NEW DELHI – In a major move to boost the “Ease of Doing Business” in India’s mining sector, the Ministry of Mines has notified the Mineral (Auction) Second Amendment Rules, 2026. Effective from March 30, 2026, these reforms aim to fast-track the operationalization of mines and streamline the transition from auction to extraction.
Strategic Highlights of the 2026 Amendment:
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Exclusion of Non-Feasible Areas: For the first time, the rules allow for the exclusion of portions of a mining block (up to 25% of total resources) that are obstructed by forests, wildlife corridors, or infrastructure. This prevents entire projects from stalling due to small, inaccessible patches.
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Unified Mining Portal: A new digital gateway will handle the entire lifecycle of a mine—from block identification to the automatic issuance of Letters of Intent (LoI). This reduces bureaucratic delays and enhances transparency.
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Stricter Operational Timelines: * For blocks not involving forest land, the total time to execute a Mining Lease is now capped at 3 years, with no extensions.
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The second installment of upfront payment must now be deposited within one year of the LoI.
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Refunds for Annulled Auctions: To protect investors, the rules now provide for a full refund of upfront payments and performance security if mining becomes impossible due to factors beyond the bidder’s control.
Boosting Private Participation & Incentives:
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Wider Scope for NPEAs: Notified Private Exploration Agencies (NPEAs) can now bid for all types of mineral blocks they have explored, removing previous restrictions that limited them to critical and deep-seated minerals.
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Critical Mineral Incentives: To encourage domestic production, the government has introduced exemptions from auction premiums for critical and strategic minerals (when they constitute less than 10% of a block’s total resource value).
The “Why” Behind the Reform
The Ministry’s goal is to eliminate the long “gestation period” between winning a bid and starting operations. By implementing a Mining Dashboard to track clearances and penalizing delays (1% of performance security per month of delay), the government is signaling a shift toward a more aggressive and efficient mineral development strategy for 2026-27.

