Nuclear India

Nuclear India – Complete GK Capsule for Railway Exams

1. India’s Nuclear Journey – Key Milestones
YearEventLocation / Remark
1945Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) set upMumbai—nucleus of Indian nuclear science
1954Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) createdUnder Dr. Homi J. Bhabha, reporting directly to PM
1956Asia’s first research reactor “Apsara” goes criticalBARC, Trombay—uses 80 % enriched U-Al alloy
1960Canada-India Colombo PlanCIRUS (40 MW) reactor supplied; started 1960, critical 1963
1974Pokhran-I (“Smiling Buddha”)India’s first peaceful nuclear explosion (18 May)
1983-87Dhruva (100 MW) reactor commissionedIndigenous route to weapons-grade plutonium
1998Pokhran-II (Shakti series)5 tests (11-13 May) – fusion & fission devices
2008India-specific NSG waiverCivil nuclear cooperation agreement signed
2010Civil liability law enactedNuclear Damage Act, 2010
201720-th nuclear power reactor (KGS-3) connectedKaiga, Karnataka – 700 MWe PHWR
202310-th indigenised 700 MWe PHWR at KakraparUnit-4 start of construction

2. Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd. (NPCIL) – At a Glance
ParameterFigure (as on Jan 2024)
Installed capacity8180 MWe (23 reactors)
Under construction8 reactors = 7000 MWe
% of total electricity~3.1 %
Largest siteKKNPP, Tamil Nadu (2×1000 MWe VVER, 2 more U/C)
Reactor typesPHWR (220/540/700), BWR (TAPS), VVER-1000 (KKNPP)
2025 target13,480 MWe (DAE Vision-2025)

3. Nuclear Institutions & Their Heads (Latest)
Institution (Year)HeadquartersPresent Chairman / Secy
DAE (1954)MumbaiDr. Ajit Kumar Mohanty
BARC (1957)Trombay, MumbaiDr. A. K. Mohanty (additional charge)
NPCIL (1987)MumbaiShri B. C. Pathak
Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB)MumbaiShri D. K. Shukla
IGCAR (Kalpakkam, 1971)Tamil NaduDr. Arun Kumar Bhaduri

4. India’s Three-Stage Nuclear Programme
StageFuelReactorBy-productStatus
INatural UPHWR 220/700Pu-239Commercial—23 reactors
IIPu-239 + Th-232Fast Breeder (500 MWe)U-233PFBR—50 MWt FBTR running; 500 MWe PFBR to be commissioned 2024
IIIU-233 + Th-232Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR)Design complete, demo plant planned

5. Uranium & Thorium Reserves
MineralIndia’s Share (World Rank)Key Mines
Uranium74,000 tU (≈ 1 %—13th)Jaduguda (Jh), Tummalapalle (AP), Lambapur-Telangana
Thorium8-10 lakh t ThO₂ (25 %—1st)Monazite coasts—Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Odisha

6. One-Liner Rapid-Fire Facts (RRB Favourite)
  • India is the only country that has thorium-based 3-stage programme planned.
  • Pokhran-I (1974) made India 6th nation to explode a nuclear device.
  • Pokhran-II (1998) code name “Operation Shakti”; yield of thermonuclear device ≈ 45 kT.
  • CIRUS & Dhruva—sole reactors giving weapons-grade Pu for Indian arsenal.
  • Tarapur (TAPS-1&2)—oldest commercial reactors (1969)—originally US (GE) BWR.
  • Kudankulam—biggest nuclear power site (6×1000 MWe planned).
  • PFBR (500 MWe) at Kalpakkam will make India 2nd country after Russia to commercialise FBR.
  • Indira Gandhi first coined phrase “Atoms for Peace and Development” in 1970s.
  • India not signatory to NPT & CTBT but adheres to voluntary moratorium since 1998.
  • Nuclear Liability Act, 2010—operator liability capped at ₹1,500 crore.
  • DAE Vision-2032—target 22,480 MWe; Vision-2050—target 63 GWe + 275 GWe from thorium.

7. MCQ Practice Set (Railway Pattern)
Q1. India’s first nuclear reactor Apsara became critical on—

Ans: 4 August 1956

Q2. Who is known as the father of the Indian nuclear programme?

Ans: Dr. Homi Jahangir Bhabha

Q3. The 1974 Pokhran test was codenamed—

Ans: Smiling Buddha

Q4. The biggest nuclear power station in India (by capacity) is—

Ans: Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP)

Q5. Which among the following is NOT a uranium mine of India?

Ans: Husainpur (Bihar) – not a mine

Q6. The indigenously designed 700 MWe PHWR is being set up at Kakrapar, Gujarat and also at—

Ans: Rajasthan (RAPP-7&8)

Q7. Fast Breeder Test Reactor (FBTR) is located at—

Ans: Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu

Q8. The Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) was constituted in—

Ans: 1983 (15 Nov)

Q9. India conducted 5 nuclear tests in May 1998; the thermonuclear device was shot on—

Ans: 11 May (Shakti-I)

Q10. The only country that supplied a power reactor to India after the 2008 NSG waiver is—

Ans: Russia (Kudankulam)

Q11. Thorium is found in India mainly in the form of—

Ans: Monazite (a phosphate mineral)

Q12. India is not a signatory to—

Ans: Both NPT & CTBT

Q13. The maximum operator liability under the Civil Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 is—

Ans: ₹1,500 crore

Q14. Which reactor produces weapon-grade plutonium for India’s strategic programme?

Ans: Dhruva

Q15. India’s share of nuclear electricity in total mix is approximately—

Ans: 3 %

Q16. The 500 MWe Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor uses—

Ans: Mixed Oxide (MOX) fuel (Pu-U)

Q17. “Atoms for Peace” slogan in Indian context was first highlighted by—

Ans: Indira Gandhi


8. Quick-View Table – Nuclear Explosions & Yields
TestDateDevicesClaimed Yield
Pokhran-I18 May 19741 fission8-12 kT
Shakti-111 May 1998Thermonuclear45 kT
Shakti-211 May 1998Fission12 kT
Shakti-3,4,513 May 1998Sub-kiloton0.2-0.5 kT each

9. International Agreements & Waivers
  • 2008 – NSG waiver → India can trade civil nuclear tech without signing NPT.
  • 2010 – Convention on Supplementary Compensation (CSC) ratified.
  • 2014 – INFCIRC/754 – separation plan with IAEA.
  • 2016 – Japan-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement signed (came into force 2017).

Keep revising the one-liners & tables; expect at least 1-2 questions from “Nuclear India” in every Railway GK section.