Highlights
- India launches ambitious $4 billion National Critical Minerals Mission to reduce dependency on critical mineral imports.
- Despite having the third-largest rare earth reserves globally, India currently produces less than 1% of global output.
- The mission faces significant technical, execution, and geopolitical challenges in becoming a true rare earth minerals powerhouse.
Subhrakant Panda’s Economic Times commentary is bullish on India’s National Critical Minerals Mission (opens in a new tab) (NCMM), painting a picture of strategic clarity and economic inevitability. It’s the kind of industrial policy gospel retail investors dream of—Rs 34,300 crore ($4 billion) committed to weaning India off critical mineral imports and building an REE powerhouse from scratch. But dreams need drill rigs. Let’s dig into what holds water—and what’s pure policy PR.
Solid Rock: What Rings True
Yes, India is overwhelmingly import-dependent on rare earths, lithium, cobalt, and nickel. China’s dominance—90% of REE refining and 80% of magnet production—is real, and recent export curbs have rattled supply chains. The article correctly identifies India’s mismatch: third-largest REE reserves globally, yet <1% of global output. Why? Low-grade ores, zero domestic separation/refining, and no magnet-making ecosystem.
It’s also accurate that India has launched NCMM, signed exploratory agreements abroad (e.g., with CAMYEN in Argentina), and joined critical minerals alliances like the U.S.-led Minerals Security Partnership and the Quad Critical Minerals Initiative.
Fault Lines: Promotional Glow, Details on Low
Here’s where things get speculative. The piece frames NCMM as a sure-fire vehicle to generate $100 billion in value by 2040—but provides no model or sourcing for that figure. There’s also no mention of actual mining progress or pilot separation facilities on domestic soil. The “1,200 exploration projects by 2030” from GSI are laudable—but exploratory drilling isn’t the same as delivering separated REEs or battery-grade lithium.
India’s recycling push and interest in scandium/strontium extraction from coal mine overburden are intriguing—but currently anecdotal and pre-commercial. The promised Rs 1,500 crore circular economy scheme sounds great. Where’s the execution record?
Most critically, the piece breezes over India’s complete absence of a rare-earth permanent magnet industry. Without that, all the ores in the world won’t shield India’s EV or electronics sectors from Beijing’s supply throttle.
Verdict: Hopeful Blueprint, Not Yet Bedrock
India’s NCMM is bold and directionally right. But between ambition and autonomy lies a treacherous road: technical gaps, slow execution, and geopolitical hurdles. Investors would be wise to cheer India’s momentum—but not overbid until feasibility turns into feedstock, and feedstock into magnets.
Source: Subhrakant Panda, “India’s critical minerals push gathers steam (opens in a new tab),” The Economic Times, August 1, 2025.
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