Why in the news?
- The Ministry of Mines issued the guidelines for the Critical Mineral Recycling Incentive Scheme.
Critical Mineral Recycling Incentive Scheme
- What is it?:
- It is to promote recycling of critical minerals from secondary sources such as e-waste, lithium-ion battery (LIB) scrap, and scrap from end-of-life vehicles (e.g. catalytic converters).
- The scheme is part of the broader National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM).
- Scheme Duration: The scheme will run over six years, from FY 2025-26 to FY 2030-31.
- Objectives:
- To boost domestic recycling capacity of critical minerals, as a near-term strategy while exploration, mining, and processing projects ramp up.
- To reduce import dependency for critical minerals (e.g. lithium, cobalt, nickel, rare earths) essential to clean energy, electronics, EVs, etc.
- To catalyze investment, create jobs, and support a circular economy in the mineral sector.
- Key Features:
- Feedstock: E-waste, LIB scrap, end-of-life vehicle scrap (e.g. catalytic converters)
- Beneficiaries: Large, established recyclers; small/new recyclers & startups (1/3 of outlay earmarked for small/new ones)
- CapEx Subsidy: 20% subsidy on plant & machinery, associated utilities, if production starts within the specified timeframe (a reduced subsidy applies beyond that)
- Cap to entities:
- Large entities: total incentive (CapEx + OpEx) capped at ₹50 crore; OpEx subsidy cap ₹10 crore.
- Small entities: total incentive capped at ₹25 crore; OpEx subsidy cap ₹5 crore.
- Significance:
- Recycling offers a shorter lead time compared to mining and primary production, enabling earlier supply security.
- Supports resource efficiency, reduces waste, and lowers environmental footprint of raw material sourcing.
- Incentives could stimulate better extraction / separation technologies, process improvements, and scale in the recycling sector.
- The earmarking of one-third of funds for smaller/new recyclers helps avoid concentration and gives startups / SMEs access.
- Challenges:
- Extracting value from mixed waste streams is technically challenging, especially for rare earths, lithium, cobalt, etc.
- Ensuring consistent and sufficient volumes of suitable e-waste, battery scrap, and end-of-life vehicle scrap may be a constraint, especially in certain regions.
- Financial viability challenges to the recycling firms.
- Monitoring, validating incremental sales, ensuring compliance, disbursing subsidies efficiently, dealing with delays- all need institutional capacity.
- The CapEx subsidy is contingent on starting production within a timeframe; delays may reduce subsidy beneficially for too many.