Key Points

India is addressing critical mineral shortages through a comprehensive three-part strategy. The approach includes processing virgin minerals, recovering co-products from existing mining operations, and extracting minerals from electronic waste. Both government and industry are collaborating on these initiatives, with specific focus on skilling youth for e-waste collection. This comes amid global supply concerns following China's export controls on rare earth materials.

Key Points: Tata Steel Mining MD Pankaj Satija on India Critical Mineral Strategy

  • Virgin mineral mining and processing with government expertise
  • Recovering nickel and chromite as co-products from mining operations
  • Extracting minerals from e-waste across urban and rural areas
  • Skilling initiatives for youth in e-waste collection and mineral recovery
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India can tackle critical mineral shortage through processing, co-products, e-waste: Tata Steel Mining MD

Tata Steel Mining MD outlines 3-pronged approach: processing virgin minerals, recovering co-products from mining, and extracting from e-waste to address India's critical mineral shortage.

"Both the government and industry are working on the three-prong approach - Pankaj K Satija"

New Delhi, August 28

India can address the shortage of critical minerals through three key methods--processing, recovery as co-products, and extraction from e-waste, according to Pankaj K Satija, Managing Director of Tata Steel Mining Ltd.Speaking with ANI, at the sidelines of an event organised by industry body FICCI in the national capital on Thursday, Satija elaborated on a three-pronged approach to address India's shortage of critical minerals.

He highlighted that both government and industry are working together across three key areas. "Both the government and industry are working on the three-prong approach. One is the virgin material, where the resources and results are there, how we can mine it and how we can process it," Satija said.

The first approach focuses on tapping virgin resources through mining and processing, Satija noted that the government is bringing in expertise and systems to boost capabilities in this area.

The second strategy involves recovering critical minerals as co-products from existing mining processes. For instance, minerals like nickel and chromite, often found as associated materials in overburden, can be extracted during mining operations.

The third approach centres on urban mining and e-waste recovery. Satija said that with the widespread use of electronic appliances in both rural and urban areas, there is growing potential to extract critical minerals from discarded gadgets. He emphasised that the narrowing rural-urban divide in digital device usage supports this strategy.

He also highlighted the role of skilling initiatives, suggesting that sector-specific skill councils, such as those for mining and green jobs, could collaborate to train youth in e-waste collection and mineral recovery.

In April, China imposed export controls on certain rare earth-related items, triggering global supply concerns, including in India. Given China's dominance in global rare earth processing, this sector remains vulnerable, as few alternative suppliers exist.

In response, India launched the National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) in January 2025, with a budget of Rs 16,300 crore and an expected Rs 18,000 crore investment from PSUs. Additionally, the government is encouraging private companies to explore and mine critical minerals abroad to meet domestic demand. However, China has recently assured India of an unrestricted supply of critical minerals.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
Finally some concrete planning! We've been too dependent on China for critical minerals. The three-pronged strategy makes sense - especially recovering minerals from existing mining waste. Waste to wealth concept should be our national mantra.
R
Rohit P
The skilling initiative is crucial. We need to train our youth in modern mining techniques and e-waste management. This could create lakhs of green jobs across both urban and rural India 🇮🇳
S
Sarah B
While the strategy sounds good, implementation will be key. We need strong regulations for e-waste collection and proper environmental safeguards. Hope they don't compromise on sustainability in the rush for minerals.
V
Vikram M
China's assurance of unrestricted supply is reassuring but we shouldn't become complacent. Atmanirbhar Bharat in critical minerals is essential for our manufacturing and defense sectors. Good to see Tata Steel leading this charge!
K
Kavya N
The rural-urban digital divide narrowing is actually helping mineral recovery? What an interesting perspective! Mobile phones in villages becoming future mineral sources - never thought of it that way 😄

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