Thorium can Power India’s 100 GWe by 2047 Mission

Syllabus: GS3/Energy Sector

Context

  • The SHANTI Act 2025 represents a watershed moment for India’s atomic energy programme; however, resolving the challenges of thorium utilisation is urgent.

India’s Thorium Reserves

  • India has one of the largest reserves of thorium in the world.
  • Together, Kerala and Odisha account for over 70% of India’s thorium.
  • India has been developing a three-stage nuclear program, with thorium-based reactors being a critical part of the third stage.
  • Challenges: Extracting thorium from ores requires high amounts of energy and creates significant waste.
    • It includes challenges such as the need for advanced reactor technology and economic viability.

Need for Thorium Utilization

  • Reduce Reliance on Imports: The growth of nuclear generation capacity currently depends heavily on imported uranium.
    • Domestic uranium ores are lean and costly to extract, though this does provide some insulation against supply disruptions. 
  • Sustainability of Uranium Production: By the time India reaches 100 GWe, global nuclear generation capacity is expected to grow from around 380 GWe today to around 1,400 GWe.
    • At that scale, the world’s known uranium reserves of about 8 million tonnes would be enough to run nuclear reactors for only about 30 years if the fuel is used once and then discarded.

Significance of Thorium for India

  • Resource Advantage: India has limited uranium but abundant thorium reserves, mainly in coastal and riverine sands.
  • Nuclear Behaviour: Thorium is not fissile like uranium; it is fertile and converts into uranium-233 after absorbing neutrons, which can then sustain nuclear fission.
  • Strategic Fit: Integral to India’s long-term three-stage nuclear power programme.

India’s Three-stage nuclear programme

  • Establishment: India established the Atomic Energy Commission in 1948. 
    • In 1956, Asia’s first research reactor, Apsara, was commissioned at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Trombay.
    • India was the second Asian nation to build a nuclear power plant in 1969 at Tarapur, just after Japan and long before China. 
  • India has a three-phase programme of nuclear power visioned by Dr Homi J Bhabha, the father of India’s nuclear programme.
  • First Stage (Pressurized Heavy Water Reactors – PHWRs): India’s nuclear program initially focused on establishing a fleet of PHWRs.
    • These reactors use natural uranium (U-238),  which contains minuscule amounts of U-235, as the fissile material.
    • Heavy water (deuterium oxide) as both moderator and coolant. 
    • The primary purpose of this stage was to produce plutonium-239 as a byproduct from the uranium fuel. 
    • Plutonium-239 is a fissile material used as fuel in nuclear reactors.
  • Second Stage (Fast Breeder Reactors – FBRs): The second stage of the program involves the deployment of Fast Breeder Reactors (FBRs).
    • FBRs are designed to produce more fissile material than they consume by utilizing a fast neutron spectrum. 
    • In this stage, plutonium-239 produced in the first stage is used as fuel along with U-238 to produce energy, U-233, and more Pu-239. 
    • Uranium-233 is another fissile material that can be used as fuel in nuclear reactors.
  • Third Stage (Advanced Heavy Water Reactors – AHWRs): The final stage of the program entails the deployment of Advanced Heavy Water Reactors (AHWRs). 
    • Pu-239 will be combined with thorium-232 (Th-232) in reactors to produce energy and U-233. 
    • Thorium is abundantly available in India, and this stage aims to harness its potential as a nuclear fuel.

Source: IE

 

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