What are Rare Earth Elements?
Rare Earth Elements (REEs) are a group of 17 metallic elements comprising:
- 15 Lanthanides (Lanthanum to Lutetium)
- Scandium
- Yttrium
They are termed “rare” not because they are scarce, but because they are rarely found in concentrated, economically exploitable forms.
Classification
- Light Rare Earth Elements (LREEs): Lanthanum to Samarium
- Heavy Rare Earth Elements (HREEs): Europium to Lutetium + Yttrium
HREEs are geopolitically more critical due to higher scarcity and strategic applications.
Key Properties
- High magnetic, luminescent, and electrochemical properties
- Essential for miniaturisation, efficiency, and performance in modern technologies
- Difficult and environmentally damaging to extract and process
Why are REEs Important?
REEs are critical minerals for modern economies and national security.
Major Applications
- Electronics: Smartphones, laptops, semiconductors
- Clean Energy: Wind turbines, EV motors, solar panels
- Defence: Missiles, radar systems, jet engines, night-vision devices
- Medical: MRI scanners, cancer therapy equipment
- Industry: Catalysts, glass polishing, alloys
Global Distribution & Geopolitics
- China dominates:
- ~60% of global mining
- ~85–90% of processing and refining capacity
- Other producers:
- Australia
- United States
- Myanmar
- Vietnam
This concentration makes REEs a strategic geopolitical lever.
India and Rare Earth Elements
India possesses the 5th largest REE reserves globally, mainly in beach sand minerals.
Major Locations
- Monazite-rich sands in:
- Kerala
- Tamil Nadu
- Odisha
- Andhra Pradesh
Institutional Framework
- Exploration and production handled by (under Department of Atomic Energy)
Challenges for India
- Limited processing and refining capability
- Environmental and radiation concerns (monazite contains thorium)
- Restrictive mining regulations
- Dependence on imports for high-purity REE products
Strategic & Economic Concerns
- REEs are central to:
- Energy transition
- Digital economy
- Defence preparedness
- Supply chain disruptions can impact:
- EV manufacturing
- Renewable energy targets
- Military readiness
Environmental Issues
- Mining generates:
- Radioactive waste
- Toxic effluents
- Poorly regulated extraction causes:
- Soil degradation
- Water contamination
This creates a trade-off between strategic autonomy and environmental sustainability.
Government Initiatives & Global Cooperation
- Inclusion of REEs under Critical Minerals Strategy
- International partnerships:
- India–Australia
- India–Japan
- India–US (Quad framework)
- Focus on:
- Diversifying supply chains
- Developing domestic processing capability
Way Forward for India
- Develop end-to-end REE value chain (mining → refining → manufacturing)
- Promote public–private partnerships
- Invest in clean extraction technologies
- Strengthen international supply-chain alliances
- Balance strategic needs with environmental safeguards