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Govt on Mission Mode to Decarbonise Transport Sector with Special Focus on Ethanol, Green Hydrogen: Gadkari

Pointing out that only 6 per cent of the energy consumption in the transport sector came from renewable energy sources, the Union Minister of Road Transport and Highways, Nitin Gadkari said the government is on mission mode to decarbonise the sector, and special focus will be on ethanol and green hydrogen-based solutions.

November 25, 2021. By Manu Tayal

Pointing out that only 6 per cent of the energy consumption in the transport sector came from renewable energy sources, the Union Minister of Road Transport and Highways, Nitin Gadkari said the government is on mission mode to decarbonise the sector, and special focus will be on ethanol and green hydrogen-based solutions.
 
“Ethanol is a clean fuel and has low greenhouse gas emissions. The additional income can be directly diverted to the farmer,” said Gadkari in his address at the 19th edition of the World Wind Energy Conference 2021 (WWEC2021) in New Delhi.
 
Green hydrogen, said the Minister, is another zero-carbon option. “We are exploring the potential of green hydrogen as fuel in rail, marine and aviation applications,” observed Gadkari on the second day of the conference where the focus is on pivoting transportation on renewables. 
 
A third of the world’s energy demands arise from the transport sector while it generates one-sixth of the greenhouse gas emissions, he added. Drawing attention to the schemes initiated by the government to integrate renewable energy into the sector, the Minister pointed out the accelerated EV optic is essential to keep the world on the 1.5 degree Celsius pathway.
 
“For a sustainable EV ecosystem, we are looking at using renewable energy to charge electric vehicles. It will reduce the load on transmission and distribution networks,” said the Minister.
 
Taking part in the discussion, Freddy Svane, Ambassador of Denmark, called for behavioural changes to make transport greener. “It is time the individual also took responsibility,” he said.
 
Besides, Svane also noted that developed and developing countries cannot have the same yardstick on issues like phasing out coal, a key area of discord at COP26.
 
Delivering the keynote address, Hans-Josef Fell, founder of the Energy Watch Group, a network of parliamentarians and researchers on global energy, said solar and wind are the cheapest options for renewable energy systems. “Renewable energy is at the centre of climate protection… and with political will, a transformation of the global energy sector by 2030-2035 appears to be possible.”
 
The WWEC2021 is organized by The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) and World Wind Energy Association (WWEA) and is supported by ISA and International Solar Energy Society (ISES) with Norway as the country partner.
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