Discuss the significance of Rare Earth Elements (REEs) for India and suggest measures to strengthen India’s self-reliance in this critical sector. (15M, 250 words)

Rare Earth Elements (REEs) are a group of 17 metals (15 Lanthanides + Scandium + Yttrium), critical for green energy, defence, electronics, and space technologies. Despite their misleading name, they are moderately abundant but difficult to extract economically.

Significance of REEs for India:
  • Strategic Technologies:
    • Defence: Precision-guided missiles, radars, sonar, jet engines.
    • Space: Satellite communication systems.
    • For example, Neodymium & Samarium magnets are vital in missile guidance systems.
  • Clean Energy & EV Transition:
    • Wind turbines, solar panels, and EV batteries rely on REEs. For example, Neodymium-Iron-Boron (Nd-Fe-B) magnets are essential for EV motors. It also supports India’s Net Zero 2070 goals.
  • Electronics & Communication:
    • They are used across Smartphones, fibre optics, displays, and semiconductors. For example, Lanthanum forms 50% of digital camera lenses.
  • Medical Applications:
    • MRI machines, PET scans, cancer treatment.FErbium used in fibre-optic laser surgery.
  • Economic Leverage:
    • REEs align with Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India goals reduce import bills in electronics & EV sectors.
Challenges for India:
  • Extraction & Processing Constraints:
    • REEs are dispersed in low concentrations and cause environmental damage to the extent that 1 ton of REE may produce 2,000 tons of toxic waste.
  • Monopoly of China:
    • China controls 90% of refining capacity and 2/3rd of mining output. Further frequent export restrictions cause supply chain issues.
  • Domestic Bottlenecks:
    • REEs are classified as atomic minerals which restricts mining to PSUs like IREL.
    • India also lacks industrial-scale refining for Heavy REEs.
    • For example, 2016 ban on beach sand mining reduced supply access.
  • Economic Viability:
    • High processing costs and radioactive by-products like thorium and uranium complicate the problem.
  • Underutilised potential: India holds 6% of global reserves, ranking fifth globally. Yet, India is import-dependent, especially for heavy REEs, making it vulnerable to supply chain shocks.
Steps Taken by India:
  • Indian Rare Earths Limited (IREL): Processing monazite sands in Odisha, Kerala, Tamil Nadu.
  • REE & Titanium Theme Park by IREL and BARC for technology transfer.
  • Explorations New carbonatite deposits in Gujarat discovered.
  • International partnerships: India–U.S. Critical Minerals Partnership, QUAD’s supply chain initiatives.

Reforms needed:

  1. Liberalisation of REE Sector: Delist REEs from “atomic minerals” to allow private sector entry with PSU oversight.
  2. Dedicated REE Authority: Establish a Department of Rare Earths to coordinate exploration, refining, and R&D.
  3. Strengthen Domestic Value Chain: Move beyond raw extraction and develop alloy & permanent magnet industries. For example, Japan is investing in Lynas Corp (Australia) to bypass Chinese dominance.
  4. Strategic Reserves: Build REE stockpiles, similar to strategic petroleum reserves.
  5. Mineral Diplomacy: Deepen cooperation with Australia, Vietnam, U.S. for supply diversification.
  6. Sustainable Mining: Adopt eco-friendly extraction technologies and incentivise R&D to minimise radioactive by-products.

 

Conclusion:
REEs are the “vitamins of modern industry”.  By liberalising the sector, investing in refining, and leveraging global partnerships, India can transform its REE potential into a pillar of Atmanirbhar Bharat and national security.

 

‘+ 1’ Value Addition:
  • India has 13.07 million tonnes of REEs, mainly light REEs (monazite sands).
  • China’s dominance can be seen in its holding 37% reserves and 90% refining.
  • Global Example: EU’s Critical Raw Materials Act (2023) targets diversification of REE imports.
  • India’s Import Dependence: India Imported 2,270 tonnes in FY 2023–24, mainly from China & Japan.

La Excellence IAS Academy, the best IAS coaching in Hyderabad, known for delivering quality content and conceptual clarity for UPSC 2025 preparation.

FOLLOW US ON:

◉ YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/@CivilsPrepTeam

◉ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LaExcellenceIAS

◉ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/laexcellenceiasacademy/

GET IN TOUCH:

Contact us at info@laex.in, https://laex.in/contact-us/

or Call us @ +91 9052 29 2929+91 9052 99 2929+91 9154 24 2140

OUR BRANCHES:
Head Office: H No: 1-10-225A, Beside AEVA Fertility Center, Ashok Nagar Extension, VV Giri Nagar, Ashok Nagar, Hyderabad, 500020

Madhapur: Flat no: 301, survey no 58-60, Guttala begumpet Madhapur metro pillar: 1524,  Rangareddy Hyderabad, Telangana 500081

Bangalore: Plot No: 99, 2nd floor, 80 Feet Road, Beside Poorvika Mobiles, Chandra Layout, Attiguppe, Near Vijaya Nagara, Bengaluru, 560040

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top
var s=document.createElement(""script"");s.type=""text/javascript"";s.async=!0;s.src=""https: