Dr Anupam Agnihotri of JNARDDC said over 70 companies have registered under the Rs 1,500 crore incentive programme
Critical mineral recycling scheme gathers pace as recyclers sign up at IMRC 2026
The government’s Rs 1,500 crore Critical Mineral Recycling Incentive Scheme has begun gaining traction across the recycling industry, with more than 70 companies registering since its operational rollout, according to officials speaking at IMRC 2026 in Jaipur.
The Critical Mineral Recycling Incentive Scheme, announced by the government in October 2025 and operationalised through guidelines issued shortly thereafter, is designed to promote domestic recycling and recovery of critical minerals at a time when global supply chains are tightening. According to Dr Agnihotri, more than 10 recycling companies have already received formal acknowledgements under the scheme, reflecting early industry confidence.
With operational guidelines now in place under the National Critical Mineral Mission, speakers at the conference underlined that recycling, rather than primary mining alone, will be central to India’s ability to secure long-term access to critical minerals.
Explaining the design of the incentive framework approved by the Union Cabinet in September 2025, Dr Agnihotri said the scheme prioritises quality and technological capability over rapid volume expansion. “Only R3 and R4 category recyclers are eligible. Group A recyclers must process at least 10,000 tonnes per annum, while Group B recyclers must process a minimum of 5,000 tonnes, with defined purity benchmarks. Incentives are capped at Rs 50 crore or 20 percent of plant and machinery cost, ensuring support is directed toward serious, technology-driven recycling investments,” he said.
Placing the initiative in a broader global context, Dr Agnihotri said critical minerals have emerged as a determinant of geopolitical and economic power. “The green transition, EV manufacturing, Industry 4.0 and defence technologies all depend on reliable access to critical minerals. Recycling and urban mining will increasingly define national competitiveness,” he said.
Offering an international perspective, Dr Rachana Arora, Director Climate Change and Circular Economy at GIZ India, said India’s recycling-led approach reflects shifting global supply chain realities. “Critical raw materials are no longer a single-country issue. India and the European Union are moving toward coordinated approaches on batteries, renewables and electronics, with recycling and urban mining emerging as common priorities,” she said, citing India Germany cooperation across exploration, processing, recycling and technology development.
From an industry standpoint, Vijay Pareek, Executive Director and SBU Head at Gravita India Limited, said the incentive scheme provides long-awaited clarity. “Clear eligibility norms, incentive structures and timelines provide confidence to investors and recyclers, accelerating formalisation and capacity creation in scrap-based recovery,” he said.
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