Highlights
- India inaugurated its first end-to-end Neodymium-Iron-Boron magnet manufacturing facility at ARCI Hyderabad in March 2026, marking a strategic move to localize production of magnets critical to EVs, wind turbines, and defense systems.
- The pilot plant addresses India's heavy import dependence on China, which controls 80-90% of rare earth processing and 90% of global magnet production, with potential for commercial scaling within 3-5 years.
- ARCI, established in 1997 under India's Department of Science and Technology, provides the technical foundation for this initiative through its specialized expertise in powder metallurgy and advanced materials development.
In March 2026, the Government of India inaugurated a pilot-scale Neodymium-Iron-Boron (Nd-Fe-B) magnet manufacturing facility at the International Advanced Research Centre for Powder Metallurgy and New Materials (opens in a new tab) (ARCI) in Hyderabad. The plant was formally launched by Abhay Karandikar (opens in a new tab), signaling a strategic push to localize a critical segment of the global rare earth value chain.

The facility is notable for its end-to-end capability—from strip-cast alloy production through to finished sintered magnets. For the first time, India has a domestic platform to validate manufacturing processes, optimize production, and collaborate with industry on scaling high-performance magnet output.
Nd-Fe-B magnets are foundational to modern industry, powering electric vehicles, wind turbines, advanced defense systems, consumer electronics, and industrial robotics. Yet today, China controls roughly 80–90% of rare earth processing and about 90% of global magnet production, leaving India heavily import-dependent.
This pilot plant represents more than a technical milestone—it is a strategic signal. If successfully scaled, it could enable commercial production within 3–5 years, reducing reliance on Chinese supply chains and strengthening domestic manufacturing resilience.

For global markets, India’s move introduces a potential new node in the ex-China magnet ecosystem—early, but consequential.
ARCI Profile
The International Advanced Research Centre for Powder Metallurgy and New Materials (ARCI), established in 1997 under India’s Department of Science and Technology, is a leading autonomous R&D institution headquartered in Hyderabad with additional operations in Chennai and Gurgaon. The center focuses on four core domains—powder metallurgy, ceramics, surface engineering, and laser processing—aimed at developing advanced, value-added materials for industrial and high-tech applications. Its work emphasizes import substitution, resource efficiency, recycling, and transforming raw mineral outputs into high-performance products. Through 11 specialized research centers, ARCI develops nationally strategic technologies, including high-temperature ceramics, energy-efficient materials, and advanced coatings, while also supporting industry through access to unique facilities and cost-effective solutions to material degradation and performance challenges.
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