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The new green gold rush

Why the minerals beneath our feet are quietly redrawing global power and where India fits in this new scramble
We are entering an era where power will not be measured by barrels of oil, but by the minerals that make clean energy possible. iStock

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The world is racing toward a cleaner future, but beneath the glossy talk of solar farms and electric cars lies a harder truth: the green transition. These “green minerals” are the new oil and the countries that control them hold the keys to the next economic and geopolitical order. As nations hustle for lithium, cobalt, nickel and rare earths, a silent power shift is underway, shaping alliances, rivalries and even the tone of border disputes.

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Green minerals: The new global power currency

Green minerals, often called critical minerals, are the raw materials essential for clean-energy technologies. They include lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, graphite and rare earth elements (REEs). These minerals are the backbone of batteries, wind turbines, electric vehicles, high-efficiency chips and advanced defence technologies.

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In simple terms:

No lithium → No EVs

No cobalt → No long-range batteries

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No rare earths → No wind turbines or modern fighter jets

As the world transitions away from fossil fuels, the demand for these minerals is exploding — often outpacing supply. This has triggered what many analysts call a 21st-century resource scramble, comparable to the oil wars of the last century, but more complex and dispersed.

 

Who owns what: The new map of power

Here’s a quick breakdown of countries dominating key green minerals:

  1. Lithium (for batteries)
  1. Cobalt (for battery stability)
  1. Nickel (for EV battery range)
  1. Rare Earth Elements (for electronics & defence)
  1. Copper (electric wiring of the world)

It’s not just about having these minerals. It’s about controlling the processing and refining. And this is where China outpaces everyone else.

Is China using its mineral advantage as leverage?

Yes, but not in the simplistic “bullying” narrative often imagined. China’s dominance is not just due to geological luck; it’s the result of decades of strategic planning, state-backed investments and global acquisitions. China controls:

This gives China immense leverage over global supply chains. When tensions rise, whether with the US, Japan or India, China has repeatedly used export restrictions on minerals as a geopolitical tool.

Does China’s mineral dominance influence its posture toward India?

Indirectly, yes. It gives China confidence in its long-term economic positioning, reduces its vulnerability to global sanctions and strengthens its geopolitical swagger. While the India-China border disputes have deeper historical roots, China’s dominance in critical minerals certainly amplifies its strategic self-assurance.

But India is not helpless and the picture is evolving.

Where India stands in the new green-mineral world

India’s position is mixed, neither weak nor dominant.

India has:

India lacks:

But India is moving fast:

In global rankings:

India’s biggest challenge isn’t geology, it’s speed. The world is in a rush and India must move faster if it wants a seat at the top table.

Why this mineral race matters for everyone

For a layperson, it means:

For a competitive exam aspirant, it means:

For geopolitics, it means:

The future will be mined, not drilled

We are entering an era where power will not be measured by barrels of oil, but by the minerals that make clean energy possible. The nations that master this supply chain — discover, mine, refine and innovate — will lead the next global order. China saw this early and acted ruthlessly. India has woken up late, but not too late.

The stakes are enormous: economic independence, energy security and geopolitical influence. If India accelerates exploration, builds processing muscle and secures global mineral partnerships, it can reshape its “middle-power” label into true strategic weight.

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