India’s success in connecting its largest domestically-built nuclear reactor to the grid is a boost for plans to deploy the technology to help the world’s third-biggest polluter limit emissions, according to the official overseeing the plans.
The 700-megawatt pressurized heavy water reactor of the Kakrapar Atomic Power Station in Gujarat is the first of 16 planned units that will help balance the grid against growing intermittent renewable generation, according to K.N. Vyas, India’s atomic energy secretary.
India is counting on its nuclear program to help meet its Paris climate commitments to reduce the emissions intensity of its economy by a third from 2005 levels by 2030. So far, domestic built reactors have avoided cost-run-ups that have hit projects planned with overseas technologies, said Debasish Mishra, a Mumbai-based partner at Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.
Nuclear Power Corp. of India Ltd., also known as NPCIL, which connected the reactor to the grid last week, expects to start five more units through March 2027, and is placing orders for another ten to be commissioned by 2031. The combined cost of the fleet is estimated at 1.5 trillion rupees (USD 20.4bn), according to the state monopoly.
India considers nuclear power a “safe, environmentally benign and economically viable source” of energy, it said in its Intended Nationally Determined Contributions at the Paris climate summit in 2015. The nation strives to achieve 63 gigawatts of nuclear power capacity by 2032 if there is enough fuel to run the plants, according to the document.
The South Asian nation has 6.8 gigawatts of existing nuclear generation capacity, which accounts for roughly 2% of the nation’s total capacity. Coal-fired generation makes up about 53% of India’s installed base, although its share has been declining in favor of cleaner generation and renewable power.