The Indian government has revised its list of winners for the first auction for electrolyser manufacturing subsidies, originally announced in January, after steelmaker Jindal — which had won incentives for 300MW of annual manufacturing capacity — dropped out of the process.
According to anonymous sources cited by local newspaper Mint in early February, Jindal had missed a deadline on 3 February for bank guarantees needed before the government could sign off on the production-linked incentives.
This left 300MW per year of manufacturing capacity, with a maximum incentive of 4.44 billion rupees ($53.5m), to be redistributed among bidders (see table below).
Engineering company Larsen & Toubro, which had in January seen its 300MW/year bid partially awarded to cover 63MW/year, has now been awarded production-linked incentives for its full bid.
Meanwhile, Matrix Gas and Renewables, which had been left off the original winners’ list, has now been allocated subsidies for 63MW/year of its 105MW/year bid, worth up to 932.4m rupees.
Awards for a separate block of funding — for “indigenously developed” technology (rather than intellectual property licensed from abroad, such as L&T’s use of McPhy tech) — did not change, as that had already been fully allocated.
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Revised list of winners for electrolyser manufacturing subsidies in India’s first auction
Company |
Bid capacity (MW/year) |
Awarded capacity (MW/year) |
Maximum incentive allocation (million rupees/year) |
Reliance Electrolyser Manufacturing Limited |
300 |
300 |
4,440 |
Ohmium Operations Private Limited |
137 |
137 |
2,027.6 |
John Cockerill Greenko Hydrogen Solutions Private Limited |
300 |
300 |
4,440 |
Advait Infratech Limited |
100 |
100 |
1,480 |
L&T Electrolysers Limited |
300 |
300 |
4,440 |
Matrix Gas and Renewables Limited |
105 |
63 |
932.4 |
Homihydrogen Private Limited* |
101.5 |
101.5 |
1,502.2 |
Adani New Industries Limited* |
300 |
198.5 |
2,937.8 |
Source: Solar Energy Corporation of India
* Awarded funding specifically allocated for indigenously-developed electrolyser technology