Jitendra Singh unveils India's first indigenously developed hydrogen fuel cell bus in Pune
Aug 21, 2022
New Delhi [India], August 21 : Union Minister of State, Dr Jitendra Singh on Sunday launched India's first indigenously developed Hydrogen fuel cell bus developed by KPIT-CSIR in Pune, according to the Ministry of Science and Technology said.
The Union Minister told the gathering that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 'Hydrogen Vision' is important for India to ensure Atma Nirbhar means of affordable and accessible clean energy, meeting climate change goals, and creating new entrepreneurs and jobs.
He said Green hydrogen is an excellent clean energy vector that enables deep decarbonization of difficult-to-abate emissions from the refining industry, fertiliser industry, steel industry, cement industry and also from the heavy commercial transportation sector.
Singh informed that the fuel cell utilizes Hydrogen and Air to generate electricity to power the bus and the only effluent from the bus is water, therefore making it possibly the most environmentally friendly mode of transportation.
For comparison, a single diesel bus plying on long-distance routes typically emits 100 tons of CO2 annually and there are over a million such buses in India, the Ministry said.
Singh said the high efficiency of fuel cell vehicles and the high energy density of hydrogen ensures that the operational costs in rupees per kilometre for fuel cell trucks and buses are lower than diesel-powered vehicles and this can bring freight revolution to India.
Moreover, Fuel Cell vehicles also give zero greenhouse gas emissions.
The Minister lauded the joint development efforts of KPIT and CSIR-NCL and pointed out that the technology prowess of Indian scientists and engineers is no less than the best in the world and also at much lower costs.
Singh pointed out that about 12-14 per cent of CO2 emissions and particulate emissions come from diesel-powered heavy commercial vehicles and these are decentralised emissions and hence difficult to capture.
The Minister said, Hydrogen fuelled vehicles provide an excellent means to eliminate the on-road emissions from this sector.
India is also aiming to increase inland waterways for freight and passenger transport, he said.
Singh concluded that by achieving these goals, India can pole-vault from being a net importer of fossil energy to becoming a net exporter of clean hydrogen energy and thus, providing global leadership to India in hydrogen space by becoming a large green hydrogen producer and supplier of equipment for green hydrogen.
Later, he inaugurated the Bisphenol-A pilot plant in CSIR-NCL and said these pilot plants have successfully demonstrated novel process technologies developed by NCL under CSIR's Covid-19 mission program and Bulk Chemicals mission program.
Singh said Bisphenol-A (BPA) is an important feedstock for the production of epoxy resins, polycarbonate and other engineering plastics.
He further said, the global market for Bisphenol-A is projected to reach 7.1 Million Tons by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 2 per cent over the analysis period 2020-2027.
The entire estimated annual demand of 1, 35,000 tons in India is imported today.
The Minister hoped that CSIR-NCL's technology will enable import substitution of this important raw material and help in India's Atmanirbhar initiative.
The uniqueness of the process developed by CSIR-NCL is a novel downstream process technology, which makes this indigenous technology competitive with global benchmarks.
The process is ready for technology transfer and further co-development to a commercial scale.