Highlights
- China currently controls 57% of rare earth imports from Myanmar, primarily from Kachin's mineral-rich regions.
- India's attempts to procure rare earth samples from the Kachin Independence Army have stalled due to military counteroffensives.
- Critical infrastructure like cross-border railways remains a blueprint, highlighting the gap between mineral ambitions and operational reality.
Indiaโs ambitions to diversify away from Chinese-controlled rare earths just hit a wall in Myanmar. A detailed report by The Federal (Sept 20, 2025) outlines how New Delhiโs outreach to the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) to procure heavy rare earth samples has stalled amid Myanmarโs military counteroffensives in Kachin state.
What Holds Up Under the Harsh Light
Some parts of the story are ironclad, impossible to dispute. Chinaโs grip on Myanmarโs rare earths isnโt speculationโitโs arithmetic. Nearly 57 percent of Beijingโs rare earth imports flow out of Myanmar, much of it drawn from Kachinโs dysprosium- and terbium-rich hills. These are the metals that give teeth to the modern ageโpermanent magnets for EVs, wind turbines, and missiles.
Indiaโs Ministry of Mines has indeed stirred, dispatching state-owned Indian Rare Earths Ltd (IREL) and Midwest Advanced Materials Pvt Ltd to gauge what lies beneath Kachinโs soil. And the infrastructure chess moves are real: the BairabiโSairang railway in Mizoram and the JiribamโImphal link in Manipur arenโt just rail linesโtheyโre arteries India hopes will one day pump minerals from Myanmarโs embattled heart into its own industrial bloodstream.
Where the Narrative Slips Into Mirage
But then the reporting veers into terrain less solid, more mirage than mountain. The so-called โlove-hateโ between the Kachin Independence Army and China is less a loversโ quarrel than a cold transactionโBeijing bankrolls, KIA tolerates. To suggest that KIA is ready to swing its bulk exports to India is more hopeful fiction than geopolitical fact.
Likewise, framing Delhiโs outreach to a non-state militia as a shocking break from tradition forgets Indiaโs own history: the informal, shadow economies of the northeast have long blurred the line between state policy and pragmatic backdoor dealing.
And those railways? They may look bold on paper, but no steel tracks yet pierce Kachinโs mineral belts. For now, they remain blueprints and press releases, not conduits of ore.
The Rare Earths That Really Matter
Strip away the theater and one truth remains: Kachinโs rare earths are simply too precious for India to ignore. China knows this, and every delay on Indiaโs part tightens Beijingโs chokehold on dysprosium and terbiumโthe irreplaceable metals of the green and digital revolutions.
Investors and strategists should read the piece not as a roadmap but as a cautionary tale. Indiaโs ambitions are embryonic, Myanmar is still a warzone, and the logistical arteries required to move heavy rare earths remain yearsโif not decadesโaway. The scramble is real, but so is the distance between aspiration and reality.
Citation: Samir K Purkayastha, The Federal, โMyanmar ground reality hits Indiaโs plans to tap rare earth minerals (opens in a new tab),โ September 20, 2025.
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