Post by Pahlé India Foundation (PIF)
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India wants 100 GW of nuclear capacity by 2047 and to get there, it's opening one of its most sensitive sectors to private and foreign players for the first time in six decades. But expansion and oversight don't automatically move at the same pace. In his latest piece for Fortune India, Dr Aishwary Kant G. from Pahlé India Foundation (PIF) asks the question the headline rush tends to skip: as India liberalises nuclear power, who actually carries the risk when something goes wrong? Reforms that dilute supplier liability and invite new operators can unlock the capital India needs but only if regulatory capacity, accountability, and public safeguards are built to match the ambition. Power without control isn't progress. It's exposure. 🔗A clear-eyed read on what India must get right before the reactors, not after- https://lnkd.in/gzyGaNjw #NuclearEnergy #EnergyPolicy #PolicyMatters #ViksitBharat