The Ministry of Mines is responsible for surveying and exploring for minerals (other than natural gas and petroleum) that are used in mining and metallurgy. It searches for non-ferrous metals including:
aluminium,
copper,
zinc,
lead,
gold,
nickel, etc. for administration of Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (MMDR Act) in respect of all mines and minerals other than
coal and
lignite. There is one attached office, one subordinate office, three public sector undertakings (PSUs), three autonomous bodies, and additional agencies working under the support of the Ministry of Mines.
Sections • Pay and Accounts Section • Protocol Section • Media and Communication Section • Mines Division • International Cooperation Section • Vigilance Section • Public Information and Public Grievance Section • Integrated Finance Section • Metal Division • Administrative Section • Establishment Section • Coordination Section • Parliament Section • Revision Section • Cash Section • Receipt and Issue Section • Hindi Section • Economic Section • Information Technology Section • National Critical Mineral Mission Section • National Mineral Exploration Trust Secretariat Section • Indian Bureau of Mines Camp Office Section
Attached office •
Geological Survey of India; headquarters at Kolkata
Subordinate office • Indian Bureau of Mines, headquarters at Nagpur
Public sector undertakings •
National Aluminium Company Limited (NALCO), Bhubaneswar • Bharat Gold Mines Limited (BGML) • Hindustan Copper Limited (HCL), Kolkata • Mineral Exploration and consultancy Limited (MECL), Nagpur
Autonomous bodies • Jawaharlal Nehru Aluminium Research Development and Design Centre (JNARDDC), Nagpur • National Institute of Rock Mechanics (NIRM), Kolar • National Institute of Miners’ Health (NIMH), Nagpur
Registered society (Autonomous & Self funding) • Non-Ferrous Technology Development Centre • National Mineral Exploration Trust •
Centre for Techno Economic Mineral Policy Options (C-TEMPO) The subject of ‘mineral regulation and development’ occurs at Serial Number 23 of the
State list in the VIIth schedule to the
Constitution. However the Constitution circumscribes this power, by giving Parliament the power under S.No. 54 of the
Union list in the VIIth schedule, to enact legislation, and to this extent the States will be bound by the Central legislation. The MMDR Act is the main Central legislation in force for the sector. The Act was enacted when the Industrial Policy Resolution, 1957 was the guiding policy for the sector, and thus was aimed primarily at providing a mineral concession regime in the context of the metal making public sector undertakings. After the liberalization in 1991, a separate National Mineral Policy (NMP) was promulgated in 1993 which set out the role of the private sector in exploration and mining and the MMDR Act was amended several times to provide for a reasonable concession regime to attract the private sector investment including FDI, into exploration and mining in accordance with NMP 1993. ==National Mineral Policy==