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Bihar to get its first nuclear power plant as part of national SMR rollout

Bihar to get its first nuclear power plant as part of national SMR rollout

Indian Express6 hours ago

Bihar will be among the first six states in India will get its first atomic plant under the country's new Nuclear Energy Mission.
On Tuesday, Union Power Minister Manohar Lal Khattar announced a Small Modular Reactor (SMR)-based nuclear power plant in the state following the Centre's approval.
The announcement comes ahead of assembly election in Bihar and comes after a meeting of eastern region power ministers, which included representatives from Bihar, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Odisha, and Andaman & Nicobar Islands.
He confirmed that the Centre had accepted Bihar's request for a nuclear plant, stating: 'If the Bihar government sets up a nuclear power plant, the Central Government is fully prepared to provide support.' Khattar added that Bihar had formally requested such a facility and the Centre would assist in its establishment. Details regarding the site and scale of the plant are expected to be finalised in the coming stages of project development.
Announced in the Union Budget 2025-26 with a Rs 20,000 crore allocation, the Nuclear Energy Mission aims at expanding clean and reliable nuclear power across the country and strengthen regional energy security.
'The government's goal is to set up at least one nuclear power plant in every state to ensure the country's energy security,' the Union Power Minister said adding: 'As the country's growth rate increases, so does electricity demand. Nuclear power is a reliable, sustainable, and long-term energy option.'
SMRs are a newer generation of nuclear technology designed to be more flexible and cost-effective than traditional large-scale reactors, experts say. They can be deployed in smaller grids and are considered safer due to their advanced design.
Khattar also said that the government has prepared a comprehensive power vision for 2035, covering thermal, solar, wind, storage, and nuclear energy projects. The decision is part of a broader policy effort to diversify India's energy mix and address rising electricity demand with advanced nuclear technology.
For Bihar, which has historically struggled with power deficits and infrastructure challenges, the project represents a significant shift. Officials say the plant could help provide a more stable electricity supply and support the state's industrial ambitions.
Alongside the nuclear plant, the Centre has also approved a 1,000 MW battery storage capacity project in Bihar, aimed at enhancing grid stability and supporting renewable energy integration. The government will provide viability gap funding of Rs 18 lakh per MW for this initiative.
This focus on battery storage comes just days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during his visit to Siwan on June 20, laid the foundation stone for a 500 MWh Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) project in Bihar.
Union Power Minister Khattar, while making the SMR announcement, also praised the Bihar government for its recent progress in the power sector, noting the installation of eight million smart meters and a significant reduction in technical and commercial losses.
'Bihar was lagging behind in power sector but it has done a considerably good job,' he added. The Union minister further assured that, in recognition of these reforms, the Centre has agreed to supply Bihar with an additional 500 MW of electricity for the next six months to help meet peak summer demand, and that states facing power shortages would be provided adequate supply from the central quota.

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He said Bansi Lal had to suffer politically for long because of his role in emergency and it was only two decades later, in 1996 assembly elections, that people of Haryana reposed their trust in him and that too after he apologised for his excesses in almost every rally he addressed. 'During the 1977 Lok Sabha election after the emergency was listed, Bansi Lal was contesting from Bhiwani and the Janata Party had fielded Chandrawati against him. Bansi Lal's wife Vidya Devi went to a village to campaign for him. Mistaking her for Chandrawati, villagers assured her full support as they said they have to teach Bansi Lal a lesson. When Vidya Devi revealed her identity, the villagers told her very politely, that they were ready to welcome her with sweetened milk or lassi whatever she wants to have, but no votes this time,' Bansal revealed. Sharing another anecdote, Bansal recalled that while Morarji Desai was kept at the Tauru guest house and leaders like Jaipal Reddy, Chandra Shekhar, L.K. 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His sons, Om Prakash Chautala and Jagdish Chautala, too, endured seven months in Hisar jail, evading police for months by fleeing their village on camelback or hiding in jeeps. Aditya Devi Lal, Jagdish's son and Dabwali MLA, shared family accounts with ThePrint: 'My mother, Seema, was pregnant when my grandfather and father were jailed. No women visited them in prison, per Devi Lal's instructions.' Ram Bilas Sharma, then a Jan Sangh leader, recounted his harrowing 19-month imprisonment to ThePrint. Arrested after a lathi charge left him unconscious for over 3 hours, Sharma said he was tortured in Rohtak, Ambala, and Gaya jails. 'In Bihar's Gaya jail, I, a 6-foot-3 man, was crammed into a 5-foot cell,' he said. Nearly 1,300 Loktantra Senanis (democracy fighters) from Haryana were jailed, with about 600 still alive, Sharma noted. Retribution and rivalry The Emergency's end in 1977 brought political reckoning. Devi Lal, elected chief minister in Haryana's first post-Emergency polls, harboured deep animosity towards Bansi Lal, stemming from personal and political slights. An infamous incident, widely discussed in Haryana's political lore, saw Bansi Lal arrested in a Haryana Youth Congress fund scam. Police paraded him handcuffed through Bhiwani's streets on foot, an act attributed to Devi Lal's vendetta. Political analyst Jyoti Mishra, a researcher at the Centre for Study on Democratic Societies (CSDS), Delhi, said the BJP's decision to exclude Kiran and Shruti Choudhry from its 'Black Day' campaign reflects a calculated move to avoid giving the Congress ammunition. 'Legacy of Bansi Lal, though a formidable leader with a legacy to cash in on, remains a liability in the context of the Emergency,' she told ThePrint. (Edited by Zinnia Ray Chaudhuri) Also read: Control, fear, and division—Congress hasn't changed even 50 years after Emergency

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