Milestone
in India and Australia Reach Critical Minerals Investment Partnership
India and Australia have reached
a major milestone in working towards investment in critical minerals projects to
develop supply chains between the two countries.
The Union Minister
for Coal, Mines and Parliamentary Affairs, Pralhad Joshi
and Minister for Resources and Northern Australia Madeleine King held bilateral
talks on Friday and announced the Partnership has identified five target projects
(two lithium and three cobalt) on which to undertake detailed due diligence
Ministers from the two countries
have also agreed to deepen cooperation and extend their existing commitments to
the India- Australia Critical Minerals Investment Partnership.
Investments under the Partnership
will seek to build new supply chains underpinned by critical minerals processed
in Australia, that will help India’s plans to lower emissions from its electricity
network and become a global manufacturing hub, including for electric vehicles.
“The partnership between India’s
KABIL and CMO Australia has reached the first mile stone in a short span of one
year from signing of the MoU in March 2022 between both the organisations’ observed
Minister Joshi.
Minister King said “India’s goals
to lower carbon emissions and boost electric vehicle production presents great opportunities
and prospects for Australia’s critical minerals sector, for renewable exports and
for building stronger supply chains. “Working together, both the nations are committed
to reduce emissions, guarantee energy security and diversify global markets for
critical minerals and clean technologies” added the Minister.
Australia produces almost half
of the world’s lithium, is the second-largest producer of cobalt and the fourth-largest
producer of rare earths. With the expected increase in global demand for low-emissions
technologies over the next three decades, this partnership will go a long way towards
securing mutually beneficial critical mineral supply chains.
The Minister Mr. Joshi visited
Western Australia in 2022 and toured Tianqi Lithium Energy’s Kwinana Lithium Hydroxide
Refinery. The partnership on critical minerals has taken further momentum after
the visit of Minister Joshi to Western Australia.