Ø Weeks after the government announced that U.S. company
Westinghouse’s Nuclear Power Project (NPP), planned in Gujarat’s Mithi Virdi,
is being moved to Andhra Pradesh, sources confirmed to The Hindu that
Russian-owned Rosatom will build its next phase of six reactors in Andhra
Pradesh as well. With other States like Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal
and Maharashtra facing local protests over NPPs, the government is now pinning
its mega-plans for generating the ‘clean’ energy on coastal Andhra Pradesh. In
fact, if all the projects under consideration from Russia, the U.S. and NPCIL
were to actually go through, NPPs in Andhra could account for more than 30,000
MW of the Modi government’s goal of 63,000 MW installed capacity by 2031. The
site for the next set of six Russian reactors was discussed during A.P. Chief
Minister Chandrababu Naidu’s recent visit to Russia, where he met Russian PM
Dmitry Medvedev.
Ø In Andhra Pradesh, six nuclear centres are going to be created,
totalling thousands of megawatts in capacity. Of course, Andhra Pradesh
will have both American and Russian participation in nuclear energy generation,
but the Russians will be the first to “Make in India” in the nuclear sphere in
Andhra. The “American participation” referred to is the plan for
Toshiba-Westinghouse to set up 6 AP1000 reactors of 1,100 megawatts each, a
proposal that had run into trouble in Gujarat due to “stiff protests from
farmers” during the land acquisition process for 777 hectares, a senior
official in the Gujarat government said. In addition, Tata, Adani and
Essar, which are the largest power producers in the State, were never comfortable
with another giant plant being set up in the State. During Mr. Modi’s
visit to Washington in June 2016, NPCIL and Westinghouse had announced the move
to Andhra Pradesh, with a commitment to complete the commercial agreement for 6
reactors by June 2017. Prior to the move by Westinghouse, U.S. company
GE-Hitachi had also been allocated a site in Kovvada, where the State plans its
nuclear park. The discussions to provide 6 Economic Simplified Boiling
Water Reactors (ESBWRs) of 1594 MW have slowed over India’s insistence on being
provided only tried-and-tested reactor technology, but the project remains a
key part of Andhra Pradesh’s power projections. Meanwhile another
Russian project that has been hanging fire for years, to build 6 ‘VVER’ (Water-Water
Energy) Reactors of 1000 MWe in West Bengal’s Haripur, may also be moved to
Andhra Pradesh due to local protests. “We are looking for a site in some
coastal area of Andhra Pradesh where a similar reactor, which was meant for
Haripur, will come up,” Dr. Sekhar Basu, now Chairman of the Atomic Energy
Commission, had told reporters last September.
No comments:
Post a Comment