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 Jadugoda Uranium Mine, Jharkhand





Jadugoda is a small township of Uranium Corporation India Limited in the
Singhbhum district of Jharkhand State in Eastern India. It is 35 km by road
and 20 km by train from the Steel city of Jamshedpur.



All of the uranium for India's ten Pressurized Heavy Water Reactors (Powers)
comes from a Single uranium processing plant at Jadugoda, a sprawling
complex fed by three underground Uranium mines and the by-product from three
nearby copper mines. Jadugoda (variously spelled as Jaduguda or Jadugoda,
from the word 'Jar agora' which means a grove of the castor oil tree).



Jaduguda exports Yellowcake (U3O8) to the Nuclear Fuel Complex (NFC) in
Hyderabad, more than a thousand Kilometres away in southern India, for
fabrication into fuel rods. Wastes from the NFC plant, as well As nuclear
wastes from other parts of India, are then returned by road and rail to
Jaduguda and Dumped adjacent to tribal villages, on what were their rice
fields? Around 50,000 people live in 15 villages within 5km of the Jaduguda
complex. They are paying For India's nuclear capabilities with their lives.



 The Mining Operation



In Jadugoda extensive mining has been going on since the time of British
India. 26 minerals are currently being mined in the Singhbhum district
alone, including iron ore, copper, manganese, Bauxite and uranium. The mine
is situated in a heavily forested area of steep hills, which frame a fertile
river valley. This is part of the catchments of the Subarnarekha River,
which flows through the states of Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa, West Bengal and
into the Indian Ocean.





 The Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL)



The Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) is a wholly owned State
monopoly charged with supplying uranium to the Indian Nuclear industry. UCIL
is owned by, and reports to, the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and its
operations are covered by the Atomic Energy Act, which makes accurate
information about the Mine somewhat tortuous to obtain.



Jaduguda underground mine and mill (processing Plant) Narwapahar underground
mine, Bhatin underground mine, Rakha copper mine , uranium recovery plant,
Surda copper mine, uranium recovery plant, and Musabani copper mine. All of
these facilities are within a short distance of each other.



 The Jaduguda Mine



Jaduguda is an underground uranium mine, which commenced operations in 1967.
The ore Grade is around 0.06%, a grade so low it would not be considered
worth recovering in other Countries. 1600-2000 feet below the surface, the
Mine workforce works without protective clothing to bring the ore to the
surface.




Ore is brought to the Jaduguda mill in open trucks from the nearby Bhatin
and Narwapahar Mines. These trucks sometimes partly covered by Tarpaulins
and occasionally carrying workers perched on top of the load are a familiar
sight on the narrow roads linking the mines. These dusty Roads also run
through the middle of the villages and are littered with loose rock fallen
from the Overloaded trucks. Seeing children and livestock picking through
piles of uranium ore is enough to give the casual visitor a feel for how
safety standards are observed at the mine. The ore is crushed to a fine
powder in the Jaduguda mill and is then chemically treated (an Acid leach
process) to remove the uranium with most of the uranium removed, the
remaining 99.94% of the mined rock is left as waste. Jaduguda produces
around 200 tones of uranium in the form of yellowcake (U3O8) a year, and has
a processing capacity of around 1000 tones of ore per day. By rough
calculation, this means that UCIL is mining, crushing and then dumping
around 330,000 – 360,000 tonnes of rock every year.



 The Tailings Waste



This waste, known as tailings, is treated with Lime to neutralize the
acidity, and then separated into coarse and fine particles. The coarse
tailings, making up about 50% of the volume of the waste, are backfilled
into the mine cavities. The remaining Fine tailings are mixed with water and
pumped through a pipeline over the rooftops of Jaduguda Village into the
tailings dam, they are final resting place.



Uranium is not the only radioactive element found in the ore. There are a
dozen or so others known as uranium decay products; among them, Thorium-230,
Radium-226, and Radon-222. Each of these presents a unique hazard to people
and other living creatures coming into contact with them. These wastes are
radioactive for around 250,000 years; in human terms this might as well be
forever. In addition to the radiological hazard, Uranium ores commonly
contain varying concentrations of zinc, lead, manganese, cadmium and
Arsenic.





 Nuclear Waste Dumping



The Jaduguda tailings dams have become the nuclear waste dump for the entire
country. Wastes from the Nuclear Fuel Complex in Hyderabad and the BARC Rare
Materials Plant in Mumbai, Mysore, Gopalpur on sea, as well as medical
rewashes from an unknown number of sources are being returned to Jaduguda.
This only came to light when local people began to find syringes, bags and
IV pipes from hospital wastes buried in the tailings. It was an early demand
of theirs that this practice be stopped, which UCIL eventually agreed to. It
is now widely understood that the company still imports this waste, and is
feeding it through the mill, crushing it before discharging it into the
dams. It is likely that some of these materials are gamma radiation
emitters, adding to the radiation hazard suffered by everyone in the area.



Heavy Water: D2O, deuterium oxide. It is similar to light water (H2O) in
many ways, except that the Hydrogen atom in each water molecule is replaced
by "heavy" hydrogen, or deuterium, making the Molecule about 10% heavier
than ordinary water. Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen containing one
Neutron. Indian nuclear reactors fuelled with natural uranium (see entry)
use heavy water to slow down or 'moderate' the neutron radiation produced
inside the reactor, allowing a chain reaction to occur.



Natural Uranium: uranium occurs in nature as a blend of three similar types,
or isotopes. An isotope is a variant of any element, which has the same
number of protons (or atomic number) but differing numbers of neutrons
(giving it a different mass number). Isotopes are almost always chemically
identical to each other but can have very different physical properties. The
most common isotopes of uranium found in natural deposits is U-238, which
makes up 99.27%. The rest is a mix of U-235 (0.72%) and U-234 (trace
quantities). Most atomic power stations use enriched uranium, where the more
useful (Fissionable) U-235 isotopes are enriched to make up a larger
proportion of the mix. Indian reactors use Uranium in its natural
proportions, which mean they have not had to invest in expensive enrichment
plants. Natural uranium reactors need to be moderated with heavy water.


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