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India critical minerals auctions have entered a new phase as the government launched the seventh tranche of critical and strategic mineral block auctions. The Ministry of Mines is offering 19 blocks under mining lease and composite licence across several states.
The latest India critical minerals auctions cover minerals needed for clean-energy manufacturing, advanced technologies, fertilisers, and strategic industries. The move reflects New Delhi’s effort to reduce import dependence and build domestic supply chains for high-value minerals.
India critical minerals auctions have become a central tool in the country’s resource security strategy since the August 2023 amendment to the Mines and Minerals Act. That reform classified 24 minerals as critical and strategic and gave the central government authority to auction them.
Regulatory Reforms Aim to Speed Up Mineral Development
India is tightening its auction framework to improve project execution after bidding. The Mineral Auction Second Amendment Rules, 2025, are designed to streamline post-auction procedures and reduce delays between award and development.
The 2026 rules also introduce insurance surety bonds as an alternative to bank guarantees. This could ease financial pressure on bidders and support broader participation from mining companies, technology firms, and downstream industrial players.
Auction revenues will go to the respective state governments, creating a stronger link between central mineral policy and state-level resource development. This structure could help states support permitting, infrastructure, and local industrial ecosystems around critical mineral projects.
Lithium, Graphite and Rare Earths Drive Industrial Strategy
The Ministry of Mines has already launched six tranches and auctioned 46 blocks. Industry participation has strengthened as demand rises for lithium, graphite, rare earth elements, tungsten, vanadium, titanium, and other rare metals.
These minerals are becoming essential for batteries, electric vehicles, renewable energy systems, aerospace, electronics, specialty alloys, fertilisers, and defense-related applications. India’s challenge is not only discovering resources, but also building processing, refining, and manufacturing capacity around them.
The seventh tranche therefore fits into a broader industrial policy agenda. India wants to position itself as a manufacturing hub while securing the mineral inputs needed for energy transition technologies and strategic supply chains.
The Metalnomist Commentary
India’s auction program shows that critical mineral security is becoming a state-backed industrial race. The real test will come after auction awards, when India must convert mineral blocks into mines, processing capacity, and downstream manufacturing strength.

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