January 31, 2026
Economic Importance: Steel is the backbone of Indian manufacturing and infrastructure.
Climate Impact: * India is the 2nd largest steel producer globally (120 MT/year).
The sector contributes 7–9% of global CO₂ emissions.
The Goal: India must decarbonize this sector to meet its global commitment of Net-Zero by 2070.
Advanced technologies can reduce emissions by 95–97% by 2050, including:
H₂-DRI: Green hydrogen-based direct reduced iron.
Renewable EAFs: Electric Arc Furnaces powered by clean energy.
Carbon Capture: For legacy assets (existing traditional plants).
Circular Economy: Increased utilization of scrap metal.
Cost Gap: Green steel is 20–40% more expensive than conventional Blast Furnace (BF-BOF) steel.
Current Policy Flaws:
Reliance on subsidies (PLI, capital grants, viability gap funding).
Risks: Subsidies can lock in inefficiencies, stifle innovation, and create fiscal strain on the government.
The government has a “potent weapon” to bypass the subsidy trap by leveraging its role as a buyer.
Market Leverage: Public sector procurement across infrastructure (Railways, Roads, Defence, Housing) accounts for ~30% of India’s GDP.
The Shift: Move away from “Carbon-Neutral” procurement (which only looks at the lowest price) to Green-Mandated procurement.
Key Benefits:
Predictability: Creates a stable, creditworthy demand base.
Market Nudge: Forces the industry to scale green tech to meet government tender specifications.
Innovation: Encourages competition based on sustainability rather than just cost-cutting.
In traditional steelmaking, we use Coke (derived from coal) to remove oxygen from iron ore. This process releases massive amounts of $CO_2$. H₂-DRI changes the chemistry of this process.
The Process: Instead of coal, Green Hydrogen ($H_2$) is pumped into a furnace with the iron ore.
The Chemical Shift: In a traditional furnace, the byproduct is $CO_2$. In an H₂-DRI furnace, the hydrogen reacts with the oxygen in the ore to produce pure water vapor ($H_2O$).
“Green” Requirement: For this to be truly carbon-free, the hydrogen must be produced via electrolysis powered by renewable energy (wind or solar), rather than natural gas.
Why it matters: It addresses the “Primary” steel production phase—the most difficult part of the industry to decarbonize because it replaces the actual chemical reducing agent (coal).
Traditional steel uses a Basic Oxygen Furnace (BOF), which requires molten iron from a coal-fired blast furnace. An Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) is a more flexible, modern alternative.
The Process: An EAF uses high-power electric arcs to melt raw materials (like scrap metal or the DRI mentioned above). Imagine a giant pot where electricity creates a “lightning bolt” to melt the metal.
The “Renewable” Factor: An EAF is only as green as the grid it sits on. If it runs on coal-powered electricity, it still has a footprint. Renewable EAFs are specifically synced with dedicated solar, wind, or hydro power plants.
The Circular Economy: EAFs are excellent at recycling. They can take 100% steel scrap and turn it into high-quality new steel, using significantly less energy than making steel from scratch.
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