| Green ammonia low-hanging fruit for India’s hydrogen economy 
 A   new report from IEEFA says green ammonia could help India  significantly  reduce its trillion-rupee fertilizer subsidy bill and cut  dependence on  liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports for fertilizer  production.
 
 April 21, 2022   Uma Gupta
 
 Hydrogen
 Markets
 Technology and R&D
 Utility Scale PV
 Indiana
 
 
  
 A green hydrogen and green ammonia plant in Bikaner by Acme.
 
 Image: Acme Group
 
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 From   pv magazine India
 
 A shift to   green ammonia   would significantly reduce the Indian government’s massive fertilizer   subsidy burden and boost energy self-reliance by cutting dependence on   imports of expensive liquified natural gas (LNG) for fertilizer   manufacturing, according to a new report by the Institute for Energy  Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).
 
 Fertilizer  subsidy in  India is budgeted at INR 1.05 trillion (US$14.2 billion) for  2022-23,  exceeding one trillion rupees for the third year in a row. The  subsidy  will likely have to be increased drastically with fertilizer  prices  pushed to record levels due to high and volatile global gas  prices,  exacerbated by the   Russia-Ukraine war.
 
 Gas   prices increased from $10.75/MMBtu (metric million British thermal   units) in January 2021 to $33 in January 2022. Global urea prices soared   to record highs of $690-794/ton (INR 51.4-60.4/kg) between October  2021  to March 2022. However, urea for the Indian agriculture sector  remained  at a subsidized retail price of INR 5.3/kg ($71/tonne),  reflecting the  heavy subsidy of more than 90% on the global benchmark  price of urea.
 
 “Demand  for fertilizer in India is expected to  grow, and this will increase the  need for further subsidies and LNG  imports unless we switch to a  cleaner and domestically produced  feedstock,” says report author Kashish  Shah, energy finance analyst at  IEEFA.
 
 “  Green hydrogen   is produced from the electrolysis of water powered by renewable energy   sources and can replace grey hydrogen, which is generated from natural   gas, or methane, as a feedstock for ammonia production.”
 
 Shah expects the demand for hydrogen in the Indian fertilizer industry to rise from about 3MT per year today to 7.5MT by 2050.
 
 Cost comparison
 
 The   International Energy Agency estimates that 8 MT of green hydrogen to   green ammonia production capacity is planned worldwide.
 
 The   IEEFA report looks at leading green hydrogen to green ammonia projects   worldwide and reviews the cost competitiveness of producing green   ammonia using various electricity inputs: grid electricity,   round-the-clock renewable power, and solar power plus batteries.
 
 The   cost of green hydrogen production   is currently at about $5.5 per kg, or $3 per kg in countries with good   solar resources and is projected to continue to decline steeply this   decade. For it to compete with grey hydrogen at $2 per kg, the costs of   two critical inputs –   electrolyzers and renewable energy – must fall further.
 
 “While   the gap between the cost of producing green hydrogen and hydrogen from   fossil fuels is narrowing, there is still further to go,” says Shah.
 
 Electrolyzers   must fall below $250 per megawatt from $700-1,000 and renewable energy   to $20 per megawatt-hour from US$30-35, according to the report.
 
 Making   electrolyzers in India, in tandem with the growing solar PV   manufacturing base, would cut the cost of producing green hydrogen for   green ammonia, says Shah.
 
 Policy intervention
 
 The   government’s new green hydrogen policy offers a range of incentives to   green hydrogen and green ammonia manufacturers, including land   allocation in renewable energy parks, interstate transmission charges   waiver for 25 years, and banking of renewable power for up to 30 days.
 
 “These   incentives mainly focus on the supply side,” says Shah. “In addition,   developers and investors would need a strong offtake pipeline for their   product to make the projects bankable. This could be done by   implementing a green hydrogen consumption obligation (GHCO) mechanism   for fertilizer production and petroleum refining, similar to Renewable   Purchase Obligations.”
 
 The  report says the next phase of policy  incentives could include  production-linked incentives (PLI) similar to  those provided for solar  modules and battery manufacturing. This could  bridge the viability gap  for interested manufacturers ready to risk  capital for green hydrogen  and green ammonia projects.
 
 The   international green bonds market will be a key funding avenue for   projects as developers look to derive value from the synergy of   renewables and green hydrogen, the report says.
 
 pv-magazine.com
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