Metallic and non-metallic minerals and their belts and States, coal and the Gondwana fields, petroleum and gas provinces, atomic and renewable energy, and the mineral-belt-versus-internal-security angle for CAPF
Minerals are the naturally occurring substances of economic value won from the earth's crust, and energy resources are the fuels and flows that power the economy. CAPF tests them as matching: mineral to its leading State or belt, coal field to its valley, oil field to its region, renewable to its leader. The security value is sharp and specific. The Chota Nagpur mineral belt and the central-Indian forest tracts coincide with the left-wing-extremism corridor, so the Central Reserve Police Force and its CoBRA units secure mines, transport and infrastructure there; and energy security is national security, because India imports most of its crude oil through the maritime chokepoints of the Strait of Hormuz and the Strait of Malacca. The anchor text is NCERT Class XII, India: People and Economy (mineral and energy resources) with the Geological Survey of India and the Indian Bureau of Mines for the distribution.
India's mineral wealth is overwhelmingly in the old crystalline and metamorphic rocks of the Peninsular Plateau, not the young Himalayas or the alluvial plains. The richest single tract is the Chota Nagpur Plateau belt spanning Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh and West Bengal, so dense in coal, iron, manganese, bauxite, copper, mica and uranium that it is called India's "mineral heartland" or the "Ruhr of India". A second belt runs through the south-eastern Deccan (Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana) for iron, gold and limestone, a third through the north-western Aravallis and Rajasthan for non-ferrous metals and rock minerals, and a fourth along the western Gujarat coast for petroleum and salt. Minerals are classed as metallic (further split into ferrous and non-ferrous), non-metallic, and energy or fuel minerals.
| Belt | States | Fields |
|---|---|---|
| Odisha-Jharkhand | Odisha, Jharkhand | Keonjhar, Mayurbhanj, Sundargarh, Singhbhum |
| Chhattisgarh | Chhattisgarh | Bailadila, Dalli-Rajhara |
| Karnataka | Karnataka | Bellary-Hospet, Kudremukh |
| Goa | Goa | low-grade, export-oriented |
| Maharashtra-Telangana | parts of the Deccan | minor |
Bailadila in Chhattisgarh is a major export source, shipped from Visakhapatnam; Kudremukh ore was once piped as slurry to Mangalore.
Iron ore is India's most important metallic mineral; the best grade is haematite (about 70 percent iron), with magnetite the other high-grade ore. Odisha is the largest producer (the Mayurbhanj, Keonjhar and Sundargarh belt), followed by Chhattisgarh (Bailadila, Dalli-Rajhara), Karnataka (Bellary-Hospet, Kudremukh) and Jharkhand. India exports iron ore from the eastern belt through Paradip and Visakhapatnam. Manganese, used in steel-making and dry cells, leads in Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra (the Nagpur-Balaghat belt) and Odisha. Bauxite, the ore of aluminium, is concentrated in Odisha (Koraput, the Panchpatmali deposits), then Gujarat, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. Copper, in which India is deficient, comes mainly from Khetri (Rajasthan), Singhbhum (Jharkhand) and Malanjkhand (Madhya Pradesh). Gold comes chiefly from Hutti and the now-closed Kolar fields in Karnataka, with placer gold from the Hutti-Maski belt; Karnataka leads. Chromite (for stainless steel) is concentrated in Odisha (Sukinda valley).
| Metal | Use | Leading source |
|---|---|---|
| Copper | wiring, alloys | Khetri (Rajasthan), Malanjkhand (MP), Singhbhum (Jharkhand) |
| Bauxite (aluminium) | aircraft, utensils, power lines | Odisha (Panchpatmali), Gujarat, Jharkhand |
| Lead-zinc | batteries, galvanising | Zawar and Rampura-Agucha (Rajasthan) |
| Gold | jewellery, reserves | Hutti, Kolar (Karnataka) |
| Tin | solder, plating | Bastar (Chhattisgarh) |
India is deficient in copper and must import; it is comfortable in bauxite. Rajasthan dominates lead and zinc (Zawar, Rampura-Agucha).
India is among the world's largest producers of sheet mica, used as an electrical insulator, found in the Koderma-Gaya-Hazaribagh belt of Jharkhand and Bihar, the Nellore belt of Andhra Pradesh, and the Ajmer-Bhilwara belt of Rajasthan. Limestone, the raw material of cement and a flux in steel, is widespread across the peninsula (Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka). Dolomite, gypsum (Rajasthan, for cement and reclamation) and phosphate round out the non-metallics.
| Non-metallic | Use | Leading source |
|---|---|---|
| Mica | electrical insulation | Koderma (Jharkhand), Nellore (AP), Ajmer (Rajasthan) |
| Limestone | cement, steel flux | MP, Rajasthan, AP, Karnataka |
| Gypsum | cement, soil reclamation | Rajasthan |
| Dolomite | refractories, steel | Chhattisgarh, Odisha |
| Phosphate (apatite) | fertiliser | Jharkhand, Rajasthan |
Coal is the backbone of India's commercial energy and electricity. About 80 percent of Indian coal is Gondwana coal, formed about 250 million years ago and concentrated in the river valleys of the peninsula: the Damodar valley (Jharia, the largest and a source of coking coal, Bokaro, Raniganj in Jharkhand and West Bengal), the Mahanadi valley (Talcher, Korba), the Godavari valley (Singareni in Telangana, the only major southern field) and the Son valley. Younger Tertiary coal, lower in carbon and high in sulphur, occurs in the north-east (Makum in Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland) and in Jammu and Kashmir. India has large reserves but much of the coal is high-ash, so coking coal for steel is partly imported.
Petroleum is found in three main onshore-offshore provinces:
Natural gas accompanies the oil fields and is also a major standalone resource in the Krishna-Godavari basin offshore the eastern coast and in the Rajasthan and Tripura fields. The Hazira-Vijaipur-Jagdishpur (HVJ) pipeline carries gas across the north.
India's commercial energy is dominated by coal (the largest source of electricity), followed by oil and gas (largely imported), hydropower, nuclear and a fast-growing renewable share. The country is a large net importer of crude oil and natural gas, which is the heart of its energy-security problem. Power is generated chiefly by thermal (coal and gas) stations, with hydroelectric plants on the Himalayan and Western Ghats rivers, nuclear stations at Tarapur (Maharashtra, the oldest), Kudankulam (Tamil Nadu, the largest), Kaiga (Karnataka), Kakrapar (Gujarat), Rawatbhata (Rajasthan) and Narora (Uttar Pradesh), and a rising renewable fleet. The grid is now a single national grid, and energy efficiency and the shift toward renewables are central policy goals.
| Source | Role |
|---|---|
| Coal (thermal) | largest source of electricity |
| Oil and gas | transport and industry; largely imported |
| Hydropower | Himalayan and Western Ghats rivers |
| Nuclear | Tarapur, Kudankulam, Kaiga, Kakrapar, Rawatbhata, Narora |
| Solar and wind | fastest-growing; large parks in the west and south |
Atomic minerals supply nuclear power: uranium comes chiefly from Jaduguda in Singhbhum (Jharkhand), with newer mining in Andhra Pradesh (Tummalapalle); thorium, in which India has the world's largest reserves, comes from monazite in the beach sands of Kerala and Tamil Nadu, the basis of India's three-stage nuclear programme. Renewables are expanding fast: solar leads in Rajasthan, Gujarat and Karnataka (Bhadla Solar Park in Rajasthan and Pavagada in Karnataka are among the world's largest), wind leads in Tamil Nadu (Muppandal), Gujarat and Karnataka, and hydropower comes from the Himalayan and Western Ghats rivers. India co-founded the International Solar Alliance and has large installed-renewable targets.
| Renewable | Leading States | Marker site |
|---|---|---|
| Solar | Rajasthan, Gujarat, Karnataka | Bhadla (Rajasthan), Pavagada (Karnataka) |
| Wind | Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Karnataka, Maharashtra | Muppandal (Tamil Nadu) |
| Hydropower | the Himalayan and Western Ghats States | Bhakra, Tehri, Sardar Sarovar |
| Biomass / bagasse | the sugarcane belts | cogeneration in Maharashtra and UP |
| Tidal / wave | potential in the Gulf of Kutch and Khambhat | pilot stage |
The drive toward renewables is both a climate commitment and an energy-security move, reducing dependence on imported fossil fuel.
| Valley | Fields | States |
|---|---|---|
| Damodar | Jharia (coking coal), Bokaro, Raniganj, Giridih | Jharkhand, West Bengal |
| Mahanadi | Talcher, Korba, Ib valley | Odisha, Chhattisgarh |
| Godavari | Singareni | Telangana |
| Son (and Wardha) | Singrauli, Korba area | MP, UP, Chhattisgarh |
| North-east (Tertiary) | Makum | Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland |
Jharia is the largest field and the chief source of coking coal; Raniganj was the first to be worked. Singareni is the only major coalfield of the south.
| Province / field | Region | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Bombay (Mumbai) High | offshore Arabian Sea | largest producer; rig Sagar Samrat |
| Digboi, Naharkatiya, Moran | Upper Assam | oldest oilfields; Digboi the oldest refinery in Asia |
| Ankleshwar, Kalol, Mehsana | Gujarat (Cambay basin) | onshore western fields |
| Krishna-Godavari basin | offshore east coast | major natural-gas province |
| Barmer (Mangala) | Rajasthan | onshore oil and gas |
| Jaisalmer, Tripura | Rajasthan, Tripura | natural gas |
Refineries of note include Digboi (oldest), Jamnagar in Gujarat (the largest refining complex in the world), Mathura, Barauni, Koyali, Panipat, Mumbai and Visakhapatnam.
| Mineral / fuel | Type | Leading area(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Iron ore (haematite) | metallic, ferrous | Odisha, Chhattisgarh (Bailadila), Karnataka (Bellary), Jharkhand |
| Manganese | metallic, ferrous | Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra (Nagpur-Balaghat), Odisha |
| Bauxite | metallic (aluminium) | Odisha (Panchpatmali), Gujarat, Jharkhand |
| Copper | metallic, non-ferrous | Khetri (Rajasthan), Singhbhum (Jharkhand), Malanjkhand (MP) |
| Gold | metallic, non-ferrous | Hutti and Kolar (Karnataka) |
| Chromite | metallic | Odisha (Sukinda valley) |
| Mica | non-metallic | Koderma (Jharkhand), Nellore (AP), Ajmer (Rajasthan) |
| Limestone | non-metallic | Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, AP, Karnataka |
| Coal (Gondwana) | fossil fuel | Jharia, Bokaro, Raniganj (Damodar); Talcher, Korba (Mahanadi); Singareni (Godavari) |
| Coal (Tertiary) | fossil fuel | Makum (Assam), Meghalaya, Nagaland |
| Petroleum | fossil fuel | Bombay High (offshore), Upper Assam (Digboi), Gujarat (Ankleshwar) |
| Natural gas | fossil fuel | Bombay High, Krishna-Godavari basin, Rajasthan, Tripura |
| Uranium | atomic | Jaduguda (Jharkhand), Tummalapalle (AP) |
| Thorium (monazite) | atomic | Kerala and Tamil Nadu beach sands |
| Solar power | renewable | Rajasthan (Bhadla), Gujarat, Karnataka (Pavagada) |
| Wind power | renewable | Tamil Nadu (Muppandal), Gujarat, Karnataka |
| Belt | States | Minerals |
|---|---|---|
| Chota Nagpur (north-eastern plateau) | Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal | coal, iron, manganese, bauxite, copper, mica, uranium |
| South-eastern Deccan | Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana | iron, gold, manganese, limestone |
| North-western (Aravalli) | Rajasthan, Gujarat | copper (Khetri), zinc-lead (Zawar), mica, gypsum, salt |
| Western coastal (Gujarat) | Gujarat, offshore | petroleum, natural gas, salt |
| Kerala-Tamil Nadu coast | Kerala, Tamil Nadu | monazite (thorium), ilmenite, beach sands |
Minerals are the base of heavy industry, which is why the eastern mineral belt also carries the steel plants. Iron ore plus coking coal plus limestone (flux) makes steel, so the public-sector steel plants of Bhilai, Rourkela, Durgapur and Bokaro and the private TISCO at Jamshedpur all sit on or near the Chota Nagpur belt where these three inputs meet. Bauxite feeds the aluminium smelters (NALCO in Odisha, Hindalco), copper feeds the smelters near the deposits, and limestone feeds the cement plants spread across the peninsula. This is the bridge to indian industries transport and population, where industrial location is set out.
Beyond the classic minerals, modern energy and defence depend on critical minerals such as lithium and cobalt (for batteries), rare-earth elements (for magnets, electronics and defence) and graphite. India is largely import-dependent for these, which has become a fresh strand of resource security: lithium finds in Jammu and Kashmir and Rajasthan have been reported, and India has joined international partnerships to secure rare-earth and battery-mineral supplies. This matters for the electric-vehicle and renewable transition and for self-reliance in defence electronics.
Minerals are exhaustible and unevenly distributed, so conservation matters: efficient extraction, recycling of metals, substitution where possible, and the regulation of mining under the mineral laws and environmental clearances. Illegal and over-mining (of iron ore, sand and coal) is both an environmental and a governance problem, and it ties into the security angle where it funds insurgency or strips the forest.
Mineral geography overlaps the internal-security map almost exactly. The Chota Nagpur mineral belt and the central-Indian forest tracts of Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Odisha coincide with the left-wing-extremism corridor, so the Central Reserve Police Force, including its specialised jungle-warfare CoBRA battalions, operates to secure the mines, the iron-ore and coal transport corridors, the road-building and the power infrastructure that the insurgency targets; control of mineral rent and of the forest economy is itself a driver of that conflict. Energy security is a strategic priority because India imports the bulk of its crude oil and a large share of its gas: most crude arrives through the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf and a great share of trade and energy transits the Strait of Malacca, which is why securing the sea lanes of the Indian Ocean and watching the western approaches to Malacca from the Andaman and Nicobar command are national-security tasks for the Navy and the Coast Guard. Strategic petroleum reserves and the diversification of import routes flow from the same logic. See straits chokepoints and strategic waterways and india borders neighbours and strategic geography.
| Mineral / fuel | Leading State |
|---|---|
| Iron ore | Odisha |
| Manganese | Madhya Pradesh |
| Bauxite | Odisha |
| Chromite | Odisha |
| Copper | Rajasthan (Khetri) |
| Gold | Karnataka |
| Mica | Andhra Pradesh / Jharkhand |
| Lead and zinc | Rajasthan |
| Coal | Jharkhand / Odisha / Chhattisgarh |
| Petroleum | offshore (Bombay High); onshore Gujarat and Assam |
| Solar power | Rajasthan |
| Wind power | Tamil Nadu / Gujarat |
Odisha is the standout, leading iron ore, bauxite and chromite; Rajasthan leads copper, lead-zinc and solar; Karnataka leads gold.
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