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India News Updated Jul 7, 2026

India Expands Critical Minerals Push with 35 Countries for Supply Chains

India has expanded its global outreach to secure critical minerals by partnering with 24 countries and negotiating with 11 others over two years. The strategy aims to reduce dependence on concentrated sources for minerals like lithium, cobalt, and rare earths essential for EVs and clean energy. Collaborations extend to semiconductor supply chains with Japan, Netherlands, Germany, and the US to boost domestic chip manufacturing. The initiative covers exploration, mining, processing, technology transfer, and investment to build resilient supply chains.

India expands critical minerals push, partners with 35 countries to secure supply chains

New Delhi, July 7

India has significantly expanded its global outreach to secure supplies of critical minerals and strengthen semiconductor supply chains, signing partnerships with 24 countries while holding negotiations with 11 others over the past two years.

The initiative forms part of the government's broader strategy to reduce dependence on concentrated supply sources and ensure long-term access to minerals essential for clean energy, electric vehicles (EVs), advanced manufacturing, defence, and semiconductor production.

According to the Ministry of Mines, India has developed a strategic network spanning North America, Europe, Africa, West Asia, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and Australia.

The approach extends beyond sourcing raw materials and includes cooperation in mineral exploration, mining, processing, technology transfer, investment, and resilient supply chains.

India has already established cooperation frameworks with countries including the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan, Australia, Brazil, Argentina, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Namibia, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Israel, Vietnam, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Malawi, and Russia.

These partnerships cover a wide range of strategic resources such as lithium, cobalt, copper, rare earth elements, and other critical minerals, alongside collaboration in semiconductor technologies, energy security, and investment.

At the same time, India is in discussions with countries including Chile, Peru, Zambia, Bolivia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Myanmar, and Indonesia to expand cooperation in lithium, copper, rare earths, and other strategic mineral resources.

A key pillar of the strategy is strengthening India's semiconductor ecosystem. Collaborations with technology leaders such as Japan, the Netherlands, Germany, and the United States are expected to support domestic chip manufacturing capabilities and improve India's integration into global semiconductor supply chains.

Critical minerals -- including lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, and rare earth elements -- are indispensable for EV batteries, renewable energy storage, wind turbines, solar infrastructure, defence systems, aerospace applications, and high-end electronics. Securing reliable access to these materials has become a strategic priority for countries seeking to accelerate clean energy transitions while reducing exposure to geopolitical supply disruptions.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Kavya N

Interesting move, but I hope we're not just signing MoUs for show. We need actual investment in domestic processing and recycling capabilities. Otherwise, we'll just be swapping one dependency for another. Let's see some concrete projects on the ground.

Rohit L

This is what "Atmanirbhar Bharat" should look like — not isolationism but smart global partnerships! EV revolution is coming and we need lithium, cobalt, etc. But also please focus on recycling these minerals from old batteries. Reduce, reuse, recycle! ♻️

Sneha F

Good strategy, but I'm concerned about the environmental and social impact of mining in partner countries like DRC and Ghana. India must ensure ethical sourcing practices. We can't build a green future on the back of exploitation abroad.

Nikhil C

Great to see India partnering with so many countries including Israel, Saudi Arabia and Russia — shows our diplomatic maturity. But the real test will be in execution. Can our bureaucracy move fast enough to actually secure these supply chains? Fingers crossed 🤞

Jennifer L

As someone working in the EV industry, this is music to my ears! India has huge potential but we've been bottlenecked by raw material sourcing. The semiconductor partnership with Japan, Netherlands, Germany and US is especially crucial for our electronics sector. Good timing too.

R

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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