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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