About Rare Earth Elements (REEs)
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Group of 17 chemical elements:
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Includes 15 lanthanides.
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Plus scandium and yttrium.
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Abundance:
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Found in the Earth’s crust in relatively high amounts.
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Present in low concentrations and mixed with other minerals.
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Extraction is difficult and costly.
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Types:
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Light REEs (LREEs): More abundant.
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Heavy REEs (HREEs): Less abundant, more critical due to high demand and low availability.
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Key Examples:
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LREE – Neodymium: Critical for mobile phones, medical equipment, EVs.
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HREE – Dysprosium, Yttrium, Cerium: Important for clean energy technologies but have smaller markets due to supply limits.
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Misleading Name:
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“Rare” refers to economic viability, not physical scarcity.
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Applications of REEs
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Electronics:
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Smartphones, laptops, flat-panel displays, headphones.
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Used for magnetic and phosphorescent properties.
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Clean Energy:
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High-performance magnets for wind turbines, EVs, solar panels.
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Defence:
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Precision-guided missiles, radar, sonar, jet engines.
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Medical Technology:
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MRI, PET scanners, radiation-based cancer treatments.
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Industrial Use:
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Petroleum refining, glass polishing, corrosion-resistant alloys.
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India’s Position in REEs
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Reserves:
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Holds around 6% of global REE reserves (untapped potential).
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Imports:
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Imported 2,270 tonnes in FY 2023–24, showing moderate external dependency.
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LREE Extraction:
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Can extract LREEs from monazite-rich beach sands in Kerala.
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HREE Refining Gap:
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Lacks technology and infrastructure for heavy REE refining.
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Creates a strategic vulnerability.
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