http://carnegieendowment.org/files/PO21.Perkovich.pdf Mirror: http://www.scribd.com/doc/144997622/George-Perkovich-Fautly-promises-the-US-India-nuclear-deal-Sept-2005
George Perkovich, Fautly promises, the US-India nuclear deal, Sept. 2005
See: http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/thorium-power-canada-inc-and-dbi.htmlThorium Power Canada Inc. and DBI Century Fuels Inc. offer thorium reactors. Shouldn't India use her thorium competence to reach out and supply thorium reactors world-wide?
US-India nuclear deal moves forward
So what's the deal?
What happened yesterday?
How do India's scientists feel about the deal?
How do arms-control experts feel about it?
And what about the nuclear industry?
Who else needs to approve the deal?
Is the plan likely to go ahead?
Comments
- The Indo-US nuclear deal is a positive development between the two great democracies, namely India and the U.S.A. In the past there has been unnecessary friction between these two democracies, which defied logic and surely also lacked conventional wisdom. However, President Bush a preeminent leader with a global horizon has removed most hurdles in this relationship and the brilliant Dr. Manmohan Singh is also complimenting this approach of President Bush. Thus the relationship between these two democratic giants is further being strengthened. Mainly due to the efforts of the late Homi Jehangir Bhabha India's nuclear energy programme is the second largest and advanced indigenous programme after that of Japan in Asia. Already during Bhabha's lifetime many great advances were made. Such as the fabrication of the first atomic reactor namely, Apsara in Asia (if the then Soviet Union was not considered as a part of Asia). Other reactors such as Cirus, Zerlina etc., followed. Bhabha realized that India had one of the largest reserves of Thorium-232 in the world and hence he pushed for fast breeder technology to convert this element to fissionable Uranium-233. Uranium-233 is a duel purpose element and can be used for power generation and also for the production of nuclear weapons. Today India is one of the few countries in the world which operates (the others being Russia, France, Japan) a fast breeder reactor. This 40 MW reactor attained criticality on Oct. 18, 1985. Following this in the year 1996 the experimental 30 KW Kamini reactor went critical utilizing Uranium-233. At present the scientists of the Indira Gandhi Center For Atomic Research (IGCAR), are engaged in the construction of another indigenous FBR, this time a 500 MW one. This is the legacy of Bhabha, thus for most of us Indians Bhabha is Hrtpriya (in Sanskrit, dear to the heart). This nuclear deal (if formalized) surely will benefit India further as she can augment her nuclear energy programme further by importing reactors and fuel. A deal of such a magnitude should also be beneficial for the US economy as it will generate jobs. Moreover, as the Indian defence related reactors are not a part of this deal, thus there can be no external control on India's nuclear weapons programme. Also as a part of this deal, India does retain the provision of blasting more nuclear weapons (Dr. Manmohan has made this clear in the Indian Parliament), if she (India) thinks necessary, with no possibility of sanctions etc. Hence, most Indians are for this deal. Dr. Upinder Fotadar
- Report this comment
- 2008-07-24 01:33:33 PM
- Posted by: Upinder Fotadar
- #3841The Indo-US nuclear deal may be fruitful to meet the energy shortge that India is suffering from distant past.It may take a great role in the economic development of India. At the same time the US nuclear companies will be getting a new market for the selling of nuclear fuel etc. So it may be a mutual benefit for both the countries if it runs in proper way. We are hopeful of getting a fruitful result out of it.
- Report this comment
- 2008-07-30 09:01:09 AM
- Posted by: Tridib Kumar Goswami
Reshaping the U.S.-Indian Nuclear Deal to Lessen the Nonproliferation Losses
- India’s Nuclear Energy Program: Ambitious Dreams, Sober Realities
- India’s Planned Nuclear Triad: Seeking a “Credible Deterrent”
For decades, India’s nuclear programs have been defined by two contradictory forces: the country’s vast ambitions and its limited uranium reserves. Its ambitions have led New Delhi to establish a significant civilian nuclear enterprise, to refuse to sign the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), and to develop and test nuclear weapons. Its limited uranium reserves, on the other hand, have clearly slowed India’s nuclear energy development, most likely hampered its nuclear weapons program, and intertwined the two efforts to a high degree.
The tension between India’s goals and resources has grown much stronger in the past decade. By bringing India’s nuclear weapons programs into the open, the country’s 1998 nuclear tests fueled calls to develop the full panoply of nuclear capabilities, including a nuclear triad. India’s recent impressive economic growth has strained the country’s energy system, increasing interest in nuclear energy. In particular, India would like to quintuple the production of electricity through nuclear energy by 2020.
To the Indian government, the civil nuclear cooperation agreement it signed with the United States last year looks like a way for New Delhi to escape this dilemma, giving it access to global uranium reserves without imposing limits on its nuclear weapons program. India’s right and left wings may claim the Congress-led government has somehow shortchanged their country. The truth is that, without the deal, New Delhi will be forced to confront painful trade-offs between its energy and national security goals, as a series of January interviews I conducted in India of nuclear scientists, policy experts, and energy and defense analysts made clear.
For the deal to go forward, the 45 members of the voluntary Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) must first agree to carve out an exception for India to its guidelines. These currently require a non-nuclear-weapon state, as India is legally defined under the NPT, to have comprehensive safeguards on all nuclear facilities before receiving civilian nuclear assistance from NSG countries.
The U.S. Congress too must sign off on the final nuclear cooperation agreement, meaning that it and the NSG will retain considerable leverage over India. They should use this power to condition the agreement in a way that does less damage to the nuclear nonproliferation regime.
The NSG has an opportunity to condition this exception on India’s behaviors, including continuing to refrain from testing nuclear explosives and placing permanent safeguards on any foreign technologies and fuel, as well as designated indigenous facilities. Moreover, the NSG should hold back on transferring enrichment and reprocessing technologies, which could further enhance India’s weapons production capabilities, and only supply as much reserve fuel as needed for reasonable power plant requirements. U.S. leadership could also influence India to become a more responsible nuclear-armed state through signing the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) and committing to a cutoff of weapons-usable fissile material in addition to adhering to conditions on civilian nuclear commerce.
Two Intertwined Visions
The roots of the current controversy over the nuclear deal go back to India’s emergence as an independent nation in the late 1940s. At that time, Dr. Homi Bhabha, widely viewed as a father of India’s nuclear programs, sought to develop these efforts in a way that exploited indigenous resources. He was well aware that India’s uranium resources were only sufficient to power a modest nuclear energy program of about 10,000 megawatts per year and even less would be available if some were used for weapons. To compensate, Bhabha laid out a three-stage plan for India to hoard these limited indigenous uranium deposits and to leverage its abundant thorium deposits to bootstrap itself to a massive production of electricity through nuclear energy and to produce weapons-grade plutonium.
This vision of self-sufficiency, which arose in part from India’s desire to escape its colonial heritage, has remained a guiding vision for India’s nuclear establishment even as its practical fulfillment has receded further into the future. India’s positions in the discussions on a nuclear cooperation agreement with the United States in many ways reflect a compromise between those who want to be self-reliant and stick almost exclusively with Bhabha’s three-stage plan, which one interviewee called “a sacred cow,” and those who are willing to bring in outside foreign suppliers. India’s preference for autarky was reinforced by its isolation from international nuclear trade after a 1974 nuclear test, which relied on U.S. and Canadian technology and nuclear materials. This is also reflected in India’s current negotiating posture, which seeks to ensure that foreign suppliers cannot shut off access to fuel and reactors if New Delhi tests nuclear explosives or commits some other proliferation transgression, such as transferring nuclear technologies to states of concern.
Moreover, while Bhabha sought to ensure that fissile materials would be available for a nuclear weapons program, India in recent years has fleshed out what it means when it says that it seeks a “credible minimal deterrent.” In its draft nuclear doctrine published soon after the 1998 tests, New Delhi explicitly stated its objective was to deploy a triad of nuclear forces. The triad would consist of land-based ballistic missiles, nuclear-capable aircraft, and nuclear-armed submarines. As with the U.S.-Soviet experience during the Cold War, such a triad is designed to provide India with survivable nuclear forces and a second-strike capability. It would also mean that India’s arsenal would increase from an estimated few dozen operational warheads today to as many as 200 or more, a level akin to China and the United Kingdom. The nuclear deal would not prevent India from building up to these projected operational and reserve capacities within several years.[1]
The Deal and India’s Fissile Material
To produce enough weapons-usable fissile material (highly enriched uranium or plutonium), India needs sufficient uranium. This uranium would have to come from the country’s limited indigenous sources because foreign suppliers would not give permission to have their uranium used to make weapons. Currently, the military has to share these scarce uranium resources with the civilian sector as nearly all of India’s thermal reactors, are fueled with indigenous uranium. All told, the current total annual uranium demand is about 475 tons. The military reactors require about 45 metric tons of uranium annually: The CIRUS and Dhruva weapons-grade plutonium-production reactors require about 35 metric tons and another military program to make fuel for nuclear-powered submarines, the uranium-enrichment facility at Mysore, uses an estimated 10 metric tons of uranium annually. By contrast, the civilian thermal reactor fleet currently requires about 430 metric tons of uranium per year to be fully fueled.[2] The uranium demands of the civilian sector have grown since the late 1990s more reactors came online in the late 1990s and the India was able to operate its reactors at a higher pitch.
Indigenous supplies have not kept up with this rising demand. Estimated uranium mining has fallen to around 300 tons per year because of poor planning in the uranium mining and milling sectors and opposition from an emerging environmental movement. Notably, New Delhi has kept its two weapons-grade plutonium-production reactors fully fueled during the last several years while curtailing electricity production.
This energy crunch could not have come at a worse time. Indian electricity demand is soaring to meet the needs of a rapidly expanding economy. According to the Indian government and the International Energy Agency, India’s electricity demand will increase at a rate of 6 to 8 percent annually at least through 2020.
India’s nuclear energy boosters, such as Subhinder Thakur, the head strategist for the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL), an enterprise of the government of India, claim “the mismatch is temporary.” Thakur said the Uranium Corporation of India, the Atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration and Research, and the Nuclear Fuel Complex are working together to resolve the uranium shortage within the next few years.
Despite this optimistic assessment from the NPCIL, India confronts continued resistance from environmentalists about opening new mines or expanding old ones, especially in the northeastern part of the country. Also, India’s plans to increase its thermal reactor power production within the next five to six years would drive up the demand for domestically mined uranium in the near term. In particular, to keep the newest indigenous reactors fully fueled would require about 140 tons of uranium per year. Adding this to the current uranium demands means that if the plants were run at full capacity, India annually would consume an estimated 600 tons of uranium.
Therefore, if the political conflicts surrounding mining were not resolved by the time these plants were built and if the nuclear deal were to fall through, India would be forced to stop running about half of its indigenously fueled reactors or only operate this fleet at approximately 50 percent capacity. With the deal, India has plans to place enough reactors under safeguards to reduce the demand for domestically mined uranium to just more than 300 tons for the unsafeguarded power production reactors by 2014—the amount that it is mining today. Assuming that India could import the uranium for the safeguarded reactors, the deal could reduce pressure on India to open up new or expand existing uranium mines. From the perspectives of the NSG and the United States, this significant difference between the deal and no deal scenarios offers tremendous leverage.
Still, the United States and the other NSG countries have not yet taken advantage of this opportunity to extract crucial concessions that would reduce the deal’s damage to the nonproliferation system. Instead, the deal would permit India to reach its goal of 20,000 megawatts of nuclear-generated electricity by 2020, if foreign suppliers could build enough reactors, and to fulfill its nuclear weapons aspirations. If the deal goes through, about one-half of India’s nuclear-generated electricity would come from indigenously produced and currently operating foreign-supplied reactors and the other half would come from additional foreign-supplied reactors, including the two 1,000-megawatt reactors Russia is completing at Kudankulam. Therefore, the Indian government has asked foreign suppliers to bid on building up to eight large reactors by 2020.[3] Current and former government officials, however, admitted to me that this planning scenario is ambitious and faces significant financial and construction hurdles.
Plutonium Production
To be sure, Indian officials I interviewed, as well as some deal supporters in the United States, contend that whether or not the deal goes through will not significantly affect India’s weapons-grade plutonium production.[4] Given New Delhi’s dedication to maintaining such production at full capacity, the deal’s potential impact in this regard is indeed murky.
New Delhi has neither published its weapons-usable fissile material holdings nor indicated how large a nuclear arsenal it intends to make. Unofficial estimates by the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) indicate that India may have amassed 575 kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium as of the end of 2004.[5] ISIS has also estimated that India may have consumed about 131 kilograms of this plutonium in nuclear weapons tests, as reactor fuel, and in processing losses. The CIRUS reactor could produce about 9 kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium annually, and Dhruva could make about 23 kilograms annually. If these estimates are accurate, India may have had available 540 kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium as of the end of 2007. Using the conservative International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) estimates that 8 kilograms of plutonium are needed to make a nuclear bomb, the stockpiled Indian plutonium could fuel a minimum of 67 first-generation fission bombs. Some analysts have argued that more advanced designs could use as little as a few kilograms of plutonium.[6] Therefore, the upper bound estimate for India’s current warhead capacity is somewhat more than 100 nuclear weapons.
It does appear that, in at least one respect, the deal could stimulate near-term growth in weapons-grade plutonium production. Under the deal, India has pledged to shut down the aging CIRUS reactor by 2010. CIRUS is contentious because India obtained it from Canada in the late 1950s and gave assurances “that the reactor would be used only for peaceful uses.” The United States had provided the heavy water for the reactor. This reactor, however, produced plutonium for India’s 1974 “peaceful” nuclear test, which spurred the United States and other countries to form the NSG. India has considered replacing this 40-megawatt thermal (MWth) reactor with a larger capacity 100 MWth reactor.[7] This replacement reactor could produce about two-and-a-half times the amount of plutonium produced annually by CIRUS, or about 23 kilograms compared to 9 kilograms.
In addition to its weapons-grade plutonium stockpile, with or without the deal, India can make hundreds of nuclear weapons from several tons of unsafeguarded reactor-grade plutonium in spent nuclear fuel it has already accumulated, although the deal could somewhat affect future production. It is unknown how much reactor-grade plutonium India has separated from spent fuel, but the unsafeguarded reactors have produced more than 20 times the amount of plutonium that India has obtained from the two weapons-plutonium-production reactors. The deal did not place any of this past production under safeguards.
The most direct and immediate means of using this material would be as fissile material in nuclear weapons. Although weapons-grade plutonium is ideal for weapons use, reactor-grade plutonium can also serve this purpose.[8] Reportedly, India may have used reactor-grade plutonium in one of its May 1998 tests.[9]
Moreover, this feedstock of unsafeguarded plutonium could fuel India’s planned breeder reactor program (the second stage of Bhabha’s three-stage plan), which will remain outside of safeguards. The five planned breeder reactors by 2020 would require two initial cores of plutonium before recycling of plutonium would make the breeders more than self-sufficient. If only the first 500-megawatt electric Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor were dedicated to weapons production, it could produce up to 140 kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium each year, more than four times the current rate of production from CIRUS and Dhruva.[10]
It should be noted that, in a few years, the deal might lower the future rate of production of reactor-grade plutonium. Without the deal, India would have only six reactors under safeguards: the U.S.-built Tarapur 1 and 2, the Canadian-built Rajasthan 1 and 2, and the two Russian reactors under construction at Kudankulam. With the deal, India has agreed to place eight additional indigenously made reactors under safeguards, meaning that eight pressurized heavy-water reactors and their produced plutonium would remain outside of safeguards. Over the course of the next seven years, the net result would be that the annual production rate of unsafeguarded plutonium would be set to peak at about 2,000 kilograms per year in the next two years and fall to about 1,250 kilograms per year by 2015, when safeguards would be applied to all of the reactors subject to the deal.
Therefore, the deal would serve to lower India’s future unsafeguarded plutonium production rate by about one-third.[11] In that respect, the deal is arguably positive for nonproliferation as long as permanent safeguards are applied. Nonetheless, existing and future stocks of spent fuel would be more than sufficient to fuel the breeder program or to provide direct fissile material for nuclear weapons. Furthermore, the deal as structured has given implicit U.S. approval to India’s nuclear weapons program under the guise of bringing India into “the nonproliferation mainstream.”
Directing India Onto a More Responsible Path
To truly bring India into the nonproliferation mainstream, the NSG and Congress must insist on certain conditions. These conditions are minimal in the sense that they would not roll back India’s nuclear weapons program and would not significantly curtail India’s weapons-usable fissile material production capabilities. In that sense, India will have won what it has most sought, recognition of its nuclear weapons program. Even if the deal dies, the United States in effect has already bestowed that recognition. Nonetheless, as a price for that acknowledgement, India should be willing to accept more responsible behavior that would lessen the damage to the nonproliferation regime.
Nuclear trade should be contingent on India refraining from nuclear testing. Also, such commerce should depend on maintenance of permanent safeguards on all designated nuclear facilities. Moreover, the NSG should hold back on transferring enrichment, reprocessing, and heavy-water technologies that could further enhance India’s weapons production capabilities. In addition, the United States should press for India to sign the CTBT and adhere to a weapons-usable fissile material cap. Fully implementing these measures, however, will depend on Chinese and Pakistani actions.
Although most Indian policymakers and analysts have supported the country’s unilateral testing moratorium since 1998, all interviewees agreed that India’s accession to the CTBT has become increasingly tied to the U.S. position on the treaty. India will not ratify the treaty unless the United States does so. Although there is no direct nuclear threat between India and the United States, Indian analysts have made a direct connection between U.S. nuclear actions and India’s place in the world. Summing up this view, Professor Pratap Mehta, the executive director of the Center for Policy Research, based in New Delhi, said India “cannot support a world order that gives into the U.S. maintaining its nuclear primacy.” Moreover, he said that “as long as the U.S. holds out on modernizing its arsenal, India will not sign the FMCT [fissile material cutoff treaty] or the CTBT.”
Acknowledging U.S. influence, top defense expert K. Santhanam, who had a leadership role during the 1998 tests, drew a more direct connection to China and Pakistan. He expressed willingness for India to continue indefinitely the testing moratorium as long as China and Pakistan refrain from testing.
All of the five original nuclear-weapon states, including China, have signed the CTBT. Even if ratification by the United States remains out of reach for the time being, India should be encouraged in tandem with Pakistan to take a step beyond the moratorium and sign the treaty.
Similarly, fissile material production depends crucially on Chinese and Pakistani production. All of the five legally recognized nuclear-weapon states but China have committed to stop making fissile material for weapons. China is believed to have stopped weapons-usable fissile material production, but Beijing has never officially said so. If China would make a public pledge not to make fissile material for weapons, it would put added pressure on India to specify when it would stop stockpiling nuclear weapons material. To bring Pakistan into this arrangement, India could offer a series of alternating unilateral moves. For example, India could verifiably shut down one of its plutonium-production reactors for a period of time. Pakistan could take a similar step with one of its production reactors. Verification could be achieved through third-party commercial satellite monitoring of the status of the reactors.
Although turning back the growth in India’s nuclear arsenal appears unlikely for the foreseeable future, the NSG and the United States have opportunities to shape the future direction of India’s strategic weapons program. They should take it.
India’s Nuclear Energy Program: Ambitious Dreams, Sober RealitiesCharles D. Ferguson ENDNOTES 1. Subhinder Thakur, Interview with author, Mumbai, January 4, 2008. Similar estimates appear in R. B. Grover and Subhash Chandra, “Scenario for Growth of Electricity in India,”Energy Policy, November 2006, pp. 2834-2847. For data on coal use, see World Coal Institute, www.worldcoal.org/pages/content/index.asp?PageID=402. 2. John Stephenson and Peter Tynan, “Will the U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Cooperation Initiative Light India?” in Gauging U.S. Indian Strategic Cooperation, Henry Sokolski, editor (Strategic Studies Institute, 2007), p. 24. |
India’s Planned Nuclear Triad: Seeking a “Credible Deterrent”Charles D. Ferguson ENDNOTES 1. For an extensive, recent Indian report on this issue, see “India’s Credible Minimum Deterrence: A Report,” IPCS Special Report, No. 13, February 2006. 2. Viktor Litovkin, “India to Get Renamed Aircraft Carrier From Russia,” RIA Novosti, June 11, 2007. 3. Arms Control Association, “Arms Control and Proliferation Profile: India,” Fact Sheet, November 2007; Sharon Squassoni, “Indian and Pakistani Nuclear Weapons,” CRS Report for Congress, RS21237, February 17, 2005. 4. Robert S. Norris and Hans M. Kristensen, “India’s Nuclear Forces, 2007,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, July/August 2007, pp. 74-78. 5. Ken Fireman, “Gates Says U.S.-India Ties to Expand Regardless of Nuclear Deal,” Bloomberg, February 26, 2008. 6. Norris and Kristensen, “India’s Nuclear Forces, 2007,” p. 76. 7. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “Nuclear Forces: India 2005,” www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=19273&prog=zgp&proj=znpp; Natural Resources Defense Council, “Nuclear Notebook,” July/August 2007. |
Charles D. Ferguson is a fellow for science and technology at the Council on Foreign Relations. He co-authored The Four Faces of Nuclear Terrorism (Monterey Institute of International Studies and the Nuclear Threat Initiative, 2004).
ENDNOTES
1. For a different analysis that reaches similar conclusions, see Raja Menon, “Nuclear Stability, Deterrence and Separation of India’s Civil and Weapon Facilities,” Strategic Analysis, Vol. 29, No. 4 (October-December 2005).
2. Zia Mian et al.,“Plutonium Production in India and the U.S.-India Nuclear Deal,” in Gauging U.S.-Indian Strategic Cooperation, ed. Henry Sokolski (Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, 2007), p. 109.
3. Note that there is a discrepancy between NPCIL and Government of India Planning Commission estimates of the number of foreign-supplied reactors by 2020. The NPCIL cites up to eight 1,000-megawatt reactors from foreign suppliers while the commission cites six of these reactors. The difference is accounted for by the NPCIL’s more ambitious projections of 23,180 megawatts of electricity (including contributions from a few breeder reactors); the commission calls for 20,000 megawatts, which it characterizes as “optimistic.” Government of India Planning Commission, “Integrated Energy Policy: Report of the Expert Committee,” August 2006, p. 47.
4. Ashley J. Tellis, “Atoms for War?: U.S.-Indian Civilian Nuclear Cooperation and India’s Nuclear Arsenal,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2006.
5. David Albright, “India’s Military Plutonium Inventory, End-2004,” Institute for Science and International Security, May 7, 2005.
6. Thomas B. Cochran and Christopher E. Paine, “The Amount of Plutonium and Highly Enriched Uranium Needed for Pure Fission Nuclear Weapons,” Natural Resources Defense Council, April 13, 1995.
7. The thermal power rating (MWth) specifies the power that is produced by the reactor core. Knowing this number, one can estimate the plutonium production capacity. By contrast, the electric power rating (MWe) tells the electrical power production capacity. Because of energy conversion loses, MWe is always less than MWth.
8. U.S. Department of Energy, “Nonproliferation and Arms Control Assessment of Weapons-Usable Fissile Material Storage and Excess Plutonium Disposition Alternatives,” 1997.
9. George Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb: The Impact on Global Proliferation (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1999), pp. 428-430.
10. Alexander Glaser and M. V. Ramana, “Weapon-Grade Plutonium Production Potential in the Indian Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor,” Science and Global Security, Vol. 15, No. 2 (2007), pp. 85-105.
11. Mian et al., “Plutonium Production in India and the U.S.-India Nuclear Deal,” p. 115.
Cumulative list of blogposts with label 'Thorium' (June 1, 2013):
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http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/01/citizens-petition-for-action-against.html Citizens' petition for action against perpetrators of the Great Rare Earths' Robbery in India
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http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/12/is-safe-green-thorium-power-finally_5438.html
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Illegal notification of 18 Jan. 2006 on Atomic Minerals and loot of Rs. 96,120 Crores worth Atomic Minerals - Complaints
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India announces plan to build thorium reactor. Congrats to India's nuclear scientists.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/11/letter-to-chairman-atomic-energy.html
Illegal mining of Atomic minerals worth Rs. 96,120 crores
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Submit views/suggestions on Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Bill No. 110 of 2011
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http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/thorium-loot-spells-strategic-loss.html
Thorium loot spells strategic loss
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/kerala-metals-and-minerals-ltd-causing.html
Kerala Metals and Minerals Ltd causing radiation: PIL
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/separation-of-monazite-from-placer.html
Separation of monazite from placer sands and strategic needs of India's energy programme.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/nuclear-thorium-country-needs-thorium.html
Nuclear Thorium: Country needs thorium-based fast breeders -- Dr. Kalam
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/near-monopoly-position-of-company-in.html
Near monopoly position of a company in garnet placer sands
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/estimated-value-of-thorium-loot-in.html
Estimated value of Manavalakurichi placer sands loot in a decade: Rs. 1 lakh crore
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/placer-sands-exports-detailed-in.html
Placer sands exports detailed in a Criminal Petition in Hon’ble Supreme Court
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/govt-misled-parliament-on-thorium-loot.html
Govt. misled Parliament on thorium loot. Thorium a game changer for India's power needs?
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/export-profiles-of-placer-sands-of.html
Export profiles of placer sands of Manavalakurichi complex
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/rare-earth-complex-of-india-containing.html
Rare earth complex of India -- containing thorium, the strategic nuclear fuel
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/indias-nuclear-energy-through-thorium.html
India's nuclear energy through thorium. Powering the world.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/thorium-could-have-powered-india.html
Thorium could have powered India
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/the-power-of-thorium-29-september-2012.html
Power of Thorium - two books reviewed. 'Super Fuel':Martin. ‘Thorium: energy cheaper than coal’: Robert Hargraves
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/10/thorium-upas-new-coalgate.html
Thorium UPA's new coalgate?
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/how-far-off-is-thorium-energy-it-is.html
How far off is thorium energy? It is producing energy already -- in many reactors of India...
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/india-all-set-to-tap-thorium-resources.html
India all set to tap thorium resources
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/india-canada-nuke-pact-days-are-gone-we.html
India-Canada Nuke pact. "Those days are gone. We're not so stupid," Dr. Chaitanyamoy Ganguly, Nuclear scientist.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-to-transform-nuclear-power-pair.html Thorium to transform nuclear power. A pair of MIT students set up Transatomic Power
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/cumulative-list-of-blogposts-with-label.html
Cumulative list of blogposts with label "Thorium" (September 27, 2012). National imperative of protecting Rare earths including thorium.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-nuclear-fuel-and-iphone-are.html
Thorium -- a nuclear fuel and iPhone are born of Mother Earth. Govt. of India, conserve and protect rare earths including thorium.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/take-steps-to-protect-strategic.html
Take steps to protect strategic monazite reserves: Subramanian Swamy to PM
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-and-imperative-of-national.html
Thorium and imperative of national security - Dr. Swamy's letter to PM
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-as-strategic-mineral-greener.html
Thorium as strategic mineral: a greener alternative to uranium. India should protect her thorium reserves.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/dae-makes-strides-towards-thorium-fuel_1207.html
DAE makes strides towards thorium fuel supplies for AHWR
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-figures-unconfirmed-irel.html
‘Thorium figures unconfirmed’ - IREL
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/vver-voda-voda-energo-reactor-water.html
VVER: Voda Voda Energo Reactor, Water-cooled, water-moderated energy reactor
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/protect-india-thorium-to-transform.html
Protect India's thorium to transform the world of energy
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/a-future-energy-giant-indias-thorium.html
A future energy giant? India's thorium-based nuclear plans
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/india-should-enforce-nsg-guidelines-for.html
India should enforce NSG guidelines for protection of thorium
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/nuclear-energys-future-thorium.html
Nuclear Energy’s Future: Thorium
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/q-thorium-reactor-designer-ratan-kumar.html
Q&A: Thorium Reactor Designer Ratan Kumar Sinha
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-fuelled-dreams-for-indias_13.html
Thorium-fuelled dreams for India’s energy future. How India’s science is taking over the world.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-poster-source-thorium-australia.html
Thorium poster (Source: Thorium Australia campaign)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/briefings-on-nuclear-technology-in.html
Protect India's thorium. Briefings on nuclear technology in India -- PK Iyengar, Retd. Chairman, AEC, May 2009
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/new-all-party-uk-parliamentary-group-on.html
New All-Party UK Parliamentary Group on Thorium
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/china-takes-lead-in-race-for-clean.html
China Takes Lead in Race for Clean Nuclear Power -- using thorium.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/the-issue-is-india-as-nuke-power-anti.html
The issue is India as nuke power. Anti-Kudankulam leaders manipulate innocents - Pioneer Edit
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.com/2012/09/india-ventures-into-rare-earths-to.html
India Ventures Into Rare Earths, To Launch Soon Monazite Processing Plant
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-is-nuclear-fuel-and-should.html
Thorium is nuclear fuel and should command immediate attention of GOI to conserve and protect the wealth of the nation.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-key-to-indias-energy-security.html
Thorium key to India’s energy security -- Sandhya Jain
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/india-plans-nuclear-plant-powered-by.html
Thorium advocates launch pressure group in UK. India plans nuclear plant powered bythorium - Guardian, UK
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/feature-article-thorium-reactor.html
Feature article: A Thorium Reactor (American Scientist, 2010)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-as-nuclear-fuel.html
Thorium As Nuclear Fuel
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thoriumgate-34-blogposts-seize-moment.html
Thoriumgate. 34 blogposts. Seize the moment to strengthen India's nuclear doctrine and energy future.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/is-thorium-biggest-energy-breakthrough.html
Is Thorium the Biggest Energy Breakthrough Since Fire? Possibly.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/are-beachfuls-of-thorium-sand-curse.html
Are beachfuls of thorium sand a curse? -- Rrishi Raote
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/why-should-foreign-companies-private.html
Why should foreign companies & private parties work in monazite placer deposits?
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/krisastha-koil-kundal-uvari.html
Karisastha koil, Kundal, Uvari
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-reactors-dr-y-federation-of.html
Thorium for dummies. Thorium reactors - Dr. Y (Federation of American Scientists)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/upas-thoriumgate-toyota-tsusho-enters_6.html
UPA's Thoriumgate? Toyota Tsusho enters the scene.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/monazite-reserves-of-india-18-million.html
Monazite reserves of India 18 Million Tonnes (A review of seabed and placer mining deposits in India by Abhineet Kumar (May, 2011. Dept. of Mining Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, 2011)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-which-can-breed-uranium-233-is.html
Thorium which can breed uranium 233 is the future energy source for India. Rare earth elements; Indian rare earths -- Its genesis and growth (TK Mukherjee, IREL)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/proof-that-coir-was-used-to-export.html
Proof that coir was used to export thorium oxide in monazite. Now Toyota is inmonazite processing in India.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/wyoming-nuclear-task-force-hears.html
Wyoming nuclear task force hears thorium reactor plan
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/indian-rare-earths-genesis-and-growth.html
Indian rare earths: genesis and growth -- TK Mukherjee, IREL
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/who-looted-indias-missing-thorium.html
Who looted India’s missing thorium? -- Sandeep Balakrishna
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/after-coal-did-india-give-away-thorium.html
After coal, did India give away Thorium at pittance too?
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/great-thorium-robbery-impacting-india.html
Great thorium robbery impacting India's nuclear doctrine and energy security
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/67-years-nuclear-energy-nuclear.html
67 Years Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Destruction
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/15-billion-hole-in-ground-thorium-for.html
$15 billion hole in ground. Thorium for clean energy
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-reserve-in-country-narayanasamy.html
Thorium Reserve in the Country - Narayanasamy informs Lok Sabha
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/09/thorium-fuelled-dreams-for-indias.html
Thorium-fuelled dreams for India's energy future. How India's science is taking over the world.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/nuclear-materials-suppliers-group-nsg.html
Nuclear materials, suppliers group (NSG) and safeguards
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.com/2012/08/depletion-of-thorium-reserves-from.html
Depletion of thorium reserves from South Indian beaches, impacting India's nucleardoctrine and energy security: 14 blogposts
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/black-monazite-sand-deposits-found-on.html
Black Monazite sand deposits found on beaches (India)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/thorium-fuel-cycle-potential-benefits.html
Thorium fuel cycle - potential benefits for India - IAEA publication (2005)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/thorium-alleged-export-of-sands-august.html
Thorium: alleged export of sands (August 2007 report)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/key-reserve-profiles-of-placer-deposits.html
Key reserve profiles of placer deposits: Chavara and Manavalakurichi (From Ph.D. thesis of Ajith G. Nair, 2001)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/valmikis-knowledge-of-oceanography-and.html
Valmiki's knowledge of oceanography and Mannar volcanic
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/mining-of-monazite-goi-response-in-lok.html
Mining of monazite (GOI response in Lok Sabha on 30 Nov. 2011)
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/indian-rare-earths-limited.html
Indian Rare Earths Limited
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.com/2012/08/vv-mineral-achievements.html
VV Mineral: achievements
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/theres-nuclear-gold-in-this-sand-and.html
There’s nuclear gold in this sand. And it’s being sent out with impunity – Tehelka
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/manavalakurichi.html
Manavalakurichi
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/irregularities-in-bureaucratic.html
Scam of the century involving Rs. 1340 billion thorium reserves. Irregularities inbureaucratic processes which led to encouragement of illegal mining of thorium
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/10-point-plan-nationalise-thorium.html
10-point plan: Nationalise thorium resources of India and institute strategic command for protecting and conserving Nuclear Fuel complexes
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/illegal-thorium-mining-in-india-value.html
Illegal thorium mining in India. Value of India’s thorium reserves: Rs. 1340 billion est.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2012/08/monday-august-13-2012-must-look-into.html
‘PM must look into illegal thorium mining’
Uranium Is So Last Century — Enter Thorium, the New Green Nuke | Magazine