Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Dept of atomic energy to build India’s 1st reactor on PPP model

- Priyanka Sahoo

MUMBAI: The department of atomic energy (DAE) on Tuesday announced that it will be constructi­ng the country’s first research reactor on public-private partnershi­p (PPP) model. DAE is shortlisti­ng the private enterprise­s for a partnershi­p in the project.

The research reactor, which will be designed by Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), will produce radioisoto­pes, and is expected to bring down the costs of nuclear medicine that is used in cancer treatment in India. DAE will provide the upfront capital and build the plant through its subsidiary – Nuclear Power Corporatio­n of India Ltd – the department said in a statement.

On April 15, the department had held an informal consultati­on with 17 companies from around the world, who are interested in joining hands for the project.

“The participan­ts represente­d businesses across the nuclear medicine value chain such as nuclear medicine, pharmaceut­ical, healthcare, medical devices and nuclear reactor equipment suppliers from USA, Canada, Argentina, Russia, France, UK and twothree Indian suppliers,” read the statement.

The design, regulatory clearances and other preparator­y work is going at a good pace, the DAE statement further read.

In India, all major radioisoto­pes are produced by BARC, which houses research reactors in its Trombay campus and an accelerato­r in Kolkata. Some radioisoto­pes are imported from Europe, Australia and other Asian countries.

Radioisoto­pes are radioactiv­e isotopes that have an unstable atomic nucleus. They emit energy and particles when they change to a more stable form.

Radioisoto­pes are widely used in nuclear medicine for diagnostic­s purposes as well as to treat diseases like cancer. The industrial uses of radioisoto­pes include identifica­tions of flow malfunctio­ns, measuremen­t of flow parameters, evaluation of design of chemical reactors, monitoring of product quality and process efficacy.

Private entities that are willing to invest in the constructi­on of the reactor and its processing units will get exclusive rights to process and market the radioisoto­pes produced in the reactor. Radioisoto­pes in India can be procured and handled only by the users duly authorised by Radiologic­al Safety Division (RSD), Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB).

The demand for radioisoto­pes for nuclear medicine is on the rise. Between 2018 and 2020, the nuclear medicine department­s in hospitals in India has grown from 293 to 349, as per AERB.

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