A deal for India to buy nuclear reactors from Beijing could be years away, but Chinese President Xi Jinping's agreement to explore options means his country may now be competing with the United States, France, Russia and several others.
"I think the Chinese are looking basically at the commercial angle, since India is going to be giving contracts for nearly $150 billion in the next 10 to15 years," said Srikanth Kondapalli, a China watcher at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University.
The announcement, made after Xi met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi, comes on the heels of a deal India struck earlier this month to buy uranium from Australia to increase its fuel supplies.
Days before that, Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe agreed to accelerate talks on a nuclear energy pact. Nuclear power, which currently accounts for just 3 per cent of India's output, is key to future energy plans in India, where a quarter of the 1.2 billion population has little or no access to electricity.
India operates 20 mostly small reactors at six sites with a capacity of 4,780 MW, according to the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited.
The government hopes to increase its nuclear capacity to 63,000 MW by 2032 by adding nearly 30 reactors at an estimated cost of $85 billion.
The talks with China will be a further boost to India's bid for international acceptance as a nuclear power producer even though it has not signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.
India open for business
India faced sanctions after testing nuclear weapons in 1998, but the restrictions have eroded since a 2008 US deal that recognised its growing economic weight as well as safeguards against diversion of civilian fuel for military purposes.
It now has nuclear energy agreements with about a dozen countries and imports uranium from France, Russia and Kazakhstan.
"It's a way for India to explore other options," said WPS Sidhu, a senior fellow at Brookings India, on the agreement between New Delhi and Beijing to open talks.
Since the pact with Washington, which allowed India to import nuclear fuel and technology without giving up its military programme, Toshiba's US nuclear unit Westinghouse has been looking to build a nuclear power plant in the western Indian state of Gujarat.
But getting foreign players up and running in India's nuclear power sector has been largely elusive due to disagreements over pricing and a liability law that suppliers worry leaves them overexposed in the event of an accident.
"There are ways of being flexible, but the companies have to decide to move ahead," an Indian official said.
He said talks with Russia to build two units at the Kudankulam nuclear power project in southern India, which had been deadlocked, moved forward in March "within the parameters of the liability law". "India is open for business," he said.
"The aim is to resolve any issues that need to be ironed out." Broader nuclear cooperation in Asia has in the past been hampered by geopolitical tensions, said Rajiv Nayan, a senior research associate at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses in New Delhi.
The US-India deal irked both Pakistan, India's nuclear-armed neighbour, and China, which saw it as an attempt by Washington to counteract Beijing's growing influence in the region.
Last year, China committed $6.5 billion to finance the construction of two nuclear reactors in Pakistan's port city of Karachi, and the two nations are in conversation about building three more plants, according to a Pakistani official.
COMMENTS (7)
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pakistan sold nuclear weapons in blackmarket for money
Writings on the wall - akin to what happened with China/USA relations - business trumps ideology. The harsh reality is that the USA has better relations with China than Pakistan - and same will eventually happen with India. Has to be a nightmare unfolding before your eyes.
After the 1974 nuclear testing by India, US cut off supplies of enriched uranium to India's Tarapur Atomic Power Station. Since this time France, China, and Russia have all supplied uranium fuel to India. Link: http://www.nti.org/facilities/77/
LOL !! We only want Chinese money,not their products.Anyway their product are cheap and of less quality.India should become manufacture country like Germany and US with high quality products.And we have shown our talent,Just we need concentrate on quality.
India and China are sensible neighbors and I don't see any reason why this nuclear deal can't happen. China is business driven country and this deal will work in his favor to get more business in nuclear area. Gone are the days where world looks at India with suspicion.
No nuclear deal with India because it can turn peaceful nuclear deal to weapons developments. Canada has done similar blunder in past.
China-India civil nuclear cooperation is a non-starter. China and India are nuclear-armed rivals with one of the longest disputed and undemarcated borders. The idea of Indo-Sino nuclear deal is far fetched.