Vedanta Urges India to Accelerate Domestic Resource Production Amid Global Risks

Vedanta Group has urged India to accelerate domestic exploration and operationalize natural resource assets faster to reduce import dependence amid global supply risks. The company highlighted that 88% of India's crude oil is imported and critical minerals are concentrated in few geographies. It noted that 85% of auctioned mining blocks in India remain non-operational, indicating a significant execution gap. Vedanta Chairman Anil Agarwal called for faster land acquisition, time-bound approvals, and commercially viable premiums to improve resource sector execution.

Key Points: India Must Boost Domestic Resource Production: Vedanta

  • India imports 88% of crude oil, vulnerable to global supply disruptions
  • Critical minerals concentration risks emerging beyond oil
  • 85% of auctioned mining blocks in India remain non-operational
  • Vedanta calls for faster exploration, policy reforms, and technology-enabled land acquisition
3 min read

India must speed up domestic resource production amid global supply risks: Vedanta

Vedanta Group urges India to speed up domestic resource production amid global supply risks, citing vulnerabilities in energy and mineral supply chains.

"The Strait of Hormuz has once again brought into focus a structural reality - how concentrated and fragile global energy supply chains remain. - Vedanta media brief"

New Delhi, May 9

Amid rising geopolitical tensions around the Strait of Hormuz and growing global competition for critical minerals, Vedanta Group has said India needs to accelerate domestic exploration and operationalise natural resource assets faster to reduce import dependence and strengthen long-term resource security.In its media brief, the metals-to-oil conglomerate said vulnerabilities in global energy and mineral supply chains are "structural, not cyclical", as India remains heavily dependent on imports for crude oil and several key resources. "The Strait of Hormuz has once again brought into focus a structural reality - how concentrated and fragile global energy supply chains remain," the Vedanta media brief said. "With nearly 88% of its crude oil imported and a significant share routed through vulnerable corridors, even short-lived disruptions can cascade into price volatility, supply uncertainty, and macroeconomic pressure." The company said similar concentration risks are now emerging in critical minerals, which are essential for electrification, clean energy and advanced manufacturing."What makes this moment more consequential is that the same pattern is now emerging beyond oil. Critical minerals, essential for electrification, clean energy, and advanced manufacturing, are also concentrated across a handful of geographies," the document stated. The media brief comes at a time when global markets remain sensitive to developments in West Asia, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, a key global oil transit route.Vedanta said India's challenge was not resource scarcity alone, but the pace at which exploration and production capacities are being developed."The country holds meaningful untapped potential across hydrocarbons and minerals. The gap lies in the speed of exploration, scale of investment, and ability to convert resources into production," the company said in the document. The company also called for faster operationalisation of mining assets and policy reforms to improve execution in the natural resources sector."At a time when 50% of India's import bill is linked to natural resources, it is critical to operationalise assets faster," Vedanta Chairman Anil Agarwal said in the media brief. He further said this would require "faster, technology-enabled land acquisition with direct benefit transfer", "time-bound approvals with trust-based, self-certification frameworks", and "commercially viable premiums to ensure sustainability of operations." According to the Vedanta, around 85 per cent of auctioned mining blocks in India remain non-operational, highlighting what it described as a significant execution gap.

The group's comments come shortly after Vedanta completed its demerger into five sector-focused entities effective May 1, covering aluminium, power, oil & gas, iron & steel, and Vedanta Ltd, which will house zinc, copper and critical minerals businesses.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
I've been following this story closely as someone who works in supply chain logistics in Mumbai. The Strait of Hormuz is indeed a chokepoint that India can't afford to ignore. But I'm a bit skeptical when Vedanta - a company that's been sitting on mining blocks for years - suddenly becomes the voice of urgency. Aren't they part of the problem too? 85% of auctioned blocks non-operational? That's not just government red tape.
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Vikram M
Anil Agarwal is right about one thing - our import bill is 50% natural resources. But let's not forget that Vedanta itself has had environmental clearance issues and mining disputes in Odisha and Goa. "Faster land acquisition" is a loaded term. We need a balanced approach: accelerate production but not at the cost of indigenous communities and forests. The minerals are under our feet, but so are our villages. 🤔
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Rohit P
This is the most sensible corporate statement I've read in months. The critical minerals angle is especially important - lithium, cobalt, rare earths for our EV mission and electronics manufacturing. China controls most of the processing. If we don't start now, we'll be begging for battery materials in 2030. I say bring on the reforms - self-certification, tech-enabled land acquisition, everything. Time is running out. 🇮🇳
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Aman W
I appreciate the concern about supply chains, but isn't Vedanta just lobbying for more subsidies and relaxed norms? The demerger into five companies was also about unlocking value for shareholders, not about national security. Let's not confuse corporate self-interest with patriotism. That said, yes, we need to explore more - but with proper oversight, not a free pass. Otherwise we'll end up like the coal sector - exploited without real energy security. ✋

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