges
The monitoring system also integrates real-time data captured from State Nodal Agencies, Renewable Energy Implementing Agencies and industry developers to ensure progress alignment with India’s 2030 renewable energy commitments.
India aims to scale its renewable energy capacity significantly before the end of the decade, with the Green Hydrogen Mission forming a core pillar of the nation’s energy security and decarbonization roadmap.
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