India’s mining sector holds the potential to add an estimated $500 billion to the economy and create up to 25 million additional jobs by 2047, according to a report by Deloitte and the Indian Chamber of Commerce (ICC). However, realizing this potential necessitates a significant shift towards “Mining 5.0,” characterized by artificial intelligence, integrated digital systems, and sustainable operations.
The report, titled “Mining 5.0 – Emerging Mining Technologies by 2030,” highlights that the Indian mining industry is entering a “structural transition” due to increasing demand for minerals resulting from infrastructure development, energy transition initiatives, and growth in manufacturing. “Looking ahead to India’s aspiration of becoming a $30 trillion economy by 2047, mining has the potential to play a disproportionately transformative role,” the report states.
Currently contributing around 2-3 percent to India’s GDP directly, the sector supports various industries, including steel, cement, power, automobiles, and infrastructure. The report emphasizes that mining could generate up to 25 million incremental jobs, both direct and indirect, while also significantly contributing to GDP growth.
India’s mining industry is progressing beyond the phase known as Mining 4.0, which primarily focused on automation and digitalization. It is now moving towards “Mining 5.0,” an evolution that emphasizes integrated decision-making systems enhanced by AI, digital twins, automation, and advanced analytics. “Mining 5.0 represents this next evolution: A shift from volume-centric extraction to a value-driven, technology-enabled, sustainable, and human-centric mining ecosystem,” it asserts.
Despite many Indian mining companies having adopted certain aspects of Mining 4.0, the report notes that digital capabilities remain fragmented across operations. “Without integration, digital investments risk remaining isolated pilots with limited enterprise value,” it cautions, suggesting that effective integration could enhance India’s capacity to align with national priorities of energy security, sustainability, and inclusive growth.
The next phase of mining transformation will prioritize the integration of planning, production, logistics, maintenance, sustainability, and safety into a unified decision-making system. The report also emphasizes that the industry’s evolution is influenced by policy reforms, escalating steel demand, critical mineral requirements, and the government’s self-reliance initiative under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
Advanced technologies such as AI-based predictive safety systems, digital twins, autonomous operations, real-time monitoring systems, and hybrid cloud-edge digital architectures are projected to play a crucial role in the future landscape of Indian mining operations. According to the report, “Mining 5.0 is not a technology roadmap; it is a leadership agenda,” reinforcing that future success will hinge on aligning operational models and incentives with value over volume, while treating AI and data as enterprise capabilities rather than mere functional tools.
Published on May 9, 2026.







