During the International Conference on Green Hydrogen 2025 (ICGH 2025) in New Delhi, the National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) under the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) unveiled its official logo, marking a symbolic milestone in India’s clean-energy transition. Union Minister Pralhad Joshi launched the logo, selected from more than 2,500 entries submitted by citizens nationwide.
The contest, hosted via the MyGov portal and announced in October 2025, invited designers across India to capture the Mission’s spirit: the ambition to become a global green-hydrogen hub, and the vision of self-reliance, innovation and sustainability. Entrants were evaluated on creativity, technical excellence and relevance to the mission’s objectives. The winner—identified as Mr. Madhu from Kerala—received a cash prize of ₹1 lakh and a certificate from the Mission Director.
The logo launch coincided with broader announcements at ICGH 2025. Pralhad Joshi announced a fresh ₹100 crore call for proposals for biomass-based green-hydrogen pilot projects under the NGHM, highlighting India’s push into next-generation clean fuels for hard-to-abate sectors.
The NGHM, formally launched in January 2023, has an initial outlay of ₹19,744 crore and is designed to make India a global production, usage and export hub for green hydrogen and its derivatives.
By unveiling the logo—a symbolic visual identity—the Mission has given the public and industry a unifying emblem for the green-hydrogen ecosystem. Participants and observers at ICGH 2025 described the logo as a “visual anchor” that brings together India’s energy-transition ambitions, manufacturing push and service-industry growth.
Industry analysts say that a strong brand identity is more than cosmetic: it signals that the sector is moving from pilot-stage to mainstream deployment, creating confidence among investors, manufacturers and policy-makers alike. With the logo now public, the NGHM is expected to accelerate announcements on electrolyser manufacturing incentives, hydrogen-hub deployment and export deals in the coming months.
As India ramps up its green-hydrogen efforts, the new emblem offers a focal point for messaging, partnerships and global engagement. For the energy-sector, it marks a moment when policy, branding and industrial ambition converged to advance the clean-fuel frontier.





