📰 Full Story
India’s Ministry of Mines is set to shortly unveil a policy offering roughly ₹3,000 crore (about 30 billion rupees) in incentives to establish domestic lithium and nickel processing capacity, sources told Reuters on June 4.
The scheme targets minerals critical to electric vehicle (EV) batteries as New Delhi seeks to cut imports and build an EV value chain.
Proposed eligibility would require minimum plant capacities of 30,000 metric tonnes for lithium and 50,000 tonnes for nickel.
Reporting indicates the policy could include a roughly 15% capital subsidy, staged payments tied to performance and utilisation benchmarks, and incentives available for about five years.
Initial support may be earmarked for two lithium and two nickel projects.
The move supports India’s ambition of 30% electric car penetration and 80% two-wheeler electrification by 2030 (from about 6% and 9% today), and follows earlier government signals that it had shortlisted these two minerals for processing policy support.





💬 Commentary