Rare earth corridors to cut Chinese imports


Rare Earth Corridors to Cut Chinese Imports — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1950 Atomic Minerals Directorate (AMD) established; REE survey begun — monazite identified on Indian coasts.
1980s Indian Rare Earths Ltd (IREL) monopolised REE extraction; processed beach sand minerals.
2011 China cuts REE export quotas by ~35%; global supply shock. India begins policy discussions.
2019 Mines & Minerals (Development & Regulation) Amendment Act lists "notified minerals"; REEs linked to atomic minerals under DAE.
2021 Critical Minerals List (first version) prepared; 30 minerals identified as critical for India.
Feb 2023 Mines and Minerals (DAMP) Amendment Act 2023 opens "atomic minerals" (including REEs partially) for private sector; six REEs removed from exclusive government list.
Jan 2025 National Critical Minerals Mission (NCMM) approved: 7-year mission (2024–25 to 2030–31), outlay ₹16,300 crore + ₹18,000 crore PSU investment. [S2]
Feb 2026 Union Budget 2026: Rare Earth Corridors announced for 4 states. [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Classifications - Rare Earth Elements (REEs): Group of 17 elements — 15 lanthanides (La to Lu) + Scandium (Sc) + Yttrium (Y). - Light REEs (LREEs): La, Ce, Pr, Nd — abundant; used in magnets & catalysts. - Heavy REEs (HREEs): Dy, Tb, Er, Yb — scarce; critical for high-performance magnets & defence. - Monazite: Primary REE ore in India; also contains Thorium (hence controlled under Atomic Energy Act, 1962). - Critical Minerals: Minerals with high economic importance and supply-chain vulnerability; India's current list has 30 minerals. [S2]

India's Resource Base [S1] - Monazite reserves: 13.15 million tonnes - Estimated REO (Rare Earth Oxides) content: 7.23 million tonnes - Key deposits: Coastal beach sands of Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Jharkhand; also teri/red sands and inland alluvium.

Implementing Bodies - Ministry of Mines — nodal for NCMM and critical mineral policy. - Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) / IREL (India) Ltd — exclusive mandate over monazite processing (Atomic Energy Act, 1962). - Atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration & Research (AMDER) — geological survey of REE deposits. - Geological Survey of India (GSI) — broader mineral mapping.

Key Schemes / Missions - National Critical Minerals Mission (NCMM): Jan 2025; 7 years; ₹16,300 crore outlay; target: secure domestic production + overseas acquisition. [S2] - KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd): JV of NALCO, HCL, MECL for overseas mineral asset acquisition. [S3] - Rare Earth Corridors (Budget 2026): Focused on 4 states; purpose = mining + processing + R&D + manufacturing cluster. [S4]

International Agreements (Ministry of Mines): Australia, Argentina, Zambia, Mozambique, Peru, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Côte d'Ivoire. [S1]

China's Dominance - ~60% of global REE mining; ~85–90% of global REE processing/refining. - India imports 60–80% by value and 85–90% by quantity of permanent magnets from China (2022–25). [S1] - Japan is the largest importer of Chinese rare earths; USA is second largest. [S4]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's monazite reserves stand at 13.15 million tonnes, containing an estimated 7.23 million tonnes of rare-earth oxides (REO). [S1]
  2. Rare earth corridors were announced in Union Budget 2026 for four states: Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu. [S4]
  3. Monazite is regulated under the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 because it contains thorium (a radioactive element). [S1]
  4. India imported 60–80% by value and 85–90% by quantity of rare earth permanent magnets from China during 2022–25. [S1]
  5. Japan is the largest importer of Chinese rare earths; the USA is the second largest. [S4]
  6. The National Critical Minerals Mission (NCMM) was approved in January 2025 with a 7-year tenure (2024–25 to 2030–31) and proposed expenditure of ₹16,300 crore. [S2]
  7. KABIL stands for Khanij Bidesh India Ltd — a JV of NALCO, HCL, and MECL for overseas mineral acquisition.
  8. IREL (India) Ltd (formerly Indian Rare Earths Limited) under Department of Atomic Energy has the exclusive mandate to process monazite.
  9. India's current Critical Minerals List comprises 30 minerals.
  10. The Mines and Minerals (DAMP) Amendment Act, 2023 removed 6 REEs from the exclusive government list, allowing private sector participation.
  11. AMDER (Atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration & Research) conducts geological surveys of REE-bearing deposits in India.
  12. REE deposits in India are primarily found in coastal beach sands and teri/red sands — not hard rock mines.
  13. China controls ~60% of global REE mining and ~85–90% of global REE processing/refining.
  14. India's bilateral critical minerals agreements include 8 countries: Australia, Argentina, Zambia, Mozambique, Peru, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Côte d'Ivoire. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II India and its neighbourhood; bilateral/multilateral groupings; effect of foreign policies on India's interests
GS-III Infrastructure: energy, mining; indigenisation of technology and developing new technology; effects of liberalisation on economy
GS-III Science & Technology: awareness in fields of IT, space, computers, robotics, nano-technology, biotechnology

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "China's dominance in rare earth elements poses a structural risk to India's strategic autonomy and green energy transition. Critically examine India's policy response, with particular reference to the rare earth corridors announced in Union Budget 2026." (GS-III) 2. "The intersection of atomic energy legislation and mining policy has historically constrained India's rare earth sector. Analyse how recent legislative and institutional reforms seek to resolve this bottleneck." (GS-II/III) 3. "Evaluate the geopolitical significance of rare earth minerals in contemporary international relations. How should India navigate its dependence on China while building resilient domestic supply chains?" (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Critical Minerals Mission (NCMM) Umbrella framework within which rare earth corridors operate.
Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) US-led multilateral grouping India joined; key for REE supply diversification.
China–US Trade War / Tariff War Direct trigger for China's REE weaponisation; geopolitical context.
EV Policy in India (PM E-Drive, FAME) End-use demand driver; REE permanent magnets are critical for EV motors.
Atomic Energy Act, 1962 Legal framework governing monazite/thorium; constrains REE liberalisation.
MMDR Act and 2023 Amendment Statutory base for mining reforms; opened private entry into REEs.
India's Net Zero 2070 Commitment Demand-side driver — wind turbines and EVs need REEs; NITI Aayog report models this.
KABIL and overseas mineral acquisition Complement to domestic corridors; reduces supply concentration risk.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "REEs are rare in the Earth's crust" — WRONG. REEs are relatively abundant; they are "rare" because commercially viable concentrations are uncommon and extraction/separation is complex.
  2. Ministry confusion: REE policy sits with Ministry of Mines (NCMM), but monazite/thorium sits with Department of Atomic Energy — candidates often conflate the two or assign REE policy to MoEFCC (wrong).
  3. IREL under Ministry of Mines — WRONG. IREL (India) Ltd is under Department of Atomic Energy, not Ministry of Mines.
  4. "USA is the largest importer of Chinese rare earths" — WRONG. Japan is the largest; USA is second. [S4]
  5. NCMM timeline confusion: Approved January 2025 (not 2024 Budget, not 2026 Budget) — the corridors are a 2026 Budget item, distinct from NCMM approval.

11. Sources