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Gadkari pitches hydrogen as India's next transport fuel

‘I travel in a hydrogen car. It is better than Mercedes,’ he said.

ANI

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  • Nitin Gadkari said focus is now shifting from passenger cars to commercial vehicles like trucks and buses (ANI)

New Delhi, 7 July 


Union Minister of Road Transport and Highways Nitin Gadkari on Tuesday made a strong push for hydrogen-powered mobility, saying he is already using hydrogen vehicles and that trucks and buses running on the fuel are set to hit Indian roads soon.


Speaking at the Navbharat Conclave, Gadkari said, “I drive electric, flex-fuel and hydrogen vehicles; I have all three at home right now," he said. "I have all three cars in my house. Those who have understood, come to my house after the programme, and take a ride in all three cars."


The Minister recounted how he got his first hydrogen car after a conversation with his wife and Toyota India's Vikram Kirloskar. "I travel in a hydrogen car. It is better than Mercedes," Gadkari said, adding that the experience convinced him of the technology's potential.


Gadkari said the focus is now shifting from passenger cars to commercial vehicles. He announced that hydrogen-powered trucks and buses are arriving.


"Now, hydrogen trucks are arriving. I recently launched Tata's hydrogen-powered trucks--one running on a hydrogen fuel cell and another new one that uses an internal combustion (IC) engine modified to run on hydrogen," he said.


The Minister outlined a pilot aimed at public transport. "Now hydrogen buses are coming too. I am running a pilot project in Nagpur: hydrogen will be produced, filled into buses, and the buses will run," Gadkari said.


Gadkari has been advocating for a shift away from fossil fuels to cut import dependence and emissions. At the conclave, he linked hydrogen to India's broader alternative fuel push, which already includes ethanol and electric vehicles.


The Minister's remarks come as automakers like Tata are testing both fuel cell and hydrogen-IC engine platforms for trucks, signalling early commercial interest.

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