NITI Aayog working on policy recommendations, incentives to boost critical mineral extraction
New Delhi, July 1
NITI Aayog is working on policy recommendations, including royalty and incentive mechanisms, to encourage the extraction of critical minerals and strengthen India's critical mineral value chain amid rising demand from clean energy and advanced technologies, Anupam Lahiri, Principal Director and Additional Director General at NITI Aayog, said on Wednesday.
"We are working on policy prescriptions. One aspect is what the royalty should be so that state governments are compensated, but more importantly, how incentivisation can come for the mine owner so that they can invest in extracting the critical minerals," Lahiri said.
He was speaking during the 15th India Minerals and Metals Forum with the theme related to India's minerals and metals sector and building self-reliance.
Lahiri said recycling has emerged as another key pillar of India's critical minerals strategy.
He said a committee is examining the entire value chain for recovery of critical minerals from battery waste, e-waste and mining waste, and is working on identifying costs and revenue streams across the chain to design suitable incentives. The committee is expected to come out with a plan of action for implementation by the Ministry of Mines.
"The main problem what we are facing is the collection space. From different households and institutional areas till the critical mineral is recovered, the total value chain we require to map. Only then we can have some policy as to what incentive or at which stage the incentive can be given," he said.
He said India already generates a sizeable volume of battery waste and e-waste, which is expected to increase further in the coming years, and stakeholder consultations are underway to develop a practical framework for strengthening the recycling ecosystem.
Lahiri said around 5,000 mineral blocks are under exploration or at different stages of exploration in the country. However, converting mineral resources into mineable reserves takes time, making overseas acquisition of critical mineral assets another important pillar of India's strategy. "Till then we cannot wait," he added.
He said Indian public sector companies are pursuing critical mineral projects in countries such as Australia and Argentina.
However, he noted that several resource-rich countries allow mining but restrict export of raw ore, requiring processing within their jurisdictions before export, posing a challenge for supply security.
Lahiri said the growing importance of new technologies is driving a shift in industrial demand from conventional raw materials towards critical minerals.
He added that India initially identified around 40 minerals that could be classified as critical before refining the list following consultations with scientific experts and industry stakeholders.
Highlighting the importance of technology, Lahiri said scaling up indigenous technologies would be essential to reduce costs and strengthen India's critical mineral ecosystem.
"The only problem is that the scale. If the technology can be scaled then only the cost can come down," he said.
He added that technologies at lower stages of development remain expensive unless they are scaled up for commercial deployment.
He expressed confidence that coordinated efforts by the government, industry, research institutions and technology developers would help India meet a significant share of its future critical mineral requirements through domestic production, recycling and innovation.
— ANI
Reader Comments
This is a promising step for India's self-reliance in rare earth elements. But the real challenge will be balancing environmental impact with extraction. Hope the policy includes strict environmental safeguards too, not just incentives for mining.
Recycling e-waste is a great idea — we generate tonnes of it in cities like Bangalore and Delhi. But collection from households is a mess. No one knows where to dump old phones and batteries properly. If they create a proper channel with small incentives, people will participate for sure.
Interesting that they're looking at overseas acquisitions too. But why not focus more on domestic exploration first? 5000 mineral blocks under exploration sounds impressive, but converting them into actual mines takes forever due to red tape. Clearances need to be faster and more transparent.
Scaling up indigenous technology is the key 🔑 We have good research in IITs, but it never goes beyond labs because there's no funding for pilot projects. The government should create a dedicated fund for scaling critical mineral tech from lab to commercial level. Otherwise, we'll always be dependent on imports.
India has huge potential in rare earths, especially in the beach sands of Kerala and Odisha. But the real bottleneck is the lack of processing facilities. We export raw minerals and import processed ones at higher costs. This policy should also focus on building processing plants within India, not just extraction.
We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.