As critical minerals become strategic assets, U.S. looks to realign supply chain
Critical Minerals as Strategic Assets: U.S. Supply Chain Realignment
UPSC Study Note | GS-II & GS-III | International Relations + Economy + Security
1. At a Glance
- Critical minerals are raw materials essential to modern economies — clean energy, EVs, defence, semiconductors, telecom — whose supply is concentrated in a handful of countries, creating structural vulnerability. [S1]
- The U.S., recognising China's choke-hold on refining (>70% of most minerals), launched Project Vault in February 2026 — a public-private strategic stockpile — to insulate domestic industry from geopolitically induced supply shocks. [S4]
- India, through the National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM), is pursuing a parallel strategy: overseas asset acquisition, domestic exploration, and stockpiling. [S2]
- UPSC relevance spans GS-II (India's foreign policy, bilateral treaties), GS-III (resource security, supply chains, clean energy), and Essay (technology-geopolitics nexus).
2. Why in the News
- February 2026 (first week): Trump administration unveiled Project Vault — a $12 billion public-private partnership (PPP) to build a domestic strategic reserve of 60 critical minerals. [S4]
- April 4, 2025: China imposed export controls on seven heavy rare earth elements (including dysprosium and terbium) in retaliation for U.S. tariffs, causing near-shutdown of automotive manufacturing lines across the U.S. and Europe. [S5]
- October 2025: U.S.–Australia signed a Critical Minerals Framework to expand joint mining and processing capacity as an explicit counter to China's dominance. [S5]
- January 29, 2025: India's Union Cabinet approved the NCMM, signalling a whole-of-government critical minerals strategy. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1939–45 | WWII exposed strategic vulnerability of raw-material supply chains; concept of "strategic stockpiling" born |
| 1975 | U.S. established the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) — conceptual predecessor to Project Vault [S4] |
| 2010 | China restricted rare earth exports to Japan (Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute) — first modern critical-minerals coercion episode |
| 2017 | U.S. Executive Order 13817 identified 35 "critical minerals"; formal list began |
| 2019 | India identified 30 critical minerals in its first official list |
| 2022 | Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) formed by U.S. + allies to diversify supply chains |
| 2023 | India joined the MSP; KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd.) operationalised for overseas acquisitions [S2] |
| Jan 2025 | India's Union Cabinet approved NCMM with ₹ outlay for 2025–2030 period [S2] |
| Apr 2025 | China's seven heavy-REE export ban triggers global manufacturing disruption [S5] |
| Oct 2025 | U.S.–Australia Critical Minerals Framework signed [S5] |
| Feb 2026 | U.S. Project Vault launched — $10B EXIM + $2B private funds [S4] |
4. Core Static Facts
Project Vault (U.S.)
- Announced: First week of February 2026
- Structure: Public-private partnership; independently governed and operated
- Financing: $10 billion from Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) + $2 billion private funds = $12 billion total [S4]
- Mechanism: EXIM provides long-term loans to purchase and store minerals domestically
- Scope: 60 minerals listed in the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 2025 Critical Minerals List [S4]
- Conceptual precedent: U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve (est. 1975) [S4]
India's National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM)
- Cabinet approval: January 29, 2025 [S2]
- Nodal ministry: Ministry of Mines [S2]
- Overseas acquisition body: KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd.) — JV under Ministry of Mines [S2]
- Stockpile target: At least 5 critical minerals in a National Critical Minerals Stockpile [S1]
- Domestic exploration target: 1,200 projects completed by 2030–31 [S2]
- Domestic production target: Self-sufficiency in at least 15 critical minerals (graphite, lithium, potash, REEs, etc.) [S2]
- R&D target: Self-sufficiency in processing of 5 critical minerals; 1,000 patents by 2031 [S2]
- Partner countries (KABIL agreements): Australia, Argentina, Zambia, Mozambique, Peru, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Côte d'Ivoire [S2]
China's Supply-Side Dominance
- Accounts for ~70% of global rare earth mining and >90% of refining capacity [S5]
- Leading refiner for 19 out of 20 important strategic minerals; average market share: 70% [S5]
- Controls ~74% of global cobalt processing [S5]
- April 2025: restricted export of 7 heavy rare earths — dysprosium, terbium, and others essential for permanent magnets in EVs, wind turbines, and defence systems [S5]
Key Terminology
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Critical Mineral | Mineral with high economic importance and high supply-risk; essential for clean energy, defence, digital technology |
| Rare Earth Elements (REEs) | 17 metallic elements (La to Lu + Sc, Y); critical for magnets, phosphors, catalysts |
| Permanent Magnets | Neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) or samarium-cobalt magnets requiring heavy REEs; used in EVs, missiles, wind turbines |
| KABIL | Khanij Bidesh India Ltd. — India's overseas mineral acquisition vehicle |
| MSP | Minerals Security Partnership — U.S.-led plurilateral grouping for supply-chain diversification |
| Project Vault | U.S. strategic reserve PPP for 60 critical minerals (2026) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- China's April 2025 REE export curbs caused near-shutdown of car manufacturing in the U.S. and Europe, illustrating how concentrated supply chains translate to macro-economic risk. [S5]
- Project Vault uses EXIM bank financing — long-term loans, not grants — indicating a market-linked, fiscally disciplined model rather than a full government buy. [S4]
- India's NCMM is expected to stimulate domestic mining, processing, and recycling industries, reducing import dependence worth billions of dollars annually. [S2]
- Critical minerals are central to the green transition: lithium (batteries), cobalt (EVs), REEs (wind turbines), silicon (solar). Supply disruptions can stall climate targets. [S3]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- China weaponised minerals as a geoeconomic coercion tool — 2010 (Japan), 2025 (U.S. tariff retaliation) — establishing REEs as instruments of statecraft. [S5]
- The Minerals Security Partnership (MSP), which India joined in 2023, is explicitly designed to exclude Chinese-controlled supply chains from allied industrial ecosystems. [S2]
- U.S.–Australia Critical Minerals Framework (Oct 2025) — bilateral cornerstone of the Quad's resource security architecture; Australia holds largest reserves of lithium and REEs outside China. [S5]
- India's deals with 8 resource-rich nations via KABIL mirror China's BRI-era minerals diplomacy but through bilateral equity-style deals rather than infrastructure-debt linkages. [S2]
- "Invisible infrastructure" argument: rare earths, magnesium, graphite, fluorspar are embedded in aircraft, missiles, and optics — making REE dominance a determinant of future military balance. [S5]
Environmental
- Mining and processing critical minerals carries heavy ecological cost — water depletion, radioactive tailings (REE processing), land degradation.
- China's dominance partly reflects its historical willingness to absorb these environmental costs; supply-chain diversification forces Western nations to apply stricter environmental standards at higher cost.
- India's NCMM includes end-of-life recovery and recycling as a component — reflecting awareness that circular economy can reduce primary mining pressure. [S2]
Scientific / Technological
- NdFeB permanent magnets (requiring dysprosium, terbium) are irreplaceable in current EV motors and wind turbine generators — no commercially viable substitute exists at scale, giving China structural leverage. [S5]
- India's target of 1,000 patents in critical mineral value chains by 2031 signals intent to build IP-based competitive advantage, not just raw-material access. [S2]
- Magnet recycling technology is an active R&D frontier globally; countries that crack economical recycling can reduce REE import dependency substantially.
- The USGS 2025 Critical Minerals List (60 minerals under Project Vault) is a scientific-regulatory document; updates reflect evolving technology demands (e.g., gallium and germanium added after China's 2023 export controls). [S4]
Administrative / Governance
- Project Vault's PPP model — independently governed, privately operated, EXIM-financed — attempts to avoid the inefficiencies of pure government stockpiling (cf. SPR cost overruns).
- India's NCMM coordinates across Ministry of Mines, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, Ministry of Electronics & IT, DST, and defence ministries — inter-ministerial complexity is a known implementation bottleneck. [S2]
- KABIL as an SPV (special purpose vehicle) allows ring-fenced overseas risk without direct sovereign balance-sheet exposure. [S2]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 29, 2025 — Union Cabinet approved India's NCMM; Ministry of Mines designated nodal ministry. [S2]
- April 4, 2025 — China announced export controls on 7 heavy rare earth elements; export volumes fell sharply through April–May 2025 causing auto-manufacturing disruptions in U.S. and Europe. [S5]
- September 2025 — NITI Aayog released Vol. 10: Critical Mineral Assessment — Demand and Supply under the Scenarios Towards Viksit Bharat and Net Zero series. [S3]
- October 2025 — U.S. and Australia signed Critical Minerals Framework — bilateral pillar for joint mining and processing capacity expansion. [S5]
- February 2026 (first week) — Trump administration unveiled Project Vault — $12B PPP ($10B EXIM + $2B private) targeting 60 critical minerals strategic stockpile. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Project Vault was announced in the first week of February 2026 by the Trump administration. [S4]
- Project Vault's total financing: $12 billion — $10B from EXIM Bank + $2B private funds. [S4]
- Project Vault targets stockpiling of 60 minerals from the USGS 2025 Critical Minerals List. [S4]
- Conceptual predecessor to Project Vault is the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve, established in 1975. [S4]
- China controls >90% of global rare earth refining capacity and ~74% of cobalt processing. [S5]
- China's April 4, 2025 export controls targeted 7 heavy rare earths, including dysprosium and terbium. [S5]
- India's National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) was approved by the Union Cabinet on January 29, 2025. [S2]
- India's overseas mineral acquisition vehicle is KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd.) — a JV under the Ministry of Mines. [S2]
- NCMM targets completion of 1,200 domestic exploration projects by 2030–31. [S2]
- NCMM aims to achieve domestic production self-sufficiency in at least 15 critical minerals and processing self-sufficiency in 5 critical minerals. [S2]
- India joined the Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) in 2023; the MSP is a U.S.-led plurilateral grouping. [S2]
- KABIL has signed mineral agreements with 8 countries: Australia, Argentina, Zambia, Mozambique, Peru, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Côte d'Ivoire. [S2]
- NITI Aayog published the Critical Mineral Assessment: Demand and Supply report in September 2025. [S3]
- U.S.–Australia Critical Minerals Framework was signed in October 2025. [S5]
- China is the leading refiner for 19 out of 20 important strategic minerals, with an average market share of 70%. [S5]
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | India's foreign policy; bilateral/multilateral groupings; effect of policies of developed countries on India |
| GS-III | Infrastructure; energy; resource security; effects of globalisation on Indian economy; internal security — linkages with strategic resources |
| Essay | Geopolitics and technology; clean energy transition |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"Critical minerals have emerged as the new oil of the 21st century. Examine the geopolitical implications of supply concentration and evaluate India's strategy to secure its critical mineral supply chain." (GS-II/GS-III, 250 words)
-
"Analyse how China's use of export controls on rare earth elements reveals structural vulnerabilities in the global clean energy transition. What lessons can India draw for its National Critical Mineral Mission?" (GS-III, 250 words)
-
"The U.S. Project Vault and India's NCMM reflect a shift from free-market globalism to strategic industrial policy in resource sectors. Critically evaluate this trend in the context of WTO norms and multilateral trade obligations." (GS-II/GS-III, 250 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) | India is a member; understanding MSP's governance and plurilateral logic is essential context |
| China's Export Control Law & Dual-Use Regulations | Legal mechanism behind China's REE weaponisation; relevant for GS-II bilateral relations |
| India's Mines & Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 & amendments | Domestic legal framework governing Indian mining, including critical minerals |
| Quad and Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) | Both have critical minerals supply-chain cooperation as explicit pillars |
| Clean Energy Transition & COP Commitments | Critical minerals demand is driven by solar, EVs, wind — links NCMM to India's NDCs |
| KABIL and India's overseas natural resource strategy | Parallel: ONGC Videsh (oil), IRCON (railways), KABIL (minerals) — India's outward resource diplomacy pattern |
| WTO and Resource Nationalism | Export controls on minerals may violate GATT Article XI; ongoing WTO disputes context |
| Battery Technology & EV Policy | End-user demand driver for lithium, cobalt, nickel — links mineral security to PM e-DRIVE and PLI schemes |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Project Vault ≠ Strategic Petroleum Reserve. SPR stores oil and was established in 1975. Project Vault stores minerals and was launched in 2026. Candidates conflate the two because the article explicitly uses SPR as a precedent. [S4]
-
KABIL ≠ NMDC. KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd.) handles overseas mineral acquisition; NMDC is a PSU for domestic iron ore mining. Different mandates, different parent contexts.
-
Ministry of Mines ≠ Ministry of Earth Sciences. NCMM is under the Ministry of Mines. Ministry of Earth Sciences handles oceanography, seismology, polar science. Critical mineral prelims MCQs often swap these.
-
"7 heavy rare earths" ≠ "all rare earths." China's April 2025 restriction was specifically on heavy REEs (dysprosium, terbium, etc.). Light REEs (lanthanum, cerium) were not included. The distinction matters for understanding which industries were disrupted.
-
China's 70% mining share vs. 90% refining share. Candidates often cite one figure for both. Mining dominance (~70%) is significant but refining dominance (>90%) is where the choke-point lies — processing is far harder to replicate than digging. [S5]
11. Sources
- [S1] Strategic Supply Chain Management for Critical Minerals — PIB Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2114467 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] National Critical Mineral Mission — PIB Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2120525®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Critical Mineral Assessment: Demand and Supply (Vol. 10) — NITI Aayog, September 2025 — https://niti.gov.in/sites/default/files/2026-02/Scenarios-Towards-Viksit-Bharat-and-Net-Zero-Critical-Mineral-Assessment-Demand-and-Supply.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "As critical minerals become strategic assets, U.S. looks to realign supply chain" — The Hindu, 18 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-18/th_international/articleGSUFJNHND-13559066.ece — (Tier 4, Article excerpt — primary source supplied by user)
- [S5] China export controls and critical minerals geopolitics (2025–26) — IEA Commentary & web search synthesis — https://www.iea.org/commentaries/with-new-export-controls-on-critical-minerals-supply-concentration-risks-become-reality — (Tier 2/reference)