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India’s Critical Mineral Mission Gains Momentum

(Source: Ministry of Mines | Critical Mineral Auctions)

Topic: GS-3: Mineral Resources | Infrastructure | Energy Transition | Economy , GS-2: Government Policies & Interventions

Context

  • India completed the 7th Tranche of Critical Mineral Auctions and the 2nd Tranche of Exploration Licence (EL) Auctions.
  • Total auctioned so far:
    • 56 Critical Mineral Blocks
    • 11 Exploration Licence Blocks
  • Supports India’s goal of reducing import dependence in strategic minerals.

Key Facts

  • 56 critical mineral blocks auctioned.
  • 63%+ auction success rate (56 of 88 blocks).
  • 10 blocks auctioned in 7th tranche.
  • 11 EL blocks auctioned since EL regime began.
  • ₹34,300 crore outlay under National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM).
  • 24 critical minerals listed under MMDR Act, 1957.

Why Critical Minerals Matter

Essential for:

  • Electric Vehicles (EVs)
  • Solar & Wind Energy
  • Battery Storage Systems
  • Semiconductors
  • Electronics Manufacturing
  • Defence Technologies
  • Aerospace Industry

Key minerals:

  • Lithium
  • Cobalt
  • Nickel
  • Graphite
  • Rare Earth Elements (REEs)
  • Titanium
  • Vanadium

Legal & Policy Framework

MMDR Amendment Act, 2023

  • Added 24 critical minerals under Part D, Schedule I.
  • Empowered Central Government to auction critical mineral blocks.
  • Introduced Exploration Licence (EL) regime.
  • Opened private participation in exploration.

National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM)

  • Approved: January 2025.
  • Outlay: ₹34,300 crore (2024–31).
  • Targets:
    • 1,200 exploration projects
    • 50 overseas mineral assets
    • Strengthening domestic supply chains

Highlights of 7th Tranche

  • 10 blocks successfully auctioned.
  • Minerals offered:
    • Graphite
    • REEs
    • Vanadium
    • Titanium
    • Rock Phosphate
    • Glauconite

First-time auctions in:

  • Gujarat
  • Uttarakhand
  • Telangana

Exploration Licence (EL) Expansion

First EL auctions conducted in:

  • Arunachal Pradesh
  • Uttar Pradesh
  • Odisha

Benefits:

  • Encourages private exploration.
  • Improves geological data availability.
  • Expands domestic resource discovery.

Strategic Significance

Energy Security

  • Reduces dependence on imports.
  • Supports clean energy transition.

Manufacturing Growth

  • Boosts Make in India.
  • Strengthens EV and electronics ecosystems.

National Security

  • Ensures availability of minerals for defence and advanced technologies.

Cooperative Federalism

  • Centre auctions blocks.
  • States receive mining revenue and lease benefits.

Strengths

  • 63% auction success rate for a new regime.
  • Wider geographical diversification.
  • Greater private-sector participation.
  • Strong policy support through NCMM.
  • Builds long-term mineral security.

Challenges

  • 44 blocks remain unauctioned.
  • Auction does not guarantee production.
  • Long gestation period between exploration and mining.
  • Processing and refining capacity remains limited.
  • Continued dependence on imported lithium, cobalt and REEs.

Way Forward

  • Create a production-tracking dashboard.
  • Improve bidder participation in difficult blocks.
  • Develop mineral processing and refining hubs.
  • Strengthen State–Centre coordination.
  • Accelerate exploration under NCMM.
  • Secure overseas critical mineral assets.

UPSC Value Addition

Critical Minerals = Minerals essential for economic growth and national security whose supply is vulnerable to disruption.

Examples:

  • Lithium
  • Cobalt
  • Nickel
  • Graphite
  • Rare Earth Elements

Conclusion

  • The auction of 56 critical mineral blocks marks a significant step toward India’s resource security and clean-energy ambitions. However, true success will depend on converting auctioned assets into operational mines, developing refining capacity, and building resilient domestic supply chains.

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