Tummalapalle in Kadapa District in Andhra Pradesh could have one of the largest uranium  reserves in the world. Recent studies have indicated that it could have a  reserve of 1.5 lakh tonnes of the scarce material. 
 Secretary, Department of Atomic Energy, and Chairman of the Atomic  Energy Commission Srikumar Banerjee said: “Studies have already shown  that the area had a confirmed reserve of 49,000 tonnes and recent  surveys indicated that this figure could go up even three folds.” 
 He said uranium deposits in Tummalapalle appeared to be spread over 35  km. Exploratory works are under way. At present, the country is  estimated to have a total reserve of about 1,75,000 tonnes of uranium,  apart from this. 
 Terming the new findings a major development, Dr. Banerjee, however,  pointed out that the indigenous reserves would still not be sufficient  to meet the entire demand of the country's nuclear programme. “The new  findings would only augment the indigenous supply of uranium. There  would still be a significant gap. We would still have to import.” 
“Nuclear power is absolutely essential to meet the growing energy needs  of the country. If the economy has to grow by 9 per cent per annum, we  need a 10 per cent growth in electricity production. We cannot do  without nuclear power.”  
 According to a NPCIL note, there would be two independent and diverse  systems to shut down the reactor, a passive decay heat removal system to  ensure cooling of the reactor core even in case of total loss of power  and steel-lined containment to contain the entire radioactivity within  the reactor building even in a severe accident scenario. 
 Noting that the country already had 20 nuclear power plants with a total  capacity of 4,780 MW in operation and seven more with a capacity of  5,300 MW were under construction, NPCIL Chairman and Managing Director  S.K. Jain said more reactors were being planned to take the total  installed capacity to at least 20,000 MW by 2020. 
 Among other things, NPCIL is working towards setting up two more  reactors of 1,000 MW each at Kudankulam, and two each in Haryana,  Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh of 700 MW each, apart from two units of 1,650  MW each at Jaitapur in Maharashtra. 
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