According to jp.ibtimes.com, Japan has certified a large-scale low-carbon ammonia supply chain linking India and Japan under its national price-gap support scheme — a key mechanism to accelerate commercial deployment of clean fuels.
Price-Gap Support Enables Cross-Border Clean Fuel Deployment
The certification, announced on June 30, 2026, formally integrates the India-Japan ammonia project into Japan’s price-gap support scheme, which subsidizes the cost differential between low-carbon ammonia and conventional fossil fuels. This scheme is central to Japan’s decarbonization roadmap, targeting net-zero emissions by 2050. According to the report, the program bridges the current $300–$500 per ton cost gap between green ammonia and gray ammonia — a critical barrier for industrial adoption. The support mechanism applies specifically to ammonia used in power generation, chemical synthesis, and high-heat industrial processes, sectors where direct electrification remains technically or economically unfeasible.
India as Strategic Production Hub for Japanese Demand
The certified supply chain relies on ammonia produced in India using renewable energy and low-carbon hydrogen feedstock — a model aligned with India’s National Green Hydrogen Mission launched in 2023. The project targets annual deliveries of up to 300,000 metric tons of clean ammonia to Japanese end-users beginning in fiscal year 2027. Key Indian partners include state-backed entities such as NTPC and GAIL, both of which have publicly committed to scaling green ammonia exports under bilateral agreements signed with Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) in Q4 2025. The infrastructure includes dedicated port terminals in Visakhapatnam and Mundra, and ammonia-compatible storage facilities at Chiba and Yokohama ports.
Technical and Regulatory Foundations
Ammonia qualifies as a zero-carbon fuel at point of combustion — emitting no CO2 when burned — but its lifecycle emissions depend entirely on production methods. The certified supply chain requires third-party verification against Japan’s Green Ammonia Certification Standard, which mandates ≤0.5 kg CO2-eq per kg NH3 across upstream hydrogen production, synthesis, and transport. Certification also triggers eligibility for Japan’s ¥20 billion (approximately $135 million USD) annual allocation under the price-gap scheme, administered by the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy (ANRE). The scheme covers up to 70% of the incremental cost for end-users switching from coal or LNG to ammonia-blended thermal generation.
Industry Implications for Global Supply Chains
This certification marks the first time Japan has approved an India-sourced ammonia value chain under formal subsidy mechanisms — a precedent that strengthens India’s position as a low-cost, renewable-powered ammonia exporter. For supply chain professionals, the move signals accelerated demand for certified green ammonia logistics: vessel retrofitting for ammonia carriage, ISO-standardized bunkering protocols, and real-time emissions tracking across multi-jurisdictional routes. It also reinforces parallel developments elsewhere: South Korea’s 2025 Green Ammonia Roadmap targets 1.5 million tons of annual imports by 2030, while the EU’s REPowerEU plan includes €500 million in grants for ammonia import infrastructure. According to the source, Japan’s decision reflects a broader strategic pivot toward securing geographically diversified, non-fossil energy carriers — particularly amid tightening global natural gas markets and volatility in LNG pricing.
Source: jp.ibtimes.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










