India's Nuclear Program - Advantage or disadvantage

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India's nuclear program is epitomized by Baba Atomic Research Centre's motto –“atoms in the service of the nation”. Due to the increasing needs of India’s burgeoning population of 1.25 billion, India's primary energy consumption has doubled over the last decade – and its economy continues to grow. Dwindling supplies of coal and oil force billions of dollars to be spent by the Government on importing fossil fuels, and this mass consumption drives pollution and ozone layer depletion. Nuclear energy, conversely, is competitively priced in the long run, does not emit pollutants, avoids depletion of our natural resources, and is better poised to address India’s future energy needs as a source thousands of times more powerful than relatively inefficient fossil fuels.
Generation of nuclear power is reliable and sustainable, unlike solar and wind power, which depend upon weather conditions. Although India lacks uranium ore, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala have vast deposits of thorium, which can also be used for nuclear power. Thorium is more chemically stable and safer than uranium – and also pr...

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