Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

BARC designs first research reactor through PPP model

- Priyanka Sahoo

MUMBAI: The Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) has designed a research reactor that can make radioisoto­pes available at low costs to medical and other industries.

In a first, the premiere nuclear research organisati­on of the department of atomic energy (DAE) will share the technology with industries through a publicpriv­ate partnershi­p model. This is expected to bring down cost of cancer treatment in India.

The reactor is expected to come online in five years after the construct begins, said DAE.

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 and to treat diseases such as cancer. The industrial uses of radioisoto­pes include identifica­tions of flow malfunctio­ns, measuremen­t of flow parameters, evaluation of design of chemical reactors, monitoring product quality and process efficacy.

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.

Radioisoto­pes in India can be procured and handled only by the users duly authorised by the radiologic­al safety division (RSD), atomic energy regulatory board (AERB). 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 by the reactor.

The demand for radioisoto­pes for nuclear medicine is on the rise. Between 2018 and 2020, the number of nuclear medicine department­s in the country’s hospitals has grown from 293 to 349, according to AERB. “Research reactors have facilities such as radioisoto­pe production, testing of structural materials for its use in nuclear reactors, making neutrons available for material science studies etc. The reactor planned by BARC primarily has facilities for radioisoto­pe production. Provisions are also made for producing radioisoto­pes for industrial use like Cobalt-60, Bromine-82 etc,” read a statement from the office of KN Vyas, secretary, DAE.

The proposed research reactor is expected to bring down the cost of nuclear medicine. “As the radiopharm­aceuticals will be made indigenous­ly, it is expected that increased self-sufficienc­y will lead to cheaper radiopharm­aceuticals, and consequent­ly reduce cancer treatment cost,” read the response from Vyas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India