HomeNewsIndiaWhat’s spooking Opposition about the SHANTI Bill: Safety, sovereignty, and who pays if things go wrong

What’s spooking Opposition about the SHANTI Bill: Safety, sovereignty, and who pays if things go wrong

The SHANTI Bill to open India’s nuclear sector to private players triggered sharp opposition in Parliament, with MPs flagging safety, liability and sovereignty risks.

December 18, 2025 / 18:44 IST
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Opposition MPs warn of safety, liability and sovereignty risks as Parliament debates opening India’s tightly controlled nuclear sector to private players.
Opposition MPs warn of safety, liability and sovereignty risks as Parliament debates opening India’s tightly controlled nuclear sector to private players.

India’s plan to open its tightly controlled nuclear power sector to private players has collided head-on with Parliament’s deepest anxieties: public safety, sovereign control, and who pays when things go wrong.

As the Rajya Sabha debated the Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India (SHANTI) Bill on Thursday, opposition MPs across parties warned that the proposed law marks a historic, and dangerous, shift away from seven decades of state dominance in nuclear energy.

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The Bill, already passed by the Lok Sabha, seeks to allow private participation across large parts of the civil nuclear value chain as India chases a government-stated target of 100 GW of atomic energy capacity by 2047.

'This is not reform, it is recklessness'