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114058
Tue, 03/30/2010 - 06:59
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USIBC applauds conclusion of US-India reprocessing agreement

Lalit K Jha
Washington, Mar 29 (PTI) Terming it as a significant
step forward for Indo-US commercial nuclear cooperation, a top
bilateral business body today applauded the conclusion of the
agreement to grant India advance consent to reprocess spent
fuel of US origin and fuel burned in US reactors.
"The agreement to make India the third reprocessing
partner of the US reflects the special trust and respect that
exists between strategic partners," said Ron Somers, president
the US India Business Council.
"Today's announcement attests to continuity and
bipartisanship in both countries, and encourages us that
US-India civil nuclear trade is near at hand," he said.
The advanced consent agreement is just the third such
pact ever undertaken by the US with another country.
The US had previously granted similar rights only to
the European consortium EURATOM and Japan, but not to China,
Brazil, Indonesia, South Korea, nor to sixteen other countries
with 123 Agreements.
Finalisation of the reprocessing agreement fulfills an
important provision of the US-India 123 Agreement, which
prescribed deadlines for negotiation of the separate
reprocessing pact.
Under the 123 Agreement, India will construct new
facilities dedicated for reprocessing the safeguarded nuclear
material under IAEA safeguards.
USIBC, supported by the leading US commercial nuclear
suppliers, was instrumental in advocating that the 123
Agreement include advanced consent rights.
Since final congressional approval of the 123
Agreement in October 2008, USIBC has steadfastly promoted
commercial implementation of the historic accord.
"Resolution of two key issues will enable India to
assume a key role in the global commercial nuclear supply
chain," said Ted Jones, director for policy advocacy at USIBC.
"We hope these issues will get early attention, as US
and Indian commercial nuclear firms are eager to partner not
just in India, but in the renaissance of commercial nuclear
power around the world."
The first issue is agreement by the US and Indian
governments on nonproliferation assurances to permit US
licensing for technical exchanges regarding nuclear power.
Delays in these "Part 810 assurances", as they are
known, are currently preventing work by Indian suppliers in
the US as well as collaboration in India, USIBC noted.
The second issue is India's adoption of a regime to
make nuclear liability predictable, consistent with the
IAEA-sponsored Convention on Supplementary Compensation, USIBC
said. (MORE) PTI

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