The reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel is a highly complex operation. Over and abovethe intricacies involved in any large chemical plant, reprocessing is also complicated by the highlyradioactive nature of the process materials. As one would expect in such involved operations, reprocessingplants and their associated infrastructure have experienced numerous accidents around the world. The accident(or incident, as the nuclear establishment likes to refer to such events) at the KalpakkamReprocessing Plant on January 21, 2003, which was described by the director of the Bhabha Atomic ResearchCentre as "the worst accident in radiation exposure in the history of nuclear India", is the latest amongthese. It underscores the likelihood of future, and potentially more severe, accidents with significant risksto occupational and public health and the environment. It also adds to the economic arguments againstreprocessing.