Rare Earth Minerals – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 11 Jun 2026 17:20:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Rare Earth Minerals – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Reliance, Vedanta, Adani join India’s drive to cut China rare earth dependence https://artifex.news/article71090621-ece/ Thu, 11 Jun 2026 17:20:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article71090621-ece/ Read More “Reliance, Vedanta, Adani join India’s drive to cut China rare earth dependence” »

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Indian industrial groups Reliance, Vedanta and Adani ​have shown interest in developing facilities to process Andhra ⁠Pradesh State’s significant reserves of increasingly important rare-earth minerals, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter.

With New Delhi seeking to cut India’s dependence on China for ‌rare earths, the three companies are among about 10 who have expressed interest in setting up rare earth facilities ‌in the southern State, one of the sources said.

The sources declined ‌to ⁠be identified as they were not authorised to speak to ⁠the media.

Andhra Pradesh holds 211 million metric tons of beach sand mineral resources, including rare earths, across 16 identified coastal deposits, according to a draft document. India has ​482.6 million tons of rare earth ‌ore resources, according to the Geological Survey of India.

Rare earth ambitions

The interest comes as New Delhi steps up efforts to build domestic rare earth mining, processing and magnet manufacturing capacity, while Andhra Pradesh aims ‌to attract ₹500 billion ($5.2 billion) in rare earth and titanium ​investments over the next decade.

The plans were set out in a draft government document.

The Andhra Pradesh government, Reliance ⁠Industries Ltd , Vedanta Ltd and Adani Enterprises Ltd did not respond to Reuters emails seeking comment.

Andhra Pradesh was among four states identified in February’s federal ‌budget for the development of rare earth “corridors” covering mining, processing and magnet production.

The initiative followed New Delhi’s approval in November of a ₹73 billion programme to support rare earth magnet manufacturing.

Rare earth elements are essential for permanent magnets used in applications such as electric vehicle motors. While India holds substantial rare earth reserves, it lacks industrial-scale facilities ‌capable of processing the minerals to high purity levels.

Capital incentives and other measures

Andhra Pradesh ​plans to issue tenders for rare earth facilities after securing Cabinet approval for its rare earth corridor policy, which is ⁠expected within a month, the sources said.

The State also plans to offer capital-linked ⁠incentives and additional benefits for projects with investments of ₹10 billion or more, the sources said.

Andhra Pradesh has been courting ‌large-scale investments, attracting companies including Google and ArcelorMittal Nippon Steel, and aims to secure $1 trillion in investment commitments by 2029, a State minister ​told Reuters last November.



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How Trump vs China Trade War Fallout Has Dealt A Blow To ‘Make In India’ https://artifex.news/how-donald-trump-vs-china-trade-war-fallout-has-dealt-a-blow-to-make-in-india-7489494/ Thu, 16 Jan 2025 15:06:33 +0000 https://artifex.news/how-donald-trump-vs-china-trade-war-fallout-has-dealt-a-blow-to-make-in-india-7489494/ Read More “How Trump vs China Trade War Fallout Has Dealt A Blow To ‘Make In India’” »

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New Delhi:

India’s manufacturing industry is bearing the brunt of a fallout between the United States and China over threats of a trade and tariff war by the incoming Trump administration, and its retaliatory measures imposed by Beijing.

In recent years, under its flagship ‘Make in India’ programme, India has seen exponential growth in key sectors like solar power, electronics and mobile manufacturing, and the automobile sector, especially for electric vehicles or EVs – all of which are directly or indirectly dependent on raw materials, components, and ancillaries supplied by China.

As China prepares for an imminent face-off with the US, which may be just days away with Donald Trump’s return as President on January 20, Beijing has already made the first move by taking some precautionary measures as a warning to Washington that it too will suffer the trade war.

China has put restrictions on the export of key raw materials, essential rare earth minerals, components, high-tech equipment, and machinery which are needed to manufacture solar panels, its parts, mobile phones and other gadgets, as well as EVs and its batteries.

These curbs not just pertain to direct exports to the United States, but to any other country which uses them to manufacture finished products meant to be shipped to the US.

In December 2024, China banned the export of gallium and germanium, which are vital for solar cell production. Shortly after that, it also banned antimony, critical for semiconductors and essential defence technologies. Earlier this month, Beijing further declared that it will now add lithium extraction and battery cathode technologies – which are crucial for EV battery manufacturing – to its controlled export list.

With the US having reduced its dependence on China for a large part of its overall imports, Washington has, in recent years, increasingly turned to New Delhi as an alternative to Beijing to fill the deficit. And so, China’s latest curbs, though aimed at the US, has indirectly hurt India too.

“Indian firms in electronics, solar, and EV sectors are facing major delays and disruptions as China has blocked exports of inputs and machinery,” economic think-tank GTRI founder Ajay Srivastava said, adding that “India is particularly vulnerable to China’s export restrictions, as many of its industries depend on Chinese machinery, intermediate goods, and components.”

“This also signals deeper geopolitical tensions and trade war. We hope India-specific restrictions go away soon as they will also hurt China,” he added.

India’s imports from China increased to $101.73 billion in 2023-24 from $98.5 billion in 2022-23.

The think-tank even suggested that China’s moves may be double-edged, as Beijing has been displeased for a while over New Delhi’s restrictions on Chinese investments and visas for its nationals.

In 2020, shortly after the deadly Galwan Valley clash between Indian and Chinese soldiers in eastern Ladakh, the Government of India had made it mandatory for countries sharing land borders with India to seek its approval for investments in any sector. The move was also made keeping in mind India’s national security objectives in its volatile neighbourhood.
 




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How Trump vs China Trade War Fallout Has Dealt A Blow To ‘Make In India’ https://artifex.news/how-donald-trump-vs-china-trade-war-fallout-has-dealt-a-blow-to-make-in-india-7489494rand29/ Thu, 16 Jan 2025 15:06:33 +0000 https://artifex.news/how-donald-trump-vs-china-trade-war-fallout-has-dealt-a-blow-to-make-in-india-7489494rand29/ Read More “How Trump vs China Trade War Fallout Has Dealt A Blow To ‘Make In India’” »

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New Delhi:

India’s manufacturing industry is bearing the brunt of a fallout between the United States and China over threats of a trade and tariff war by the incoming Trump administration, and its retaliatory measures imposed by Beijing.

In recent years, under its flagship ‘Make in India’ programme, India has seen exponential growth in key sectors like solar power, electronics and mobile manufacturing, and the automobile sector, especially for electric vehicles or EVs – all of which are directly or indirectly dependent on raw materials, components, and ancillaries supplied by China.

As China prepares for an imminent face-off with the US, which may be just days away with Donald Trump’s return as President on January 20, Beijing has already made the first move by taking some precautionary measures as a warning to Washington that it too will suffer the trade war.

China has put restrictions on the export of key raw materials, essential rare earth minerals, components, high-tech equipment, and machinery which are needed to manufacture solar panels, its parts, mobile phones and other gadgets, as well as EVs and its batteries.

These curbs not just pertain to direct exports to the United States, but to any other country which uses them to manufacture finished products meant to be shipped to the US.

In December 2024, China banned the export of gallium and germanium, which are vital for solar cell production. Shortly after that, it also banned antimony, critical for semiconductors and essential defence technologies. Earlier this month, Beijing further declared that it will now add lithium extraction and battery cathode technologies – which are crucial for EV battery manufacturing – to its controlled export list.

With the US having reduced its dependence on China for a large part of its overall imports, Washington has, in recent years, increasingly turned to New Delhi as an alternative to Beijing to fill the deficit. And so, China’s latest curbs, though aimed at the US, has indirectly hurt India too.

“Indian firms in electronics, solar, and EV sectors are facing major delays and disruptions as China has blocked exports of inputs and machinery,” economic think-tank GTRI founder Ajay Srivastava said, adding that “India is particularly vulnerable to China’s export restrictions, as many of its industries depend on Chinese machinery, intermediate goods, and components.”

“This also signals deeper geopolitical tensions and trade war. We hope India-specific restrictions go away soon as they will also hurt China,” he added.

India’s imports from China increased to $101.73 billion in 2023-24 from $98.5 billion in 2022-23.

The think-tank even suggested that China’s moves may be double-edged, as Beijing has been displeased for a while over New Delhi’s restrictions on Chinese investments and visas for its nationals.

In 2020, shortly after the deadly Galwan Valley clash between Indian and Chinese soldiers in eastern Ladakh, the Government of India had made it mandatory for countries sharing land borders with India to seek its approval for investments in any sector. The move was also made keeping in mind India’s national security objectives in its volatile neighbourhood.
 




Source link

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