India has recently confirmed the discovery of approximately 7.23 million tonnes of Rare Earth Elements Oxide (REO), estimated to be worth a staggering $360 billion, according to a government statement in Parliament by Minister of State Jitendra Singh
These reserves are contained in 13.15 million tonnes of monazite—a thorium-bearing rare earth mineral—located across coastal and inland sands in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Gujarat, and Maharashtra, along with additional 1.29 MT in hard rock deposits in Gujarat and Rajasthan
Strategic Context & Mineral Mission
India now ranks among the top three countries globally in rare earth reserves, following China and another major holder. Its total reserves of 7–8.5 million tonnes underscore significant resource potential
However, despite the large reserves, India’s annual rare earth oxide production remains very low—just around 2,900 tonnes in FY 2023‑24, contributing less than 1% of global output
In response, the government launched the National Critical Mineral Mission with a ₹16,300 crore budget to support mining, processing, exploration, and recycling projects through 2030–31. This mission aims to accelerate domestic rare earth capabilities and reduce import dependency
Implications for Industry and Geopolitics
1. Diversifying Global Supply Chains
China currently dominates rare earth extraction (44 MT reserves) and controls nearly 90% of processing capacity. India’s reserves offer an opportunity to heat up strategic competition and diversify global supply chains
2. Domestic Manufacturing Push
India is using reforms to allow private sector participation, scale magnet production (through a ₹1,345 crore PLI scheme), and build processing hubs—targets include regional magnet output of 4,000 tonnes by 2030
3. International Partnerships
India is forging collaborations with countries like Australia, Argentina, Zambia, and Australia—as part of strategic programs including the Minerals Security Partnership and G7 critical minerals initiatives—to secure technology, mining access, and downstream processing capabilities The Economic Times
Quick Snapshot
Parameter | India Rare Earth Discovery |
---|---|
REO Reserves | 7.23 million tonnes in monazite-based coastal/inland sands |
Hard Rock Deposits | Additional 1.29 million tonnes |
Estimated Value | ~$360 billion |
Global Rank | Among top three by reserves |
Production (FY 2023–24) | ~2,900 tonnes (under 1% of global) |
Policy Response | National Critical Mineral Mission; PLI incentives; reforms |
Future Outlook
India’s rare earth discovery comes at a moment of global urgency—both for green energy technologies and national-tech security. Capitalising on these reserves will require expanding domestic refining, strategic mineral diplomacy, and regulatory reforms to diversify supply chains. With its growing demand in sectors like EVs, defence, renewable energy, and digital infrastructure, India has a window to transform itself from a resource-holder to a strategic player within the critical minerals ecosystem.