What's new

Global body gives India poor rating on nuclear safety, may stall entry into Nuclear Supplier Group

Zarvan

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 28, 2011
Messages
54,470
Reaction score
87
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
Global body gives India poor rating on nuclear safety, may stall entry into Nuclear Supplier Group - The Economic Times


INDIA GET POOR RATING ON NUCLEAR SAFETY AND SECURITY...!!!
____________________________________________________

Ahead of the annual plenary session of the Nuclear Suppliers Group, which is expected to discuss the case of #India's membership to the coveted global body, the country has questioned Nuclear Threat Initiative (#NTI) for rating the security arrangements at its nuclear installations as poor and below mark.

NTI - a Washington-based non-profit body which aims to strengthen global security by reducing the risk of use and preventing the spread of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons - makes the assessment of the security mechanisms in countries having at least one kg of enriched uranium and publishes its assessment annually. It has been rating the security implementations at the Indian nuclear installations as "poor and not up to the mark". NTI places India among the nations having poor practices with regard to nuclear security implementations.

#RadioactiveFriends
#PakistanDefence
 
.
Last edited:
. .
Ahead of the annual plenary session of the Nuclear Suppliers Group, which is expected to discuss the case of #India's membership to the coveted global body, the country has questioned Nuclear Threat Initiative (#NTI) for rating the security arrangements at its nuclear installations as poor and below mark.

So now the private bodies are going to be decide how safe is Indian nuclear installations?????
 
.
However, according to a recent study conducted by the Narendra Modi government, India follows some of the best practices in the world. Officials said that field visits conducted by Indian experts to some of the vital nuclear facilities in UK, Japan and France confirmed that the country complies with best practices equivalent to those being followed in these countries.

The move to question NTI's assessment follows apprehensions that its rating could be used to stall India's entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group or NSG. The India-US nuclear deal signed in October 2008 ended India's isolation in the global nuclear order. In 2008, the NSG, which normally prohibits its members from nuclear commerce with states which have not signed the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT), agreed on a special waiver in the case of India. Since then, India has been trying to enter the NSG amid opposition from some member states including China.

India and the US have held wide-ranging discussions on entry into the NSG, including during US President Barack Obama's last visit to the country. The government said that NTI's assessment is flawed on account of security as India has taken adequate steps and measures to prevent any attack on its nuclear facilities by terrorists from across the border.

"Security and safety measures at the country's nuclear sites, including during the disposal of nuclear and radiological materials, have been made more stringent. Use of technology to minimise human element both to avoid possible errors as well as to deal with insider threats has been increased. Unlike NTI's evaluations, India's nuclear security measures are comparable to best practices globally," an official said.


India's security agencies have been tasked with constantly working on improving their ability to respond quickly and effectively and in a coordinated manner during emergency like attack on a nuclear power plant or nuclear facility.

Though not unique to India, the population density in India's urban centres increases the vulnerabilities and the possible casualty levels in the event of an attack.The Department of Atomic Energy is working on integrated drills involving security both within the perimeter and outside operating in unison, officials said.

Various rules were established under the 1962 Atomic Energy Act to address security related issues of India's nuclear programme. "India has been steadfast in its adherence to the instruments and norms stipulated by the global nuclear security regime," an expert said.

The Central Industrial Security Force is in charge of providing security to nuclear facilities in the country. Each nuclear facility is guided by a CISF team headed by a commandant. At many sites, the CISF team is supplemented by a Special Task Force.

India is pursuing development of nuclear power plants by using a mix of indigenous pressurised heavy water reactors, fast breeder reactors and light water reactors based on foreign technical cooperation and fuelled by imported enriched uranium. Beyond 2030, India plans a large expansion based on fast breeder reactors and later thorium-based reactors as part of its closed fuel cycle approach, officials said.

UN's nuclear watchdog: Rajasthan reactors are among world's safest

AWATBHATTA: Good news for India from the UN nuclear watchdog that intensively audited over several weeks two reactors at the Rajasthan Atomic Power Station for safety. It has concluded that the reactors are among the best in the world, the indigenously made 220 MW atomic plants can withstand a Fukushima type of accident, even suggesting that the "safety culture is strong in India".

After completing the first ever audit, speaking exclusively to NDTV, the head of the Operational Safety Division at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, Miroslav Lipar, who has over 35 years of nuclear experience with more than a decade in the IAEA, said "improvements were necessary in fire protection and electrical cabling systems".

Mr Lipar said this was the 171st such nuclear audit in the world and the first of its kind for India. According to him, "India emerged a winner with a high global safety rank." (Watch: IAEA lauds safety of Rajasthan reactors)

When asked if the plant incorporated additional safety features necessitated after the accident at the Fukushima atomic reactors in Japan, Mr Lipar said "the emergency preparedness was optimal", with sufficient back-up power and cooling systems being in place.

But the big question is - will this calm the critics who oppose nuclear energy?

This international peer review was precipitated when the Indian nuclear establishment faced a deluge of questions on the safety of Indian nuclear reactors with fears sky-rocketing, especially after the nuclear disaster at Fukushima in Japan last year.

This was a first hint of transparency in the highly secretive Indian nuclear establishment. Interestingly and in comparison Pakistan subjected its atomic power reactors located at the Chashma site for a similar peer review as far back as 2004.

In an unprecedented step India agreed to allow for the very first time safety inspectors from the IAEA to thoroughly audit over a period of several weeks two nuclear reactors at the Rajasthan Atomic Power Station, namely units 3 & 4, for their operational safety.

The international audit was a voluntary confidence-building measure initiated at the prodding of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, so the Department of Atomic Energy, for the very first time gathered the courage to subject its indigenously-made 220 MW atomic reactors to an international peer review of the safety procedures.

Speaking to NDTV, G. Nageshwar Rao, Director (Operations) at the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited, Mumbai, said, "Here onwards people should not have apprehensions about Indian atomic reactors." (Watch: Nothing to worry about India's reactors)

Still not convinced, critics like former Atomic Energy Regulatory Board chairman Dr A Gopalakrishnan are urging India to subject the oldest reactors the country has at Tarapur, the two boiling water reactors made by General Electric, namely units 1&2 which have a vintage of 1969, to an open safety inspection.

Mr Gopalakrishnan says, "These two smaller Tarapur units are totally unsafe and should have been shut down long ago as they are of a similar kind like the atomic reactors that exploded one after another at the Fukushima site in Japan."

Countering this criticism, Mr Rao says, "We have no reservation of subjecting older reactors to a peer review and if the government wants Tarapur 1&2 these can also be audited by the IAEA safety team at a later date, but initially the thought was that learnings should flow to reactor types namely the Pressurized Heavy Water Reactors that are the mainstay for India and are now totally indigenously made, the benefits of a peer review could be best for these reactors that will last the country another half a century or more."

But will this thumbs up by the global nuclear watchdog really help allay fears of radiation leaks and accidents? The country has been witness to unparalleled protests in Tamil Nadu at the Kudankulam nuclear power plant where locals oppose the commissioning of the 1000 MW Russian made reactor dubbing it unsafe. Mr Rao feels this endorsement from the IAEA should help quell voices of dissent that vociferously oppose the country's desire to ramp up the installed capacity of atomic reactors to 63,000 MW in the next two decades from the 4800 MW installed capacity in 20 reactors that exist today.
 
. . . .
Few Facts

Recently I got some information for the "Kankarapar Nuclear Reactor" one expert said to me, that when Nepal Earth Quack happen, the Automatic Switch stop the processing, when the science lab get the waves of earth quack, No.2 Internationally all countries meet to make safety and share their ideas, so the Indian have Get the Experience from the Japan Tsunami where the Diesel pump for cooling the tower was failed due to water enter their, and due to that Indian have take the some other kind of step as back up idea, their are multiple back up systems to protect the systems and to avoid the accidents etc.etc. and they are given No.1 award for that. I think the Facts are twisted, and yes Easterns Black would never satisfy Racist Western...........and that is thing for which we never care. we are not to answer their questions and to make them our masters, if they want to alive do that if want to do suicide their problem......... i hope you would get the right message by this.
 
.
well a part from the NTI report, last year's NSG already indicated difference between both the Neighbors.. as far the security and command and control system is concern, they conveyed Pakistan with better facilities a part from more and offensive threat... so Pakistan is already into it and more comfortably securing it from terrorist and external Inteligence forces also...
 
.
NSG already indicated difference between both the Neighbors.. as far the security and command and control system is concern, they conveyed Pakistan with better facilities a part from more and offensive threat... so Pakistan is already into it and more comfortably securing it from terrorist and external Inteligence forces also...
And how would the NSG (a civilian regulatory body) be able to gain access to the Sub-continent's most guarded and secretive locations??

I can't speak for Pakistan but I know for a fact there is ZERO way the NSG (or any outside observer) would ever be allowed to gain such privileged access to such locations and information.


So I'm going to say you are either misinformed or quoting yet another BS report that isn't worth the paper it is written on.
 
.
well a part from the NTI report, last year's NSG already indicated difference between both the Neighbors.. as far the security and command and control system is concern, they conveyed Pakistan with better facilities a part from more and offensive threat... so Pakistan is already into it and more comfortably securing it from terrorist and external Inteligence forces also...

Given the AQ affair and Bin laden's killing in Abbotabad Pakistan is not getting entry into the NSG anytime soon

If the Europeans want to do something about global warming India is getting nuclear power generation technology
 
.
@Abingdonboy well none of these bodies enter into your system to check, well its your government and Security or command and control bodies of any country provide them with some clues and apparatus to show if their Security or command and control is better or at par with the global type...

@wiseone2 well up till now americans also not sure they kill Osama bin ladin in Abbotabad or he died before of his sickness earlier.. that's all propaganda, by which both Countries (USA & Pak) got so much... So it's all game ..
and about AQ, he is only a culprit who took all bad things onto his name, to safe his nation...so that also something thats not come into media or to people's awareness....
 
.
And how would the NSG (a civilian regulatory body) be able to gain access to the Sub-continent's most guarded and secretive locations??

I can't speak for Pakistan but I know for a fact there is ZERO way the NSG (or any outside observer) would ever be allowed to gain such privileged access to such locations and information.


So I'm going to say you are either misinformed or quoting yet another BS report that isn't worth the paper it is written on.
NTI,isn't this a private body ?

@gslv mk3

thanxx for bursting our good friend Zarvan's bubble. NTI itself is a joke.

Guy's check the leadership of NTI on it's website, it not a just another NGO, it's a full blooded lobbyist group, not to be take lightly. with pakistani experts in it's body too.
I do not think we should be taking this lightly, this might eventually come back and bite us.
 
.
Guy's check the leadership of NTI on it's website, it not a just another NGO, it's a full blooded lobbyist group, not to be take lightly. with pakistani experts in it's body too.
I do not think we should be taking this lightly, this might eventually come back and bite us.

You have frightened me. :crazy:

Time to call our jewist friends. Nothing beats Jewist lobby. :D

Honestly govt must remain on its toes. We shall succeed in joining Nuclear Supplier Group by putting our full diplomatic weight behind our claims.
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom