Nuclear Reactors 1581 – Public and Private Organizations Collaborate on Major SMR Program for India

A blue circle with white text and a blue circle with white text

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Engineers India Limited (EIL) for the provision of engineering services towards the development of conceptual design and engineering of structures, systems and components of the Bharat Small Modular Reactor (SMR).

The MoU was signed at NPCIL’s office in Mumbai on the 12th of August in the presence of EIL Chairman and Managing Director Vartika Shukla and NPCIL Chairman and Managing Director Bhuwan Chandra Pathak and other senior management officers from both organizations.

New Delhi-based EIL is a public sector organization under the administrative control of the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, providing industrial technology, engineering consultancy and technology licensing services.

EIL said in a statement, “This partnership supports the Government of India’s vision to accelerate nuclear power, enabling clean, green, and reliable energy to strengthen India’s energy security and is a step towards Nuclear Energy Mission for Viksit Bharat, targeting a nuclear power capacity of 100 GW by 2047.”

In a post on LinkedIn, NPCIL said, “This occasion marks an important milestone in the journey of development of BSMR-200 jointly by NPCIL and the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), a project that represents not only technological advancement but also a step further towards India’s clean, safe and reliable nuclear power capabilities.”

The two-hundred-megawatt Bharat Small Modular Reactor (referred to as BSMR-200) is a pressurized heavy water reactor that will use slightly enriched uranium fuel and will feature passive safety features. The reactor is being designed and developed by BARC and NPCIL to supply power generation for energy intensive industries such as steel, aluminum and cement; for repurposing retiring thermal power plants; and to provide electricity to remote locations without grid connectivity.

In March this year, Minister of State Jitendra Singh told parliamentarians that a fifty-five-megawatt variant of the BSMR targeted at deployment in remote locations is also being developed. The lead twin units will be “set up in a Department of Atomic Energy site by 2033”. Singh added that “subsequent units are to be located at the sites of the end-user industry in case of captive power plants and at brownfields sites of retiring thermal power plants.”

India’s Minister of Finance Nirmala Sitharaman announced in the 2024 budget the government’s intention to research and develop the BSMR series. This year’s budget was announced in February. Sitharaman promised federal funds to develop at least five Indian-designed SMRs to be operational by 2033, as well as amendments to Indian legislation to encourage private sector participation, as part of plans to develop at least one hundred gigawatts of nuclear energy by 2047.

Earlier this year, NPCIL issued a Request for Proposals (RFP) from “visionary Indian industries” to finance and build a proposed fleet of two hundred and twenty megawatt BSMRs. Tata Power and the Naveen Jindal Group have already expressed an interest in constructing SMR. In February, Minister for Railways Ashwini Vaishnaw told the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian parliament, that nuclear power is under consideration to meet the growing power needs of the country’s rail sector.

Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited