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India News Updated May 28, 2026

West Asia Crisis Accelerates India's Coal Gasification Push for Energy Security

The West Asia crisis has accelerated India's push for coal gasification to reduce import dependence and enhance energy security. Coal Secretary Vikram Dev Dutt highlighted that the geopolitical disruptions expose vulnerabilities from India's heavy reliance on imported energy and commodities. He noted that coal gasification can substitute products worth Rs 2.77 lakh crore, including natural gas, urea, and methanol. The government's Rs 37,500 crore incentive scheme aims to boost domestic production and strategic self-reliance under the Atmanirbhar Bharat vision.

West Asia crisis sharpens India's push for coal gasification, strategic energy security: Coal Secretary

New Delhi, May 28

The ongoing crisis in West Asia has fundamentally altered global energy and commodity supply chains, exposing the risks of India's heavy dependence on imports and accelerating the country's push towards coal gasification as a strategic pillar of energy security and industrial self-reliance.

Addressing a roadshow to promote Surface Coal/Lignite Gasification, Coal Secretary Vikram Dev Dutt said the geopolitical disruptions have underlined the urgency of building domestic capabilities to shield the Indian economy from external shocks.

Referring to the conflict in West Asia, Dutt said it has "fundamentally altered global energy and commodity supply chains, exposing vulnerabilities arising from India's import dependence."

"If you look at our total import bill across all the substitutable products which are possible through coal gasification -- natural gas, urea, ammonia, coking coal and methanol -- in the financial year 2025, the total quantum of these imports stood at about Rs 2.77 lakh crore and that was at prices pre the West Asia conflict," he said.

He added that the price escalation witnessed in March and April after the conflict had increased stress across sectors of the economy, highlighting the need for India to strengthen domestic energy and industrial supply chains.

Dutt said coal gasification offers India a long-term pathway to reduce strategic import dependence by converting domestic coal reserves into products such as natural gas, ammonia, methanol, dimethyl ether (DME), hydrogen and fertiliser feedstock.

"The question is not about whether we use coal, it's about how intelligently we use coal. Coal gasification is the answer," he said.

According to the Coal Secretary, projects approved under the government's first incentive scheme for coal gasification have the potential to substitute nearly Rs 20,000 crore worth of foreign exchange outflow through domestically produced gasification products.

He said the initiative is not merely about energy security, but also about strengthening industrial resilience, domestic manufacturing and supply-chain stability under the Atmanirbhar Bharat vision.

"Today we stand at a pivotal moment as all of you know, where as a country we are turning to our own earth, our own resources and our own ingenuity to shape the next chapter of our industrial transformation, strategic self-reliance and national resilience based on the bedrock of Atmanirbhar Bharat," Dutt said.

India currently possesses the world's fifth-largest coal reserves, while coal continues to contribute nearly 55 per cent of the country's energy mix, making coal gasification strategically significant for the foreseeable future.

Dutt noted that coal gasification has evolved into a commercially proven industrial technology globally, with different technological pathways suited for varying coal characteristics and end-use products. He said India's high-ash coal requires technology choices aligned with feedstock quality, project economics and downstream applications.

"At the same time, we are committed to encouraging the development of indigenous gasification technologies tailored in India and operated at pilot scale by BHEL and others so that India not only adopts the technology but masters it," he said.

The Coal Secretary also highlighted the National Coal Gasification Mission launched in 2021 and the Union Cabinet-approved Rs 37,500 crore financial incentive scheme aimed at accelerating investments and reducing risks for early project developers.

"The opportunity is unprecedented, the need is urgent, the support is generous and the time is now," he said.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally some strategic thinking. We have been importing so much for decades and this West Asia crisis is a wake-up call. Rs 2.77 lakh crore import bill is staggering! Time to use our coal reserves wisely.

James A

Interesting perspective from India. But coal gasification still involves carbon emissions. The transition to renewables should be the priority long-term, not doubling down on coal. Just my two cents as an observer.

Vikram M

The Coal Secretary makes a valid point about high-ash coal challenges. We need to master indigenous technology, not just import foreign solutions. BHEL should be given more resources to develop pilot-scale gasifiers. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

Sarah B

As someone who works in energy policy, I appreciate India's pragmatism. Coal gasification can reduce import dependency for fertilizers and methanol. But the government must also invest in carbon capture to make this truly sustainable.

Rohit P

Good initiative but the devil is in the execution. Rs 37,500 crore incentive scheme sounds generous but we've seen delays in coal sector projects before. Hope they streamline clearances and ensure timely implementation. 😊

Michael C

West Asia crisis is indeed reshaping global energy dynamics. India's push for coal gasification makes sense for strategic autonomy.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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