Published on: March 10, 2026

CANADA’S URANIUM DEAL HELPS INDIA

CANADA’S URANIUM DEAL HELPS INDIA

NEWS: India signed a $2.6 billion uranium supply deal with Cameco, one of the world’s top three uranium producers

India’s Uranium ‘Stocks’ (Domestic Reserves)

Domestic Uranium Reserves

  • Total uranium ore reserves: 2–4.3 lakh tonnes.
  • Major mining locations: Jaduguda (Jharkhand), Turamdih (Jharkhand), Tummalapalle (Andhra Pradesh)
  • Extractable uranium metal: Around 76,000–92,000 tonnes

Imports

  • Currently about 75% of India’s civilian uranium needs are met through imports.
  • Countries supplying uranium: Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Russia, Canada (latest deal)

India–Canada Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement

This agreement was possible because:

  • Nuclear Suppliers Group gave India a waiver in 2008
  • This waiver followed the India–United States Civil Nuclear Agreement.

Key Feature of the Agreement

  • India must provide “fissionable material accounts” to Canada.
  • Canada can track how the uranium supplied is used.
  • Strategic advantage: Imported uranium is used in civilian reactors, allowing domestic uranium to be reserved for military use.

India’s ThreeStage Nuclear Power Programme

  • Designed by Homi J. Bhabha.
  • To utilize India’s large thorium reserves (20–25% of world total).

Stage 1 – PHWRs

  • Fuel: Natural Uranium-235
  • Output: Electricity, Plutonium-239 (byproduct)

Stage 2 – Fast Breeder Reactors

  • Fuel: Mixed Oxide Fuel (MOX), Uranium-238, Plutonium-239
  • Produce more fuel than they consume.
  • Example: Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor
  • Outputs: Electricity, Uranium-233, More Plutonium-239

Stage 3 – Thorium Based Reactors

  • Fuel: Thorium-232, Plutonium-239
  • Output: Electricity, Uranium-233
  • This stage aims to exploit India’s huge thorium reserves.

Problems in India’s Nuclear Programme

Delays

  • Fast breeder test reactor built in 1977
  • PFBR approved only in early 2000s.
  • Reason: International sanctions after nuclear tests

Cost Overruns

  • PFBR cost: ₹3,492 crore (initial estimate), Increased to ₹6,800 crore by 2019

Long Time for Thorium Deployment

  • According to the Department of Atomic Energy (2013): Large-scale thorium use may take 30–40 years after commercial fast breeder reactors.
  • This may push thorium deployment to around the 2060s or later.

Doubling Time of Fast Breeder Reactors

  • As explained by Anil Kakodkar: Doubling time = 15–20 years