India's Mining Fiscal Landscape Regulations, Governance and Sustainability (2025 Update)
Description
India's Mining Fiscal Landscape Regulations, Governance and Sustainability (2025 Update)
Summary
GlobalData's India's Mining Fiscal Landscape Regulations Governance and Sustainability (2025) provides a comprehensive coverage on India's mining fiscal regime. The report provides country's overview with macroeconomic performance, corruption index and mineral overview. It also provides a comprehensive coverage on the country’s mining regulatory bodies, laws, rights, and obligations, as well as current and future tax-related proposals.
India is endowed with vast mineral deposits, including coal, iron ore, bauxite, manganese, copper, lead, zinc and limestone. The country’s mining industry is governed by the Ministry of Mines, Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC), the Indian Bureau of Mines (IBM) and the Geological Survey of India (GSI).
India's mining industry is exclusively governed by the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957, also known as the MMDR Act. It has undergone multiple amendments, the most recent of which introduced major reforms intended to boost investment, improve transparency, and increase mineral production through the MMDR Amendment Acts of 2021 and 2023. In August 2025, the parliament passed the Mines and Minerals (Amendment) Bill 2025 to boost mineral production and attract investment. It removes the 50% sale cap on minerals from captive mines, allows lease area extensions for deep-seated minerals and enables sale of old mineral dumps.
Scope
Summary
GlobalData's India's Mining Fiscal Landscape Regulations Governance and Sustainability (2025) provides a comprehensive coverage on India's mining fiscal regime. The report provides country's overview with macroeconomic performance, corruption index and mineral overview. It also provides a comprehensive coverage on the country’s mining regulatory bodies, laws, rights, and obligations, as well as current and future tax-related proposals.
India is endowed with vast mineral deposits, including coal, iron ore, bauxite, manganese, copper, lead, zinc and limestone. The country’s mining industry is governed by the Ministry of Mines, Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC), the Indian Bureau of Mines (IBM) and the Geological Survey of India (GSI).
India's mining industry is exclusively governed by the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957, also known as the MMDR Act. It has undergone multiple amendments, the most recent of which introduced major reforms intended to boost investment, improve transparency, and increase mineral production through the MMDR Amendment Acts of 2021 and 2023. In August 2025, the parliament passed the Mines and Minerals (Amendment) Bill 2025 to boost mineral production and attract investment. It removes the 50% sale cap on minerals from captive mines, allows lease area extensions for deep-seated minerals and enables sale of old mineral dumps.
Scope
- The report outlines the governing bodies, governing laws, various mineral licenses and fees by state
- Enhance your decision-making capability in a more rapid and time sensitive manner
- Find out India's governing bodies, major laws in the industry
- Identify various mineral licenses and fees
- To gain an overview of India's mining fiscal regime
Table of Contents
- Executive Summary
- Country Overview
- Mineral Overview
- Government Bodies
- Mining Laws and Regulations
- Mining Leases and Licenses
- Mining Taxes and Royalties
- Sustainable Mining Practices
- Appendix
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