The Indian government announced it had carried out a series of underground nuclear tests on May 10, 1998.
No, India has both civil nuclear power reactors and nuclear weapons
Pokhran is not a nuclear power station in India. It is known for being the site of nuclear tests conducted by India.
The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Station is a collaboration between India and Russia. It is located in the state of Tamil Nadu in India.
As of 2021, India has 22 operational nuclear reactors across seven nuclear power plants. India has plans to increase its nuclear energy capacity through the construction of additional reactors in the coming years.
Tarapur, Maharashtra, started operation 1969
On May 28, 1998,First Pakistan became a nuclear power.
Just 2 months before nuclear test of Pakistan, India tested nuclear weapon at pokhran. Both India and Pakistan became nuclear power with almost a gap of 2 monhts. After Pakistan North Korea test its nuclear weapon.
Nuclear Power Corporation of India was created in 1987-09.
No, India has both civil nuclear power reactors and nuclear weapons
India has 19 nuclear power stations all together.
See the link below for a survey of India and nuclear power
Pokhran is not a nuclear power station in India. It is known for being the site of nuclear tests conducted by India.
In 1969, tarapur Maharastra India`s first Nuclear power plant has been constructed
The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Station is a collaboration between India and Russia. It is located in the state of Tamil Nadu in India.
1.Kakrapar nuclear power pant, Gujarat2. Kalpakkam nuclear power plant, Tamil Nadu.
As of 2021, India has 22 operational nuclear reactors across seven nuclear power plants. India has plans to increase its nuclear energy capacity through the construction of additional reactors in the coming years.
On May 28, 1998, Pakistan became a nuclear power when it successfully carried out five nuclear tests at Chaghai, in the province of Baluchistan. This was in direct response to five nuclear explosions by India, just two weeks earlier. Widely criticized by the international community, Pakistan maintains that its nuclear program is for selfdefence, as deterrence against nuclear India. A former Prime Minister of Pakistan, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, offered justification for Pakistan's nuclear program when he said that if India were to produce a bomb, Pakistan would do anything it could to get one of its own. It has always been maintained by Pakistan that a nuclear threat posed to its security can neither be met with conventional means of defense, nor by external security guarantees.