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Can India become self-reliant in REE production?

 Why is it in News?

  • Union Cabinet approved a ₹7,280-crore scheme to establish integrated REPM manufacturing facilities in India.
  • Aim: Convert rare earth oxides → metals → alloys → permanent magnets, reducing import dependence.
  • Announcement comes as China tightens export controls on rare earth elements (REEs) and magnets, disrupting global supply chains.

Relevance

GS 1 – Geography

  • Mineral distribution in India (monazite sands: TN, Kerala, Odisha).
  • Resource geography and strategic minerals.

GS 2 – International Relations

  • Strategic minerals in geopolitics (US–China tech war).
  • Global supply chain dependencies.
  • Critical minerals alliances with Japan, US, EU.

GS 3 – Science & Tech

  • Metallurgy, magnet technology, refining and separation tech.
  • REPM (NdFeB) magnet ecosystem.

What are Rare Earth Elements (REEs)?

  • Group of 17 elements: 15 lanthanides + Scandium + Yttrium.
  • Properties: High magnetic strength, heat resistance, conductivity.
  • Applications:
    • EV motors
    • Wind turbine generators
    • Electronics and semiconductors
    • Defence systems (missiles, radars, avionics)
    • Smartphones, hard drives
  • REEs are relatively abundant, but extraction is costly, energy-intensive, and polluting.

China’s Dominance: Extent and Strategy

  • 70% of global production90% of global processing, but only 30% of known reserves.
  • Controls entire value chain: mining → processing → magnet manufacturing.
  • Tools of dominance:
    • 2009: Export quotas → struck down by WTO in 2015.
    • 2020: Restricted graphite exports.
    • 2021: Export licensing to control downstream industries.
    • 2024-25: Export restrictions on 7 rare earths and finished magnets.
  • Impact on industries:
    • EV makers worst affected, followed by electronics & defence.
    • Part of broader US–China trade and tech war.

Why India is Prioritising REEs?

  • REEs are critical for:
    • Electric mobility (EV motors = NdFeB magnets)
    • Renewables (wind turbines)
    • Electronics manufacturing
    • Defence and space systems
  • India’s situation:
    • Imports 53,000+ MT of REE magnets (FY 2024-25).
    • Holds ~8% of global REE reserves, mainly monazite sands (TN, Kerala, Odisha, Andhra).
    • Produces less than 1% of global REEs.

Government Moves Toward Self-Reliance

New ₹7,280-crore REPM scheme

  • Supports end-to-end magnet manufacturing.
  • Aim: Create India’s first complete rare-earth magnet supply chain.

National Critical Mineral Mission (2024–2031)

  • Total outlay: 34,300 crore (₹16,300 crore approved Jan 2024).
  • Focus areas:
    • Exploration
    • Processing
    • Refining
    • Recycling (end-of-life electronics)

Mining reforms

  • Private sector allowed entry since August 2023.
  • Auctions of REE-rich blocks in progress.

Structural Challenges for India

  • Refining and separation infrastructure absent (core of China’s strength).
  • Skill gaps in metallurgy, material sciences, precision magnet making.
  • Regulatory hurdles: environmental approvals, slow exploration licensing.
  • Long gestation period: 5–8 years for full supply chain maturation.

Opportunities India Can Leverage

  • Large monazite deposits rich in Neodymium (Nd) → essential for permanent magnets.
  • Growing ecosystem of magnet recycling from e-waste.
  • Global diversification push away from China → aligns with India’s manufacturing ambitions.
  • Strategic potential:
    • Reduce dependence in EVs, defence, electronics.
    • Build partnerships with Japan, US, EU (who are all seeking non-China REE suppliers).

Strategic Significance

  • Economic dimension
    • Reduces import bill for magnets & REEs.
    • Boosts Make in India for EVs, electronics, renewables.
    • High-value segment: REPMs (NdFeB magnets) are 10x more valuable than raw REE oxides.
  • Geopolitical dimension
    • Counters China’s resource weaponisation tactics.
    • Strengthens India’s role in global critical minerals alliances (Indo-Pacific partnerships).
  • Security dimension
    • Defence systems—from missile guidance to electronic warfare—depend on REPMs.
    • Reducing vulnerability enhances strategic autonomy.
  • Environmental dimension
    • Domestic production necessitates safe mining + environmentally sound refining.
    • Recycling can reduce pollution and import dependence simultaneously.

Conclusion

  • REEs are indispensable for modern technology; China dominates supply chains.
  • India has reserves but lacks extraction–processing–magnet manufacturing capacities.
  • The ₹7,280-cr scheme + National Critical Minerals Mission aim to build self-reliance.
  • Success depends on deregulation, infrastructure, skilled workforce, and global collaboration.

December 2025
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