
In Focus by The Hindu India’s Rare Earth strategy: Digging beneath the Budget announcements
11 snips
Feb 24, 2026 Shobhankita Reddy, a research analyst at the Takshashila Institution who studies critical minerals and tech geopolitics, digs into India’s rare earth plans. She discusses China’s processing dominance, recent export controls and how companies are diversifying. She reviews India’s policy shifts, the National Critical Mineral Mission and the design of rare earth corridors.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
How China Grew Processing Dominance
- China concentrated processing, R&D and even recycling, turning rare earth value chains inward and importing ores from Africa and Latin America.
- That shift followed technology gains tied to China's atomic program and outsourcing of polluting stages from the West.
Licensing Replaced Informal Embargoes
- China's 2023–25 export controls became a formal licensing regime covering elements, magnets and processing tech, creating slow, opaque approvals.
- Reddy notes licences now ask for sensitive business details and only a fraction get approved for regions like the EU.
Use Stockpiles And Guarantees To Build Alternatives
- Governments should combine stockpiling, international partnerships and procurement guarantees to counter cheap Chinese overcapacity.
- Reddy cites the US $12 billion stockpile and offtake/support to private firms as policy tools to sustain alternatives.
