India’s Ather Energy Says Magnet Crunch “Sorted”-But Is It Really?

Sep 1, 2025

man wearing glasses and a blue shirt in the context of the EV magnet supply chain

Highlights

  • Ather Energy CEO Tarun Mehta declares rare earth magnet supply shortage as 'sorted out' despite ongoing challenges.
  • India's EV market remains critically dependent on Chinese rare earth magnet exports, revealing significant geopolitical vulnerabilities.
  • Technical limitations persist in substituting heavy rare earth elements, presenting complex engineering and supply chain constraints.

At Bengaluruโ€™s Ather (opens in a new tab) Community Day, CEO Tarun Mehta (opens in a new tab) declared the worst of Indiaโ€™s rare earth magnet shortage behind him. Launching a new e-scooter platform, he assured the crowd that restricted supplies are โ€œsorted out for now.โ€ In a country racing to electrify two-wheelers, his confidence matters. But beneath the optimism lie structural risks that canโ€™t be wished away.

Solid Ground: What Checks Out

Mehtaโ€™s reference to recent disruptions is grounded in fact. Chinaโ€™s April 2025 export curbs hit neodymium, dysprosium, terbium, samarium, gadolinium, praseodymium, cerium, and finished magnets. Export data confirm: shipments of rare earth magnets plunged 74% year-on-year in May, snarling supply chains from EVs to wind turbines. Indiaโ€™s scooter OEMs were not spared. His push to diversify suppliers and reduce part counts in Atherโ€™s new platform reflects real engineering adaptation to supply-chain stress.

Tarun Mehta: Liberated from rare earth supply chain shackles?ย 

Source: X

Between the Lines: The Leap Toward โ€œLightโ€ Rare Earths

Where things slip toward hopeful spin is in Mehtaโ€™s prescription: โ€œmove away from heavy rare earths to at least light rare earths.โ€ While engineers can substitute to some extentโ€”relying on NdPr instead of Dy/Tb for certain magnet gradesโ€”performance penalties are real. High-torque, high-temperature applications (think drive motors in hot Indian summers) still demand dysprosium or terbium doping. The claim that a pivot to light REEs solves the problem oversimplifies.

Selling Confidence, Masking Fragility

The Business Standard framing leans heavily on CEO Tarun Mehtaโ€™s optimism: the crisis is โ€œsorted,โ€ market share is rising, and diversification is supposedly on track. Thatโ€™s part sales pitch, part survival strategy. Growth-stage CEOs often must project resilience as loudly as they market their products. But the underlying facts donโ€™t changeโ€”Indiaโ€™s e-mobility boom is still lashed to Chinese magnet supply chains. No commercial-scale domestic separation facility is operational, and substitutes for heavy rare earth elements like dysprosium and terbium remain technically constrained. Presenting this moment as a solved problem risks blunting the urgency of Indiaโ€™s own industrial build-out.

The Real Signal Beneath the Headlines

For rare earth investors, the headline isnโ€™t Atherโ€™s trajectory toward 20% market share. Itโ€™s the stark reminder that Chinese export restrictions translate instantly into bottlenecks on Indian assembly lines. Mehtaโ€™s remarks confirm the direct exposure of Indiaโ€™s EV sector to Chinese supply maneuvers. With no alternative heavy rare earth refining capacity outside China, every neodymium-praseodymium magnet doped with Dy or Tb is a geopolitical choke point. Indiaโ€™s surging two-wheeler EV marketโ€”one of the largest in the worldโ€”can be slowed or shaped by decisions in Beijing. Thatโ€™s the real takeaway for markets: technology adoption is now inseparable from rare earth geopolitics.

Citation: Business Standard, (opens in a new tab) Aug. 31, 2025.

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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.

1 Comment

  1. Ian Brown

    Tsusho Toyota, have worked out how to use La and Ce instead of Dy/Tb. also have signed an MOU with Pensana (to supplement the India operation) is this how the problem is sorted for now, by not being dependent on Chinese Raw materials

    Reply

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