India is rapidly emerging as one of the world’s leading clean industrial markets, with its low-carbon industrial project pipeline expanding by 30% in the past six months, according to Mission Possible Partnership’s latest Global Project Tracker.
The report places India as the third-largest clean industrial project pipeline globally by project count, behind China and the United States, spanning 65 projects across 11 states and representing an estimated $433.07 billion investment opportunity across clean fuels, chemicals, and low-carbon manufacturing.
The pipeline covers sectors including green hydrogen derivatives, green ammonia, green methanol, sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), and low-carbon aluminium. Green ammonia dominates the portfolio with 49 projects, while emerging SAF developments indicate growing potential in cleaner aviation fuels and export-oriented clean energy markets.
Key projects highlighted include developments by AM Green in Kakinada, ACME’s green ammonia project in Odisha, Indian Oil Corporation’s SAF initiatives, NTPC’s Pudimadaka proposals, and Vedanta’s low-carbon aluminium operations in Odisha and Chhattisgarh.
The report notes that India’s expanding clean industry ecosystem is being driven by policy support for green hydrogen, renewable energy integration, and industrial decarbonisation, alongside rising global demand for diversified and resilient supply chains.
According to Arnava Sinha, Executive Vice President – Green Hydrogen and Ammonia at ACME, India’s green hydrogen sector is transitioning from ambition to execution, supported by competitive renewable energy pricing and policy-backed offtake frameworks that are helping establish a viable green ammonia market.
Globally, the report highlights a sharp acceleration in clean industrial investment, with the pace of projects reaching final investment decision more than doubling over the past year. China currently leads deployment, while India is identified as part of a growing “industrial sunbelt” of renewable-rich economies positioned to benefit from the shift toward low-carbon manufacturing.
Mission Possible Partnership CEO Faustine Delasalle noted that clean industry is moving from planning to execution, driven by increasing financial viability and global efforts to reduce exposure to fossil fuel volatility and climate risks.
India Lead at the Industrial Transition Accelerator, Yash Kashyap, added that the country’s challenge now lies in converting its renewable energy advantage into large-scale industrial deployment through stronger policy support, financing mechanisms, and market demand creation.
The findings underscore India’s growing role in shaping the future of global clean manufacturing, with increasing potential to become a major hub for green fuels, low-carbon materials, and export-oriented industrial production over the coming decade.
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