The Aravalli question faces the brunt of India’s fondness for ‘strategic exemptions’
UPSC Study Note: The Aravalli Question & India's 'Strategic Exemptions'
1. At a Glance
- The Aravalli Hills — one of the world's oldest fold mountain ranges — are caught between India's ecological protection imperatives and its push for domestic critical mineral extraction for defence and green technology. [S1][S2]
- The Supreme Court's November 2025 order defined Aravalli hills using a 100-metre elevation threshold, froze new mining leases, and carved out an explicit exception for critical, strategic, and atomic minerals under the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) [MMDR] Act, 1957. [S2][S3]
- The topic sits at the intersection of GS-III (environment, mining policy) and GS-II (judicial review, executive discretion), making it a rare crosscutting issue. [S1]
- India's resort to "strategic exemptions" — bypassing EIA hearings, public scrutiny, and judicial directions via executive orders citing national defence — is the central governance concern. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- November 20, 2025: Supreme Court adopts a uniform 100-metre elevation definition for Aravalli "hills and ranges," prohibits mining in core/inviolate areas, and freezes new mining leases pending a Management Plan for Sustainable Mining (MPSM) by ICFRE. [S2][S3]
- September 2025: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) issues an Office Memorandum exempting critical mineral mining projects from public hearings under EIA Notification, 2006, invoking the "strategic considerations" clause. [S4]
- December 23, 2025: Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit, Chief of Integrated Defence Staff, publicly makes the defence establishment's case for domestic critical mineral access, citing global supply chain concentration as a "strategic vulnerability." [S4]
- December 24, 2025: Centre issues direction to states for complete ban on new mining leases in the Aravalli range. [S5]
- December 28, 2025: Supreme Court takes suo motu cognisance of the definitional ambiguity of Aravalli hills. [S5]
- December 29, 2025: SC stays its own November 20 judgment and refers the matter back for reconsideration, citing definitional confusion. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- Origin: The Aravallis are among Earth's oldest fold mountains (pre-Cambrian), stretching ~692 km through Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi, and Gujarat. They act as a natural barrier against westward desert advancement (Thar Desert) and recharge the NCR's groundwater. [S1]
- 1991–2009: A series of Supreme Court orders attempted to restrict quarrying and mining in Haryana and Rajasthan portions; compliance was uneven.
- 2009: MoEFCC notified Aravalli Notification under the Environment Protection Act for parts of Haryana.
- 2019: Supreme Court extended a ban on stone quarrying in Aravallis; definitional disputes over what constitutes "Aravalli land" erupted between states.
- 2024 (July 23): Finance Minister announces National Critical Mineral Mission in Union Budget 2024-25. [S6]
- 2025 (Cabinet approval): Union Cabinet approves the National Critical Mineral Mission with an outlay of ₹34,300 crore over 7 years. [S6]
- November–December 2025: Supreme Court orders, executive MoEFCC OM, and defence establishment's public lobbying converge into the current controversy. [S2][S3][S4]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Range length | ~692 km (Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi, Gujarat) |
| Geological age | Pre-Cambrian (one of world's oldest fold mountain ranges) |
| Key SC definition (Nov 2025) | 100-metre elevation threshold to identify hills/ranges |
| Body tasked with MPSM | ICFRE (Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education) under MoEFCC |
| SC exception carved out | Critical, strategic & atomic minerals (Seventh Schedule, MMDR Act 1957) |
| Critical minerals identified in Aravallis | Tin, graphite, molybdenum, niobium, nickel, lithium, Rare Earth Elements (REEs) |
| Strategic exemption vehicle | MoEFCC Office Memorandum (September 2025) under EIA Notification 2006 |
| National Critical Mineral Mission outlay | ₹34,300 crore over 7 years |
| Mission announced | Union Budget 2024-25 (July 23, 2024) |
| Enabling legislation | MMDR Act, 1957 (Seventh Schedule lists atomic/critical minerals) |
| Implementing ministry (Mission) | Ministry of Mines |
| Integrated Defence Staff Chief | Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit (as of Dec 2025) |
| EIA exemption clause invoked | "Strategic considerations" under EIA Notification, 2006 |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Environmental
- Aravallis act as a green wall against the advancing Thar Desert; denudation accelerates desertification in Rajasthan and Delhi. [S1]
- Mining causes groundwater depletion (NCR already water-stressed), biodiversity loss, and soil erosion in a fragile semi-arid landscape. [S1]
- The 100-metre elevation threshold adopted by SC was contested by ecologists as too permissive — nearly 50% of the Aravallis could become vulnerable to mining under this definition. [S3]
- MoEFCC's own MPSM mandate (via ICFRE) is a positive step but lacks a binding timeline. [S2]
Legal / Constitutional
- MMDR Act, 1957 (Seventh Schedule): classifies atomic and strategic minerals, creating a statutory basis for differential treatment; the SC order explicitly carves these out. [S2]
- EIA Notification, 2006: the September 2025 OM bypasses the mandatory public hearing process for critical mineral projects, raising Article 21 concerns (right to healthy environment as interpreted in Subhash Kumar v. State of Bihar). [S4]
- SC's December 29 stay of its own November 20 order creates a rare judicial vacuum — no operative definition of "Aravalli" exists pending reconsideration. [S3]
- The suo motu cognisance (Dec 28, 2025) signals judicial discomfort with the definitional manipulation that has historically enabled mining. [S5]
Ethical / Governance
- India has no clear statutory rule to resolve conflicts between climate commitments and industrial demand; instead, it relies on executive discretion — ad hoc OMs, "strategic" labels, and opaque ministerial orders. [S4]
- The defence establishment's public lobbying (Air Marshal Dixit, Dec 23) before a pending SC case raises questions about separation of powers and the propriety of executive pressure on judicial proceedings. [S4]
- "Strategic exemption" creep: once the exemption exists for defence minerals, it risks being applied expansively to bypass environmental scrutiny in other contexts. [S4]
Economic
- Aravallis contain commercially significant deposits of lithium, REEs, niobium — minerals critical for EV batteries, wind turbines, semiconductors, and defence electronics. [S2][S4]
- National Critical Mineral Mission (₹34,300 crore) aims to build a domestic value chain — exploration → mining → beneficiation → processing — reducing import dependence from China-dominated supply chains. [S6]
- Import dependence on critical minerals is framed as a strategic vulnerability — India imports ~80% of its REE requirements. [S4]
Administrative
- Definitional fragmentation: different state governments (Rajasthan, Haryana, Gujarat) apply different boundaries for "Aravalli," enabling regulatory arbitrage. [S3]
- ICFRE (forestry body under MoEFCC) is tasked with preparing the MPSM — but has no explicit mining expertise, creating capacity mismatch. [S2]
- Centre's December 24 direction to states for a complete ban on new leases lacks enforceable teeth without a gazetted notification. [S5]
Historical
- The Aravalli mining controversy mirrors earlier resource-vs-environment clashes: Vedanta-Niyamgiri (tribal rights vs. bauxite mining), coal block allocations (CAG 2012 report), and coastal regulation zone dilutions — all resolved via executive discretion rather than clear statutory rules. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- July 23, 2024: National Critical Mineral Mission announced in Union Budget 2024-25. [S6]
- Cabinet approval (2025): Mission formally approved with ₹34,300 crore, 7-year outlay. [S6]
- September 2025: MoEFCC OM exempts critical mineral mining from EIA public hearings under "strategic considerations." [S4]
- November 20, 2025: SC adopts 100-metre threshold definition; freezes new mining leases; mandates ICFRE-led MPSM; carves out exception for critical/strategic/atomic minerals. [S2][S3]
- December 22, 2025: Union Minister Bhupender Yadav states no new mining leases in ecologically sensitive Aravalli areas. [S5]
- December 23, 2025: Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit publicly makes defence case for critical mineral access. [S4]
- December 24, 2025: Centre directs states — complete ban on new mining leases in Aravalli range. [S5]
- December 28, 2025: SC takes suo motu cognisance of definitional ambiguity. [S5]
- December 29, 2025: SC stays its November 20 judgment; matter referred back for reconsideration. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Aravallis stretch approximately 692 km across Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi, and Gujarat.
- The Supreme Court's November 20, 2025 order adopted a 100-metre elevation threshold to define Aravalli "hills and ranges." [S2]
- ICFRE (Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education) — under MoEFCC — was mandated to prepare the Management Plan for Sustainable Mining (MPSM). [S2]
- The SC order prohibited mining in "core/inviolate areas" but explicitly exempted critical, strategic, and atomic minerals listed in the Seventh Schedule of the MMDR Act, 1957. [S2]
- Critical minerals identified in the Aravalli-Delhi system include lithium, tin, graphite, molybdenum, niobium, nickel, and REEs. [S2][S4]
- National Critical Mineral Mission was announced in Union Budget 2024-25 (July 23, 2024). [S6]
- The Mission's approved outlay is ₹34,300 crore over 7 years; implementing ministry is Ministry of Mines. [S6]
- MoEFCC invoked the "strategic considerations" clause of the EIA Notification, 2006 via an Office Memorandum (September 2025) to exempt critical mineral projects from public hearings. [S4]
- The Supreme Court stayed its own November 20, 2025 order on December 29, 2025 — a rare instance of a court staying its own judgment. [S3]
- SC took suo motu cognisance of the Aravalli definitional issue on December 28, 2025. [S5]
- The Aravallis function as a natural barrier against the advancing Thar Desert (desertification check). [S1]
- The Chief of Integrated Defence Staff who publicly advocated for critical mineral access in December 2025 was Air Marshal Ashutosh Dixit. [S4]
- The DTE analysis found that nearly 50% of the Aravallis could become vulnerable to mining under the 100-metre elevation definition. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Environment and ecology; mineral policy; energy security; conservation vs. development trade-offs. - GS-II: Judicial review; executive discretion; governance and transparency; role of statutory bodies.
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Conservation, environmental pollution, and degradation; effects of liberalization on the environment; infrastructure (energy). - GS-II: Important aspects of governance, transparency, and accountability; functioning of the judiciary.
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India's approach to resolving conflicts between environmental protection and strategic resource extraction relies on executive discretion rather than clear statutory rules. Critically examine with reference to the Aravalli Hills controversy." (GS-III/GS-II) 2. "Critically analyse the implications of 'strategic exemptions' carved out in environmental laws for critical mineral mining in ecologically sensitive areas. What institutional safeguards are needed?" (GS-III) 3. "The National Critical Mineral Mission is necessary but insufficient for India's energy transition goals. Examine the governance and ecological challenges in building a domestic critical mineral value chain." (GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| MMDR Act, 1957 & Amendments (2021, 2023) | The statutory backbone for critical mineral classification and mining lease rules. |
| EIA Notification, 2006 & Dilution Concerns | The "strategic considerations" clause is embedded here; repeated dilutions are a recurring GS issue. |
| National Critical Mineral Mission | Direct policy vehicle cited in the Aravalli controversy; covers value chain, PSU acquisitions abroad. |
| Vedanta-Niyamgiri Case (2013) | Landmark precedent on tribal rights vs. mining; parallel structure of resource-vs-environment clash. |
| Forest Conservation Act & Amendments (2023) | Aravallis involve forest land; 2023 FCA amendments also relaxed scrutiny for strategic projects. |
| India's NDCs and Green Transition | Demand for lithium, REEs is driven by India's solar/EV targets under Paris Agreement commitments. |
| Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 | Forest-dwelling communities in Aravalli foothills have rights that intersect with mining permissions. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry for MPSM preparation: It is MoEFCC via ICFRE, not the Ministry of Mines — easy to confuse since mining policy sits under Mines.
- Confusing "critical minerals" with "atomic minerals": These are distinct categories under MMDR Act; atomic minerals have a separate schedule and are regulated under the Atomic Energy Act. The SC exemption covers both but they are not interchangeable.
- National Critical Mineral Mission outlay: ₹34,300 crore — not ₹16,300 crore (an earlier, incorrect figure circulated before Cabinet approval). [S6]
- The SC did NOT impose a total mining ban: It banned new leases for general minerals in inviolate areas pending MPSM; critical/strategic/atomic mineral leases were explicitly exempted — a nuance that is frequently misread.
- Aravalli states: The range passes through four states/UTs — Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi (UT), and Gujarat — aspirants often miss Gujarat or conflate the range with purely Rajasthan geography.
11. Sources
- [S1] Aravalli Hills: Protecting Ecology and Ensuring Sustainable Development — https://www.pib.gov.in/FactsheetDetails.aspx?Id=150596®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S2] Aravalli Hills: Protecting Ecology and Ensuring Sustainable Development (PDF) — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/dec/doc20251221740901.pdf — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S3] Supreme Court Ruling: Aravalli Mining Leases Not Entirely Banned — https://www.downtoearth.org.in/environment/governments-claim-of-no-new-mining-leases-in-aravalli-not-entirely-true — (Tier 4: downtoearth.org.in)
- [S4] The Aravalli Question Faces the Brunt of India's Fondness for 'Strategic Exemptions' — The Hindu (article excerpt, January 2, 2026) — (Tier 4: thehindu.com)
- [S5] Supreme Court Takes Suo Motu Cognisance on Definition of Aravalli Hills — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/supreme-court-takes-suo-motu-cognisance-on-issue-of-definition-of-aravalli-hills — (Government broadcaster: newsonair.gov.in)
- [S6] Cabinet Approves National Critical Mineral Mission — ₹34,300 crore over 7 years — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2097309 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)