India’s Rare Earth Push: Ambition Meets Reality

Mar 28, 2026

Highlights

  • India aims for 5,000 tonnes of domestic magnet production by 2030, launching processing corridors and lithium exploration in a whole-of-government push to build integrated rare earth supply chains.
  • The country faces a critical midstream bottleneck where China controls ~90% of separation, metals, and magnet fabrication capacity—making execution sequencing the key risk factor.
  • Success hinges on solving environmental permitting, complex geology, and mobilizing private capital with clear pricing signals and long-term offtake guarantees to avoid the trap of mining without processing.

India is accelerating its rare earth and lithium strategy, targeting 5,000 tonnes of domestic magnet production by 2030—up from a current demand base of ~4,000 tonnes expected to double by decade’s end. For investors, the message seems clear enough: New Delhi is no longer content to remain a marginal player in critical minerals as Rare Earth Exchanges™ has chronicled over the past year.  Pilot NdFeB magnet projects, a scaling samarium–cobalt plant in Visakhapatnam, and early-stage lithium exploration in Rajasthan and Jammu & Kashmir signal intent to build an integrated supply chain spanning mining to magnet manufacturing.

Midway through this push, the details matter. According to Chemical Industry Digest (opens in a new tab) and official statements from Dr. Jitendra Singh (opens in a new tab), currently serving as Minister of Science & Technology, India is pursuing a “whole-of-government” approach—launching processing corridors across Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, and Kerala while opening parts of the sector to private investment. This is structurally aligned with global trends: governments stepping in where markets have failed to build resilient supply chains.

But ambition raises hard questions. Can India solve the midstream bottleneck—separation, metals, and magnet fabrication—where China still dominates ~90% of capacity? Will environmental permitting, complex geology, and fragmented execution slow progress? Can private capital be mobilized at scale without clear pricing signals or long-term offtake guarantees?

For executives and policymakers, the risk is not underinvestment—it is mis-sequencing. Mining without processing solves little. For investors, the opportunity is real—but so is execution risk.

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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 targets 5,000 tonnes domestic magnet production by 2030. Can its critical minerals strategy overcome China's 90% midstream dominance? (read full article...)

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