Kerala Chief Minister VD Satheesan presenting the Budget in the State Assembly, in Thiruvananthapuram on Friday

| Photo Credit:

The State government has outlined an ambitious regional development strategy that views Southern Kerala as a single integrated economic region rather than three separate districts. The Budget proposes the creation of the Southern Kerala Economic Corridor, bringing together Thiruvananthapuram, Kollam, and Alappuzha into a unified economic zone.Presenting the Budget, Chief Minister VD Satheesan said the three southern districts possess a unique combination of advantages, including the world-class deep-sea port at Vizhinjam, abundant coastal mineral resources and rare-earth deposits, leading space and technology institutions and a blue economy with vast untapped potential. He further stated that harnessing these strengths through an integrated development framework would position the region as a major driver of Kerala’s economic growth.Thiruvananthapuram (Zone 1) will be transformed into Kerala’s Knowledge and Space Technology Hub; Kollam (Zone 2) into the nerve centre for mineral processing and rare earths; and Alappuzha (Zone 3) will be elevated as India’s Blue Economy capital.He said that modern economic growth is predominantly driven by integrated regional clusters rather than isolated projects. By seamlessly linking logistics, technology, manufacturing, research and natural resources into a single developmental framework, the Southern Kerala Economic Corridor will engineer a robust blended economy, attract massive private investment, and ensure Kerala’s position at the vanguard of the nation’s strategic and maritime development sectors in the future.To operationalise this, he said a detailed project report will be prepared through an expert agency to map out the necessary infrastructure and formulate the requisite administrative and policy interventions. An allocation of ₹100 crore is provided for the Rare Earth and Critical Minerals Corridor and ₹50 crore is earmarked for the Southern Kerala Economic Corridor.Sustainable ExtractionIndustry expert, MP Sukumaran Nair said the proposal incorporates a Rare and Critical Minerals Corridor, capitalising on Kerala’s rich beach sand deposits containing titanium, zirconium and other minerals. An environment-friendly mining scheme is emphasised to ensure sustainable extraction.Titanium, recognised as a sunrise industry, finds applications in pigments, metals, alloys and nanomaterials. Growing demand stems from sectors such as ISRO satellite launches, power plant equipment, and medical implants. Zirconium and associated minerals offer wide industrial applications. This corridor is projected to generate significant value addition through processing and downstream industries, he said.Published on June 19, 2026