Vishwa Khabar

Hydrogen Cars in India: The Next Big Leap Beyond EVs

Hydrogen Cars in India (2025): Rise Beyond EVs

Hydrogen cars in India are stepping out of the pilot phase: the National Green Hydrogen Mission funds production and mobility pilots; NTPC has handed over hydrogen fuel-cell buses in Leh, Ladakh, supported by a green H₂ station; Toyota Mirai continues government-backed pilots; and new schemes under SIGHT target electrolyzer manufacturing and vehicles. Still, infrastructure is nascent, costs must fall, and battery EVs remain more energy-efficient for mainstream passenger cars. Hydrogen will likely shine first in buses, trucks, and fleet use, then select private mobility segments as stations scale.

1) What Exactly Are Hydrogen Cars?

Hydrogen Cars in India: The Next Big Leap Beyond EVs

Hydrogen cars are electric vehicles that make their own electricity onboard. Instead of charging a battery from the grid, Fuel-Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEVs) feed compressed hydrogen (H₂) to a fuel-cell stack, which combines it with oxygen from air to produce electricity and water vapor. That electricity powers the traction motor, much like a BEV (battery EV). Key traits:

Hydrogen cars are different from:

2) Why India Is Looking Beyond EVs

India’s mobility sector is huge, diverse, and climate-sensitive. Battery EVs are surging for two-wheelers, three-wheelers, and city cars; however, India’s geography and duty cycles also demand solutions for:

Hydrogen slots into a complementary role: focus on long-range, heavy-duty, continuous-use segments first, then expand to select private mobility segments as infrastructure grows.

3) 2025 Snapshot: Where India Stands Today

4) Policy Backbone: National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) & Standards

NGHM at a glance

Green Hydrogen Standard (what counts as “green”)

Demand creation levers

5) Refueling Infrastructure: Where Can You Fill Hydrogen Today?

Bottom line: Public retail hydrogen availability for private cars is still very limited in 2025, but rapidly evolving via pilot corridors and hubs.

6) Pilot Projects & Early Deployments (Buses, Trucks, Cars)

NTPC’s Ladakh hydrogen buses

MNRE Mobility Pilots

Toyota Mirai government pilot

State-level momentum

7) Vehicles to Watch: Mirai, Nexo & Made-in-India Momentum

8) Hydrogen vs Battery EVs: Efficiency, Emissions & Use-Cases

Energy efficiency (why BEVs still win for many cars)

Independent analyses indicate battery EVs convert a higher share of input electricity to wheel motion (~70–90%) compared to the well-to-wheel chain for hydrogen (renewable electricity → electrolysis → compression/liquefaction → transport → fuel cell), which incurs larger losses. This is why BEVs often dominate light-duty markets on energy cost and efficiency.

Emissions

When produced to India’s standard, green hydrogen must meet ≤ 2 kg CO₂e per kg H₂ (well-to-gate average), ensuring very low lifecycle emissions for mobility. Meanwhile, BEVs’ emissions depend on grid mix; as India’s grid greens, BEVs get cleaner over time. Both pathways can deliver deep decarbonization with the right upstream inputs.

Where hydrogen shines first

Takeaway: Expect BEVs to dominate mainstream passenger cars, while hydrogen grows first in fleets, buses, and heavy-duty then expands as stations and volumes rise.

9) Economics: Cost per kg, TCO, and What Must Change

Cost drivers for hydrogen mobility

India’s NGHM and SIGHT schemes aim to localize electrolyzers, lower costs, and scale demand with pilots and potential obligations, all of which should push H₂ toward cost parity in targeted segments through the decade.

TCO (Total Cost of Ownership)

For buses and trucks where daily kilometers are high and downtime is costly, TCO can swing in hydrogen’s favor once fuel cost drops and station utilization is strong. Early pilots (like Leh) are there to build the operational data India needs to calibrate subsidies and scale commercially.

10) Safety: Myths vs Facts

11) Consumer Readiness: Buying, Servicing, Insurance, Resale

As of 2025, hydrogen cars are not yet on open retail sale in India. Practical implications:

12) Sector Outlook to 2030: What Experts Expect

13) City & State Spotlight: Where Adoption May Accelerate First

15) Actionable Checklist for Fleet Owners & Policymakers

For fleet operators (bus/truck/logistics):

For city/state governments:

Conclusion

Hydrogen cars in India have moved from concept to credible pilots. With NTPC’s Ladakh buses in service, MNRE’s multi-route pilots green-lit, and the Toyota Mirai data-gathering continuing, India is systematically testing hydrogen mobility in the right segments. Policy clarity under the National Green Hydrogen Mission and the Green Hydrogen Standard provides the regulatory rails for investment, certification, and trade.

The near-term reality: BEVs remain the most efficient choice for mass passenger adoption, while hydrogen is poised to lead in buses, long-haul trucks, and high-utilization fleets, especially where fast refueling and long range matter.

Over the next five years, expect more stations on pilot corridors, bigger fleets, and the first limited retail opportunities as costs fall and infrastructure scales. India isn’t choosing between batteries and hydrogen; it’s building both, and that balanced strategy is exactly how the country will decarbonize mobility faster.

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Q1. Are hydrogen cars available for private purchase in India?

As of 2025, hydrogen cars like the Toyota Mirai are being tested under government-backed pilots but are not yet available for retail purchase in India. Fleets and pilot projects are the main focus right now.

Q2. How do hydrogen cars work?

Hydrogen cars are Fuel-Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEVs). They use a fuel cell that combines hydrogen with oxygen from the air to generate electricity, which powers the motor. The only by-product is water vapor.

Q3. How long does it take to refuel a hydrogen car?

Hydrogen cars can be refueled in 3–5 minutes for ~500–650 km on today’s models, similar to filling a petrol or diesel tank, giving them a significant advantage over long EV charging times.

Q4. What is the driving range of hydrogen cars?

Most hydrogen cars, like the Toyota Mirai, can drive around 500–650 km on a full tank, making them comparable to petrol and diesel vehicles in range.

Q5. Where are hydrogen refueling stations in India?

At present, hydrogen refueling stations are limited to pilot projects. The first green hydrogen refueling station was set up in Leh, Ladakh, and more stations are planned across pilot corridors by MNRE and OMCs.

Q6. Are hydrogen cars safe?

Yes. Hydrogen vehicles use high-pressure carbon-fiber tanks tested for crashes, leaks, and fire. Hydrogen is lighter than air, so it disperses quickly in case of leakage.

Q7. How much does hydrogen fuel cost in India?

Hydrogen costs in India are still high (₹400–500 per kg) because production and distribution are limited. However, with the National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM), costs are expected to drop significantly by 2030.

Q8. Which companies are working on hydrogen vehicles in India?

Toyota: Mirai (pilot project)
Hyundai: Nexo (showcased, not yet launched in India)
Tata Motors: Hydrogen fuel-cell buses
Ashok Leyland: Hydrogen ICE trucks and buses
NTPC: Hydrogen bus fleet in Leh

Q9. Will hydrogen replace EVs in India?

Not entirely. Experts believe EVs will dominate short-distance passenger cars, while hydrogen will play a bigger role in buses, trucks, and long-range fleet vehicles where fast refueling and heavy loads are required.

Q10. What is the future of hydrogen cars in India?

By 2030, India aims to build large-scale hydrogen hubs, more refueling stations, and expand hydrogen mobility pilots into city buses and freight corridors. Hydrogen cars will gradually move into select retail segments as infrastructure improves.

Q11. How many hydrogen stations does India have?

Publicly accessible retail stations are very limited; Leh, Ladakh, has a green H₂ station for NTPC buses, and the MNRE pilots provide for nine stations along selected corridors.

Q12. Are hydrogen cars cleaner than EVs?

Both can be ultra-low-carbon. India’s Green Hydrogen Standard caps emissions at ≤ 2 kg CO₂e/kg H₂ (well-to-gate). BEV emissions depend on grid mix; as the grid decarbonizes, BEVs get cleaner.

Q13. Why pursue hydrogen if BEVs are more efficient?

Use-case fit. Hydrogen suits high-utilization, long-range duty cycles (buses, trucks, fleet cars) demanding fast refueling and high uptime; BEVs dominate urban light-duty. India is wisely pursuing both.

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