Syllabus: GS3/Energy
Context
- The government is likely to move two crucial amendments in the laws governing the country’s atomic energy sector in the upcoming monsoon session of Parliament.
Legal Reforms Underway
- Easing Nuclear Liability Law (Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010): Its objective is to limit the liability of equipment vendors in case of a nuclear accident. Key Proposed Changes:
- Monetary Cap: Liability may be capped to the original contract value.
- Time Limit: Introduce a statute of limitations for how long liability applies.
- Amendment to the Atomic Energy Act, 1962: Its objective is to allow private and foreign players to enter nuclear power generation.
- Current Restriction: Only state-owned entities like NPCIL and NTPC Ltd can operate nuclear plants.
- Proposed Change: Permit minority equity participation by foreign/private entities in upcoming projects.
Need for the Changes
- NPCIL: India’s nuclear sector is governed by the Atomic Energy Act, 1962, under which only government-owned entities such as NPCIL can generate and supply nuclear energy.
- There has been no private sector involvement in India’s nuclear power sector so far.
- Foreign companies like GE-Hitachi, Westinghouse, and Framatome have avoided India due to open-ended liability concerns.
- Amending this is crucial to attract foreign investment and technology.
- These moves aim to unlock the potential of the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement, signed nearly two decades ago.
- India intends to package these reforms as part of a wider trade and investment framework with the U.S., potentially leading to a trade pact.
Recent U.S. Regulatory Breakthrough
- Recently, the U.S. Department of Energy granted Holtec International a specific authorisation (SA IN2023-001) under 10CFR810.
- Implication: Holtec can now transfer unclassified SMR technology to Indian partners like Tata Consulting Engineers and L&T.
- This clears the path for design and manufacturing of small modular reactors (SMRs) in India.
- Significance: Positions India to co-develop and manufacture nuclear components domestically.
India’s Need to Increase its Nuclear Capacity:
- Nuclear Capacity: India’s plans to increase its nuclear power capacity from the current 8,180 MW to 22,480 MW by 2031-32 and eventually 100 GW by 2047.
- Energy Demand Growth: India’s electricity demand is expected to increase 4-5 times by 2047, and nuclear power will help meet base-load demand alongside renewables.
- India’s Targets: To reduce the emission intensity of its GDP by 44% by 2030 from the 2005 level.
- To achieve 50% cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources by 2030.
- Roadmap for 100 GW: A roadmap is being developed with stakeholders, and while challenges remain, achieving the 100 GW target is seen as both ambitious and achievable
Conclusion
- These developments reflect a historic shift in India’s nuclear policy. By addressing legal and regulatory obstacles, India is poised to:
- Unlock foreign investment and advanced technology.
- Expand its clean energy portfolio through nuclear power.
- Reinforce strategic alignment with the U.S. under the civil nuclear framework.
Source: IE
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