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India offers veiled warning to nuclear suppliers

RPK

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India offers veiled warning to nuclear suppliers


AFP: India offers veiled warning to nuclear suppliers

(AFP) – 2 hours ago

NEW DELHI — India has suggested that countries refusing to match nuclear reactor sales with technology transfers could be frozen out of one of the world's largest reactor markets.

The veiled threat came in a television interview broadcast Sunday, in which Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao was asked about new Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) guidelines on sensitive uranium enrichment and reprocessing technology.

The guidelines restrict the sale of such technology to countries which, like nuclear-armed India, have not signed up to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

India sees the move as a challenge to the waiver from NSG rules -- negotiated by the United States -- that the country was granted in 2008.

Companies from France, Russia, the United States and Japan are competing for a slice of the $175 billion India plans to spend on nuclear reactors, and Rao hinted that a willingness to provide technology transfers would be a factor in awarding contracts.

"There are leverages that we can exert from our side," Rao said. "We have an expanding nuclear industry. This is a great attraction to the rest of the world."

Asked if that meant India would ban reactor purchases from countries that follow the new transfer guidelines, Rao said: "We will defend our interests to the hilt."

India's fast-growing economy is heavily dependent on coal. Less than three percent of the country's electricity comes from nuclear power, but it hopes to raise the figure to 25 percent by 2050.

The 2008 exemption from NSG rules ended three decades of nuclear isolation imposed on India following its 1974 nuclear tests.

Rao stressed that the the United States, France and Russia had provided reassurances that they would continue to support the waiver.

"The international nuclear order will change in India's favour. I am sure of that," Rao said, adding that the new NSG restrictions were not "set in stone."

The foreign secretary also touched on recent talks with her Pakistani counterpart, as the bitter South Asia rivals seek to mend ties broken after the 2008 Mumbai attacks blamed on Pakistan-based militants.

Despite what India sees as Islamabad's lack of progress in bringing those behind the attacks to justice, Rao said the Pakistani side had shown a greater willingness to discuss India's concerns over terrorism.

"I think the prism through which they see this issue has definitely been altered."

Relations between India and Pakistan, which have fought three wars since the subcontinent was partitioned in 1947, have been plagued by border and resource disputes, and accusations of Pakistani militant activity against India.
 
tht's where i say
Either my way or the highway......or its all about money honey

Jokes apart....i think it comes as a perfect wake up call for Delhi tht instead of trusting others we should put our R&D on thorium base reactors on fast track...
 
India has to take a stand at some point, we survived the restrictions for long long time. IF the West wants to play the same game, no problem we will make it on our own.
 
Just get the thorium reactors working and produce in mass scales.. Its funny that nuclear nobodies like Ireland and New-zealand are behind this..
 
Well Well just wait my friends... They will transfer all the tech.. No one would like to losse $$$$.... And if they cant transfer key tech openly, they will do it behind the doors.. And if at last they dont do.. i would be more than happy as then we will go at full scale for our on thorium babies.. So we will win in both situations... :cheers:
 

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