| Relevance: GS Paper I — Natural Resources; GS Paper III — Science & Technology, Critical Minerals | Source: Reuters / SCMP, July 2026 |
1 · What happened
| On 10 July 2026, China’s Ministry of Commerce and General Administration of Customs banned all exports of helium with immediate effect. There is no expiry date, no country exemption, and no relief even for existing contracts.
The odd part is that China is not a big producer. It makes only about 1.6% of the world’s helium and imports more than 80% of what it uses. The ban is therefore a defensive step, meant to save scarce stock for its own chip and hospital sectors after the Iran conflict shut Qatar’s Ras Laffan facility. |
2 · What Makes Helium So Special
| Helium is the second lightest element after hydrogen. It cannot be manufactured. It forms deep inside the Earth’s crust when uranium and thorium decay radioactively. Over millions of years it collects in pockets along with natural gas, and is pulled out as a by-product of natural gas processing. Extraction pays only if the gas contains at least 0.3% helium. |
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The Science
Why Nothing Else Works
Boiling point of -269°C, the lowest of any element. It is chemically inert. So it is the only substance that stays liquid near absolute zero without reacting with anything around it.
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Where It Is Used
Chips, MRI, Rockets
Semiconductors and quantum computing (17%): cools silicon wafers and qubits. MRI machines (15%): chills superconducting magnets. Aerospace (9%): pushes fuel into rocket engines. Leak detection (5%).
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Supply Bottleneck
Hard to Store, Easy to Lose
A purification plant costs over $100 million. Salt-cavern storage crosses $200 million. Liquid helium must travel in special vacuum-jacketed cryogenic vessels, and it slowly boils off. Once it escapes, it leaves Earth’s gravity for good.
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The Chokepoint
Hormuz Squeeze
Qatar supplies about one-third of world helium, and its shipments must cross the Strait of Hormuz. Russia has cut Asian quotas to 40% of 2025 levels till end-2027. Spot prices in Northeast Asia doubled to $150-205 per thousand cubic feet.
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- Who produces it: The United States (about 43%) is the largest supplier, followed by Qatar (about 33%), then Russia, Canada and Algeria. Production is unusually concentrated.
- The US pulled back its safety net: In 2024, the US privatised its Federal Helium Reserve, selling it to the Messer Group. Washington no longer holds a public buffer stock to steady the market during a shock.
- India’s position: India has no commercial helium plant and imports its entire requirement, mainly from the USA and Qatar. A Hormuz disruption directly affects ISRO (which uses helium to push liquid propellants into rocket engines), DRDO, and the Department of Atomic Energy.
- India’s hidden potential: Indian natural gas is poor in helium, but the granite rocks below several geothermal zones are rich in uranium and thorium. Hot springs in the Bakreswar-Tantloi area of the Son-Narmada-Tapi (SONATA) zone show high helium content, offering an unconventional extraction route.
- Policy link: Securing helium fits the goals of the National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM), launched in 2025, which aims to reduce India’s dependence on imported strategic inputs.
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to helium, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only
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