Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India (SHANTI) Act

Syllabus: Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways etc.

Context

  • Parliament enacted the SHANTI Act, overhauling India’s legal framework governing nuclear energy.
  • The Act repeals the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010.
  • It aims to accelerate nuclear capacity expansion and attract private and foreign participation.

Significance of SHANTI Act

  • Opens India’s nuclear sector to private companies and foreign investment, earlier restricted to public utilities.
  • Supports India’s plan to raise nuclear capacity from 8.8 GW to 100 GW by 2047.
  • Seeks to increase nuclear power’s share in electricity generation from 3% to higher levels.
  • State-owned utilities plan about 54 GW, with remaining capacity expected from private players.

Key Changes in Liability Framework

  • Nuclear safety globally mandates immediate victim compensation, irrespective of fault determination.
  • Earlier law allowed operator’s right of recourse against suppliers under three specific conditions.
  • SHANTI removes supplier-fault-based recourse, eliminating liability risks for equipment providers.
  • Deletion of the term “supplier” addresses concerns of foreign reactor manufacturers.
  • This change responds to hesitations following the Indo–U.S. Nuclear Deal (2008).

Compensation and Liability Structure

  • SHANTI introduces a graded liability system linked to plant capacity.
  • Liability caps:
    • ₹3,000 crore for plants above 3,600 MW.
    • ₹1,500 crore for 3,600–1,500 MW plants.
    • ₹750 crore for 1,500–750 MW plants.
    • ₹300 crore for 750–150 MW plants.
    • ₹100 crore for plants below 150 MW.
  • Existing Indian plants are 3,000 MW or lower, limiting operator exposure.
  • Critics noted compensation caps remain far below global accident reparation costs.

Implications for India’s Nuclear Vision

  • India’s long-term strategy involves a three-stage programme focused on thorium utilisation.
  • Progress remains slow, with the Fast Breeder Reactor delayed until September 2026.
  • SHANTI aligns future expansion with Small Modular Reactors (SMRs).
  • SMRs require enriched uranium-235, which India lacks domestically.
  • SMRs offer flexibility and safety improvements, but produce less power per unit.
  • They do not significantly advance India’s thorium-based self-reliant fuel cycle.

Overall Assessment

  • SHANTI reduces investment risk and encourages participation in nuclear power generation.
  • However, reliance on SMRs may diverge from India’s original thorium-based nuclear roadmap.

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