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Economics May 19, 2026 6 min read Daily brief · #26 of 53

Coal gasification can raise India's resource security amid decarbonisation uncertainties: Report

A report by the Observer Research Foundation (ORF) identified coal gasification as a strategic tool for India to reduce import dependence in the steel sector...


What Happened

  • A report by the Observer Research Foundation (ORF) identified coal gasification as a strategic tool for India to reduce import dependence in the steel sector while navigating uncertain global decarbonisation timelines.
  • India's steel sector is the fastest-growing steel market globally, with demand projected to expand by 7.4% in 2026 and accelerate to 9.2% in 2027 — but it remains critically dependent on imported coking coal, primarily from Australia.
  • Nearly 90% of India's coking coal requirements are met through imports, exposing domestic steelmakers to price volatility and geopolitical supply disruptions — a structural vulnerability underscored by recent price spikes triggered by Queensland floods (January 2026) and West Asia conflict-related disruptions (March 2026).
  • Coal gasification offers a domestic alternative: using India's vast domestic coal reserves to produce syngas (synthetic gas), which can partially substitute coking coal as a reducing agent and fully substitute LNG in gas-based Direct Reduced Iron (DRI) steel production.
  • The Union Ministry of Coal integrated gasification provisions into production agreements with coal mine bidders in April 2026, and the government approved a Rs 37,500 crore scheme in May 2026 offering financial assistance of up to Rs 5,000 crore per gasification project.

Static Topic Bridges

Coal Gasification: Technology and Process

Coal gasification is a thermo-chemical process that partially oxidises coal at high temperatures and pressures in the presence of steam and limited oxygen. The output — syngas — is a mixture primarily comprising carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO₂), and hydrogen (H₂), which can be further processed into multiple industrial inputs.

  • Syngas can be used as a feedstock for Direct Reduced Iron (DRI) production, as a substitute for natural gas in industrial heating, and as an input for hydrogen production through Water-Gas Shift reactions.
  • Underground Coal Gasification (UCG) is a variant that converts coal to syngas in situ, without mining it — reducing surface environmental disruption but posing groundwater contamination risks.
  • Surface gasification plants process mined coal in controlled reactor environments; these are more technologically mature and scalable.
  • Coal gasification is one of the most carbon-intensive pathways for steel production — each syngas production stage generates CO₂, creating a direct conflict with decarbonisation goals unless paired with Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS).

Connection to this news: India's strategy hinges on using coal gasification as a transitional technology — bridging the gap between current import dependence and future clean energy steel production — while keeping the decarbonisation option open through CCUS integration.

India's Coal Endowment and the Coking Coal Gap

India holds approximately 400 billion tonnes of total coal reserves — among the largest in the world — but the vast majority is non-coking thermal coal. Coking coal (also called metallurgical coal), essential for traditional blast furnace steelmaking, is scarce domestically.

  • India's domestic coking coal reserves are limited and of lower quality (high ash content), making them largely unsuitable for direct use in conventional blast furnaces without significant blending with imported coal.
  • As of the latest data, approximately 90% of India's metallurgical (coking) coal requirements are imported, primarily from Australia.
  • Australian coking coal price spikes in January 2026 (due to Queensland flooding) and March 2026 (geopolitical disruptions) have quantified the cost of this dependency.
  • Coal gasification, by enabling domestic non-coking coal to be converted into a usable syngas reducing agent, effectively unlocks India's abundant thermal coal reserves for steelmaking applications.
  • The ORF report estimates that coal gasification could generate Rs 60,000–90,000 crore annually for India through import substitution.

Connection to this news: The resource security argument rests precisely on this distinction: India has vast coal but the wrong type for steel. Gasification bridges that gap by making domestic coal economically functional for the steel value chain.

India's Steel Sector: Scale, Growth, and Emissions Profile

India is the world's second-largest steel producer and its fastest-growing major steel market, with the sector playing a central role in the government's infrastructure push and manufacturing growth ambitions.

  • Steel demand growth is projected at 7.4% in 2026 and 9.2% in 2027, according to the ORF report.
  • India's steel emission intensity stands at approximately 2.55 tonnes of CO₂ per tonne of crude steel — roughly 30% higher than the global average of approximately 1.89 tonnes.
  • Nearly 80% of India's Direct Reduced Iron (DRI) production is coal-based, with only a small fraction gas-based — making decarbonisation of the DRI route a major challenge.
  • India has set a target to produce 300 million tonnes (MT) of steel annually by 2030, up from approximately 143 MT in 2023.
  • The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) adopted by the European Union — effective from 2026 — will impose tariffs on high-emission imports including steel, adding an economic incentive for Indian producers to decarbonise.

Connection to this news: The scale of India's steel ambitions makes the energy and raw material sourcing question strategically critical — coal gasification is one lever, but its high emission intensity means it may incur CBAM-related costs unless paired with carbon capture.

Decarbonisation Pathways for Steel and Green Hydrogen

The global steel industry's decarbonisation roadmap centres on three main technologies: Green Hydrogen-based DRI (H-DRI), Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCUS), and Electric Arc Furnaces (EAFs) fed by renewable electricity. India is pursuing all three, but faces cost and scale barriers in the near term.

  • Green hydrogen production in India remains expensive; the National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023) aims to bring costs down to USD 1 per kg by 2030, enabling viable H-DRI for steel.
  • CCUS technology is not yet deployed at commercial scale in India's steel sector; integration with coal gasification would be necessary to make gasification-based steel compatible with net-zero pathways.
  • The EU's CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism) creates a financial incentive for Indian exporters to lower their emission intensity to avoid tariff penalties on exports to Europe.
  • Coal gasification, per the ORF report, is explicitly described as a transitional technology — valuable for resource security in the current decade but not a long-term decarbonisation solution.

Connection to this news: The "decarbonisation uncertainty" in the article's title refers to the gap between long-term green steel ambitions and the near-term reality of a sector still dependent on coal — coal gasification is the pragmatic short-to-medium term response to that gap.

Key Facts & Data

  • India's steel demand growth projection: 7.4% in 2026, 9.2% in 2027 — the world's fastest-growing major steel market.
  • India holds approximately 400 billion tonnes of total coal reserves, but domestic coking coal is scarce and of lower quality.
  • ~90% of India's coking coal requirements are imported, primarily from Australia.
  • India's steel emission intensity: ~2.55 tonnes of CO₂ per tonne of crude steel — ~30% higher than the global average.
  • The government approved a Rs 37,500 crore coal gasification scheme in May 2026, with up to Rs 5,000 crore assistance per project.
  • Coal gasification potential revenue through import substitution: Rs 60,000–90,000 crore annually (ORF estimate).
  • Coal gasification process: partial oxidation of coal at high temperature and pressure → syngas (CO, CO₂, H₂).
  • EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) entered into force in 2026, applying to high-emission imports including steel.
  • National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023) targets green hydrogen production cost of USD 1 per kg by 2030.
  • India's steel production target: 300 million tonnes per annum by 2030 (vs. ~143 MT in 2023).
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. Coal Gasification: Technology and Process
  4. India's Coal Endowment and the Coking Coal Gap
  5. India's Steel Sector: Scale, Growth, and Emissions Profile
  6. Decarbonisation Pathways for Steel and Green Hydrogen
  7. Key Facts & Data
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