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Sources: India is in negotiations with Brazil, Canada France and the Netherlands about critical mineral deals

Sources said that India has been in discussions with Brazil, Canada France and the Netherlands to explore, extract and process critical minerals.

Sources who declined to identify themselves because the discussions were confidential said that the focus would be on rare earths and lithium, but also that India would seek to access mineral processing technologies.

Mining experts say that India's heavy reliance on its arch-rival China, who dominates the global supply of minerals and has advanced technology in mining and processing, highlights the need to reach out to other countries to reduce emissions as it accelerates?its energy transformation.

Mining can take many years to go from discovery to production. Exploration alone takes five to seven year and ends up with no viable mine.

One source said that India wants to copy the elements of a "critical minerals" agreement signed in January with Germany. The agreement covers exploration, recycling and processing, as well the acquisition and development mineral?assets both in India and Germany and in tertiary countries.

The source stated that "there are requests and we are in contact with France, Netherlands and Brazil. We are also actively considering the agreement with Canada."

Sources said that the Ministry of Mines leads the effort.

Mark Carney, Canada's prime minister, is expected to visit India early in March and sign agreements on uranium and energy. He will also likely sign deals with India regarding minerals, artificial intelligence, and uranium.

When asked for comment, Canada’s Natural Resources Department pointed to a statement from January that said?both parties had agreed to formalise their cooperation on critical mineral in the coming week.

The Brazilian embassy in New Delhi and the Indian Ministry of Mines as well as the Foreign ministry have not responded to requests for comments. The Netherlands embassy did not respond to a request for comment, while the French embassy declined.

India is scouring the globe for critical minerals. It has signed agreements with Argentina, Australia and Japan and is in discussions with Peru and Chile about broader bilateral deals that include critical minerals.

India's growing international engagement coincides with the G7 finance ministers and other major economies meeting in Washington last month to discuss how to reduce China's dependence on rare Earths.

India has identified lithium as a "critical" mineral for its energy transformation and rising demands from the industry and infrastructure sectors.

(source: Reuters)