Ministry of Mines has notified the Mineral
Concession Rules, 2026, to implement provisions related to the extension of
mineral leases and the inclusion of additional minerals
Ministry of Mines has notified the Minerals (Other
than Atomic and Hydro Carbon Energy Minerals) Concession (Second Amendment)
Rules, 2026, to operationalise provisions related to mining lease expansion and
inclusion of additional minerals.The rules are framed pursuant to amendments in
the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 through the MMDR
Amendment Act, 2025 (effective September 2025).The amendment aims to boost
exploration, production, and efficient utilisation of critical, strategic, and
deep-seated minerals.
It aligns with the objective of Atmanirbhar Bharat by
strengthening domestic mineral supply chains.The rules provide the operational
framework for implementing key legislative changes introduced in 2025.
Key Provisions of the Amendment
¨ Inclusion of Contiguous
Areas: A one-time extension is allowed for Mining Lease (ML) and Composite
Licence (CL) holders of deep-seated minerals for inclusion of contiguous
areas.The limit is up to 10% of the existing area for ML and up to 30% for CL,
with payment fixed at 10% of the auction premium for auctioned leases and
additional royalty equivalent for non-auctioned leases.
¨ Optimal Extraction of
Deep-Seated Minerals: The amendment enables mining of minerals locked in
adjoining areas. It also prevents uneconomic fragmentation of mining
operations.
¨ Inclusion of Associated
Minerals: The amendment allows inclusion of additional minerals, including
minor minerals, in existing leases.State Governments must approve such
inclusion within 30 days, and no extra payment is required for critical
minerals, strategic minerals, and deep-seated minerals listed in the Seventh
Schedule.
¨
Provisions for Minor and
Major Minerals: For minor mineral leases granted before 2025, a mechanism is
provided to include major minerals.For future leases, exploration up to G3
level is mandatory (except sand), and if major minerals are discovered, the
area will be auctioned as a major mineral block.
¨
Removal of Restrictions
on Captive Mines: The cap on the sale of minerals from captive mines has been
removed.If the plant operates at full capacity, surplus sale is allowed,
whereas if it operates below capacity, sale is limited to the quantity consumed
annually.
¨ Time-bound and Simplified
Procedures: The amendment introduces a simple and time-bound application
process. This is aimed at enhancing ease of doing business in the mining
sector.
MMDR Amendment Act, 2025
¨ Expansion of NMET (now
NMEDT): The National Mineral Exploration Trust has been expanded and renamed as
the National Mineral Exploration and Development Trust (NMEDT), allowing fund
utilisation within India (including offshore areas) and abroad, with lessee
contribution increased from 2% to 3% of royalty.
¨
Inclusion of New and
Associated Minerals: The amendment enables the inclusion of new and associated
minerals in existing leases, including permitting major minerals in minor
mineral leases under conditions, with an additional payment mechanism
introduced while exempting critical and strategic minerals to boost their
production.
¨ One-time Extension for
Contiguous Areas: State Governments can grant a one-time extension of mining
leases or composite licence areas to include adjacent contiguous regions on
payment, capped at 10% for mining leases and 30% for composite licences to
support efficient extraction.
¨ Promotion of Mineral
Markets and Exchanges: The Central Government is empowered to promote mineral
markets and establish exchanges for trading minerals and their processed forms
to ensure transparent price discovery and better market stability.
¨
Liberalisation of Sale
from Captive Mines: Captive mine owners are now allowed to sell minerals after
meeting their own requirements and paying additional charges, including sale of
unused accumulated dumps to improve resource utilisation and increase state
revenue.
¨ Removal of Prior Approval
for Auction: The requirement of prior Central Government approval for auction
of certain notified mineral blocks for composite licences has been removed to
streamline and speed up the auction process.