A giant green wave is sweeping across Odisha’s industrial region. The eastern state now dominates India’s green hydrogen sector with a staggering 38% of the national project pipeline. Not content with just participation, Odisha’s gunning to become a global export powerhouse for green hydrogen derivatives like ammonia and methanol. They’re not messing around.
The numbers are frankly ridiculous. Sembcorp is building a plant capable of producing 720,000 metric tons annually. Hygenco’s throwing ₹40 billion at a 1.1 MTPA green ammonia facility. Ocior Energy? They’re going even bigger with a 1 million TPA project. Phase one: 200,000 TPA by 2028. Phase two: another 800,000 TPA by 2030. And that’s not even counting what ACME and Avaada are cooking up.
Money’s pouring in. REC has committed over ₹40,000 crore to just two projects in Gopalpur. The state’s dangling plenty of carrots too—capital subsidies, interest breaks, tax exemptions. You know, the usual government courtship dance. It’s working though. Odisha and other leading states account for 92% of India’s state-level support for these projects. This approach mirrors the economic advantages of green energy systems, which offer low operational expenses despite higher initial installation costs.
Financial floodgates have opened. Odisha’s not just investing—they’re seducing clean energy players with every incentive imaginable.
Smart geography helps. Paradip and Gopalpur aren’t just random spots on a map—they’re strategic coastal locations perfect for production and export logistics. Build near ports, ship worldwide. Basic business sense.
It’s not all smooth sailing. Water availability is an issue. So is integrating renewable energy and building supporting infrastructure. But location helps solve many of these problems.
Beyond just bragging rights, there’s actual environmental impact here. Projects align with India’s target of producing 5 million tonnes of green hydrogen annually by 2030. This national ambition is further bolstered by the $2.4 billion initial allocation for the National Green Hydrogen Mission launched in 2023. They’re even testing hydrogen-powered public transport in Bhubaneswar with NTPC signing a tripartite MoU with GRIDCO and CRUT to establish hydrogen fuelling infrastructure.
Let’s be real—Odisha is betting big. If they pull this off, they’ll transform from an industrial heavyweight to a clean energy pioneer. Pretty ambitious for a state many couldn’t even locate on a map.
References
- https://chemindigest.com/odisha-pushes-forward-on-green-hydrogen-development/
- https://www.icis.com/explore/resources/news/2025/06/11/11109495/indian-refineries-plan-green-hydrogen-projects-worth-rs2-trillion
- https://www.indianchemicalnews.com/policy/center-discusses-progress-of-hydrogen-projects-in-odisha-26749
- https://www.ceew.in/press-releases/state-level-policies-can-unlock-usd-61-billion-in-incentives-for-green-hydrogen-production
- https://rmi.org/green-hydrogen-production-pathways-for-india/