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India's first hydrogen-powered train set to launch July 17 on the Jind-Sonipat route in Haryana

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to flag off India's first hydrogen fuel-cell train on July 17 in Haryana as part of a Rs 26,800 crore (roughly US$3.2bn) infrastructure launch covering Haryana, Chandigarh, and Punjab; the train will operate on the Jind-Sonipat route

البنية التحتية·الطاقة· pending-decision كيف تتغيّر الحياة·اللعبة الطويلة ·3 قراءات · ·تحديث rbtfl 16 يوليو 2026
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انقسام التغطية

الخبر نفسه كما تناولته غرف أخبار من دول مختلفة. كلماتهم، منسوبة ومربوطة بمصادرها.

India

ETV Bharat

“Scheduled to launch on July 17, India's first hydrogen train will operate on the Jind-Sonipat route using advanced fuel-cell technology.”

Indian regional broadcaster; provided the clearest technical description of the fuel-cell technology and the specific Jind-Sonipat operating routeاقرأ النص الأصلي ↗

India

Swarajya Magazine

“India's First Hydrogen Train, Delhi-Amritsar-Katra Expressway: PM Modi to launch Rs 26,800 crore projects in Haryana, Chandigarh and Punjab.”

Indian right-leaning magazine; contextualised the hydrogen train within a wider Rs 26,800 crore infrastructure push across three states, including the Delhi-Amritsar-Katra Expresswayاقرأ النص الأصلي ↗

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Summary

India's first hydrogen fuel-cell train is scheduled to be flagged off by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on July 17, operating on the Jind-Sonipat route in the state of Haryana. The train uses hydrogen fuel-cell technology that generates electricity from hydrogen with water as its only emission. The launch is the symbolic centrepiece of a broader Rs 26,800 crore (roughly US$3.2bn) infrastructure package Modi will inaugurate across Haryana, Chandigarh, and Punjab on the same day, which also includes the Delhi-Amritsar-Katra Expressway. India has positioned the hydrogen train as a step toward green rail mobility on routes where electrification is not yet complete.

Why it matters

India operates one of the world's largest railway networks, and a successful hydrogen train program would open a pathway to decarbonise non-electrified routes without the capital cost of full electrification. It also signals India's intent to develop domestic hydrogen transport technology, relevant to its broader import-reduction and energy-independence agenda. The commercial viability of hydrogen rail will depend on the cost trajectory of green hydrogen production in India.

What to watch

  • Whether the July 17 launch proceeds as scheduled and initial operating performance on the Jind-Sonipat route
  • The government's timeline for expanding hydrogen train operations beyond the pilot route
  • Green hydrogen production costs in India and how they affect the economics of scaling the program
  • International comparisons: Germany, China, and South Korea have existing hydrogen rail programs

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