Vinod2070
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More than the nuclear reactors themselves, it is the end of the "Technology Denial" regime around India that is more interesting.
Side-effects of Npowerment-Special Report-Sunday Specials-Opinion-The Times of India
Its just not a nuclear deal and that is why it is so important.
Side-effects of Npowerment
Thought for the day: Corus, the Anglo-Dutch steel giant now in the Tata kitty makes high-grade advanced steel that could be used to make rust-free hypodermic syringes, golf club heads and even bicycle tubes. Now that Tata owns Corus, this steel would be available to the Indian manufacturing sector, right? Wrong. Because it can also be used to make centrifuges in uranium enrichment, it's denied to India. So the Tatas may own it, but cannot sell the steel in India.
Quite apart from nuclear energy, the 'nuclear deal' as it is inappropriately but widely known, is a deal for India to access all those technologies that may make nuclear power, but could also be used to make a perfect coffee-pot. Ravinder Pal Singh, who has studied technology denial regimes against India for years at SIPRI in Stockholm, says it's inaccurate to call these technologies "dual-use". "For India's purposes, these are controlled technologies, which mean countries use denial regimes to deny India access to these technologies, whether they are in the civilian or military sectors."
As the nuclear deal heads for its denouement and the country emerges from a bruising debate on its obscure and esoteric merits, for the average Indian the deal is still a mystery. If all this is going to do is increase India's energy generation by 8%, what is the big deal about? That's because it's more than just nuclear energy — after three decades it opens India up to advanced technologies in sectors as diverse as aerospace, pharmaceuticals, automotives, defence and IT. And there lies the real importance of the deal.
Let's do a random check of what opens up for India if the deal clears the NSG hurdle. Currently we can only look at what is called "sunset technologies" — stuff that is no longer competitive. Advanced technologies in any field are denied to Indian manufacturing facilities at the moment.
But with an NSG waiver, technologies that are younger than seven years suddenly become accessible. And the sectors that stand to gain are:
IT and software
These sectors will be the biggest beneficiaries as a relaxation in global technology rules gives India access to much more advanced tech, spelling a quantum leap for the Infosys, TCS and Wipros of the country. Indian companies now have to reinvent the wheel, so to speak, before they can jump to the next level. For instance, access to high-performance computing systems — a lot of which are currently denied to India under various export control regimes — will put Indian software and IT R&D in a different league.
HPC systems have contributed to leading-edge developments in such diverse applications as weapons design, integrated-circuit simulation, automobile crash simulation, seismic prospecting, and drug design.
Oil and electronics
This includes technology used in weather analysis and forecasting. As it also has nuclear applications, it has thus far been denied to India. Digital phosphor oscilloscopes, which are indispensable for oil refineries and electronics industry, also have a nuclear role and are currently barred — but will now be available. Filamentary poles, important for making tennis rackets, golf clubs and fishing poles, are also inaccessible because they can be used for uranium enrichment.
Mining and power
Compressors, testing systems, furnaces for power generation, mining equipment, high-voltage power supplies, industrial and scientific equipment like heat exchangers, pipings, fittings, valves, measuring and calibrating equipment... Many of these have applications in different sectors and access to them would give Indian manufacturing a huge boost.
Side-effects of Npowerment-Special Report-Sunday Specials-Opinion-The Times of India
Its just not a nuclear deal and that is why it is so important.