The move follows a landmark US agreement to support the civil nuclear programme in India, which is seen by Washington as an economic and geopolitical counterweight to China.
Asia's third-largest economy has long complained about the ban. Uranium from Australia would help it meet an ambitious target for nuclear energy growth, hampered by fuel shortages even at existing plants.
Australia has refused to sell nuclear material to India because it has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Gillard's ruling Labor party will debate lifting the ban at its conference next month.
"I believe the time has come for the Labor party to change this position. Selling uranium to India will be good for the Australian economy and good for jobs," Gillard told reporters.
"This will be one way we can take another step forward in our relationship with India. We have a good relationship with India, it is the world largest democracy, a stable democracy."
The move is set to spark heated debate at the party's December conference, but should easily pass with support from Labor's dominant right faction. The policy does not need to go to parliament for approval, but the conservative opposition also supports uranium sales to India.
Gillard's comments came on the eve of US President Barack Obama's visit to Australia and would bring Australia's uranium policy into line with the United States.
"We welcome this initiative," India's Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna told reporters. "We attach importance to our relations with Australia, which are growing across the board. Energy is one of the key areas of bilateral cooperation."
Washington in 2008 signed a landmark civil nuclear agreement with India over the use of uranium for nuclear energy.
Critics accused the United States of undermining the global non-proliferation regime, but the deal was seen by President George W. Bush as the centrepiece of a new strategic relationship with India.
Australia, one of the United States' closest allies in the region, supported the US-India nuclear agreement as a member of the 46-member Nuclear Supplier's Group, but had continued to refuse to sell uranium to India.
Gillard said the policy shift would apply only to India and not open up potential sales to Israel or Pakistan, as only India had sought and received an exemption from the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Suppliers Group.
"So that puts India in a class of its own," Gillard said. "When you look at other nations, whether it be Pakistan or Israel, they are not in that same class."
Australia has almost 40% of the world's known uranium reserves, but supplies only 19% of the world market. It has no nuclear power stations.
The country now has four mines, BHP Billiton's Olympic Dam, potentially the world's biggest; Energy Resources Australia's Ranger mine; the Beverly mine, owned by US company General Atomics, and Honeymoon mines, owned by Uranium One and Mitsui & Co.
Shares in smaller uranium producers and explorers rose, with Paladin Energy up 3.1% and Toro Energy up more than 10%.
Toro Energy managing director Greg Hall said the policy shift would help smaller miners attract investment.
"For smaller development companies like ourselves, it brings the opportunity of attracting new investors," Hall told Reuters.
"Indian companies have invested in copper and coal mines in Australia, and they are, of course, a candidate to invest in uranium properties for offtake agreements."
Greens opposed
While a decision to lift the ban would be welcomed by Australia's mining sector, it is strongly opposed by Labor's political allies, the Greens, who said the move would encourage a nuclear arms race in Asia and make Australia less safe.
Strict conditions are imposed on uranium exports to ensure it is used for power generation and not weapons. Nuclear-armed India has repeatedly clashed with neighbouring Pakistan, which also possesses nuclear weapons.
India has refused to sign the nuclear NPT, arguing it is discriminatory and flawed in allowing only countries which had tested nuclear weapons before 1967 to legally possess them.
Pakistan, Israel and North Korea are the only other non-signatories to the treaty.
Two-way trade between India and Australia is currently worth about $20 billion a year, with the balance skewed in Australia's favour because of India's voracious appetite for resources.
Canberra has forecast uranium exports to rise from around 10,000 tonnes a year to 14,000 tonnes in 2014, worth around A$1.7 billion ($1.74 billion).
BHP Billiton, which is planning a major expansion of its Olympic Dam copper and uranium mine, said it would review its position on sales to India if the government changed its policy.
Rio Tinto had no immediate comment.
Power push
India's 20 nuclear plants produce only a small fraction of the country's electricity and operate at about half capacity for lack of fuel. It plans to add nearly 30 reactors over the next 20 years, requiring more overseas uranium purchases.
Uranium prices have fallen below $55 a pound since the March 11 tsunami that knocked out Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant. That compares with January's price of nearly $75, itself nearly half a high of $136 in 2007 <UX-U3O8-SPT>.
For now, supplies of uranium to the world market continue to be supplemented with secondary sources of uranium – stockpiled fuel and nuclear arms decommissioned since the end of the Cold War -- which are now in decline. That additional supply provided nearly half of demand in 1999 but by 2010 it had dropped to 30%, according to sector estimates.
The decline in secondary supply may accelerate once the "megatons for megawatts" programme that converts Russian nuclear warheads into reactor fuel expires in two years, taking secondary supply lines from Russian and US uranium stocks to as low as 5%, from 40% now, analysts say.
BHP, Cameco, Rio Tinto and others are taking steps to dig new mines and expand old ones to take advantage of a forecast 20 percent leap in global uranium consumption by 2015.
In Australia, BHP also wants to mine 90,000 tonnes of uranium from its Yeelirrie deposit over 30 years but has yet to break any ground.
COMMENTS (49)
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@antanu:
My dearest, who has a bigger population? Japan or Pakistan?
@Yuri Kondratyuk: no its not credibility my dear....its only the market size which matters. value of uranium would be chicken feed in comparison with other benefits to be made by aussies.Thats where population of a country counts....otherwise with nuclear power India would hardly produce 5% of its power requirement in the next 20 years.
@Hamood: you cares, you forgot to add this at the last- '-with the help of pakistan'
Ali did you change your name to Hamood?
@Ali: You are a gem. Please keep the pearls of wisdom coming. We are eagerly waiting to lap the fountain of knowledge in you
@Hamood: Lets say you are correct in your prediction. How does that benefit Pakistan? Beyond talk which is cheap, China has never helped your country in any war with India, it has not invested in large projects, it has not given significant humanitarian aid, it has not stood up against US which is running amok in your country, it has not bought any significant Pakistani goods. So my advise to you is just focus your efforts on making Pakistan a country that the world is compelled to look up to like China & India.
@Hamood: There is an easy way to deflate China. The time will soon come when major importers will stop buying from China for strategic as well as practical reasons. India, Brazil, Indonesia will be next low cost factories of the world. All of whom are being actively courted by first world nations. I know China is the only country that supposedly supports Pakistan today so your blind faith in China is understandable. But just wait until the Chinese fully understand your countries shenanigans in Xinjiang. They will become enemies in a heartbeat
Who cares about Australian partnership with India? US, India, Australia and others must realize that China is going to be the next superpower and US will become like another Great Britain soon. Their strategic containment of China will never work. China is strong enough to not only take on these three countries but the whole world.
@Ali: Son you are amazing, May Allah grant you some sense.
@Australia @Indonesia
Great sense of humour.Hillarious.Almost fell off the chair!
@Indonesia: @Australia:
Ha ha ha......:)
@Indonesia: Good one. Appreciate your sense of humour.
@Ali: That's it. You have put the fear of almighty Pakistan in them. I am sure the Australians are shivering in their boots
@Ali Tanoli: If it was money Oz would sell to Venezuela, Iran & Israel which they are not. What is left unsaid is the grand coalition of US/Japan/India/UK/Canada/France/Germany/Russia to contain China. And a crucial cog in that wheel is a nuclear armed India that can see China eyeball to eyeball. To that end Australia & Canada have lifted uranium export restrictions to India. France & Japan are providing plant technology & US orchestrated the entry of India into the nuclear club. For missiles & nuclear subs India does not need any ones help.
@Ali: Pakistan should build strategic relationship with Indonesia .
Dear Mr. Ali,
Brillian idea. We accept, we accept. Let us form a strategic relationship and be all-weather friends. We will together send your 5 and our 2 huge submarines to Australia. We will smash the tiny Australian landmass with our mighty submarines and sink the whole country into the ocean. We can do that to India and the US too if you want.
Let us know when you want to set sail. We're getting the submarines ready.
Your strategic all-weather friend, Indonesia
@Ali: Pakistan must react by sending the Australian ambassador withdraw all intelligence corporation and send a few submarines to that tiny country and put the fear of Allah into them Dear Mr. Ali,
Please forgive us for our folly and spare us the wrath of your huge 5 submarine fleet. We've never seen such powerful vessels and didn't even know you could build them. We are sure that if your submarines rammed our tiny country it would sink into the Indian ocean. Or is it the Pacific - can't say since we span both the oceans? We are so afraid, we promise never to talk to India ever again.
We have chosen sides, and we have chosen Pakistan. With all the billions that Pakistan has invested in Australia and the aid we get from you every year, we can't live without you. We are also cancelling the security pact we just signed with the US. Can you please sign this pact instead so you can protect Australia and be our all-weather friend? In fact, we are sending some uranium to Pakistan as a token of our goodwill. Let us know if you need more - there's more where that came from.
Cheerio, Australia
Kangroo hats indian skin more than any thing else and pakistan dont care about australian
India is better than Pakistan in everything. Australia knows that. Apparently, Pakistan and Pakistanis are still delusional about their +ve influence on this world so they still think they can compete with India. Well good luck with that. The world will embrace India while you watch and while your sugar daddy china will embrace you somewhat superficially as it did in 1965, 1971, 1999 and in 2008 too.
@Ali: Again you do un necessary cribing about India's poor. Has India's poor stopped it from it's economy growth. If Pakistan has lesser poor why isn't it in the world map of successful and economically strong nation ? Your whole nation survives on world funds. Speaks everything about one's poverty.
Pakistan has a history of nuclear proliferation and so does china. There is no arguing that. India has no such history. It just behooves me to think that after all this, they wouldn't be ashamed to beg for more uranium. Every time India has to make a deal with some country, Pakistan has to drag it down like it is some sort of equal and play the party pooper. Well it is not. India has policies geared towards Economic growth and is heading in that direction. Pakistan is doing neither. So Pakistan is not in the same league or class of India. It is an insult for India to be even equated with Pakistan. Let India continue its own business proposals with other countries. It is none of Pakistan's damn business.
@BruteForce:
Ever heard of GSP+ status mate? Bangladesh is already in GSP Plus category for EU & USA.
@Ali: "Australia must be warned of the consequences of such an action . Australia would rethink this decision once they realise it would mean them being forced to pick sides Pakistan should build strategic relationship with Indonesia ."
Some observations:
So you think that Australia is forced to pick sides between India and Pakistan it will pick Pakistan? How delusional are you?
You think Indonesia would support you against India just because it is a Muslim country? Are you aware that Malaysia and Indonesia have an Free Trade Agreement (much more liberal than MFN by the way) with India as part of Indo-Asean treaty.
You further say : "Pakistan must react by sending the Australian ambassador withdraw all intelligence corporation and send a few submarines to that tiny country and put the fear of Allah into them"
Your hubris is amazing,
@ Patrick, Ali Tanoli Do you want to prove that Pakistanis are, in general, short sighted and short of reasoning.
@Harris Sour grapes
@Ali You were quite studious in your school days. You put a lot of efforts studying your textbooks.
@Ali: "Pakistan must react by sending the Australian ambassador withdraw all intelligence corporation and send a few submarines to that tiny country and put the fear of Allah into them "
I suggest you look at the Map of the World !!! That tiny countyr is 10 times the size of Pakistan and has possibly only 15% of your population and still has GDP per capita of 66 times, that of Pakistan !!!! Wake up !! The world is not scared of Pakistani Gun Boat threats as when they react their may not be Pakistan left in such an event !!!!
@Ali:
Do you realize maps are drawn to scale and that in reality Australia is indeed many times larger than it appears in the map? OK, forget maps. Do you know what a scale is?
@Ali:
You made my day, what a comical relief...
@Ali:
"Well Pakistan tried to get eu deal an India blocked it"
You dont debate with someone who has a higher knowledge of things than you. EU deal? It went against the WTO and not only India but countries like Bangladesh blocked it too. That concession in trading was for Pakistan for floods.
Try to trade the fair way for a change. Even Bangladesh doesn't ask for such privileges only the nuclear power Pakistan does..
"India has More poor people in one sate than the entire nation of Germany"
India also has more rich than all of Europe combined. What is your point?
Not only USA, Russia, UK, France and all the major power support India. That is how it got the NSG waiver. You name the Coiuntry they supported India. Even China didn't not vote against India in IAEA! If it were Pakistan not even the Arab Countries will vote for it, forget others.
@Ali:
Dude, my stomach is hurting from laughing so hard. Please stop! You are too funny. Have you considered becoming a comedian.
@Ali: Ali bhai, your comment just lite up my day. Australia is 1000's of Kms away from the sub continent and they are ready to change their stance for economy, then why cant we keep aside our issues for sometime and concentrate on economy, i am sure it will result in mutual progress
@G. Din: That is what the made themselves into. They thought they can do anything to anybody. Now the world reacts saying ------ with you, we go to do nothing. An insect that grew wings to fly into fire ---------- Pakistan.
Oh my lord... @Ali....who in the world said AUS is tiny country.... "Pakistan must react by sending the Australian ambassador withdraw all intelligence corporation and send a few submarines to that tiny country and put the fear of Allah into them"
hope u read geography too along with ur religious text....this is not ignorance but a false ego and failed mentality
@BruteForce: What's stopping Pakistan becoming like Germany ? Well Pakistan tried to get eu deal an India blocked it....whats stopping India becoming like Germany ? India has More poor people in one sate than the entire nation of Germany Don't be such a simpleton ....many reasons why India cannot be like Germany until America supports it... For. 20 years USA has blocked Russia entry to WTO . USA destroyed the Libyan economy last month
Pakistan must react by sending the Australian ambassador withdraw all intelligence corporation and send a few submarines to that tiny country and put the fear of Allah into them
Australia must be warned of the consequences of such an action . Australia would rethink this decision once they realise it would mean them being forced to pick sides
Pakistan should build strategic relationship with Indonesia .
@Straight_Talk: "No uranium exporting country can afford to keep away from India for long. " No country in the world can afford to come close to Pakistan! What a contrast!
Who cares about the NPT
Australians realise that their long-term threat comes from China. Barack Obama is visiting Australia to tell them this precisely and to increase dramatically the scale of US Military presence in Australia to defend against any future Chinese adventures. Australians know that in the event of a Chinese invasion, it is only US from the Pacific Ocean and India across the Tibet border who can come to their rescue by applying counter- pressure on China - no one else.
A firm anti-Communist, anti-Dictatorship alliance is forming in the East today - this comprises India, US, Japan, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Phillippines, S.Korea and Singapore.
It is obvious for some people to get jealous. However do i need to say anything more than what the Australian PM said. India has arrived. There had been announcements earlier. This is one more for those who refuse to listen. Fukushima surely has hastened the Australian rethink but this was bound to happen for far more fundamental reasons.No uranium exporting country can afford to keep away from India for long.
That wil cause some hearburn to the 1/2 bro's ...
“So that puts India in a class of its own,” Gillard said. no need to say more....
Reality bites . In next 10 yrs ,India set to enter top 5 economy club and other countries like Canada agree to sale Ur to India ,how can Aus stay quite ?
@Patrick:
"Money talks" is a convenient excuse. What stops Pakistan from having the cleanest Governance and the highest Economic growth? What stops Pakistan from doing what Germany is doing and export Nuclear Knowhow?
India has its weaknesses but it also has the strength to overcome all of those weaknesses. This is just a recognition of it.
Look at this statement. "When you look at other nations, whether it be Pakistan or Israel, they are not in that same class."
Is there anything else which any Indian can add to make the point more clearer?
@Patrick: If it were just money, quite a few oil nations would have been big nuclear powers. You see, credibility and reputation matters too.
Yeah , Money talks !. Australia has realised that it stands to lose out big time, financially if it does not engage with India so they want to change a long standing policy. In any case the original policy of not selling Uranium to countries that have not signed NPT was hypocrital since Austalia is happy to shelter under the US nuclear umbrella while taking a high moral tone !