Radioactive Pollution ☢️
Ionizing vs Non-Ionizing Radiation · Alpha/Beta/Gamma · Biological Damage · Radiation Dose Units · Mobile Towers · Chernobyl · Fukushima · Nuclear Waste · Disposal Methods · India’s Nuclear Journey · Nuclear Energy Mission 2025
Ionizing vs Non-Ionizing Radiation — The Key Distinction
💡 Think of Radiation As Waves With Different “Punch Strengths”
Radiation is energy travelling through space. The question is: does it carry enough energy to knock electrons off atoms (ionise them)? Non-ionizing radiation — like visible light, radio waves, microwaves, UV — doesn’t have enough punch to remove electrons from atoms. It can heat tissue (microwave burns) but generally can’t break chemical bonds or damage DNA directly. Ionizing radiation — X-rays, gamma rays, alpha particles, beta particles, neutrons — carries enough energy to rip electrons from atoms, creating charged ions. These ions then disrupt biological molecules, especially DNA. A DNA strand broken by ionizing radiation can lead to mutations, cancer, or cell death. The higher the dose, the worse the damage.
| Feature | Non-Ionizing Radiation | Ionizing Radiation |
|---|---|---|
| Energy | Lower energy — cannot remove electrons from atoms | Higher energy — can remove electrons (ionise atoms) |
| Examples | Radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, UV (partial), radar, mobile phone waves | Alpha (α), Beta (β), Gamma (γ), X-rays, Neutron radiation |
| DNA damage | No direct DNA damage (UV can cause indirect damage via oxidative stress) | Direct DNA strand breaks — mutations, cancer risk |
| Penetration | Varies — radio waves pass through buildings, UV absorbed by skin | Varies by type — alpha stopped by paper, gamma penetrates walls |
| Sources | Mobile towers, power lines, WiFi, radar, TV, microwaves | Radioactive decay (α/β/γ), nuclear reactors, X-ray machines, cosmic rays |
| Biological effects | Heat effects (microwave), skin effects (UV → sunburn), cataracts | Cancer, genetic mutations, radiation sickness, death at high doses |
Non-Ionizing Radiation — Mobile Phone Towers & EMF
- Electromagnetic Field (EMF): Non-ionizing radiation from electrical and wireless devices. All electric fields, radio waves, microwaves are EMF.
- Types (low to high energy): Extremely Low Frequency (ELF, from power lines) → Radio waves → Microwaves (mobile, WiFi) → Infrared → Visible light → UV (borderline — higher UV can cause some DNA damage)
- SAR (Specific Absorption Rate): The rate at which human tissue absorbs energy from EMF. Measured in watts/kg. India’s SAR limit for mobile phones: 1.6 W/kg (same as USA)
- WHO position: No confirmed causal link between mobile phone radiation and cancer. The evidence is “inadequate” rather than “safe.” WHO classifies mobile phone radiation (radiofrequency EMF) as Group 2B — Possibly Carcinogenic (same classification as coffee and pickled vegetables)
- Precautionary principle: Despite uncertain evidence, many countries have set precautionary exposure limits. Children may be more vulnerable.
- India’s emission limits: The Department of Telecommunications (DoT) set EMF limits for mobile towers at 1/10th of the ICNIRP (International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection) limits — making India’s limits among the strictest in the world on paper
- Concern: As 5G rollout accelerates, community concerns about tower radiation have grown. TRAI and DoT both maintain that towers within prescribed limits are safe.
- Thermal vs non-thermal effects: The established risk is the thermal effect (heating of tissue). The disputed area is non-thermal effects at low chronic exposure — research ongoing.
- Real threat comparator: X-rays (used medically) are ionizing and measurably more dangerous per dose than mobile radiation. Radon gas (natural, from granite rocks) is a known lung carcinogen — more dangerous than mobile towers. Kerala has higher background radiation due to granite/basaltic volcanic rock (BARC studies).
Ionizing Radiation — The 4 Types & Their Damage Potential
Alpha (α) Particles
Beta (β) Particles
Gamma (γ) Rays
Neutron Radiation
- Stochastic effects (random, no threshold):
- Cancer (carcinogenesis), genetic mutations (heritable effects)
- Probability increases with dose — but even tiny doses carry SOME risk (no completely “safe” dose)
- Severity does not increase with dose — you either get cancer or you don’t
- Examples: lung cancer from radon, thyroid cancer from I-131 (Chernobyl), leukaemia from whole-body irradiation
- Deterministic effects (threshold-based, dose-dependent severity):
- Effects appear only above a certain threshold dose
- Severity increases with dose above the threshold
- Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS): doses >1 Sv cause nausea, hair loss, bone marrow damage; >6 Sv often lethal without treatment
- Radiation burns, cataracts, reproductive damage
- Genetic/hereditary effects: Ionizing radiation can damage DNA in reproductive cells, potentially causing hereditary disorders in offspring. This is the basis for strict occupational dose limits for workers of reproductive age.
- Bioaccumulation: Certain radioisotopes accumulate in specific organs — I-131 concentrates in the thyroid (thyroid cancer), Sr-90 mimics calcium and deposits in bone (bone cancer), Cs-137 distributes throughout muscle.
- Chernobyl legacy: Most clearly documented was the thyroid cancer epidemic — especially in children who consumed contaminated milk containing I-131. Over 6,000 thyroid cancer cases documented.
Radiation Dose — Units & Measurements
| Unit | What It Measures | Definition | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Becquerel (Bq) | Activity of radioactive material | 1 Becquerel = 1 radioactive decay per second. SI unit of radioactivity. | Measures how much radiation is being emitted by a source. Old unit: Curie (Ci). 1 Ci = 3.7 × 10¹⁰ Bq |
| Curie (Ci) | Activity (older unit) | 1 Curie = 3.7 × 10¹⁰ disintegrations per second (activity of 1 gram of Ra-226) | Named after Marie and Pierre Curie. Still used in medical/industrial contexts. |
| Gray (Gy) | Absorbed dose | 1 Gray = 1 joule of energy absorbed per kg of tissue. SI unit of absorbed dose. | Measures energy deposited in tissue regardless of radiation type. Old unit: rad (1 Gy = 100 rad) |
| Sievert (Sv) | Effective dose (biological impact) | Gray × Radiation Weighting Factor (RBE). Accounts for the relative biological effectiveness of different radiation types. | Most important for human health risk. Occupational limit: 20 mSv/year. Old unit: rem (1 Sv = 100 rem). 1 Sv causes radiation sickness; 6 Sv often fatal. |
| Röntgen (R) | Exposure in air (old unit) | Measures ionisation produced in air by X-rays or gamma rays | Historical unit; largely replaced by Coulombs per kg. Still seen in older texts and in RBMK reactor context (Chernobyl control room meters maxed at 3.6 R/h). |
- Becquerel (Bq) = radioactivity SOURCE (how much material is decaying) → measures activity
- Gray (Gy) = energy ABSORBED by tissue → measures physical dose
- Sievert (Sv) = biological EFFECT on health → most relevant for risk assessment. = Gray × RBE weighting factor
- Natural background radiation: ~2.4 mSv/year globally (varies: ~1 mSv in low areas to 100+ mSv/year in high natural radiation areas like parts of Kerala/Rajasthan)
- Chest X-ray: ~0.02 mSv | CT scan: 2–15 mSv | Annual occupational limit for radiation workers: 20 mSv/year
- Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS) threshold: ~1 Sv | Lethal dose (LD50 — kills 50% without treatment): ~3–5 Sv
Major Accidents at Nuclear Power Plants
Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster
- Reactor: RBMK-1000 reactor (Channel-type graphite-moderated, water-cooled). A design flaw: positive void coefficient — steam bubbles increased reactivity instead of reducing it.
- Cause: Safety test during shutdown went wrong. Rapid power surge → steam explosion → graphite fire. Reactor design made the problem self-amplifying.
- Immediate deaths: 31 confirmed direct deaths (2 from explosion, 28 from ARS). Over 600,000 “liquidators” (cleanup workers) received high doses.
- Long-term impact: WHO estimates 4,000 additional cancer deaths attributable to Chernobyl. Greenpeace estimates 90,000+. Thyroid cancer in children especially high (I-131 in milk). 6,000 thyroid cancer cases documented, mainly in Belarus/Ukraine.
- Exclusion Zone: 30 km radius — uninhabitable. Pripyat city abandoned. Zone still exists today.
- Geographical spread: Radioactive plume spread across Europe — especially Belarus, Ukraine, Scandinavia. Caesium-137 contaminated large areas.
- Policy impact: Accelerated end of Soviet nuclear expansion; triggered global nuclear safety reforms; led to formation of World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO).
Fukushima Daiichi Disaster
- Trigger: Tōhoku earthquake (9.0 magnitude — Japan’s largest recorded) → tsunami (15–17m waves) → knocked out backup diesel generators → cooling failure in 3 reactors.
- What happened: Reactor cores overheated → hydrogen explosions in reactor buildings → meltdowns in Units 1, 2, 3. Unit 4 (fuel storage pool) also damaged.
- Evacuation: 160,000 people evacuated from the surrounding area. Many never returned. Psychological trauma was severe.
- Direct deaths from radiation: Disputed. Only 1 confirmed radiation-related death. But mental health impacts, suicide, disruption cost thousands of lives indirectly.
- Contamination: Groundwater, ocean, soil contamination. Cs-134 and Cs-137 detected globally (including Pacific Ocean, North America).
- ALPS Water Discharge 2023 Current Affairs: In August 2023, Japan began releasing ALPS-treated (Advanced Liquid Processing System) water from Fukushima into the Pacific Ocean — 1.34 million tonnes over ~30 years. IAEA approved but faced opposition from China, Pacific island nations, South Korean fishermen. Tritium (cannot be removed by ALPS) remains in water — at concentration levels Japan claims are safe (below WHO drinking water standards).
Three Mile Island Accident
- Reactor: PWR (Pressurized Water Reactor) — Unit 2. Fundamentally different, safer design than Chernobyl’s RBMK.
- Cause: Loss of feedwater → cooling failure → partial meltdown of reactor core. Human error compounded equipment failures. Control room operators misread instrument readings.
- Containment success: Unlike Chernobyl, the containment structure held — no large radioactive release into environment. Only small amounts of radioactive gases and iodine released.
- Deaths/injuries: No direct deaths or injuries attributable to radiation. Some studies suggest slight increase in cancer rates in nearby areas — disputed.
- Policy impact: Transformed US nuclear regulation. Led to formation of Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO), stricter NRC oversight, improved operator training, better instrumentation. Effectively halted new nuclear plant construction in USA for 30+ years.
Nuclear Waste — Classification & Safe Disposal Methods
💡 Nuclear Waste Is Like a Financial Debt Passed to 500 Future Generations
High-level nuclear waste remains hazardous for up to 10,000 years. The Roman Empire lasted ~500 years. Modern nation-states have existed for 200–300 years. We are asking civilisations that don’t yet exist to safely manage waste from our energy choices today. That’s the fundamental moral and technical challenge of nuclear waste. Every disposal method has to answer: Can we guarantee isolation from human civilisation for a timespan longer than recorded human history?
🟢 Low-Level Waste (LLW)
🟡 Intermediate-Level Waste (ILW)
🔴 High-Level Waste (HLW)
- 1. Geological Disposal / Deep Geological Repository (DGR): The most widely accepted long-term solution. Waste sealed in specially engineered containers and buried 500–1,000 metres underground in stable geological formations (granite, clay, salt). Expected to isolate waste for hundreds of thousands of years. No country currently has an operational DGR for HLW — Finland’s Onkalo repository is the world’s first under construction (expected to begin operations ~2025).
- 2. Vitrification: High-level liquid waste from reprocessing is immobilised by mixing with borosilicate glass and casting into cylinders. The glass matrix prevents leaching of radionuclides. India has operational vitrification plants at BARC (Trombay) for immobilising liquid HLW from PHWR fuel reprocessing. The glass is then stored awaiting final geological disposal.
- 3. Spent Fuel Pools: Immediate post-reactor storage. Spent fuel rods are stored in water pools inside the reactor facility for 5–10 years to allow cooling (water shields radiation AND dissipates heat). After cooling, moved to dry cask storage.
- 4. Dry Cask Storage: Spent fuel is placed inside large steel cylinders filled with inert gas, sealed, and placed in outer steel/concrete chambers. A medium-term solution (decades to a century). Used as interim storage awaiting DGR availability.
- 5. Transmutation: Using neutron bombardment in accelerators or fast reactors to convert long-lived radionuclides (like Plutonium, Americium) into shorter-lived ones. Reduces the time waste remains hazardous. India’s Fast Breeder Reactor programme has transmutation potential — converting nuclear waste into usable fuel.
- 6. Sub-Seabed Disposal: Historically proposed — burying waste under ocean sediment. Currently banned under London Protocol (1996). Concerns about leakage into ocean.
- 7. Ice Sheet Disposal: Proposed for Antarctic ice sheets — now banned under Antarctic Treaty. Concerns about ice movement and eventual release.
- What: Japan began releasing ALPS-treated wastewater from Fukushima Daiichi NPP into the Pacific Ocean in August 2023. Total volume: ~1.34 million tonnes, released over ~30 years.
- ALPS: Advanced Liquid Processing System removes most radioactive contaminants except tritium (H-3) — which cannot be removed. Japan argues tritium levels are well below WHO drinking water standards (7 Bq/mL → Japan releases at 1.5 Bq/mL or less).
- IAEA position: Approved the plan — found Japan’s approach consistent with international safety standards and environmental impact negligible.
- Opposition: China and Hong Kong banned Japanese seafood imports. Pacific island nations and Korean fishing communities protested. Scientific debate on long-term bioaccumulation effects remains.
- India connection: India has not banned Japanese seafood. MoEFCC and AERB monitor domestic nuclear facilities separately.
- UPSC angle: Tests knowledge of nuclear waste management, IAEA role, Pacific governance, food safety regulations, India-Japan relations, environmental law (London Protocol, UNCLOS).
India’s Nuclear Programme — From Bhabha to Budget 2025
PHWRs — Natural Uranium
FBRs — Plutonium Fuel
AHWRs — Thorium Cycle
- Budget allocation: ₹20,000 crore for research and development of Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) — announced in Union Budget 2025-26
- Target: At least 5 indigenously designed SMRs operational by 2033
- Long-term target: 100 GW nuclear power capacity by 2047 (currently 8,780 MW — ~11× expansion needed)
- Near-term target: Increase to 22,480 MW by 2031-32 through 10 reactors under construction
- SMR types under DAE development:
- BSMR-200 (Bharat Small Modular Reactor): 220 MWe PHWR design scaled down
- SMR-55: 55 MWe for remote areas, coal plant repurposing
- HTGCR (High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor): up to 5 MWth, for hydrogen co-generation
- SHANTI Act: New legislation enabling private sector participation in nuclear energy alongside public sector (Atomic Energy Act 1962 amendment)
- ASHVINI JV: Joint venture between NPCIL and NTPC — to build and operate nuclear power plants including upcoming 4×700 MWe Mahi-Banswara Rajasthan project
- Kovvada NPP: Government gave in-principle approval for 6×1,208 MW nuclear plant in collaboration with USA at Kovvada, Andhra Pradesh
- Record generation: NPCIL achieved 56,681 Million Units (MUs) in FY 2024-25 — preventing ~49 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions
- Atomic Energy Act, 1962: Central legislation for development, control, and use of atomic energy. Grants government monopoly on nuclear activities.
- AERB (Atomic Energy Regulatory Board): Independent regulatory body for nuclear and radiation safety. Creates rules, conducts audits, ensures NPPs comply with safety standards. Reports to Atomic Energy Commission.
- BARC (Bhabha Atomic Research Centre): India’s premier nuclear research centre, Trombay, Mumbai. Conducts R&D on reactors, fuel cycles, waste management (vitrification), isotope production, radiation applications. Founded by Homi Bhabha in 1954.
- NPCIL (Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd): Designs, builds, and operates commercial nuclear power plants.
- BHAVINI (Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Ltd): Set up to build and operate Fast Breeder Reactors (Stage II). Operating PFBR at Kalpakkam.
- Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 (CLND Act): Sets liability framework for nuclear accidents. Controversial provision (Section 17b) holds suppliers liable — has deterred foreign nuclear vendors from entering India.
- BARC study on Indian NPPs: Analysis of 6 nuclear power plants (2000–2020) found that radioactive discharges from Indian nuclear plants have been minimal — well within prescribed safety limits.
⭐ Complete Radioactive Pollution Cheat Sheet
- Ionizing vs Non-Ionizing: Ionizing = enough energy to remove electrons from atoms → DNA damage | Non-ionizing = cannot remove electrons (radio waves, microwaves, UV below threshold)
- Alpha (α): Helium nucleus | Stopped by paper/skin | Dangerous if INHALED/ingested | RBE = 20 | Radon gas → lung cancer
- Beta (β): Electrons | Stopped by aluminium | I-131 (thyroid), Sr-90 (bone), Cs-137 (muscle) | RBE = 1
- Gamma (γ): EM radiation | Most penetrating → needs thick lead/concrete | Cs-137, Co-60 | RBE = 1
- Neutron: Most hazardous in reactor | Stopped by hydrogen-rich material (water) | Makes other materials radioactive (activation)
- Dose units: Becquerel (Bq) = 1 decay/sec (activity) | Gray (Gy) = 1 J/kg (absorbed) | Sievert (Sv) = Gray × RBE (biological effect) | Curie = 3.7×10¹⁰ Bq
- Stochastic effects: Random, no threshold → cancer, mutations. Probability increases with dose.
- Deterministic effects: Above threshold only → ARS, burns. Severity increases with dose.
- INES Scale: 0–7. Level 7 = Major Accident (Chernobyl 1986, Fukushima 2011). Level 5 = Three Mile Island 1979.
- Chernobyl (1986): RBMK reactor | Positive void coefficient flaw | 31 direct deaths | 6,000+ thyroid cancer cases | 30 km exclusion zone | Europe-wide contamination
- Fukushima (2011): Earthquake + tsunami → cooling failure → 3 meltdowns | 160,000 evacuated | ALPS water discharge Pacific Ocean 2023 (IAEA approved, China banned Japanese seafood)
- Three Mile Island (1979): PWR | Partial meltdown | Containment held | No direct deaths | Ended US nuclear expansion for 30 years
- Waste classification: LLW (clothing/tools) → shallow burial | ILW (fuel cladding) → intermediate burial | HLW (spent fuel) → vitrification + DGR (10,000+ years hazardous)
- Disposal methods: DGR (geological, 500-1000m deep) | Vitrification (glass immobilisation) | Spent fuel pools | Dry cask storage | Transmutation
- India nuclear: Current capacity 8,780 MW | 3-stage (PHWR→FBR→AHWR) | PFBR core loaded March 2024 | Budget 2025-26: ₹20,000 crore SMRs | Target 100 GW by 2047
- India’s thorium: 25% of world reserves | Strategic endgame (Stage III) | Monazite sands in Kerala, Jharkhand
- Regulatory: AERB (regulator) | BARC (research, vitrification) | NPCIL (commercial plants) | BHAVINI (FBR) | Atomic Energy Act 1962
- Mobile towers: WHO Group 2B — possibly carcinogenic | India SAR limit: 1.6 W/kg | DoT limits at 1/10th ICNIRP standard | Kerala higher background radiation (granite/basaltic rock)


