India’s Fusion Power Roadmap by IPR Gandhinagar

Context

The Institute for Plasma Research (IPR), Gandhinagar, has proposed a roadmap for India to achieve fusion power. This comes as fusion energy is emerging globally as a potential clean and limitless source of energy, similar to the process that powers the sun and stars.

India is already a member of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) project, which is building a fusion reactor in France.

Background

  • Fusion vs. Fission:
    • Fission: Splitting heavy atoms (like uranium) to release energy.
      Example: Nuclear power plants.
    • Fusion: Combining light atoms (like hydrogen isotopes) under extreme conditions to form heavier atoms, releasing massive energy — the process that powers stars and the sun.
  • Why Fusion Matters:
    • Produces no greenhouse gases.
    • Minimal radioactive waste compared to fission.
    • Potential for virtually unlimited clean energy.

Key Proposal by IPR Gandhinagar

  • Development of India’s first fusion electricity generator:
    • Named Steady-state Superconducting Tokamak-Advanced SRF Hybrid (SST-RH).
    • Will function as a fusion-fission hybrid reactor:
      • 100 MW from fusion.
      • 130 MW from fission, totaling 230 MW.
    • Estimated cost: ₹25,000 crore.
  • Timeline:
    • Full-scale demonstration by 2040.
    • Future goal to reach 2,500 MW capacity.

Global Milestones

  • In February 2025, the WEST Tokamak in France maintained plasma for 22 minutes, a significant record in magnetic confinement fusion research.
  • ITER Project (France):
    • Involves 35 nations, including India.
    • Goal: Sustain 150 million degrees Celsius plasma for continuous fusion reaction.

Challenges Highlighted

  1. Technical Barriers:
    • Maintaining plasma stability.
    • Handling high-temperature materials.
    • Achieving continuous magnetic confinement.
  2. Economic Challenges:
    • Currently expensive and not commercially viable.
    • High initial research and development (R&D) costs.
  3. Timeline Uncertainty:
    • Fusion power plants are unlikely to be in widespread use before 2040–2050.

Significance for India

  • Energy Security:
    • Reduces dependence on fossil fuels and imports.
    • Aligns with India’s Net Zero by 2070 target.
  • Strategic Leadership:
    • India’s participation in ITER positions it as a global leader in next-gen clean energy.
  • Innovation Ecosystem:

Encourages development in AI, plasma physics, material science, and high-temperature engineering.

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