India Nuclear News And Discussion

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Sanatanan
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Sanatanan »

Happy to post a rare blow for indigenous development of hi-tech. From The Hindu, Apr 30, 2010:

Two nuclear energy parks planned in A.P.
. . .
He {S.K Jain, CMD, NPCIL} was in Hyderabad to attend a function where Fuelling Machine head for Advanced Heavy Water Reactor was handed over by Chief Minister K. Rosaiah to Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) Chairman Srikumar Banerjee. It was manufactured by the city-based MTAR Technologies Private Ltd. . . .. . .
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by SSridhar »

Continuing with the previous post, Hi-tech equipment for reactor handed over to AEC Chief
Excerpts
Marking a milestone in the development of sophisticated technology for India's ambitious nuclear power programme, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister K. Rosaiah handed over a fuelling machine head for the Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (300 MWe) to Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) chairman Srikumar Banerjee here on Thursday.

Receiving the gigantic equipment manufactured by Hyderabad-based MTAR Technologies Private Ltd. for Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), Mr. Banerjee described it as a “marvel of engineering, which is the first of its kind in the world.”

BARC conceptualised and carried out the detailed design of the fuelling machine head and subsequently entrusted the task of manufacturing the prototype to MTAR. The 65-foot machine weighs 40 tonnes and is a vital component of the AHWR.

Praising the engineers of MTAR, BARC and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd. (NPCIL) for completing the challenging task, Mr. Banerjee said this was the first time that such equipment was made for a thorium-based reactor anywhere in the world.

“It is also a symbol of India entering the third phase of the nuclear power programme…This kind of public-private partnership in terms of technology provides confidence that anything can be built without depending on foreign supplies,” Mr. Banerjee said.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Gerard »

Atomic board scours for missing Cobalt pencils
Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) officials are scrutinising the university’s as well as their own records to find out how many Cobalt-60 pencils were purchased by Delhi University in late 1968 when it procured the gamma irradiator machine.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by abhishek_sharma »

U.S. non-proliferation agenda caught in web of contradictions

http://www.hindu.com/2010/05/03/stories ... 601200.htm
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Gerard »

Note that BP is the lease operator. Its subcontractor Transocean was responsible for the rig itself.
The manufacturer and suppliers of the drilling rig and equipment are not liable.

The US origin reactors would be owned and operated by India. The operator has liability.

The Bill, atomised
The arguments of the Left parties are based on a faulty understanding of the US’s Price Anderson Act. In the US, all nuclear power plants are operated by the private sector, unlike in India, France and Russia where they are all operated by government companies. In the US, all the operators and equipment suppliers have pooled together to form a fund with a corpus of $10 billion. Compensation to the victims of a nuclear accident will be paid out of this fund according to a complex formula. The US government has no obligation whatsoever to compensate the victims of a nuclear accident. The Left parties are falsely claiming that the US has a liability cap of $10 billion. Payments out of this corpus for any one particular accident would be far far less than $10 billion.
Manoj Yadav is counting chickens before a single egg has been layed
Since India has developed its nuclear technology in using natural Uranium and Thorium as a nuclear fuel through indigenous efforts, the import of enriched Uranium reactors is considered to slow down the process of nuclear research and development in India.
Decades from now India might be able to use Thorium for widescale production of power. It is also possible that the technology doesn't work out. Or the Thorium may be off-limits to extraction due to concerns by fishing folk.

Where will the baseload electrical power that India needs now for economic growth come from? Where will the fissile material for Thorium conversion come from?

The critics of the nuclear deal have been raising bogeymen for years. By now, India was supposed to have signed the CTBT and NPT. The IAEA would be running all over India, pursuing every last milligram of Uranium. Now they latch onto liability. Even Grand Ayatollah Sokolski gets into the act.

Suddenly reactors are terribly dangerous things that explode every other Friday. They need untold billions in money from the US treasury in case of accident. Many of these same critics advocate huge arsenals. One wonders where the fissile material for thousands of bombs was supposed to come from. Are Indian plutonium production reactors magically safer than US civilian power reactors? Are the Russian reactors safer? Does anyone seriously think Russia will provide ten billion dollars from their treasury in case of an accident at an Indian owned and operated reactor?
Obama went on record saying that BP is legally responsible for paying the costs of response and cleanup.
Obama can say whatever he wants.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/news ... -leak.html
The company also came under fire after it emerged its total liability for damages to the fishing and tourism industry may be limited to $75 million (£50 million) under federal law.
The cap was introduced after the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska, with anything over that payable by a federal fund, the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund.
BP said it would pay "all legitimate claims" but US Senators from coastal states unveiled a plan to lift the cap to $10 billion (£6 billion).
Democratic Senator Bill Nelson of Florida said: "BP says it'll pay for this mess. Baloney. They're not going to want to pay any more than the law says they have to."
Bill Nelson needs to read his constitution... specifically article 1 clause 3
No bill of attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
The US has a cap on damages because without such a cap, nobody would drill for oil in their waters.
There is a cap on nuclear accidents for the same reason.
If people started to sue the power companies for environmental and health damage due to coal fired plants, there would be caps on that as well.

In the end, it is the state that ends up as provider of compensation.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by arnab »

Obama allows India more reprocessors
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100505/j ... 413865.jsp
In a concession of historic proportions, almost similar to the nuclear deal announced in 2005 by Bush, Obama personally intervened against an intransigent state department and introduced a provision to quadruple the number of reprocessing facilities in India in a recently concluded agreement to alter “in form or content” US-supplied nuclear fuel to New Delhi.
Buried amidst pages of legalese in the agreement under an article on “right to reprocess”, the Obama administration and the UPA government “agree(d) to pursue the steps necessary, consistent with their national laws, to permit reprocessing or alteration in form or content of nuclear material... at one or more new additional national facilities in India, beyond the two facilities provided for in these Arrangements and Procedures, established by the Government of India and dedicated to the reprocessing and, as required, other alteration in form or content of safeguarded nuclear material under IAEA safeguards.”
Jones took the matter to Obama for a political directive and was surprised when the President directed that four — not one — reprocessing facilities should be provided for in the agreement, obviating the need for new negotiations under any unpredictable future US administration in case the Americans eventually sold more than two nuclear power plants to India which are now on the drawing board.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Karan Dixit »

He said India would not be represented in the conference in any capacity not even as an "observer" country.The NPT review conference is held every five years to assess the progress in reaching the goal set out in the 1970 treaty to disarm and stop the spread of nuclear weapons. India, Pakistan and Israel have not signed the treaty and have been nudged by countries like US to sign it. North Korea withdrew from it in 2003. The 2005 conference for the treaty ended without any concrete result and was widely regarded as a failure.

http://news.rediff.com/interview/2010/m ... erence.htm
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by amit »

Gerard wrote: Decades from now India might be able to use Thorium for widescale production of power. It is also possible that the technology doesn't work out. Or the Thorium may be off-limits to extraction due to concerns by fishing folk.

Where will the baseload electrical power that India needs now for economic growth come from? Where will the fissile material for Thorium conversion come from?

The critics of the nuclear deal have been raising bogeymen for years. By now, India was supposed to have signed the CTBT and NPT. The IAEA would be running all over India, pursuing every last milligram of Uranium. Now they latch onto liability. Even Grand Ayatollah Sokolski gets into the act.

Suddenly reactors are terribly dangerous things that explode every other Friday. They need untold billions in money from the US treasury in case of accident. Many of these same critics advocate huge arsenals. One wonders where the fissile material for thousands of bombs was supposed to come from. Are Indian plutonium production reactors magically safer than US civilian power reactors? Are the Russian reactors safer? Does anyone seriously think Russia will provide ten billion dollars from their treasury in case of an accident at an Indian owned and operated reactor?
Obama went on record saying that BP is legally responsible for paying the costs of response and cleanup.
Obama can say whatever he wants.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/news ... -leak.html
The company also came under fire after it emerged its total liability for damages to the fishing and tourism industry may be limited to $75 million (£50 million) under federal law.
The cap was introduced after the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska, with anything over that payable by a federal fund, the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund.
BP said it would pay "all legitimate claims" but US Senators from coastal states unveiled a plan to lift the cap to $10 billion (£6 billion).
Democratic Senator Bill Nelson of Florida said: "BP says it'll pay for this mess. Baloney. They're not going to want to pay any more than the law says they have to."
Bill Nelson needs to read his constitution... specifically article 1 clause 3
No bill of attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
The US has a cap on damages because without such a cap, nobody would drill for oil in their waters.
There is a cap on nuclear accidents for the same reason.
If people started to sue the power companies for environmental and health damage due to coal fired plants, there would be caps on that as well.

In the end, it is the state that ends up as provider of compensation.
My personal thanks to you Gerard for a great post which sums up the situation (and bogeymen!) succinctly.

I can now sleep easy without worrying if there are CTBT inspectors under my bed sniffing at undesirable objects. :rotfl:
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by amit »

Karan Dixit wrote:He said India would not be represented in the conference in any capacity not even as an "observer" country.The NPT review conference is held every five years to assess the progress in reaching the goal set out in the 1970 treaty to disarm and stop the spread of nuclear weapons. India, Pakistan and Israel have not signed the treaty and have been nudged by countries like US to sign it. North Korea withdrew from it in 2003. The 2005 conference for the treaty ended without any concrete result and was widely regarded as a failure.

http://news.rediff.com/interview/2010/m ... erence.htm
I think it's a good thing India was not there at this stupid conference which was reduced to a predictable slanging match between Iran and the US. Incidentally I loved the chutzpah displayed by Ahmadinejad. Really ruffled feathers of even the urbane Madam Hillary! :)

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art ... wD9FGB54G3
The first day of the conference was dominated by rhetorical crossfire between the United States and Iran, as Ahmadinejad rejected allegations his country was building nuclear weapons while the U.S. said sanctions were necessary to stop the Iranian programs.
Last edited by amit on 05 May 2010 09:15, edited 1 time in total.
amit
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by amit »

arnab wrote:
Obama allows India more reprocessors
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100505/j ... 413865.jsp
In a concession of historic proportions, almost similar to the nuclear deal announced in 2005 by Bush, Obama personally intervened against an intransigent state department and introduced a provision to quadruple the number of reprocessing facilities in India in a recently concluded agreement to alter “in form or content” US-supplied nuclear fuel to New Delhi.
In the spirit of Gerard's post, yet another bogeyman has been laid to rest.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Karan Dixit »

amit wrote: I think it's a good thing India was not there at this stupid conference which was reduced to a predictable slanging match between Iran and the US.
Absolutely. That is a proof in itself that the Indian babus are not asleep at the wheel.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by amit »

Karan Dixit wrote:Absolutely. That is a proof in itself that the Indian babus are not asleep at the wheel.
Couldn't agree with you more. :)
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by NRao »

Well, ............... Perhaps this provides some insight on things to come?

Your power bill may go up every three months (not nuke related)
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by SSridhar »

New Vistas for Indian researchers
A dedicated beam line for Indian researchers at the Photon factory, a synchrotron, at the High Energy Accelerator Research Organisation (KEK) in Japan has become operational, according to authorities of the Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics (SINP), the nodal institute for the project.

They told The Hindu here that the facility is available to Indian researchers as a result of an agreement signed between the Prime Ministers of the two countries in 2007 and the project is being conducted under the auspices of the Central Department of Science & Technology.

“The facility has been set up this month and scientists from several institutes across the country are currently in Japan to conduct their experiments. It will function at full capacity a year from now,” said Prof Milan K. Sanyal, Director of SINP.

Currently researchers can apply for beam time at the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology in Indore but the access to the synchrotron at KEK will increase the number of students who can avail of the facility, he added.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Ameet »

India sees nuclear business opportunity in Kazakhstan

http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_in ... an_1381633

External affairs minister SM Krishna will fly to Kazakhstan on Tuesday for talks with key leaders of the Central Asian Republic. On top of the agenda will be to finalise discussions on an inter-governmental agreement on nuclear cooperation.

India is planning to build small and medium sized nuclear power stations in Kazakhstan once the inter-governmental agreement is finalised.

Building nuclear power stations in smaller countries in the neighbourhood is one of the benefits of the India-US civil nuclear agreement and the exemptions granted to India by the Nuclear Suppliers Groups.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Gerard »

Dealing directly with a State and a non-state entity are two completely different things. A State when entering into contract could amass resources that a non-state entity can never provide.
No foreign state is going to provide India an unlimited tap into their treasury in event of an accident. They will cap liability as per international treaty norms. There will be claims of shoddy Indian maintenance practices. There will be claims of sabotage.
US Government can pass laws that are retroactive
Assuming ex-post-facto and bill-of-attainder constitutional objections are cleared by US courts.

What prevents India from passing retroactive laws in the event of an accident like the US?
If nothing prevents India, does the current liability cap law even matter?

Will there be a similar clamor for billions in liability from suppliers of drilling equipment to IOC or Reliance? With their push into deep water, such technology will have to be imported.
What about all the industrial plants, refineries etc? Will India only buy equipment from state companies?
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by a_kumar »

Gerard wrote: Note that BP is the lease operator. Its subcontractor Transocean was responsible for the rig itself.
The manufacturer and suppliers of the drilling rig and equipment are not liable.

The US origin reactors would be owned and operated by India. The operator has liability.
We have had the NPCIL model, where it builds and operates (with assistance sometimes).

But will all the new reactors, that will be built from now on, follow the same model?

In the meantime..
Oil executives point fingers in Congress over oil spill
And President Obama wants new laws to lift the cap on how much firms are liable to pay for such disasters from millions to billions of dollars - and that would apply to this accident, our North America editor adds.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by RamaY »

Question to Gurus

What are the countries with significant uraniam reservers that India can do barter business with, like India supplies the Nuke-reactors (Indian owned) and inreturn for uranium exports to India?
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Amber G. »

RamaY
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Post by RamaY »

8) Thank you Amber G garu.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Satya_anveshi »

(azimuthally(?) related to nook thread)

White House to Unveil Legislation to Respond to Oil Spills
WASHINGTON—The White House said Wednesday it is sending legislation to Congress to allow the federal government to collect more damages from companies responsible for oil spills as a sunken rig in the Gulf of Mexico continues to spew thousands of gallons of oil along the Louisiana coast.
The legislation comes as President Barack Obama said he is deeply frustrated the leak hasn't been plugged and his administration continues to try to show it is aggressively responding to the disaster.
The Obama administration has stressed that BP will bear the costs of the vast spill despite a cap on damages written into law several decades ago.
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Satya_anveshi
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Post by Satya_anveshi »

Admins, not sure by tracking this story here is OK with you, as this story having parallel with our nuke liability, it may be relevent here and provide food for thought to some folks debating this bill.

WRAPUP 1, BP to try new fix as oil spill threatens Gulf
There were small protests against BP in several U.S. cities. In Los Angeles, about 50 people protested at a busy street corner near a BP gas station. They waved signs that said "Spill Baby Spill" and "BP is not green, its deadly."

In San Francisco, about 30 people marched in a circle and chanted slogans while in Chicago two dozen protesters passed out flyers at a downtown street corner near BP's Chicago offices, chanting "seize BP, make them pay".

Nearly 100 lawsuits have already been filed across the Gulf region and the disaster, which lawyers see becoming one of the biggest class actions in U.S. history, involves billions of dollars in potential liabilities.So far, 87 sea turtles, 18 birds and six dolphins have been found dead, officials said. :roll: :|
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by NRao »

Satya_anveshi ji,

This is:
1) Indian, and
2) nuclear

thread.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by SSridhar »

Satya_anveshi wrote:Admins, not sure by tracking this story here is OK with you, as this story having parallel with our nuke liability, it may be relevent here and provide food for thought to some folks debating this bill.
This can be discussed here only so far as 'principles' go, not 'specifics' wrt oil spill.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Uttam »

SSridhar wrote:
Satya_anveshi wrote:Admins, not sure by tracking this story here is OK with you, as this story having parallel with our nuke liability, it may be relevent here and provide food for thought to some folks debating this bill.
This can be discussed here only so far as 'principles' go, not 'specifics' wrt oil spill.

"Capitalism for poor and socialism for rich", "Heads I win, tails you lose", "Moral Hazard". Those are some of the things that come to my mind when I hear of liability cap. If the Nuclear Industries' claim that nuclear power is safe, then why ask for liability caps. Their attitude is like 'All the profits are mine but shares losses with me'.

I understand businesses need some level of predictability when the investment involved is of this magnitude. BUT why should we allow the nuclear industry to 'shift risk' towards Indian people? If the nuclear industry is really serious about liability risk management, then why not buy a liability insurance from an insurer. Of course, very few (possibly none) of the insurers will have the expertise to underwrite such a risk. In that case the nuclear industry can create a pool of money out of their own profits for possible accidents resulting in a huge liability. Many reinsurance firms wouldn't mind extending insurance to such a pool. Let them manage the pool themselves. Different participants (nuclear power plant operator, builder, etc.) can monitor each other (since they have the expertise to do so) and fix the price of participation in the pool based on the safety practices.

I am very very uncomfortable with the idea of liability cap.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by NRao »

pandyan wrote:Satya ji, NRao ji - BP incident is still relevant for this thread. It gives insight into how the liability cap is irrelevant for the US. However, when India agrees to it, it will be set in stone...(scorpene deal is an example...or the corollary is even if the contract is properly drawn out in good faith, the contracting parties can still screw the other one on fine prints).
Liability issues, sure. But birds/fish/etc killed stats, top hat/whatever, pollution, etc should go in the right thread.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Neshant »

Satya_anveshi wrote:
The Obama administration has stressed that BP will bear the costs of the vast spill despite a cap on damages written into law several decades ago.

Interesting piece of info.

Why is India then capping its liability?
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Post by SSridhar »

PFBR crosses a milestone
As a very tall crane ever so slowly winched up the circular contraption weighing 78 tonnes with “a spider” gripping it from top on Thursday, the contraption called thermal baffle sometimes stayed still in midair. At times, it swayed slowly as it rose in the air and hundreds of eyes were riveted on it. “Roger,” “roger” went the commands on walkie-talkies to those manning the crane. As the thermal baffle reached a height of about 80 metres, it was gingerly lowered to a height of 54 metres from the ground and then placed deftly inside the main vessel of the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) under construction at Kalpakkam, near Chennai.

Applause rang out as the baffle fitted flush inside the main vessel, with just 90 mm of space separating the two contraptions. With that, the tension that had gripped the engineers of Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Limited (BHAVINI), which is building the PFBR, was gone. The entire operation took about an hour.
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Six more fast Breeder Reactors planned
The Centre has sanctioned a pre-project funding of Rs. 250 crore to Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Limited (BHAVINI) for the construction of two more fast breeder reactors of 500 MWe capacity each at Kalpakkam, near Chennai, according to Prabhat Kumar, Project Director, BHAVINI. The money would be used for land acquisition and site-levelling. These two breeder reactors would come up in addition to the 500 MWe Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) already under construction at Kalpakkam.

The PFBR had the largest and the deepest excavated pit for any nuclear power project in India. It measured 225 metres by 225 metres and was 20 metres deep.

S.C. Chetal, Director, Reactor Engineering Group, Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research, said the construction of the two additional breeder reactors at Kalpakkam would commence by the beginning of 2014. They would generate electricity by 2020. Four more breeder reactors of 500 MWe capacity each would come up at coastal sites, perhaps in Andhra Pradesh, Orissa or West Bengal, Mr. Chetal said.

About 2.25 lakh cubic metres of concrete had so far been used in the construction of the PFBR, said S.S. Dhere, Chief Engineer (Civil), BHAVINI. A record was created when 5,800 cubic metres of concrete was poured into the raft (foundation) continuously for six days. Totally 35,000 cubic metres of concrete went into the raft.

According to B.S. Goel, Director (Finance), BHAVINI, the PFBR project cost had gone up from Rs. 3,500 crore to Rs. 5,600 crore.
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by putnanja »

Govt plays safe, sends n-damage liability Bill to Cong-led House panel

In a surprise development, the government has decided to refer the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Science and Technology, Environment and Forests instead of the one on Energy as was widely expected.



The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Energy is headed by SP leader Mulayam Singh Yadav while the one on Science and Technology, Environment and Forests is chaired by Congress member in Rajya Sabha T Subbarami Reddy. Yadav was a vocal critic of the Bill till some time back though he was apparently won over by the government at the time of the Bill’s introduction in Lok Sabha on the last day of the Budget session.

...
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Protests stall public hearing on Jaitapur nuclear project

http://www.hindu.com/2010/05/17/stories ... 251400.htm
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Post by Prem »

Ratan Kumar Sinha appointed new BARC director
Dr Ratan Kumar Sinha, closely associated with the design and development of India's [ Images ] first thorium-based Advanced Heavy Water Reactor, will be the new Director of Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC).Sources in the Department of Atomic Energy said Sinha's appointment has been cleared by the Union Government. A formal announcement is expected this week.
inha will take over from Dr S Banerjee, who had been holding the post of BARC director and Chairman of Atomic Energy Commission (AEC).Born on October 23, 1950, Sinha, a mechanical engineer of the 16th batch of BARC training school, is currently the director of Reactor Design Development Group of BARC, the country's premier nuclear research centre.He has been working on the country's design and development of India's first thorium-based Advanced Heavy Water Reactor for the last 15 years, the sources said.
http://news.rediff.com/report/2010/may/ ... rector.htm
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Neshant »

Note : US does not adhere to its own commitments to cap liability. Why should India cap its liabilities in the nuclear case?

----------
It added: "We will not rest until BP permanently seals the well head, the spill is cleaned up, and the communities and natural resources of the Gulf Coast are restored and made whole."

It was the second strong statement to BP by the government officials on the current crisis.

Earlier they (US) sent a letter saying they wanted to be sure BP would honour commitments not to limit costs to a US statutory cap of $75m (£50m).

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8685969.stm
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Gerard »

India cannot join the Vienna Convention on Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage without passing domestic liability legislation.

http://www.iaea.org/Publications/Docume ... ility.html
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Stan_Savljevic »

Log smuggling goes aerial
It is also believed that because of the presence of radioactive elements like thorium and uranium, red sanders might be used as a coolant in nuclear reactors which could be one of the reasons for the Southeast Asian nations becoming a preferred destination for the logs.
http://telegraphindia.com/1100518/jsp/n ... 458963.jsp
Gerard
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Re: India Nuclear News And Discussion

Post by Gerard »

because of the presence of radioactive elements like thorium and uranium, red sanders might be used as a coolant in nuclear reactors
:rotfl:
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