India’s Critical Mineral Mission Gains Momentum: 56 Critical Mineral Blocks and 11 Exploration Licence Blocks Successfully Auctioned

I now have sufficient grounded facts from Tier 1 sources. Writing the study note.


India's Critical Mineral Mission: 56 Blocks + 11 EL Blocks Auctioned — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Nov 2022 Ministry of Mines constitutes committee to identify India's critical minerals
2023 Committee identifies 30 critical minerals; list formally released by Ministry of Mines [S6]
Aug 2023 MMDR (Amendment) Act, 2023 passed by Parliament — moves 24 critical minerals to Part D, Schedule I of MMDR Act; their auction reserved exclusively for the Central Government [S7]
2024 First tranches of critical mineral block auctions begin under Central Government
2024 Royalty rates notified for 12 critical and strategic minerals (Beryllium, Cadmium, Cobalt, Gallium, Indium, Rhenium, Selenium, Tantalum, Tellurium, Titanium, Tungsten, Vanadium) [S8]
Jan 29, 2025 Cabinet approves NCMM: ₹34,300 crore over 7 years (FY 2024-25 to 2030-31) [S3]
Tranche V (2025) 10 critical mineral blocks auctioned, including first-ever Potash blocks in India [S5]
Tranche VI (2025–26) Ministry of Mines launches sixth tranche of critical/strategic mineral block auctions [S9]
Tranche VII (Jun 2026) 10 blocks auctioned; cumulative total reaches 56 blocks + 11 EL blocks [S1]

Predecessors/Related Initiatives: - Khanij Bidesh India Ltd (KABIL) — PSU JV (NALCO + HCL + MECL) established 2019 to acquire critical mineral assets abroad. [S3] - MMDR Act, 1957 — parent statute for all mineral regulation in India; repeatedly amended (2015, 2021, 2023). [S7]


4. Core Static Facts

National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) - Approved by: Union Cabinet, January 29, 2025 [S3] - Duration: 7 years — FY 2024-25 to FY 2030-31 [S3] - Financial outlay: ₹34,300 crore total - Government budgetary support: ₹16,300 crore - PSU/other investment: ₹18,000 crore [S3] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Mines (primary); involves Ministry of External Affairs, MNRE, MoD, DST [S3] - Nodal agency for overseas acquisition: KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd) [S3]

Critical Minerals List - 30 minerals identified as critical for India [S6] - 24 minerals placed in Part D, Schedule I, MMDR Act — auctioned exclusively by Central Government [S7] - Full 30-mineral list includes: Antimony, Beryllium, Bismuth, Cobalt, Copper, Gallium, Germanium, Graphite, Hafnium, Indium, Lithium, Molybdenum, Niobium, Nickel, PGE (Platinum Group Elements), Phosphorus, Potash, REE (Rare Earth Elements), Rhenium, Silicon, Strontium, Tantalum, Tellurium, Tin, Titanium, Tungsten, Vanadium, Zirconium, Selenium, Cadmium [S6]

Auction Statistics (as of June 23, 2026) - Total critical/strategic blocks auctioned: 56 [S1] - EL (Exploration Licence) blocks auctioned: 11 [S1] - Total mineral blocks auctioned in FY 2025-26 (all minerals): 200 (123 ML + 77 CL) [S4] - Potash blocks first auctioned in India: Tranche V [S5]

Enabling Legislation - Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 — principal statute [S7] - MMDR Amendment Act, 2023 — key amendment for critical mineral auction framework [S7]

Licence Types under MMDR - Mining Lease (ML): Direct right to mine - Composite Licence (CL): Combined prospecting + mining - Exploration Licence (EL): Preliminary exploration; newer instrument to attract private explorers


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. 56 critical and strategic mineral blocks have been successfully auctioned by the Central Government as of June 23, 2026. [S1]
  2. 11 Exploration Licence (EL) blocks have been successfully auctioned alongside the mining blocks. [S1]
  3. The National Critical Mineral Mission was approved by the Union Cabinet on January 29, 2025. [S3]
  4. NCMM financial outlay: ₹34,300 crore over 7 years — ₹16,300 crore (government) + ₹18,000 crore (PSUs/others). [S3]
  5. India has identified 30 minerals as critical; 24 are placed in Part D, Schedule I of the MMDR Act, 1957. [S6][S7]
  6. Under the MMDR Amendment Act, 2023, critical minerals (Part D, Schedule I) are auctioned exclusively by the Central Government, not by State Governments. [S7]
  7. Tranche V was the first time Potash blocks were auctioned anywhere in India. [S5]
  8. KABIL (Khanij Bidesh India Ltd) is the PSU established for overseas acquisition of critical minerals — a JV of NALCO, HCL, and MECL. [S3]
  9. India auctioned 200 mineral blocks in FY 2025-26 — the highest in a single financial year. [S4]
  10. Royalty rates for 12 critical and strategic minerals were approved by the Cabinet, including Cobalt, Gallium, Lithium-group minerals, Tungsten, and Vanadium. [S8]
  11. Mines and minerals regulation falls under Entry 54, Union List, Schedule VII of the Constitution — enabling Central Government to reserve critical mineral auctions. [S7]
  12. The Seventh Tranche auctioned 10 blocks, bringing the total to 56. [S1]
  13. NCMM duration: FY 2024-25 to FY 2030-31 (7 years). [S3]
  14. Implementing ministry for NCMM: Ministry of Mines (not MNRE or MoEFCC). [S3]
  15. India's offshore critical mineral exploration targets polymetallic nodules containing cobalt, REEs, nickel, and manganese. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Indian Economy — Resource mobilisation; Infrastructure; Science & Technology; Energy; Environment & Conservation - GS-II: Government Policies and Interventions; Bilateral/International groupings (Quad, mineral partnerships)

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment"; "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways"; "Changes in industrial policy and their effects on industrial growth" - GS-II: "Important International institutions, agencies and fora — their structure, mandate"

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's National Critical Mineral Mission is both an economic necessity and a geopolitical imperative. Critically analyse." (GS-III, 15M)

  2. "The MMDR Amendment Act, 2023 has significantly altered the federal balance in mineral governance. Examine its implications for Centre-State relations and India's mineral security." (GS-II/GS-III, 15M)

  3. "Critically evaluate India's strategy for securing critical minerals — domestic exploration, overseas acquisition, and recycling — in the context of the global green energy transition." (GS-III, 15M)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why it Connects
Mines and Minerals (Development & Regulation) Act, 1957 and its amendments The enabling statute for all block auctions; 2015, 2021, 2023 amendments are separately examinable
Global Critical Minerals Landscape (IEA, USGS reports) India's policy is calibrated against global supply-demand projections for lithium, cobalt, REEs
Quad and Mineral Security Partnership (MSP) India is a signatory to MSP (2022) — geopolitical dimension of NCMM
India's EV Policy (FAME, PM E-DRIVE) Demand-side driver for critical minerals (lithium, cobalt, nickel for batteries)
Deep Ocean Mission (Ministry of Earth Sciences) Offshore critical mineral exploration; complements NCMM
Khanij Bidesh India Ltd (KABIL) Overseas acquisition arm; bilateral mineral deals with Australia, Argentina
District Mineral Foundation (DMF) and PMKKKY Revenue distribution from mineral auctions to mining-affected communities
India's Rare Earth Policy (IREL India Ltd, Beach Sand Minerals) REEs are a critical subset; government monopoly vs. liberalisation debate

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: NCMM is under Ministry of Mines, not Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) or MoEFCC — despite its clean energy purpose.

  2. Confusing total with critical-only: The 200 block milestone in FY 2025-26 covers all minerals (including coal, iron ore, etc.); the 56 blocks figure is specifically for critical and strategic minerals only.

  3. MMDR 2023 federal shift: Pre-2023, States auctioned most mineral blocks. Post-2023, the 24 critical minerals in Part D are Central Government's exclusive domain — a fact often missed.

  4. NCMM outlay confusion: ₹34,300 crore = ₹16,300 crore (budgetary) + ₹18,000 crore (PSU). Aspirants often quote only one component or confuse the total.

  5. KABIL vs. NCMM: KABIL (est. 2019) predates NCMM (2025) and handles overseas acquisition only; NCMM is the overarching domestic + international mission. They are complementary, not synonymous.


11. Sources