Highlights
- India's government aims to build indigenous rare earth permanent magnet capacity to reduce reliance on China's dominance in EV motor magnets, targeting a critical supply chain chokepoint.
- Success hinges on overcoming technical barriers:
- Commercial-scale NdPr separation
- Sintered magnet manufacturing complexity
- Lengthy OEM qualification cycles
- Sustained capital investment
- Credible pathways include:
- Technology partnerships with non-Chinese players
- Anchor offtake commitments from EV manufacturers
- Phased pilot-to-scale execution
- Importing operational expertise alongside capital
Indiaโs government says it wants to build indigenous rare earth permanent magnet capacity to support electric vehicles. For a lay reader, the message is clear and sensible: EV motors need magnets, China dominates magnets, and India wants to localize a critical chokepoint. That framing, reported by Asian News International (ANI) and attributed to H D Kumaraswamy (opens in a new tab) at the 5th Global Electric Mobility Summit 2026 organized by Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers, (opens in a new tab) is directionally correct.
But in rare earths, aiming at the right target does not guarantee a clean hit.
From producing films to directing steel furnacesโH D Kumaraswamy has gone from box office hits to heavy industry, now helping India turn rare earths into a blockbuster supply chain.
Why Magnets Matter More Than Mines
Permanent magnets made from neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbium sit at the heart of high-efficiency EV motors. Control over magnetsโnot oreโdefines strategic leverage across autos, defense, robotics, and energy systems. Chinaโs dominance stems from downstream mastery: separation, metal-making, alloying, and sintered magnet manufacturing.
On this point, Indiaโs focus is aligned with global reality. Any serious attempt to de-risk EV supply chains must confront magnets head-on.
The Hard Problems the Statement Skips
What the ANI report does not explore are the technical and economic barriers:
- Separation bottlenecks: India lacks commercial-scale NdPr separation operating at global cost and purity benchmarks.
- Manufacturing complexity: Sintered magnet production requires tight process control, specialized equipment, and years of learning-by-doing.
- OEM qualification: Automotive-grade magnets must pass long validation cycles; this cannot be rushed.
- Capital intensity: Integrated magnet supply chains demand sustained capex, not one-off incentives.
None of these obstacles are addressed in the announcementโbut they will determine success or failure.
How India Could Transcend the Bottlenecks
There are credible pathways forward if India treats magnets as an industrial project, not a slogan:
- Technology partnerships: Secure proven separation and magnet IP through joint ventures with experienced non-Chinese players. Albeit, to date, this is a nascent space.
- Anchor offtake: Lock in long-term EV OEM commitments to de-risk investment and accelerate qualification.
- Phased execution: Start with pilot-scale separation and magnet lines, then scaleโrather than leap straight to megaprojects.
- Talent strategy: Import operational expertise alongside capital; magnets are built by engineers, not policies. Why are so many nations in the Great Powers Era 2.0 missing this point?
This is how downstream capability is actually built.
Why This Still Matters
Indiaโs announcement is notable because it targets the correct choke point. That alone differentiates it from mine-centric strategies that miss where value accrues. Still, intent without execution changes nothing for investors.
And our message to Minister Kumaraswamy, until timelines, partners, capital structures, and offtake are disclosed, Indiaโs magnet push remains a strategic signalโnot an investable turning point.
Source: Asian News International; remarks by H D Kumaraswamy
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