The Indian developer quietly building one of the most advanced green ammonia portfolios
The global hydrogen economy is still in its formative stage. Across the world, hundreds of projects have been announced, but only a handful are moving steadily toward construction, contracting and eventual operation.
Among those developers pushing ahead is ACME Group - a GH2 India Anchor Member - that has assembled what is now widely seen as one of the most advanced portfolios of green hydrogen and green ammonia projects globally.
With projects spanning India and the Middle East, ACME represents a generation of developers that began preparing for the hydrogen economy well before it became central to government policy or global climate strategies.
Today, as hydrogen markets begin shifting from ambition to execution, that early conviction is beginning to show results.
Duqm, Oman
One of the world’s first commercial green ammonia export projects
ACME’s most prominent development is its Green Hydrogen and Green Ammonia facility in Duqm, Oman, one of the most advanced hydrogen export projects currently under development.
The first phase of the project will supply 100,000 tonnes of green ammonia annually to Norwegian fertiliser company Yara under a long-term offtake agreement. The first deliveries are expected in Q1 2027, which would position ACME to become the first Indian company to export green ammonia to Europe at commercial scale.
The Duqm project sits within Oman’s rapidly developing hydrogen ecosystem. The country has emerged as a strategic location for large-scale hydrogen production, benefiting from abundant solar and wind resources, deep-water port infrastructure and proximity to global shipping routes.
For ACME, Duqm represents more than a single project. It forms part of a broader vision of future clean energy trade corridors, where renewable-rich regions supply hydrogen derivatives such as ammonia to industrial demand centres across Europe and Asia.
As global demand grows for low-carbon fuels in sectors such as fertilisers, shipping and heavy industry, these trade corridors are expected to become a defining feature of the hydrogen economy.

Bikaner, Rajasthan
The early pilot that tested India’s hydrogen future
Years before hydrogen became a central pillar of India’s energy policy, ACME began experimenting with the technology.
In 2021, the company commissioned a pilot green hydrogen and green ammonia facility in Bikaner, Rajasthan. The project was relatively small in scale but strategically important. Powered by approximately 5 MW of solar capacity, the plant produced green hydrogen through electrolysis and converted part of it into green ammonia in a small demonstration facility.
At a time when India had yet to formally launch the National Green Hydrogen Mission, the project allowed ACME to test the practical realities of hydrogen production — integrating renewable power with electrolysers, managing intermittency, and operating ammonia synthesis systems.
The facility reportedly produced around 500 Nm³ of hydrogen per hour, or roughly 175 tonnes annually, making it a pilot rather than a commercial plant. Yet the lessons gained were significant.
For ACME, the Bikaner project provided early operational experience with hydrogen technologies, insights that would later inform the development of far larger projects.
In retrospect, the plant stands as one of the earliest demonstrations of green hydrogen production in India, long before the sector attracted widespread global attention.
A Portfolio Built Across Markets
Since those early experiments, ACME has expanded its ambitions significantly.
Within India, the company has secured 370,000 tons per annum (TPA) across six contracts. This accounts for over 51% of the entire 724,000 TPA capacity tender, positioning itself as a major participant in the country’s emerging hydrogen derivatives market. This includes 100,000 TPA to IFFCO at the lowest tariff of Rs 49.75/kg and 50,000 TPA to Coromandel International.
At the same time, ACME is actively pursuing export partnerships with markets including Japan and Europe, where demand for green ammonia is expected to grow rapidly as countries seek alternatives to fossil fuels in fertilisers, shipping and power generation.
Taken together, these developments place ACME among the most advanced hydrogen developers globally, particularly notable in a sector where many announced projects remain at early feasibility stages. The company is likely to have at least 3 operational projects by the end of the decade.
The company’s strategy reflects a deliberate approach: build projects simultaneously across domestic supply chains, export corridors and international partnerships.
The Founder Behind the Strategy
Manoj Kumar Upadhyay’s journey from telecom infrastructure to clean energy
Behind ACME’s rise in the hydrogen sector stands its founder, Manoj Kumar Upadhyay.
Mr. Upadhyay began his career in the telecom tower infrastructure sector, building telecommunications networks during a period when India’s mobile industry was expanding rapidly. That experience in large-scale infrastructure deployment and systems integration later proved valuable as he moved into energy development.
He founded ACME as an infrastructure and technology company before expanding into renewable energy and solar power development. Over time, the company evolved into a major clean energy platform.
Upadhyay’s move into hydrogen came well before the sector became a central focus of global energy policy.
At the time, hydrogen projects faced uncertain economics and limited policy support. Yet Mr. Upadhyay believed that green molecules — hydrogen, ammonia and methanol — would eventually become essential to decarbonising industries that cannot easily electrify, including fertilisers, refining, steelmaking and maritime transport.
The Bikaner pilot was one of the first expressions of that conviction. Today, as the hydrogen sector begins to accelerate globally, ACME’s early investments are positioning the company at the forefront of a new energy market.

From Vision to Execution
Across the energy sector, hydrogen is now entering what many analysts describe as its execution phase.
Governments have announced ambitious hydrogen targets. Financing mechanisms are emerging. And industries ranging from fertilisers to shipping are beginning to explore the role hydrogen derivatives may play in their decarbonisation strategies.
Yet translating these ambitions into operational projects, infrastructure and trade flows remains the central challenge.
Developments like ACME’s projects in Duqm and Bikaner illustrate how the hydrogen economy may evolve:
- renewable power feeding electrolysers
- hydrogen converted into transportable fuels such as ammonia
- long-term offtake agreements enabling project financing
- ports emerging as gateways for global clean fuel trade
Together, these elements form the backbone of what is slowly becoming the next global energy system.
India’s Role in the Hydrogen Economy
The rise of companies like ACME also reflects India’s growing role in the international hydrogen landscape.
With vast renewable energy potential and strong policy backing through the National Green Hydrogen Mission, India is positioning itself as both a major hydrogen producer and a future exporter of green fuels.
Indian developers are increasingly active not only domestically but also across the Middle East and other renewable-rich regions, helping shape new energy trade corridors that could redefine global energy flows.
In this context, ACME’s portfolio represents more than the growth of a single company. It reflects the emergence of Indian energy developers as global actors in the hydrogen transition.










