Fairwood, SK Securities sign small reactor project pact


Fairwood – SK Securities Small Modular Reactor (SMR) Pact: UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Parties Fairwood Nuclear Pvt. Ltd. (India) & SK Securities Co. Ltd. (South Korea)
Agreement Type Strategic Collaboration Agreement
Date of Signing 4 June 2026
Scope SMRs + MMRs in India
Activities Covered Project development, industry engagement, investor outreach, fundraising
Objective Commercial & technical development of advanced nuclear projects + financing
SMR Definition Reactors with capacity up to 300 MW (GOI definition) [S5]
MMR Micro Modular Reactor — typically <10 MW; highly modular
Nodal Ministry (Nuclear) Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), under Prime Minister's Office
Key R&D Body BARC (Bhabha Atomic Research Centre)
NPCIL Role Commercialisation arm; issued RFP for BSR
Budget Allocation (SMR Mission) ₹20,000 crore (Budget 2025-26) [S2]
Domestic SMR Designs BSMR-200 (200 MWe), SMR-55 (55 MWe), HTGR (5 MWth) [S4]
SMR Target ≥5 operational by 2033 [S2]
Nuclear Capacity Target 100 GWe by 2047 [S2]
Net-Zero Target India committed to Net Zero by 2070
Enabling Act Atomic Energy Act, 1962 (amended 2015); Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010
SK Securities South Korean financial services company; brings capital market/financing expertise

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental / Scientific-Technological

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Fairwood Nuclear Pvt. Ltd. (India) and SK Securities Co. Ltd. (South Korea) signed an SMR/MMR pact on 4 June 2026. [S1]
  2. SMR = Small Modular Reactor; capacity defined by Government of India as up to 300 MW. [S5]
  3. MMR = Micro Modular Reactor — typically sub-10 MW; highly portable/modular.
  4. Union Budget 2025-26 allocated ₹20,000 crore for the Nuclear Energy Mission for SMR R&D. [S2]
  5. India's target: at least 5 indigenously developed SMRs operational by 2033. [S2]
  6. India's nuclear capacity target: 100 GWe by 2047, supporting Net Zero by 2070 commitment. [S2]
  7. BARC designs under development: BSMR-200 (200 MWe), SMR-55 (55 MWe), HTGR (5 MWth). [S4]
  8. NPCIL issued an RFP for private industry participation in 220 MW Bharat Small Reactor (BSR) for captive power. [S3]
  9. Nuclear power in India is governed by the Atomic Energy Act, 1962; administered under the Prime Minister's Office (DAE). [S5]
  10. HTGR (High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor) being developed by BARC is designed for hydrogen generation. [S4]
  11. Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 (CLNDA) is the key law governing nuclear accident liability in India — a major deterrent to foreign suppliers/investors.
  12. The Fairwood–SK pact covers: project development, industry engagement, investor outreach, and fundraising. [S1]
  13. AERB (Atomic Energy Regulatory Board) is India's nuclear safety regulator; its replacement NERA bill is pending in Parliament.
  14. BSR = Bharat Small Reactor (220 MW); BSR ≠ BSMR-200 — aspirants must not conflate the two.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper & Syllabus Mapping:

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways; Science & Technology developments and applications
GS-II Bilateral, Regional and Global Groupings (India-South Korea relations)
GS-III Environmental Impact Assessment; Climate change and India's commitments

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's Nuclear Energy Mission and the push for Small Modular Reactors represent a paradigm shift in the country's energy security strategy. Critically examine the opportunities and challenges involved." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "The Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 has been cited as a major impediment to both domestic private investment and foreign participation in India's nuclear sector. Evaluate its implications and suggest reforms." (GS-III/II, 15 marks)
  3. "In the context of India's Net-Zero target by 2070, assess the role that Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) and Micro Modular Reactors (MMRs) can play alongside renewables in India's energy transition." (GS-III, 10 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India's Nuclear Programme & Three-Stage Strategy Foundation for understanding why SMRs are the "next phase" after PHWRs and FBRs
Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 Key legal barrier to private/foreign investment in nuclear; directly relevant to Fairwood-SK pact context
National Green Hydrogen Mission HTGR (BARC's SMR design) targets hydrogen generation; missions are complementary
India-South Korea Bilateral Relations Provides strategic context for the SK Securities partnership
Atomic Energy Act, 1962 & Amendments Legal framework within which all private nuclear activity must operate
NPCIL, BARC, DAE — Institutional Structure Examinees frequently confuse roles; essential for prelims
India's NDCs and Net-Zero 2070 Commitments Nuclear energy's role in India's climate commitments under UNFCCC

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. BARC vs. NPCIL vs. DAE confusion: BARC does R&D; NPCIL builds/operates commercial plants; DAE is the parent ministry under PMO — not MoP&NG or MoNRE.
  2. BSR ≠ BSMR-200: The Bharat Small Reactor (BSR, 220 MW) is the design for private-sector captive use; BSMR-200 (200 MWe) is a BARC R&D design — different entities and contexts.
  3. SMR capacity threshold: UPSC may test "up to 300 MW" as the GOI definition — do not use the IAEA's informal "<300 MW" without qualification, and do not confuse with MMR (typically <10 MW).
  4. Atomic Energy Act bars private ownership of reactors — the Fairwood–SK pact is for development and financing, not reactor ownership/operation; aspirants often assume private sector now "owns" nuclear plants.
  5. CLNDA 2010 is a domestic Act, not a ratification of international conventions — India has not ratified the Vienna Convention on Nuclear Liability; confusing the two is a common error in international law questions.

11. Sources