India may become 'third pillar' in US-Japan rare earth network: Analysis - Here's what 'buys the breathing space'
India is emerging as a potential key player in the global rare-earth supply chain, as the recent Donald Trump–Xi Jinping summit has given the world a one-year reprieve from China's export controls, opening a strategic window for New Delhi to expand its refining and manufacturing capabilities, according to an analysis.
"With strong political will and a growing technological ecosystem, India could soon emerge as the third pillar - alongside the United States and Japan - of a democratic rare-earth network," The Diplomat analysis noted.
India’s rich reserves of rare-earth minerals such as monazite and bastnaesite, found in its beach sand deposits, give it strong raw material potential.
However, the country’s refining and processing capacity has historically lagged due to environmental and regulatory hurdles, something that is now changing, according to Jianli Yang, author of the Diplomat analysis and a research fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.
The Trump-Xi summit in South Korea last month has "bought breathing space," the publication said, adding that "India now offers a path to breathe freely.”
A White House fact sheet confirmed that following the Busan meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, Beijing agreed to delay specific export controls on rare earth materials for one year under a new trade agreement with Washington.
Earlier in June, India announced plans to negotiate with private firms and introduce fiscal incentives for domestic rare-earth magnet manufacturing to reduce dependence on China.
Companies like Sona Comstar are already setting up magnet production lines, while Indian Rare Earths Ltd. has been directed to expand refining capabilities. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is helping adapt high-purity separation technology initially developed for satellites, ANI reported.
India is also linking these domestic efforts to global partnerships under the Quad framework — with the US, Japan, and Australia — to fast-track joint exploration, co-financing, and technology transfer.
Yang wrote that India, as the world’s fifth-largest economy, "brings both scale and credibility" to the rare-earth race, offering a manufacturing base large enough to absorb downstream industries such as magnets, motors, and batteries — something smaller producers like Australia or Brazil cannot match.
He noted that while Australia plays a key role in mining and early-stage processing, and Brazil provides valuable diversification in the Western Hemisphere, the US has made progress in producing NdPr metal in California and magnets in Texas — yet none of these alone can counter China’s dominance.
"India, however, changes the calculus by linking supply diversification with market demand," Yang explained, adding that the country has the capacity to consume what it produces, export what it refines, and by working closely with its allies, become a hub for both production and processing.
The analysis noted that India’s rare-earth strategy is politically stable, backed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s "Atmanirbhar Bharat" (self-reliant India) agenda that enjoys bipartisan support.
The analysis suggested that the United States should see India not merely as a defence or semiconductor partner, but as a "cornerstone of a new rare earth alignment.”
It proposed that India and the US establish reciprocal stockpiles of rare-earth materials, with the author noting that "fast-tracking technology sharing on refining and waste treatment will allow India to leapfrog the costly trial-and-error phases that slowed the United States and Australia.”
The report further emphasised that rare-earth cooperation should be "embedded into the core agenda" of the Quad — comprising India, Japan, Australia, and the United States, making it as integral as joint naval drills or semiconductor partnerships.
Yang added that India’s success in attracting Apple’s assembly lines and chip design centres shows it can deliver when strategic alignment meets policy support. If the US, Japan, Australia, and Brazil "rally behind India’s rise as a credible supplier and processor," they can help build a truly diversified global rare-earth market, The Diplomat noted.
India’s rich reserves of rare-earth minerals such as monazite and bastnaesite, found in its beach sand deposits, give it strong raw material potential.
However, the country’s refining and processing capacity has historically lagged due to environmental and regulatory hurdles, something that is now changing, according to Jianli Yang, author of the Diplomat analysis and a research fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.
Breathing space after Trump-Xi deal
The Trump-Xi summit in South Korea last month has "bought breathing space," the publication said, adding that "India now offers a path to breathe freely.”
India ramps up domestic capacity
Companies like Sona Comstar are already setting up magnet production lines, while Indian Rare Earths Ltd. has been directed to expand refining capabilities. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is helping adapt high-purity separation technology initially developed for satellites, ANI reported.
India is also linking these domestic efforts to global partnerships under the Quad framework — with the US, Japan, and Australia — to fast-track joint exploration, co-financing, and technology transfer.
Yang wrote that India, as the world’s fifth-largest economy, "brings both scale and credibility" to the rare-earth race, offering a manufacturing base large enough to absorb downstream industries such as magnets, motors, and batteries — something smaller producers like Australia or Brazil cannot match.
He noted that while Australia plays a key role in mining and early-stage processing, and Brazil provides valuable diversification in the Western Hemisphere, the US has made progress in producing NdPr metal in California and magnets in Texas — yet none of these alone can counter China’s dominance.
"India, however, changes the calculus by linking supply diversification with market demand," Yang explained, adding that the country has the capacity to consume what it produces, export what it refines, and by working closely with its allies, become a hub for both production and processing.
The analysis noted that India’s rare-earth strategy is politically stable, backed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s "Atmanirbhar Bharat" (self-reliant India) agenda that enjoys bipartisan support.
The analysis suggested that the United States should see India not merely as a defence or semiconductor partner, but as a "cornerstone of a new rare earth alignment.”
It proposed that India and the US establish reciprocal stockpiles of rare-earth materials, with the author noting that "fast-tracking technology sharing on refining and waste treatment will allow India to leapfrog the costly trial-and-error phases that slowed the United States and Australia.”
The report further emphasised that rare-earth cooperation should be "embedded into the core agenda" of the Quad — comprising India, Japan, Australia, and the United States, making it as integral as joint naval drills or semiconductor partnerships.
Yang added that India’s success in attracting Apple’s assembly lines and chip design centres shows it can deliver when strategic alignment meets policy support. If the US, Japan, Australia, and Brazil "rally behind India’s rise as a credible supplier and processor," they can help build a truly diversified global rare-earth market, The Diplomat noted.
Popular from Business
- How to link your TOI+ subscription with Google in under a minute
- Donald Trump sanctions impact: Russia crude available at highest discount in a year; India, China cut purchases
- Groww IPO day 3: GMP softens to 11% reaching Rs 111; should you subscribe?
- Gold price prediction: What's the outlook for November 7, 2025? Why ‘buy on dips’ makes sense
- Path to world’s first trillionaire: Tesla clears $1,000,000,000,000 pay package for Elon Musk; T&C apply
end of article
Trending Stories
- Gisele Bündchen implied that prioritizing Tom Brady for years took a personal toll: “When you love someone, you don’t put them in jail”
- Who is Marshawn Kneeland’s girlfriend Catalina? Inside the life of the woman who loved the late Cowboys star
- Inside Marshawn Kneeland’s family: How his late mother Wendy and his father Shawn shaped the late NFL star’s journey
- Injured WWE star makes rare public appearance at Stranger Things Season 5 Premiere
- Sidney Crosby’s future at Pittsburgh takes a turn as GM Kyle Dubas reveals his firm decision about the captain’s long-term plans
- “I don’t have any interest…”: Joe Alwyn’s old comments about Taylor Swift resurfaces and fans claim Travis Kelce is the total opposite
- Ford CEO Jim Farley: I have talked to Apple CEO Tim Cook many times, iPhone maker needs to understand that Ford does not have the right to ...
Featured in Business
- Over 100 flights cancelled: How US govt shutdown is affecting travellers; right before Thanksgiving
- India's growth to be 'north of 6.8%': CEA Nageswaran upbeat on FY26 outlook; cites boost from GST cuts & tax relief
- Bira 91 asset sale: B9 Beverages looks to clear employees salary dues; founder aims to raise 'immediate cash'
- China's rare earths move: Trump’s hopes of full restrictions rollback might be shattered - here's why
- Aishwarya Rai Bachchan was sent a tax notice related to disallowance of income: Here is how she won the Rs 4 crore case in ITAT Mumbai
- Gold price in your city: How much the yellow metal costs today; check rates for 22k and 24K gold in Delhi, Mumbai and more
Photostories
- 5 Japanese tricks for sharp brain and mental boost
- 9 iron-rich beetroot dishes perfect for winter evenings
- Singappenne tops the TRP charts; here’s a look at the Top 5 Tamil TV shows
- How to grow fenugreek (methi saag) in balcony garden; steps to follow
- Copper, silver or brass: Which metal glass is actually healthier to drink from?
- Millie Bobby Brown to Raveena Tandon: 5 best celebrity looks of the day
- Stories from Bollywood where one heart loved and waited in silence
- From Neil Bhatt and Aishwarya Sharma heading for a divorce to Dipika Kakar sharing details about her cancer diagnosis – Top TV news
- Take fashion cues from Bigg Boss Malayalam 7 fame Aryan Kathuria's weekend looks in the show
- Bright and beautiful: 7 yellow-coloured snakes from around the world
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment