India Goes Offshore—With a Digital Leash

Feb 10, 2026

Highlights

  • India's Ministry of Mines published new Offshore Areas Mineral Rules requiring:
    • Digital tracking
    • Online permits
    • Real-time vessel monitoring for all offshore minerals except hydrocarbons
  • The rules mandate cradle-to-grave traceability with:
    • Pre-declared transport routes
    • Automated identification systems
    • Penalties up to 5 years imprisonment for violations
  • India is building a comprehensive regulatory infrastructure before offshore production scales to position itself as a transparent alternative to Chinese supply chains for seabed minerals, including battery metals.

On February 3rd, India’s Ministry of Mines quietly published the Offshore Areas Mineral (Prevention of Illegal Mining and Transportation) Rules, 2026 in the Gazette of India. The title is bureaucratic. The intent is not. New Delhi is erecting a digital compliance regime over offshore mineral extraction—complete with vessel tracking, online permits, and seizure powers. The rules apply to all offshore minerals except hydrocarbons. They require operators, carriers, and mine developers to register on a government web portal, install real-time electronic monitoring systems, and obtain digitally signed transit permits before moving material. Each shipment must disclose grade, quantity, royalty payments, destination, and export documentation. Exporters must secure customs clearance at least seven days before dispatch.

In effect, India is demanding cradle-to-port traceability.

This is governance before tonnage. Offshore production remains limited, but the regulatory scaffolding is being built as if scale is inevitable.

Surveillance at Sea

The most striking feature is compulsory electronic oversight. Vessels must carry automated tracking and identification systems capable of continuous location reporting. Transport routes must be pre-declared. Weighment systems at the first onshore discharge point must comply with Indian Bureau of Mines specifications, with dry-weight conversion factors applied scientifically.

Such granularity mirrors supply-chain transparency standards increasingly demanded in Western markets. It also positions India to monitor revenue leakage and illegal diversion—problems that plague terrestrial mining across emerging markets.

Yet questions arise. Will smaller operators bear the cost of compliance? Does India possess the institutional capacity to monitor data in real time? Digital architecture without enforcement bandwidth risks becoming symbolic.

Teeth Behind the Portal

As Rare Earth Exchanges has chronicled, we have entered the Great Powers Era 2.0.  And perhaps as a consequence, the new rules carry muscle. Authorities from theSubcontinent may inspect, seize, and publicly auction mineral cargo. Operating rights can be cancelled. Violations can result in prison terms of up to five years and fines of up to ₹1 crore ($110- $120 thousand USD), with additional daily penalties. The release of seized property requires cash or a bank guarantee. The Navy, Coast Guard, and state police are formally enlisted in enforcement.

This is not light-touch regulation.

Strategic Implications

India harbors ambitions in offshore polymetallic nodules and other seabed resources—materials that could include rare earth elements and battery metals. For investors seeking alternatives to Chinese supply chains, regulatory clarity matters almost as much as geology.

But governance is notproduction. Offshore extraction is technologically complex andcapital-intensive. India is signaling seriousness. Whether it can translate digital oversight into commercially viable output remains an open question.

For now, India has chosen to control first—and mine later.

Source: Gazette of India — Extraordinary

Registry No. D.L.-33004/99_

Part II — Section 3 — Sub-section (i)

Published by Authority_

Ministry of Mines — Notification

New Delhi, February 3, 2026_

G.S.R. 102(E).— Inexercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) and clause (pa) ofsub-section (2) of section 35 of the Offshore Areas Mineral (Development and Regulation) Act, 2002 (Act No. 17 of 2003), the Central Government hereby makes the following rules, namely:—_

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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India's new offshore mining regulations demand digital tracking, real-time monitoring, and strict compliance before production scales. (read full article...)

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