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Uranium Corporation of India

Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) is an Indian public sector undertaking engaged in the mining and processing of uranium ore. It operates under the administrative control of the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), Government of India, and supplies uranium concentrate that is used as feedstock for India's nuclear fuel cycle.

Key facts

Type Public sector undertaking
Industry Uranium mining and milling
Founded 4 October 1967
Headquarters Jaduguda, Jharkhand, India
Parent body Department of Atomic Energy
Owner Government of India
Area served India

Overview

UCIL is the sole producer of uranium in India. The corporation undertakes exploration support, mining, milling and the production of yellow cake (uranium oxide concentrate, U3O8), which is then transferred for further processing into nuclear fuel for India's pressurised heavy water reactors and other reactors operated by the Nuclear Power Corporation of India.

Background

Uranium occurrences in the Singhbhum Shear Zone of present-day Jharkhand were investigated from the 1950s by the Atomic Minerals Division (now the Atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration and Research). The first uranium mine and mill at Jaduguda were commissioned in the late 1960s, and UCIL was incorporated in 1967 to operate these facilities and to expand uranium production capacity in the country.

Operations

Jharkhand (Singhbhum belt)

UCIL's principal cluster of operations is in the East Singhbhum district of Jharkhand. The mines and processing facilities in this region include:

  • Jaduguda – the original underground mine and the location of the central processing mill.
  • Bhatin – an underground mine adjacent to Jaduguda.
  • Narwapahar – a mechanised underground mine.
  • Turamdih – an underground mine with an associated processing mill.
  • Banduhurang – an open-cast uranium mine.
  • Bagjata – an underground mine.
  • Mohuldih – an underground mine.

Andhra Pradesh

To diversify production beyond Singhbhum, UCIL developed the Tummalapalle project in the Kadapa district of Andhra Pradesh, comprising an underground mine and a processing plant exploiting low-grade but extensive uranium reserves in dolostone host rock.

Other projects

UCIL has pursued exploration-stage and proposed projects in other parts of India, including sites in Meghalaya, Telangana and Karnataka, in association with the Atomic Minerals Directorate.

Timeline

  • 1967: Incorporation of Uranium Corporation of India Limited.
  • Late 1960s: Commissioning of the Jaduguda mine and mill.
  • 1980s: Commissioning of the Bhatin mine.
  • 1990s: Commissioning of the Narwapahar mine.
  • 2000s: Commissioning of Turamdih, Banduhurang and Bagjata operations.
  • 2010s: Commissioning of the Mohuldih mine and the Tummalapalle project in Andhra Pradesh.

Significance

As the only entity authorised to mine and mill uranium in India, UCIL occupies a strategic position in the country's three-stage nuclear power programme conceived by Homi J. Bhabha. Its output underpins the indigenous fuel supply for power reactors that are not under international safeguards, complementing imported uranium used for safeguarded reactors after the 2008 civil nuclear cooperation agreements.

Health, environment and community

UCIL's operations in the Jaduguda area have been the subject of public debate concerning radiation exposure, tailings management and the welfare of nearby tribal communities. The corporation maintains tailings ponds and environmental monitoring programmes, and conducts community development activities in the regions where it operates.

References

  • Wikidata entry: Q7899671
  • Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India – annual reports.