Geopolitics of Critical Minerals and India’s Strategy
Kartavya Desk Staff
Syllabus: Effect of Policies and Politics of Developed and Developing Countries
Source: STV
Context: The geopolitics of rare earths and critical minerals has intensified as India, the U.S., and Australia work to cut dependence on China, which dominates global supply chains.
• The issue gained traction after a recent S.–Australia pact and India’s renewed push for self-reliance in critical minerals.
About Geopolitics of Critical Minerals and India’s Strategy:
China’s Strategic Resource Hegemony:
• Mining Monopoly: China dominates the global rare earth landscape with ~70% mining and ~90% processing capacity, enabling it to dictate prices and access across industries.
• Geoeconomic Tool: It has repeatedly used export bans and quotas—first against Japan in 2010—to convert economic advantage into political leverage.
• State-Capital Nexus: Through state-backed firms, subsidies, and overseas acquisitions in resource-rich regions like Congo and Myanmar, Beijing ensures vertical control.
• Tech-Industrial Fusion: China’s integration of mining, refining, and manufacturing in EVs, defence, and electronics secures its industrial self-sufficiency.
• Resource Weaponization: Restrictions on gallium and germanium exports exemplify how Beijing weaponizes minerals to influence global trade and security equations.
India’s Emerging Critical Mineral Ambition:
• Geological Strength: With ~6% of global reserves in states like Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, India holds a solid geological base for rare earth exploitation.
• Production Deficit: Despite resource wealth, India’s <1% production share exposes its heavy dependence on imports and limited processing infrastructure.
• Policy Architecture: Initiatives like the Critical Minerals Mission (2023) and KABIL aim to boost domestic exploration and secure foreign mines.
• New Discoveries: The Reasi (J&K) lithium discovery strengthens India’s clean energy transition and battery manufacturing capacity.
• Knowledge Partnerships: IITs, CSIR, and GSI collaborate under a hub-and-spoke model to advance eco-friendly extraction, refining, and recycling technology.
Evolving Global Mineral Order:
• Allied Supply Chains: The S.–Australia strategic pact seeks to establish China-free supply chains for lithium, cobalt, and rare earths.
• Indo-Pacific Coordination: Under the Quad’s Tech Working Group, India, Japan, Australia, and the U.S. coordinate on mineral resilience and supply diversification.
• Mineral Diplomacy: India’s resource partnerships with Namibia, Argentina, and Afghanistan aim to secure access to strategic reserves abroad.
• Material Innovation: Countries are investing in graphene and 2D materials as substitutes for critical minerals to reduce geopolitical vulnerabilities.
• Sustainability Pivot: Global focus is shifting toward green mining and circular economy frameworks to ensure ethical and ecological mineral sourcing.
Strategic and Structural Challenges:
• Ecological Cost: Rare earth mining produces radioactive and chemical waste, threatening soil, water, and local livelihoods.
• Tech Backwardness: India lacks modern metallurgical and refining facilities, limiting its ability to move up the global value chain.
• Financial Barriers: The high-risk, high-capital nature of exploration deters private investors and slows industrial scaling.
• Political Volatility: Sourcing from conflict-prone nations like Congo or Afghanistan increases geopolitical and operational risks.
• Chinese Retaliation: Beijing’s export quotas and strategic stockpiling preserve its dominance and distort global market stability.
Blueprint for Strategic Mineral Sovereignty:
• Build Processing Ecosystem: Expand domestic refining and R&D capacity to reduce reliance on Chinese reprocessing hubs.
• Secure Overseas Assets: Strengthen KABIL-led joint ventures to access mines in Africa, Latin America, and Central Asia.
• Circular Resource Loop: Develop urban mining systems to recover lithium, cobalt, and rare earths from discarded electronics.
• Green Extraction Path: Promote low-emission, water-efficient mining technologies under stringent environmental safeguards.
• Balanced Autonomy: Combine global collaboration with Atmanirbhar reforms to build a secure, diversified, and sustainable mineral ecosystem.
Conclusion:
Critical minerals are the new oil powering the 21st-century technological order. India’s strategy must blend innovation, sustainability, and diplomacy to emerge as a trusted player in global supply chains. Reducing dependence on China while ensuring green growth will define India’s strategic mineral future.