HomeNewsIndia NewsRare Earth Export Curbs Lifted by China: India’s Semiconductor and Electronics Sectors...

Rare Earth Export Curbs Lifted by China: India’s Semiconductor and Electronics Sectors Poised to Benefit

India’s electronics sector, one of the major achievements under the Make in India initiative, could witness long-term benefits following China’s decision to ease export restrictions on rare earth metals and critical minerals.

Rare earth elements (REEs) comprise the very stuff in a myriad of devices-hardly just companies assembling smartphones, laptops, gaming consoles, and electric vehicles, but also advanced display technologies. Rare earth elements (REEs) were an eternal source of limited supply, coupled with China dominating the supply chains worldwide, thereby posing an impediment to global electronics manufacturers.

The relaxation in export restrictions by China could go a long way in reducing supply constraints in India thus helping the domestic industry grow faster, and in removing supply-chain bottlenecks-according to experts of the industry. This is extremely important in sectors like semiconductors, consumer electronics, and electric mobility, where India aspires to build some competitive advantage.

Industry leaders believe that stable prices for critical minerals should lower production costs and foster further investment in the electronics ecosystem in India, thus quickening the country’s path to being recognized as a-global electronics manufacturing hub.

The change in policy comes at a time when India is enhancing PLI schemes to pull in global multinationals engaged in electronics and semiconductor fabrication. With a better supply assurance for rare earths, India should now find itself better placed to enter into global value chains and curtail its dependence on expensive imports from various markets.

Despite China being India’s strategic competitor, the loosening of export controls unexpectedly highlights global supply chains’ interconnectivity. Analysts say that the way is now clear for the electronics and EV sectors of India to be among the biggest beneficiaries if India continues to develop domestic processing and value addition firms.

Related News

Must Read

Sasken Announces Hyderabad Center of Excellence to Scale Product Engineering and Digital Innovation

Hyderabad, India: April 16, 2026: Sasken Technologies Ltd. (BSE:...

Mission accomplished: Infineon technology proves reliable once again in space on Artemis II

Infineon's radiation-hardened semiconductors performed flawlessly on NASA's Artemis...

Bosch and Qualcomm expand collaboration to strategic ADAS solutions

Cockpit Computers: 10 million units delivered • High-performance solutions: Bosch...

Gartner Forecasts Worldwide Semiconductor Revenue to Exceed $1.3 Trillion in 2026

Semiconductor Revenue to Grow 64% in 2026 DRAM...

Directed Energy Systems: Where Capability Ends and Control Begins

by Sukhendu Deb Roy, Industry Consultant Key Takeaways The economics...

Boundary scan in combination with automotive applications for CAN-FD and LIN bus

Serial communication remains the backbone of electronic communication in...

Why Every EV & 5G Phone Could Soon Be Powered by Gujarat

In a move that cements India’s transition from a...