Maharashtra & Rosatom to Jointly Develop Thorium-Based Reactor

Maharashtra State Power Generation Corporation Limited (MAHAGENCO) signed a strategic cooperation agreement with Rosatom (Russia’s State Atomic Energy Corporation) for development of a thorium-based Small Modular Reactor (SMR).

Key Highlights of Agreement

FeatureDetails
Parties InvolvedMAHAGENCO (India) and Rosatom (Russia)
Project TypeSmall Modular Reactor (SMR) using Thorium Fuel
Location InitiativeUnder ‘Make in Maharashtra’ initiative
Safety ComplianceAdherence to AERB (Atomic Energy Regulatory Board) norms
Deployment ModelPrefabricated modular SMRs with a smaller footprint and cost-effective setup
Strategic Body InvolvedMITRA – Maharashtra Institution for Transformation (Industry, Trade & Investment Facilitation Cell)
Execution TeamJoint Working Group (Mahagenco + Rosatom + stakeholders)
Focus AreasR&D, feasibility studies, commercial deployment, safety regulation compliance

Why Thorium-Based SMRs Matter?

  • Thorium is more abundant in India than uranium.
  • Considered safer and cleaner, making it suitable for long-term nuclear energy sustainability.
  • India holds one of the largest thorium reserves globally—this aligns with India’s 3-stage nuclear programme (final stage: Thorium-based reactors).
  • SMRs allow modular, decentralized power generation—suitable for remote areas.

Institutional Framework:

Rosatom (Russia):

  • Russian state atomic energy corporation, established in 2007.
  • Controls both civilian and military nuclear sectors in Russia.
  • Involved globally in nuclear plant development, technology exports, and nuclear research.

Strategic Significance:

  • Positions Maharashtra as a leader in thorium-based nuclear tech.
  • Strengthens India–Russia collaboration in civil nuclear energy.
  • Boosts indigenous nuclear manufacturing under ‘Make in Maharashtra’.
  • Advances India’s vision of clean, reliable, and decentralized energy.

Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB):

FeatureDetails
Established15 November 1983 under Atomic Energy Act, 1962
MandateEnsure safety in use of ionizing radiation & nuclear energy
Reporting ToAtomic Energy Commission
Legal AuthorityAtomic Energy Act (1962), Environment Protection Act (1986)
Other PowersCan enforce Factories Act, 1948 for DAE units
StructureMaximum 5 members: Full-time Chairman and Member-Secretary, with full-time/part-time members
SupportAdmin support from Department of Atomic Energy (DAE)

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