India's Thorium based nuclear power programme

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India starts new unsafeguarded reprocessing plant - Fissile material

India starts new unsafeguarded reprocessing plant


A new 100-ton per year capacity reprocessing plant was inaugurated by India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on 6 January 2011 at the Tarapur nuclear site. Singh used the occasion to praise India's long term plan to use thorium and termed the plant, "a milestone in India's three-stage nuclear programme."

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, cited by World Nuclear News, the new facility is not covered by any safeguards regime. The Tarapur site already has a reprocessing plant (PREFRE) with a capacity of 100 tons/year that was commissioned in 1977 but has not operated consistently. Over the last decade, the plant has been refurbished extensively. It is not clear if this line is intended as a replacement for the existing line or if the capacity of the plant is being increased for the long term.

India has been attempting for years to build up a full-scale plutonium economy, with multiple reprocessing plants and fast breeder reactors. The first large scale breeder reactor, the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR), has encountered multiple delays and is several years behind schedule. Currently it has been delayed and is expected to start up between 2012 and 2013.
 
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NPCIL to borrow $5.7 bn for world�s largest nuclear plant

NPCIL to borrow $5.7 bn for world's largest nuclear plant


New Delhi: Nuclear Power Corporation (NPCIL), India's lone nuclear power generation utility, is going ahead with its aggressive capacity addition plans despite the renewed concern over safety of nuclear power generation after the Fukushima disaster.
NPCIL is in talks with a consortium of 12 European banks, including BNP Paribas SA, HSBC Holdings Plc and Societe Generale, to raise as much as 4 billion euros ($5.7 billion) to finance its proposed 10,000 mw nuclear power plant at Jaitapur in Maharashtra. Reactors for this plant — the largest in the world — will be supplied by Areva, a French nuclear power equipment manufacturer, according to a senior NPCIL official.

The loan will be guaranteed by French trade credit insurance company Coface SA. The total cost of the project, with a debt-equity ratio of 70:30, is about $18 billion. The PSU will have to arrange for the rest of the loan component from domestic lenders such as Power Finance Corporation.

"The challenge of large-scale nuclear power capacity addition in a rapid manner has, indeed, provided an opportunity for further enhancing country's capability in adopting and implementing diverse technologies," says NPCIL chairman and managing director SK Jain.

The state-owned generator plans to put up six reactors each with 1,650 mw capacity at Jaitapur. The ministry of environment and forests (MoEF) recently issued environmental clearance for the project after dithering over the issue initially.

Some environmentalists had raised concern about the possible environmental impact of putting up such a large nuclear power plant at a site that according to them, falls in a seismically sensitive zone. Besides, concerns were also raised about the safety of the European Pressurised Reactors to be supplied by Areva on the ground that it is a technology that is yet to be tested.

"We have funding commitment of more than what we require," NPCIL finance director Jagdeep Ghai was quoted as saying by agencies in Mumbai. "There is absolutely no problem with bankers, although they have also increased their due diligence after the Fukushima event."

The loan will likely have a 17-year maturity and the rate of interest may be as much as 7%, Ghai said. The company is also looking to borrow $250 million through a loan with maturity of five to seven years.

India's plan to increase nuclear power generation about 13-fold is back on track following a safety review after the Fukushima disaster. Following the accident at the Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant, the Indian government ordered a comprehensive review of safety of its operational nuclear power plants also of the preparedness of the operator to deal with nuclear contingencies. The government also plans to tighten regulatory norms for nuclear power plants.

The department of atomic energy (DAE), which is directly concerned with India's nuclear power generation programme,...
 
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Russia begins construction of fast breeder reactors: Voice of Russia



Russia begins construction of fast breeder reactors


The development of fast breeder reactors, which are considered the safest, was begun in the 50s of the last century, but the experiment was halted due to lack of money. There is only one such reactor at the Beloyarsk station in the Sverdlovsk region in Russia, which has two power generating units, one of which has been in service for more than 30 years. A similar station is being constructed in India. The main feature of the Ulyanovsk station is its lead-bismuth alloy coolant, which does not create hydrogen, excluding the possibility of a chemical explosi9n. The specific construction of the station prevents the leaking of radioactive substances .Russian submarines are equipped with such generating units in which the isotope of the heavy uranium-238 and torium-232 are used. In addition, the installation of such units in the fast breeder reactors enables a significant saving in fuel, says Alexander Vinogradov of the Institute of nuclear research, speaking in an interview for VOR:

"The technology has been in use for a long time and the Beloyarsk station has been working for a pretty long period of time. The so-called nuclear cycle can become more effective with such a technology, meaning that the oil materials will be used more effectively", Vinogradov said.

The lifespan of the Ulyanovsk power generating units is 60 years, and they can be constructed under all weather conditions and in any place, and construction work will take less than 4 years. In time, the new reactors will replace all the old ones. The only shortcoming of the reactors is the low capacity since they can meet only the demands of a region, says Anna Kurbatova of "Atomenergoproject":

"A power station based on industrial-experimental generating unit of lead-bismuth alloy 100 will enable the creation of small and medium, atom complexes of 100 megawatt capacity. That will satisfy the requirements of regions which have moderate or even small energy needs", Kurbatova said.

Experts are currently carrying out a geological study at Dimitrovograd, the site of the future construction, to ensure that the power station is in a seismologically stable zone. Preparations are nearing completion and the launching of the first innovative power generating unit is planned for 2018.
 

Godless-Kafir

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NPCIL to borrow $5.7 bn for world�s largest nuclear plant

NPCIL to borrow $5.7 bn for world's largest nuclear plant


New Delhi: Nuclear Power Corporation (NPCIL), India's lone nuclear power generation utility, is going ahead with its aggressive capacity addition plans despite the renewed concern over safety of nuclear power generation after the Fukushima disaster.
NPCIL is in talks with a consortium of 12 European banks, including BNP Paribas SA, HSBC Holdings Plc and Societe Generale, to raise as much as 4 billion euros ($5.7 billion) to finance its proposed 10,000 mw nuclear power plant at Jaitapur in Maharashtra. Reactors for this plant — the largest in the world —
This is not at all enough, 10,000Mw means only 10,000 medium scale factories. Most medium scale factories owned by private owners requires atleast 1Mw of energy. That is peanuts and does not solve a crisis.
 
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This is not at all enough, 10,000Mw means only 10,000 medium scale factories. Most medium scale factories owned by private owners requires atleast 1Mw of energy. That is peanuts and does not solve a crisis.
one reactor cannot solve a crisis but it could be built in other places later that can solve the crisis. Reactors are not an issue anymore, it seems the US nuclear deal is dead and NSG has reversed the clean waiver to India, whatever plans India has now in the nuclear sector will rely more on indigenous efforts.
 

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New Estimates of Thorium

Press Information Bureau English Releases


Availability of Thorium

Sufficient quantity of thorium reserves are available in the country which has the potential to serve as feedstock for an ambitious nuclear power programme.

The atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration and Research (AMD), a constituent of Department of Atomic Energy has established the presence of 10.70 million tonnes of Monazite in the country, which contains 9,63,000 tonnes of Thorium Oxide (ThO2). India Monazite contains about 9-10% of ThO2 and about 8,46,477 tonnes of thorium Metal can be obtained from 9,63,000 tonnes of ThO2 which will be used for future programmes of DAE.

India is pursuing a three-stage nuclear power generation programme aimed at long term energy independence based on use of our abundant Thorium resources. The programme is to use Thorium for electricity generation in the long-term. In order to realize this goal, we are well into the first stage based on our modest domestic uranium resources. This will be followed by second stage comprising of fast reactors. It is proposed to set up a large power generation capacity based on fast reactors before getting into the third stage. Thorium in itself cannot produce electricity and it has to be first converted to Uranium-233 in a nuclear reactor. A comprehensive three-stage nuclear power programme is therefore being implemented sequentially.

Shri V. Narayanasamy, Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions and in the Prime Minister's Office gave this information in a written reply to a question by Adv. Ganeshrao Dudhgaonkar in Lok Sabha today.
 
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The Nuclear Green Revolution: Deproliferation, India and the Thorium Fuel Cycle

Deproliferation, India and the Thorium Fuel Cycle


In the first part of this essay, I reviewed the almost inevitable rise of China and India to great power status. I pointed out that by 2050, current expectations are that by 2050, China and India will be ranked along with the United States as great powers of the first order. I noted that both China and India are committed to the development of Thorium fuel cycle nuclear technology, and the possibility that those commitments could chalenge the current course of American nonproliferation policy.

It is possible to produce fissionable U-233 from thorium from the same sort of reactors used to produce weapons grade plutonium, yet during the cold war, no one thought to do so. Frank von Hippel is a self-styled non-proliferation expert who has greatly influenced American, and even global non-proliferation policy. Other self-styled non=proliferation experts tend to advocates arms control policies suggested by von Hippel. Together with Jungmin Kanga and von Hippel, actually attempted to explore this seemingly rational step was not taken during and after the cold war in a paper titled U-232 and the Proliferation- Resistance of U-233 in Spent Fuel.

They write,
Uranium-233 is, like plutonium-239, a long-lived fissile isotope produced in reactors by single-neutron capture in a naturally-occurring abundant fertile isotope (see Figure 1). The fast critical mass of U-233 is almost identical to that for Pu-239 and the spontaneous fission rate is much lower, reducing to negligible levels the problem of a spontaneous fission neutron prematurely initiating the chain reaction -- even in a "gun-type" design such as used for the U-235 Hiroshima bomb (see Table 1). Why then has plutonium been used as the standard fissile material in the "pits" of modern nuclear weapons while U- 233 has not? This question is not just of historical interest, since there is increasing interest in U-233-thorium fuel cycles.
Kanga and von Hippel note
One of the most important reasons why plutonium was chosen over U-233 as a weapons material is that first-generation plutonium-production reactors were fueled by natural uranium, which contains almost as large a fraction of neutron-absorbing fertile material (U-238) as is possible consistent with a reactor achieving criticality. In a natural-uranium fueled reactor, such as the Canadian heavy-water-moderated (HWR) reactor type, Pu-239 is produced by neutron absorption in U-238 at a rate of about one gram of plutonium per thermal megawatt-day (MWd) of fission energy release at low U-235 "burn ups," (see Figure 2).1 Approximately one MWd is released by the fission of one gram of fissile material. After taking into account the neutron requirements for maintaining a steady chain reaction, there is about one excess neutron available per fission and virtually all of these neutrons are absorbed by U-238. Production of U-233 requires the addition of the fertile material Th-232. If the fuel is natural uranium, only a relatively small percentage of thorium can be added before it becomes impossible to sustain a chain reaction. We"estimate that about 7 percent thorium oxide can be added to HWR fuel achievable burnup is reduced from 7000 to 1000 MWd/t (thermal megawatt- days per ton-heavy metal). Because the thermal-neutron absorption cross-section of Th-232 is almost 3 times larger than that of U-238, this concentration of thorium would yield about 0.2 grams of U-233 per MWd at burnups lower than 1000 MWd/t (see Figure 3). Thus most of the fissile material produced in the core would still be plutonium.
Kanga and von Hippel also state,
For a country with uranium-enrichment capabilities, the balance between plutonium and U-233 production could be shifted almost all the way toward U-233 by fueling production reactors with highly-enriched uranium. Indeed the U.S. produced much of its weapons plutonium in the Savannah River heavy-water-moderated production reactors, using highly-enriched uranium fuel and depleted uranium targets in mixed-lattice arrangements.
But Kanga and von Hippel also noted a second problem for weaponizing U-233,

But at this point it should be noted that countries with uranium enrichment capacities to the level of highly-enriched uranium already possess the capacity to produce nuclear weapons. And the process of producing U-233 using HEU-235 to in production reactors, destroys more weapons grade fissionable material than it produces. The use of U-235 at Savannah River to produce Pu-239 was motivated by the fact that Pu-239 had useful military qualities that U-235 lacked. The military qualities of U-233 are inferior too the military qualities of U-235. Thus the choice to produce Pu-239 but not U-233 at Savannah River was rational. Kanga and von Hippel acknowledge the problem,
A second problem with U-233 as a fissile material for either weapons or reactor fuel is that it contains an admixture of U-232, whose decay chain produces penetrating gamma rays. The decay chain of U-232 is shown in Figure 4. The most important gamma emitter, accounting for about 85 percent of the total dose from U-232 after 2 years, is Tl-208, which emits a 2.6-MeV gamma ray when it decays (see Appendix C). For plutonium containing a significant admixture of 14.4-year half-life Pu-241, the most important source of gamma-ray irradiation from is its 433-year half-life decay product, Am-241, which emits low-energy (< 0.1 MeV) gamma rays. These gamma rays do not represent a significant occupational hazard for weapon-grade plutonium (0.36% Pu-241) but their dose becomes more significant for "reactor-grade" plutonium, which contains on the order of 10 percent Pu-241. Thus both U- 233 contaminated with U-232 and reactor-grade plutonium are made less desirable as weapons materials by virtue of the fact that their gamma emissions bring with them the potential for significant radiation doses or shielding requirements for workers involved in nuclear weapons production and for military personnel handling nuclear weapons.
How much less desirable? Kanga and von Hippel report that at a 1% U-232 contamination level a worker would begin to accumulate a cancer risk after working with U-233 for less than three minuits. But 1% U-232 is unusual to say the least. The problem is simple, U-233 poses problems for workers and military personel by exposure to radiation from a U-232 daughter product, while the same radiation poses problems for weapons electronics in storage.

Kanga and von Hippel report that India is researching laser isotope separation of U-233 from U-232. But does this represent a proliferation challenge? First if Indian researchers can separate U-233 from U-232 using lasers, they can also separate U-235 from U-238, and U-235 from U-238 separation is one of the two classic route to nuclear weapons. U-235 based weapons are reliable enough that they do not require tests to identify their military effect. This is not the case for U-233 based weapons. The only known test of a U-233 based weapon failed to accomplish test objectives, although it did explode with a respectable if not as large as expected bang, Thus it would appear that given routs to U-233 and U-235 based weapons, given equivalent costs and technical obstacles, but without tests, military planners will prefer the U-235 based weapons.

Now it can be argued that India should not develop laser uranium enrichment technology because such technology poses proliferation risks, but Burma, a rogue state, is also developing Laser enrichment technology, although it is very unlikely that the Burmese will master it. Burma is also attempting to master centrifuge technology, and given the track records of Pakistan and Iran, that appears to more likely.

The Indian three stage nuclear Research and Development program is well known, and despite setbacks, it has made steady progress over the last 50 years. During much of that time, the global anti-proliferation community sought to punish India for its pursuit of nuclear weapons. India, which shares common borders with two nuclear armed hostile states that are allied against it, believed that a small nuclear arms program was prudent, given the likelihood that at least one of its enemies might use nuclear weapons against it. India maintained its nuclear weapons program despite a 34 year embargo on uranium and other nuclear related trade items. The embargo somewhat handicapped the development of the Indian nuclear industry, and limited the production of nuclear power in India.

It should be pointed out that in 1974, at the beginnings of the international nuclear trade sanctions against India, that nation lacked many of the characteristics of a great power. Never the less it refused to back down on its nuclear weapons program. Today, India is rapidly becoming a great power. It is conceivable that by 2050 India will have the largest economy of any nation. At worst India will have by most estimates the second or third largest economy. India, like China is developing aircraft carriers, a standard military technology for projecting power.

If in 1974, a relatively weak India refused to subordinate itself to the nuclear policies dictated by the United States, by 2050 a very powerful Indian State will certainly not place itself under American Nuclear hegemony. The 123 agreement between India and the United States offered India recognition of its great power status.

The Indian three stage Indian Nuclear development plan directly contradicts the non-proliferation policy advocated by Frank von Hippel who opposes nuclear waste reprocessing and the use of fast reactors. Von Hipple states,
Reprocessing is enormously dangerous. The amount of radioactivity in the liquid waste stored at France's plant is more than 100 times that released by the Chernobyl accident. That is why France's government set up antiaircraft missile batteries around its reprocessing plant after the 9/11 attacks.

Even more dangerous, however, is the fact that reprocessing provides access to plutonium, a nuclear weapon material. That is why the U.S. turned against it after 1974, the year India used the first plutonium separated with U.S.-provided reprocessing for a nuclear explosion. President Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger, his secretary of State, managed to intervene before France and Germany sold reprocessing plants to South Korea, Pakistan and Brazil, all of which had secret weapons programs at the time.
The heart of the Indian long range three stage nuclear program involves recycling spent fuel from conventional power reactors. Plutonium in that spent fuel becomes the the Fissile start charge for for fast breeder reactors, which produce plutonium and U-233 from thorium. That fuel is recycled and the the Plutonium is returned to the fast breeder while the thorium is used to power thorium fuel cycle thermal breeder reactors.

Von Hippel apparently has not produced a comprehensive case study of nuclear disarmament issues from the Indian perspective, but he thinks he knows what the Indians should be doing. In 2006 he co-authored a paper which offered prescriptions for demands which the United States should seek to include in any nuclear trade agreement with India. In particular von Hippel demanded that any nuclear trade agreement with India should require that before trade can begin
that India has stopped the production of fissile material (plutonium and highly enriched uranium) for weapons or else joined a multilateral fissile production cutoff agreement;
Von Hippel also called for
A determination and annual certification that U.S. civil nuclear trade does not in any way assist or encourage India's nuclear weapons program.
The Conditions which von Hippel sought to impose on India might be described as humiliating for a great power, even a great power which was content to hold a small number of nuclear weapons. India faces a possible military alliance between China and Pakistan which together hold far more nuclear weapons than India does. Thus India's nuclear arsenal may not offer India sufficient for conceivable national defense needs.

In addition von Hippel has taken a stance that nuclear fuel reprocessing is conducive to weapons use of fissile materials. Von Hippel also objects to fast reactors because a fast reactor fleet will inevitably be dependent on fuel reprocessing, and theoretically fast reactors could produce fissionable materials that could be used in nuclear weapons. Later in this essay, I will examine problems with von Hippel's belief that reprocessing and fast reactors increase the likelihood of nuclear proliferation. In Fast Breeder Reactor Programs: History and Status, a study coauthored by von Hippel, he remarks
India's Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR), expected to be completed in 2010, will have the capacity to make 90 kg of weapon-grade plutonium per year, if only the radial blanket is reprocessed separately and 140 kg per year if both radial and axial blankets are reprocessed.15 The Nagasaki bomb contained 6 kg of weapon-grade plutonium and modern weapons designs contain less. At 5 kg per warhead, the PFBR would produce enough weapon-grade plutonium for 20–30 nuclear weapons a year, a huge increase in production capacity in the context of the South Asian nuclear arms race. were left mixed with the plutonium, however — a project that the U.S. Department of Energy abandoned when it learned that the technology was not in hand — the gamma radiation field surrounding the mix would still be less than one-hundredth the level the IAEA considers self-protecting against theft and thousands of times less than the radiation field surrounding plutonium when it is in spent fuel (figure 1.4).
It is doubtful that von Hippel favors Indian reprocessing of Thorium cycle nuclear fuel. Thus to the extent that American nonproliferation policy is influenced by von Hippel and his followers, American nonproliferation policy, it is likely to conflict with Indian nuclear policy. The Indian nuclear policy had from its inception of using nuclear power to turn India into a rich and powerful nation. Not just militarily and politically powerful, but economically powerful as well. It is unlikely that the Indian political leadership will abandone their goal of achieving great power political and economic status for India, and the prevailing view that nuclear power will play a key roal in accomplishing that goal. To understand Indian national goals is to begin to understand the realpolitik of Indian objections to American nonproliferation as interpreted by Frank von Hippel.

Much 20th century thinking about nuclear nonproliferation, sprang from ethical goals. Nuclear war, is a moral wrong, and the use of nuclear weapons is evil. These assumptions cannot be dispited. But nuclear weapons and their use exist in a morally imperfect world, where people believe that they are sometimes are forced to commit acts that are morally wrong, and even to do things which in absolute moral terms are evil. It is not necessicary to justify such behavior in order to acknowledge that it exists, and to regard the necessity of responding to the real acts of people, as imposing on us constraints on the moral aspects of our life and thought. It is desirable to bring together the real world of human thought and action, with the more lofty goals offered by moral thought. Such is the case if we wish to control the production and use of nuclear weapons.

Thus future American policy towards India nuclear developments ought to focuse on a conversion of the ethical with the realpolitik goals. American policy has no choice but to accept that India has chosen a path that will lead to a thorium based economy. as well as the Indian need for a limited stock of nuclear weapons, at least in the short run.. Once Indian goals accepted, India will willingly participate in the creation on an international order directed towards arms control.
Posted by Charles Barton at 2:35 AM
 
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India uncloaks new thorium nuke plants "¢ The Register

India uncloaks new thorium nuke plants


India has revealed its plan for a new nuclear reactor design using the thorium fuel cycle.

The Advanced Heavy Water design differs from China's molten salt or liquid fluoride designs. But Indian scientists expect the AHW reactor to be operational before China's, certainly by 2020, and are confident enough to seek buyers for their existing PHWRs, or pressurised heavy water reactors, the Grauniad reports.

It's not so surprising, given India's long history of nuclear boffinry. The country's research programme was started by Homi Bhabha in 1944, with the nation's first reactor sparking into life in 1960. India also sits on the world's most abundant deposits of thorium.Which helps.

Environmentalists have recently tempered some of their historically reflexive antagonism to nuclear power. Byrony Worthington, a climate-change activist who led civil servants in writing the Climate Change Act (a must-see video) recently started the Weinberg Foundation to promote thorium designs.

And the UK's official reaction?

In technical language, it can be summed up as "very interesting, now go away – we have windmills to build". Meanwhile an e-petition calling for greater investment in Thorium has acquired just 50 signatures. ®
 

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India uncloaks new thorium nuke plants "¢ The Register

India uncloaks new thorium nuke plants


India has revealed its plan for a new nuclear reactor design using the thorium fuel cycle.

The Advanced Heavy Water design differs from China's molten salt or liquid fluoride designs. But Indian scientists expect the AHW reactor to be operational before China's, certainly by 2020, and are confident enough to seek buyers for their existing PHWRs, or pressurised heavy water reactors, the Grauniad reports.

It's not so surprising, given India's long history of nuclear boffinry. The country's research programme was started by Homi Bhabha in 1944, with the nation's first reactor sparking into life in 1960. India also sits on the world's most abundant deposits of thorium.Which helps.

Environmentalists have recently tempered some of their historically reflexive antagonism to nuclear power. Byrony Worthington, a climate-change activist who led civil servants in writing the Climate Change Act (a must-see video) recently started the Weinberg Foundation to promote thorium designs.

And the UK's official reaction?

In technical language, it can be summed up as "very interesting, now go away – we have windmills to build". Meanwhile an e-petition calling for greater investment in Thorium has acquired just 50 signatures. ®
I like how the smart brits take the dumb brits trips :)
 
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Thorium-rich India plans alternative nuclear reactor

Thorium-rich India plans alternative nuclear reactor

MUMBAI: India has announced plans for a prototype nuclear power plant that uses an innovative, ''safer'' fuel.

Officials are selecting a site for the reactor, the first of its kind, using thorium for the bulk of its fuel instead of uranium, the fuel for conventional reactors. They want the plant to be operating i by the end of the decade.

The development of workable and large-scale thorium reactors has been a dream for nuclear engineers for decades, while for some environmentalists it has become a major hope as an alternative to fossil fuels. Proponents say the fuel has considerable advantages over uranium. It is more abundant, and exploiting it does not involve release of large quantities of carbon dioxide, making it less dangerous for the climate than fossil fuels like coal.

Ratan Kumar Sinha, the director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre in Mumbai, said his team was finalising the site and conducting ''confirmatory tests'' on the plant's design. ''The basic physics and engineering of the thorium-fuelled advanced heavy water reactor are in place, and the design is ready,'' he said.

Once the six-month search for a site is completed, probably next to an existing nuclear power plant, it will take another 18 months to obtain regulatory and environmental impact clearances before building can begin.

''Construction of the [reactor] will begin after that, and it would take another six years for the reactor to become operational,'' Mr Sinha said, meaning the reactor could be operational by the end of the decade. The reactor is designed to generate 300 mega-watts of electricity, about a quarter of the output of a typical new nuclear plant in the West.

India was in talks with other countries over the export of conventional nuclear plants, Mr Sinha said, and was looking for buyers for its 220MW and 54MW pressurised heavy water reactors.

Kazakhstan and some Persian Gulf states have expressed an interest. Producing a workable thorium reactor would be a massive breakthrough in energy generation. Using thorium - a naturally occurring, moderately radioactive element named after the Norse god of thunder - as a source of atomic power is not new technology. Early research was carried out in the US in the 1950s and '60s and abandoned in favour of using uranium.

The pro-thorium lobby maintains this was partly because nuclear power programs in the US and elsewhere were developed with a military purpose in mind: access to a source of plutonium for nuclear weapons.

Unlike uranium, thorium-fuelled reactors do not result in a proliferation of weapons-grade plutonium. Also, under certain conditions, the waste from thorium reactors is less dangerous and remains radioactive for hundreds rather than thousands of years.

With the world's supply of uranium rapidly depleting, attention has refocused on thorium, which is three to four times more abundant and 200 times more energy-dense.

India has substantial thorium deposits and with a world hungry for low-carbon energy, it has its eyes on a potentially lucrative export market.
 

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Kudankulam atomic plant constructed with highest safety standards: A P J Abdul Kalam

Kudankulam atomic plant constructed with highest safety standards: A P J Abdul Kalam - The Economic Times
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24 Nov, 2011, 1424 hrs IST, PTI
Batting for nuclear power to ensure energy
independence of the country, former President A
P J Abdul Kalam today said the Kudankulam
atomic plant has been constructed with "highest
safety standards" and discounted fears of any
danger in the event of a disaster.
Kalam, who visited the stir-hit Kudankulam plant
in Tamil Nadu earlier this month and expressed
satisfaction over its safety aspects, said nuclear
power is one of the "cleanest resource" in
achieving independence from fossil fuels.
A nuclear and missile scientist himself, the
former President said he went to Kudankulam in
Tirunelveli district to understand the plant's
safety features and how authorities are
addressing the concerns of the locals in the
aftermath of Fukushima nuclear mishap.
"It is established that this plant is equipped with
the latest technologies when it comes to
safety...the structure of the plant has been made
with highest safety standards," he said,
addressing a seminar 'Disaster Risk Reduction:
Another Important Route to Poverty Alleviation'
here.
His comments come as protests continue
unabated in Kudankulam area against the nuclear
power project.
Kalam also dismissed the fear of a danger to the
plant in the event of a tsunami, saying the wave
height would not exceed 5.44 metres, whereas
the reactor is located at 8.7 metres height,
turbine plant at 8.1 metres, diesel generators at
9.3 metres height and switch yard at a height of
13 metres.
Dwelling into the safety aspects, he said all four
important aspects -- structural integrity safety,
thermal hydraulic safety, radiation safety and
neutronic safety --- have been designed with
"highest safety standards."
He said, "Electricity is the most important
component in development of the society
through small and big industry, agriculture and
above all improving the quality of life of every
citizen at home and workplace."
Kalam said as of today 29 countries are
operating 539 nuclear power plants, with a total
capacity of about 3,75,000 MW(e) and that the
industry now has more than 14000 reactor-
years of experience.
"The nuclear power reactor technology is
graduating towards most robust safety and
security system capability which virtually
minimises the risk factor in building and
operating a nuclear reactor," he said.
Kalam emphasised that there is a need to
mainstream Disaster Risk Management in all
areas of development and cooperation and said
this can be achieved only by integrating the
development plan of a particular region with the
disaster risk reduction plan of the same region.
He said planning in advance, designing the
systems to withstand the higher level of risk
through robust design methodologies and
implementing it in right time to reduce the
vulnerabilities of the risk to a maximum extent
are the basic foundations for risk reduction.
He also suggested a combined disaster
management and development plan for a state
like Bihar which can be implemented as a part of
the 12th five year plan of the nation.
"Connecting rivers and water bodies as a
national smart waterways as a grid in each state
will definitely mitigate the suffering from flood
and redistribute the water to the water deficit
areas and hence reduce the problem during
droughts," he said.
To drive home his point that systems can
prevent disaster, Kalam said when a missile
which the ISRO was launching from Sriharikota
"misbehaved", its direction was towards
Chennai.
"What will happen? There is a destruction
command. We used the command, turned the
direction and made it crash into the sea," Kalam
said.
 
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VivekaJyoti: Thorium Fuel Cycle Development in India

Thorium Fuel Cycle Development in India



Homi Jehangir Bhabha, an Indian physicist, who had, during a pre-World War II stay in Europe, made important discoveries about cosmic rays. Upon his returned to India at the start of the war, he began to campaign for Indian research institutions deveoted to physics and nuclear energy. He quickly established himself as a scientist politician who had the ear of Pandit Nerhu, the first Indian Prime Minister. Shortly after Indian independence in 1948, Bhabha was assigned the task of establishing the Indian Atomic Energy Commission, and developing a nuclear research program.

During the first UN Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy (1955), Bhabha, who was the Conference President, presented a paper on Indian Atomic development. He argued that India lacked energy resources, and in order for the Indian people to have a Western standard of living, Indian electricity must be generated by nuclear means. He noted, "the necessity of obtaining enriched or pure nuclear fuel (plutonium- or uranium-233) for use in future atomic power stations of a more advanced design required the setting up during the next decade of a few atomic power stations designed to produce these materials as well as electric power."

Bhabha once remarked that "No energy is costlier than no energy". He was what Texans use to call a wheeler-dealer. He used his position at the The First Conference to obtain British, Canadian and American assistance for the Indian nuclear program. Soon Indian Scientists were showing up at Chalk River, Harwell, and Oak Ridge for on the job training.

In addition to training, during the 1950's, with American support and Canadian help, India began to construct its first reactor, the heavy water Cirus. What the Americans and Canadians did not notice was that the Cirus was capable of producing weapons grade plutonium.
In early 1957, Bhabha summarized his plan for the Indian nuclear energy future,

"It is likely that in the future more advanced and efficient types of atomic power stations will use concentrated atomic fuel, such as uranium-235, uranium-233, or plutonium, rather than the naturally occurring uranium. If we are not to depend on the import of such fuel from abroad, and not to build a gaseous diffusion plant involving an enormous expenditure and technical effort, it is necessary for us to start producing this fuel now by converting natural uranium into plutonium, and thorium into uranium-233 in atomic reactors. If we are therefore, not to lose further ground in the modern world, it is necessary for us to set up some atomic power stations within the coming five years, which will produce plutonium for our future power reactors, in addition to producing electricity now."

Bhabha believed that nuclear generated electricity would play an important future role in the Indian economy, and that India possessed only limited Uranium resources. However, India possessed large thorium reserves. Thus Bhabha believed that the Indian nuclear research must be directed toward the development of the thorium fuel cycle. During the 1950's Bhabha set out a three stage development program for Indian Nuclear technology.

In the first stage, Heavy water reactors using unenriched uranium derived from India's limited uranium reserve, would be constructed and begin operating. The use of heavy water reactors meant that India did not need to to develop expensive and power demanding uranium enrichment facilities.

During the second stage, India was to construct Fast Breeder Reactors, which burned plutonium reprocessed from the spent fuel of the heavy water reactors as well as their depleted uranium. India needed to develop breeder technology quickly, because it had limited uranium resources. Breeders allowed India's uranium supply to be used much more efficiently.

During the third stage thorium was to be bred, and U-233 would fuel Indian power reactors.

This plan enabled India to boot strap its limited nuclear resources, into a viable nuclear energy program. Of course, along the way, something which Pandit Nehru swore on a stack of Bhagavad Gitas would never happen, did. India used some of Bhabha plutonium to build nuclear weapons. But remarkably fifty years later, India is still following Bhabha's three stage plan for nuclear power development. The plan is now at the beginning of the third stage.

India has 13 heavy water reactors with 4 more under construction. These Indian reactors are smaller than western commercial power reactors. India also has fuel reprocessing facilities, and a developmental breeder reactor. A full scale fast breeder (500,000 MW), which will breed both U-238 and Th-232 in a hybrid fuel cycle, is under construction, and is expected to be completed in 2010. A second large thorium fast breeder, the ATGB is already in the planning stage. The KAMINI test reactor is used to test the use of U-233 produced by the Kalpakkam experimental breeder. A Generation 3+ Thorium fuel cycle Advanced Heavy Water Reactor is also in the planning stage. India plans, by 2020, to have reactors capable of generating 20 GWs of power, most of it using thorium fuel cycle nuclear fuel. Bu 2050, India plans to produce 30% of its electricity from thorium fuel cycle nuclear generating facilities. The Indians believe that their thorium reserve will last them for at least 350 years.

The Indian nuclear program is remarkable in several respects. First, is the depth of Homi Bhabha's understanding of Indian nuclear resources and the sort of nuclear program that would achieve the maximum benefit from his country. The second, was the reliance on the relatively simple CANDU technology, during the first development stage and its continued development through all three stages. Reactors were kept small, 220 MW's, limiting capitol commitment for each reactor. In addition reactor design was given a chance to develop, successive improvements were made as new reactors were designed. Operational experience gave feedback to reactor designers. During the second stage, the full plutonium – thorium – U233 fuel cycle was tested in two small reactors.

Finally, believing that they had mastered all of the individual components of their thorium fuel cycle program, the Indians have set about to build prototypes of commercial reactors that are intended to go into serial production. They have been faithful to Bhabha's vision. They have found a way to highly efficient technology, a technology that is far more efficient in its use of nuclear fuel, than the French/American nuclear system by ingeniously mastering and organizing relatively old nuclear technologies, and leveraging them into a fuel efficient system. By doing so they will achieve EROIE's many times that achieved by Western fuel/reactor systems. The Indian Thorium fuel cycle system will provide electricity to an enormous country for at least 350 years, from 500,000 tons of fuel. Indian scientists and engineers are on the brink of a significant human accomplishment, the realization of Bhabha vision of bringing nuclear generated electricity to India's vast population. – Charles Barton
 

JAISWAL

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LF, that artical is awesom and very informative.
Thanx.
 

trackwhack

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India to need 5,057 tonne uranium during 12th plan: govt

India would require an estimated 5,057 tonnes of uranium during the 12th Five-Year Plan period from 2012-2017, government told the Lok Sabha today.

"The country's uranium requirement in the 12th Five-Year Plan period is estimated to be 5,057 tonne," Minister of State in the PMO V Narayanasamy said in a written reply.

He said this includes 318 tonne of low enriched uranium for the Tarapur Atomic Power Station (TAPS) I-II and the Kudankulam I-II units.
As part of a long-term uranium procurement agreement, India would import 1,375 tonnes of natural uranium dioxide pellets from Russia and 1,150 tonne of natural uranium ore concentrate from Kazakhstan, he said.

On Australia's moves to lift the ban on uranium imports to India, Narayanasamy said, "No formal communication has been received by the Government of India from Australia, so far."

"It is not possible, as yet, to provide the time by which uranium for our reactors would be available from Australia," he said.

In reply to a separate question, Narayanasamy said a decision has been made to invite IAEA missions - Operational Safety Review Team (OSART) and Integrated Regulatory Review Service (IRRS) - for peer review of safety of nuclear power plants and of the regulatory system respectively.

"The central government is in touch with IAEA for scheduling the visit of OSART team in 2012," he added.
 

agentperry

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requirement is huge. i dont know whether they will be able to fulfill it or not
 

Virendra

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Good timing of the Australian decision. That policy shift will provide us with alternatives and bargain power.
I hope we start first in Thorium based production, the initiative and research done till now deserves such a milestone achievement.
We have a good lead over others and should convert it into every possible kind of leverage.
Few examples - selling:
a) Thorium or b) Thorium produced power or c) Thorium based power reactors

Regards,
Virendra
 
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How Homi Bhabha's vision turned India into a nuclear R&D leader | Environment | guardian.co.uk

How Homi Bhabha's vision turned India into a nuclear R&D leader

Architect of India's atomic energy programme laid the foundations for a thorium research programme




Admiral Lewis Strauss (right) chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and Homi Bhabha (left), the secretary of India's Atomic Energy Commission, sign a 1956 deal for heavy water, which the US is selling to six nations to help develop their atomic energy programmes. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis

Despite decades of relative neglect compared with conventional nuclear power, research into thorium is now forging ahead around the world.

But it is thanks to the vision of Homi Bhabha, the architect of India's atomic energy programme, that India is a world leader in thorium research and development. He died in a plane crash in 1966 aged 56, but had already laid the foundations for a research programme that is now beginning to bear fruit.

India's government-controlled nuclear power industry has been criticised in the past for lack of transparency and inadequate safety oversight. But it has its admirers around the world. "India has the most technically ambitious and innovative nuclear energy program in the world," Siegfried Hecker, a former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US, wrote in a recent issue of Physics Today. "The extent and functionality of its nuclear experimental facilities are matched only by those in Russia and are far ahead of what is left in the US."

Canada, Russia, Japan, the US and the EU all have active thorium research programmes. And China too is now sinking considerable resources into the field. It officially launched its thorium-based reactor project, led by the son of a former Chinese president, at a meeting of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai earlier this year.

"The commonly used (uranium-based) nuclear reactor isn't a 'perfect stove', and burns only a small proportion of the highest quality fuel, leaving a lot of 'cinder'," a lead researcher told a Shanghai newspaper. "We need a better stove that can burn more fuel."

The Chinese have chosen a different technology path from India in the quest for a thorium reactor – liquid-fluoride instead of heavy water. The International Atomic Energy Agency lists other technologies that are being explored in international thorium research projects. All have yet to prove that thorium reactors can be commercially viable. As far back as 1983, for instance, a high temperature 300MW thorium power reactor was commissioned in Germany, but shut down six years later as it was not found economically feasible.
 

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