EU, India to collaborate on ‘peaceful uses’ of nuclear energy under Euratom deal


EU–India Euratom Nuclear Energy Collaboration

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2006 India joins the ITER Agreement alongside Euratom, China, Japan, South Korea, Russia, USA. [S4]
2020 (July) India–Euratom sign a formal R&D Agreement on Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy. [S1]
2021 Horizon Europe (2021–2027) launched — EU's flagship research/innovation programme; India designated a key partner. [S5]
2025 (Jul–Dec) EU–India trade negotiations resume; CBAM friction surfaces as a parallel irritant in the bilateral relationship. [S2]
2026 (27 Jan) 16th EU–India Summit, New Delhi — Joint Strategic Agenda 2030 endorsed; Euratom cooperation reaffirmed and expanded. [S3]

4. Core Static Facts

Euratom

The India–Euratom Agreement (2020)

ITER

Horizon Europe

Key Indian Institutions


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Euratom was established by the Treaty of Rome, 1957 — the same treaty that created the European Economic Community (EEC). [S1]
  2. India signed the R&D Agreement on Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy with Euratom in July 2020. [S1]
  3. ITER stands for International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor and is located at Cadarache, France. [S4]
  4. ITER has 7 member parties: EU (Euratom), India, China, Japan, South Korea, Russia, and the USA — India joined in 2006. [S4]
  5. India's nodal agency for ITER is the Institute for Plasma Research (IPR), Gandhinagar, under the Department of Atomic Energy. [S4]
  6. The 16th EU–India Summit was held in New Delhi on 27 January 2026 and endorsed the Joint Strategic Agenda 2030. [S3]
  7. Horizon Europe is the EU's key funding programme for research; it covers the period 2021–2027. [S5]
  8. The India–Euratom agreement covers non-power applications of atomic energy, including radio-pharmaceuticals — relevant for cancer diagnostics/therapy. [S2]
  9. CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism) — EU's mechanism imposing additional tariffs on carbon-intensive imports (iron/steel) from outside the EU — is a separate bilateral irritant in EU–India relations. [S2]
  10. The Atomic Energy Act, 1962 is the primary legislation governing India's nuclear sector; it excludes the private sector from the fuel cycle. [S2 — contextual]
  11. India is a non-NPT state — Euratom R&D agreements with India are structured as science cooperation deals to avoid NPT compliance requirements. [S1]
  12. NSA Ajit Doval and Union Minister Piyush Goyal represented India at the January 2026 EU–India discussions where the Euratom deal was reaffirmed. [S2]
  13. Radiation safety and nuclear security (not just power generation) are explicit pillars of the India–Euratom agreement. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): - GS-II: India's bilateral/multilateral relations; International institutions and groupings; India and its relations with major powers (EU). - GS-III: Energy security; Nuclear energy; Science & technology — developments and their applications; Awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers, Robotics, Nanotechnology, Biotechnology.

Syllabus Headings: - Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India (GS-II) - Indian Economy — energy security (GS-III) - Science & technology — nuclear, fusion energy (GS-III)

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The India–Euratom R&D agreement of 2020 represents a qualitative shift in India's nuclear diplomacy. Examine its strategic significance and the challenges that remain." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "ITER represents both a scientific milestone and a geopolitical statement. Critically analyse India's role in the ITER project and its implications for India's energy future." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Assess the significance of the India–EU Comprehensive Strategic Agenda 2030 with special reference to nuclear energy and R&D cooperation. How does it square with India's status as a non-NPT state?" (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Related
India–US Civil Nuclear Deal (2008) & NSG Waiver Gateway event that enabled all subsequent bilateral nuclear R&D agreements, including with Euratom
India and the NPT / CTBT / MTCR Explains the legal architecture within which India negotiates nuclear R&D deals (non-NPT status shapes scope)
ITER & Fusion Energy Core scientific cooperation pillar of the Euratom agreement; distinct from fission-based nuclear power
Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) — Structure & Mandate Implementing body for all India's nuclear cooperation; BARC, NPCIL, IPR fall under it
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) A key friction point in EU–India trade relations running parallel to cooperative nuclear agenda
Horizon Europe Programme EU research funding mechanism through which India–EU R&D co-funding is channelled
India's Nuclear Energy Roadmap (22.5 GW by 2031) Domestic context within which all external nuclear cooperation must be understood
India–France & India–Russia Nuclear Cooperation Comparative bilateral nuclear partnerships (Jaitapur with EDF; Kudankulam with Rosatom)

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Euratom ≠ EU: Euratom is a separate legal entity established by a distinct treaty (Treaty of Rome, 1957); it shares EU institutions but is not the EU itself. Do not write "the EU's nuclear energy body" without qualification.
  2. ITER = fusion, not fission: ITER is a thermonuclear fusion experimental reactor — not a fission power plant. Confusing the two is a frequent MCQ trap.
  3. India joined ITER in 2006, not later: Some aspirants conflate India's ITER membership year with later amendments or the 2020 Euratom agreement. These are separate milestones.
  4. The 2020 agreement is R&D only, not fuel supply: The India–Euratom agreement is restricted to research and development; it does not involve nuclear fuel supply, reprocessing, or weapons-sensitive technology transfers — the NPT context makes this distinction critical.
  5. Implementing ministry is DAE, not MEA alone: While MEA signs treaties, the Department of Atomic Energy (under the Prime Minister's Office) is the implementing authority for nuclear cooperation — not the Ministry of External Affairs or Ministry of Science & Technology.
  6. CBAM applies to steel/iron, not nuclear: CBAM is a trade mechanism on carbon-intensive goods (steel, cement, aluminium, etc.) — not related to nuclear imports/exports. Conflating the two issues in the same EU–India context is a common error.

11. Sources