Shree Cement plans to bid for lithium mining rights in Jammu-Kashmir
India’s Shree Cement plans to bid for lithium mining rights under a government plan to secure critical minerals production through auctions that are expected to raise more than $5 billion.
Shree Cement, India’s second biggest cement company by market capitalisation, will also bid for blocks in the eastern state of Chhattisgarh, said the source, who asked not to be identified due to the commercial sensitivities.
If it acquires a lithium block there it would team up with an Australian company for technical assistance on setting up a refinery, which would cost around $600-700 million, the source said. Last week, New Delhi launched the first part of its critical minerals auction that is expected to raise an estimated 450 billion rupees ($5.4 billion) by Feb. 20.
Electric vehicles made up about 2% of total car sales in India of 3.9 million last fiscal year but the government wants to grow this to 30% by 2030. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in June this year listed 30 minerals, including lithium, nickel, titanium, vanadium and tungsten, as critical to drive its clean energy push.
India has committed to cutting its emissions intensity – the amount of emissions released relative to its economic growth – by 2030 to 45% of its 2005 level and net zero by 2070.
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First Published: Dec 06 2023 | 5:42 PM IST