Hyderabad hosted a key policy consultation on India’s critical minerals strategy this week, with a high-level panel under the proposed NITI Aayog signalling the need for closer coordination between government agencies and private industry to strengthen domestic mineral security.
The meeting, convened as part of deliberations on the National Mineral Mission framework, focused on reducing India’s dependence on imported critical minerals used in renewable energy systems, electric mobility, advanced electronics and defence manufacturing. Officials and sector representatives reviewed current exploration levels, domestic reserves and the institutional mechanisms required to accelerate production.India remains heavily reliant on overseas suppliers for minerals such as lithium, cobalt, nickel and rare earth elements — inputs that underpin battery storage, solar modules and clean energy technologies. Policymakers have increasingly framed critical minerals as central to economic resilience and the transition towards low-carbon growth.
According to officials present at the discussion, the emerging consensus is that achieving self-sufficiency will require a hybrid approach. Public sector mining entities would continue to anchor strategic exploration and early-stage investments, while private companies could bring in technology, risk capital and operational efficiencies to scale extraction and processing.Industry analysts note that the success of the National Mineral Mission will depend not only on geological surveys and auction reforms, but also on faster environmental clearances, improved logistics connectivity and downstream processing capacity. Without domestic refining and value addition, raw mineral extraction alone would offer limited strategic benefit.
Hyderabad’s selection as the venue reflects Telangana’s established mining ecosystem and institutional presence in the coal and mineral sectors. Representatives from state-linked mining enterprises and policy advisers reviewed responsibilities across agencies, including resource mapping, regulatory simplification and international partnerships for mineral sourcing.The deliberations come at a time when global supply chains are being restructured amid geopolitical tensions and climate commitments. Countries across Asia, Europe and North America have announced incentive schemes to secure access to battery and clean energy minerals. For India, strengthening domestic exploration is viewed as essential to support manufacturing ambitions in electric vehicles, renewable energy equipment and grid storage.
Urban economists point out that mineral security is increasingly linked to city-level industrial growth. Reliable access to critical inputs can catalyse investment in battery manufacturing clusters, electronics parks and green hydrogen facilities — all of which generate employment and stimulate regional development.While policy frameworks are still evolving, the Hyderabad consultation indicates that India is moving towards a coordinated, mission-driven approach. The next phase is expected to translate strategy into implementation timelines, exploration targets and public–private partnership models that align mineral development with environmental safeguards and long-term resource stewardship.
Hyderabad critical minerals mission gains momentum

