RPK
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India to sign nuclear convention
In an attempt to clear the ground for civil nuclear cooperation with the United States before the arrival of President Barack Obama, India plans to sign a critical international agreement that defines the terms of liability and compensation in the event of an atomic accident.
Called the Convention on the Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage, the treaty has been at the centre of intense negotiations in the last few weeks between Delhi, Washington, the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna and the major international corporations involved in atomic power generation.
While the US nuclear industry has raised concerns that the recently enacted Indian legislation on civil nuclear liability is not in tune with the international standards defined by the CSC, the UPA government has insisted otherwise.
While the lawyers from both sides will continue to explore the issue, India’s signature on the CSC is likely to create the legal and diplomatic space for moving forward.
In the last few weeks, India has been hinting at the possibility of signing the treaty, which sources say will bring major benefits to India in terms of additional compensation to victims of nuclear accidents beyond that offered by the domestic legislation as well as address some the potential trans-border issues that could emerge out of India’s plans to build a large nuclear industry.
Government sources briefing reporters here on Obama’s visit were not willing to say when exactly India will sign the CSC. The Cabinet is expected to take a decision on this shortly.
“We hope to wrap up the all the governmental work on the liability issue before the president’s visit so that the corporations on the two sides can begin to find their way forward”, sources here said.
The nuclear liability issue figured prominently in the talks between the Indian government and the visiting US Under Secretary of State William Burns who was here earlier this week to finalise the agenda for Obama’s visit.
Burns also briefed the Indian government on its new package of military assistance to Pakistan, worth $ 2. 29 billion, before it was announced in Washington on Friday.
In response, the sources said, Delhi laid out two major concerns. One was about the likelihood of Pakistan “misusing this assistance against India” and the other was about the “impact on the military balance” between Islamabad and Delhi.
While it has noted the Obama Administration’s recent rejection of Pakistan’s calls for US mediation on Kashmir, Delhi is fully aware of the possibility of major violent incidents being engineered in the sensitive state on the eve of the President’s trip.
The sources pointed to the pattern of major terror attacks before the visits of Presidents Bill Clinton (March 2000) and George W. Bush (March 2006) with a view to internationalise the Kashmir question.
The sources were reluctant to spell out the specific outcomes from Obama’s visit. A range of issues are said to be under discussion and these include liberalisation of US controls on high technology exports to India and the US support for a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.
Among the US priorities are expanded market access to a range of American goods. Officials form the commerce ministry are said to be reviewing the wish list of the Obama Administration.
The sources say the negotiations on possible agreements to be announced during Obama’s visit could go right down to the wire as it happened in the run-up to the earlier summits between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Bush. With two weeks to go before Obama arrives—in Mumbai on November —¿there is time and space to shape the final outcomes of the President’s visit to India the sources said.
In an attempt to clear the ground for civil nuclear cooperation with the United States before the arrival of President Barack Obama, India plans to sign a critical international agreement that defines the terms of liability and compensation in the event of an atomic accident.
Called the Convention on the Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage, the treaty has been at the centre of intense negotiations in the last few weeks between Delhi, Washington, the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna and the major international corporations involved in atomic power generation.
While the US nuclear industry has raised concerns that the recently enacted Indian legislation on civil nuclear liability is not in tune with the international standards defined by the CSC, the UPA government has insisted otherwise.
While the lawyers from both sides will continue to explore the issue, India’s signature on the CSC is likely to create the legal and diplomatic space for moving forward.
In the last few weeks, India has been hinting at the possibility of signing the treaty, which sources say will bring major benefits to India in terms of additional compensation to victims of nuclear accidents beyond that offered by the domestic legislation as well as address some the potential trans-border issues that could emerge out of India’s plans to build a large nuclear industry.
Government sources briefing reporters here on Obama’s visit were not willing to say when exactly India will sign the CSC. The Cabinet is expected to take a decision on this shortly.
“We hope to wrap up the all the governmental work on the liability issue before the president’s visit so that the corporations on the two sides can begin to find their way forward”, sources here said.
The nuclear liability issue figured prominently in the talks between the Indian government and the visiting US Under Secretary of State William Burns who was here earlier this week to finalise the agenda for Obama’s visit.
Burns also briefed the Indian government on its new package of military assistance to Pakistan, worth $ 2. 29 billion, before it was announced in Washington on Friday.
In response, the sources said, Delhi laid out two major concerns. One was about the likelihood of Pakistan “misusing this assistance against India” and the other was about the “impact on the military balance” between Islamabad and Delhi.
While it has noted the Obama Administration’s recent rejection of Pakistan’s calls for US mediation on Kashmir, Delhi is fully aware of the possibility of major violent incidents being engineered in the sensitive state on the eve of the President’s trip.
The sources pointed to the pattern of major terror attacks before the visits of Presidents Bill Clinton (March 2000) and George W. Bush (March 2006) with a view to internationalise the Kashmir question.
The sources were reluctant to spell out the specific outcomes from Obama’s visit. A range of issues are said to be under discussion and these include liberalisation of US controls on high technology exports to India and the US support for a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.
Among the US priorities are expanded market access to a range of American goods. Officials form the commerce ministry are said to be reviewing the wish list of the Obama Administration.
The sources say the negotiations on possible agreements to be announced during Obama’s visit could go right down to the wire as it happened in the run-up to the earlier summits between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Bush. With two weeks to go before Obama arrives—in Mumbai on November —¿there is time and space to shape the final outcomes of the President’s visit to India the sources said.