India's southern state of Tamil Nadu has received strong interest from renewable hydrogen and ammonia project developers, but the government expects to give the go-ahead to less than 20pc of proposed facilities for now.
Shortlisted developers face a race to move ahead with their planning and to secure land for renewable electricity assets.
The state has received proposals for 17 renewable hydrogen and ammonia projects, a government official told Argus. But the government has signed preliminary agreements with just five companies and only three of these are due to get the green light because of land constraints, according to the official.
The state government intends to provide land for the three projects which implement their plans first. While the government will provide land for hydrogen or ammonia production assets it will not allocate public space for the necessary solar and wind assets, a government official said. This means the companies will have to acquire land for renewable power assets "privately", the source said. Whichever company manages to do this first is likely to have an edge in terms of securing overnment land for their hydrogen, and potentially ammonia, production sites.
Malaysian renewable energy company Gentari, a subsidiary of state-controlled Petronas, has signed preliminary agreements with Tamil Nadu for two projects, of which one is to be developed together with renewables firm Greenko's AM Green venture. The project with AM Green has found potential offtakers in Europe, while the other site would be used to supply renewable ammonia to Petronas' refinery in Malaysia, a state government official said. Renewables developer Acme has also struck a deal with the state government and has offtakers lined up in South Korea and Japan, the source said. Gentari and Acme did not confirm the offtake arrangements, although Gentari had previously said that its joint venture with AM Green would target overseas buyers.
The projects could together produce around 3mn t/yr of renewable ammonia.
Domestic power generation firm Leap Green and Singapore's Sembcorp are the other two companies that have preliminary agreements in place with the state government.
Tamil Nadu has several state-owned industrial parks, one of which is in the port city of Thoothukudi, where renewable hydrogen and ammonia projects are likely to be established. The VO Chidambranar port, one of India's three designated ports for development of green hydrogen hubs, is located in Thoothukudi.
Policy incentives
Tamil Nadu does not have a specific green hydrogen policy with incentives or a production target like the states of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Punjab.
The state does not want to "vastly incentivise" the sector as of now, since most of the projects are aimed for exports, according to a government official. It could think of formulating a specific policy once consumption in the domestic markets takes off and use of green hydrogen is mandated in some sectors.
But hydrogen and ammonia projects stand to benefit from regulations under Tamil Nadu's industrial policy. This will provide a "structural package of incentives" to the three projects that are selected, including exemptions for electricity tax, stamp duty, flexible capital subsidy or turnover-based subsidy. The subsidies will be disbursed only when commercial production begins. The concerned department is working on these details, which will be customised for individual projects, a source told Argus.
Renewable ammonia projects in Tamil Nadu | ||
Company | Capacity (mn t/yr) | Potential off-takers |
Gentari | 1.00 | Petronas refinery Malaysia |
Gentari + AM Green | 1.00 | Europe, Japan, South Korea, Singapore |
Acme | 1.00 | Japan, South Korea |
Sembcorp | 1.00 | _ |
Leap Green | 0.60 | _ |
Source: Argus |