- May
18, 2017, 6:18 pm
Signaling
its intent to fast-track India’s domestic nuclear power programme, the
government on Wednesday approved a proposal to construct 10 indigenous units of
pressurised heavy water reactors (PHWRs), each with the capacity of generating
700 Mega Watt (MW) of electricity, in a fully home grown initiative.
This
takes the number of planned 700MW PHWRs in India to 14, four of which are
currently under construction at Kakrapar Atomic Power Station in Gujarat and
Rajasthan Atomic Power Station in Rajasthan. Currently, India has 12
operational PHWRs with significantly lower capacities of 100 MW, 200 MW, 220 MW
and 540 MW. The PHWR in Kakrapar, which is expected to go in for trial
runs in June, will
potentially be India’s first 700MW PHWR to be commissioned.
PHWRs
were initially developed in Canada with the experience it gained working with
wartime allied countries in the 1940s and was known as CANDU. In 1956, it
supplied a 40 MW CANDU reactor to India, heavy water for which was supplied by
the United States (US). It was, allegedly, plutonium derived from the spent
fuel of this reactor that India used to detonate its first nuclear device at
Pokhran, Rajasthan in 1974.
How Are PHWRs Different From Light Water Reactors?
PHWRs
reactors use heavy water as a neutron moderator and coolant and natural uranium
as fuel, unlike Light Water Reactors (LWRs) which use uranium enriched up to 3
to 5 per cent as fuel and normal water as both its coolant and neutron
moderator. Another major difference between the two is that a PHWRs produce
more plutonium and tritium as a by-product compared to LWRs. Also, PHWRs do not
need to be shut down for refuelling while LWRs are refuelled after shutdown.
Why Does India Choose Heavy Water Reactors?
India’s
nuclear power program is currently based mainly on a series of PHWRs, some of
which have been separated from reactors meant to feed the country’s nuclear
weapons programme and placed under safeguards of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA). PHWRs have been chosen because of availability of fuel, indigenous
technology and expertise, resources and the need for power generation
infrastructure.
A
PHWR uses unenriched natural uranium as its fuel, unlike LWRs. Having placed
most its PHWRs under safeguards, Indian has made sure that it can use
imported fuel in these facilities.
In the most likely scenario, India will place some of the new PHWRs it is
constructing under IAEA safeguards, ensuring continuous supply of fuel for
them.
Source: World Nuclear Association
Source: World Nuclear Association
The
use of PHWRs also brings other advantages. Because these reactors use natural uranium
as fuel, they can be operated without constructing expensive facilities that
are required to enrich uranium. The PHWRs are also more efficient than
comparable LWR as they produce more energy per kilogram of mined uranium. These
advantages make PHWRs ideal for India’s nuclear energy programme.
Opponents
of PHWRs cite the high cost of heavy water as a drawback. But in view of the
aforementioned fact that PHWRs produce more energy per kilogram of mined
uranium as compared to LWR, the high cost of the heavy water can bee seen as a
trade-off against reduced fuel costs.
Another
important point that influences government’s choice is the presence of
indigenous technology and expertise. The first two PHWRs were built in
Rajasthan with Canadian collaboration and became operational in the year 1973
and 1981. Since then, India has invested in development of this design in
a sustained
manner, developing lower
capacities of 100 MW, 200 MW, 220 MW and 540 MW before moving to 700 MW.
The
choice also marks a response to the near collapse
of Westinghouse, the US-based reactor
maker that was set to sign a deal with India for the construction of six of its
AP1000 reactors a single site in southeastern India. The firm, owned by Japan's
Toshiba, filed for bankruptcy in March, raising doubts about whether it can
complete the India deal. GE-Hitachi and France's state-owned Areva were
also expected to build nuclear reactors in India, but financial troubles
surrounding these reactor makers have further dimmed the prospects of
international cooperation.
Therefore,
switching to indigenous technology was the only reliable way forward.
However,
this is the first time that the government has cleared the construction of 10
nuclear reactors in one go. With another four already under construction, why
does India need 10 new nuclear reactors?
Why India needs more nuclear reactors?
Of
India’s total power generation capacity of 326,848.53MW, two-thirds, that is
nearly 217,492.26 MW, is fuelled by coal. Renewable energy accounts for
57,260.23 MW. Nuclear energy accounts for only 6,780 MW, that is 2.07 per cent
of total capacity. Therefore, as India moves towards cleaner sources of energy,
nuclear power plants can replace plants fuelled by coal and other polluting
fuels.
Source: World Nuclear Association
Source: World Nuclear Association
Moreover,
India has committed, under the Paris climate change accord, that by 2030, at
least 40 per cent of its electricity will be generated from non-fossil sources.
To replace coal using thermal plants with nuclear power plants, as France has
done, India needs to construct these in large numbers. India’s plan to ramp up
nuclear output to 32,000 MW by 2032 can contribute significantly.
But clean energy, although
the most important driver, is not the only reason. Well over 300 million Indians live without electricity when the country’s per capita
electricity consumption has reached 1010 kilowatt-hour (kWh). The per capita
consumption in 2013-14 was 957 kWh in 2013-14 and is expected to rise to 5300
units of power. To keep up with this growth in demand, India will have to
construct a large number of nuclear power plants.
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