["Breakthrough" (or "breakthrough understanding") or just crafty trickery!?
The sec. 46. of the Indian Act just cannot be simply wished away, nor
it can be negated via "a nonbinding legal memorandum".
The Westinghouse Electric and GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy are private
companies, they're are pretty unlikely to be tricked.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/is-the-india-nuclear-agreement-really-the-breakthrough-obama-promised/2015/02/04/bc0b0dd2-abc1-11e4-8876-460b1144cbc1_story.html

Is the India nuclear agreement really the 'breakthrough' Obama promised?
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President Obama and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave after
giving a statement in New Delhi on Jan. 25. (Adnan Abidi/Reuters)
By Annie Gowen and Steven Mufson February 4 at 6:51 PM
NEW DELHI -- President Obama stood alongside India's prime minister,
Narendra Modi, in India's capital just days ago and announced a
"breakthrough understanding" that the two countries hoped would pave
the way for U.S. firms to sell nuclear reactors to India.

But analysts and experts familiar with the negotiations say that the
legal issues remain so complex that private U.S. companies may
continue to shy away from new deals in India, despite the developing
country's dire and fast-growing power needs.

So far, the details of the agreements have been sketchy at best,
although the Indian government was expected to release more details
Thursday. On Wednesday, however, officials in India said that the
agreement includes three key parts: the establishment of an insurance
pool that will cover nuclear operators and suppliers for up to $250
million in damages; a nonbinding legal memorandum asserting that
Indian liability law is consistent with international norms; and a new
system of reporting on the status of nuclear fuel and other materials
supplied by the United States.

"We've been characterizing it as a breakthrough or breakthrough
understanding," said a senior U.S. administration official on Tuesday.
But, the official said, "It is not a signed piece of paper but a
process that led us to a better understanding of how we might move
forward."

The talks around the Obama visit were designed to remove some stubborn
obstacles to the sale of U.S. nuclear reactors and fuel to India,
sales that had been cut off after India exploded a nuclear device in
1974 and tested nuclear weapons in 1998.

In the waning days of the presidency of George W. Bush, amid warming
relations, the United States finalized a landmark civilian nuclear
agreement with India. The deal was supposed to open a new era of
cooperation between the countries after years of sanctions and create
thousands of jobs for American workers.

But the new cooperation failed to materialize. In 2010, the Indian
parliament passed a strict liability law that angered many in
Washington and effectively stalled efforts by companies like Toshiba's
Westinghouse Electric and GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy to sell materials
or partner to build nuclear power plants in India.

Aides say Modi and Obama -- who met in Washington in October and again
at the G-20 summit in Australia in November -- wanted to move beyond
the gridlock. Negotiators met formally in New Delhi, Vienna and London
in the following months and were frantically trying to forge a deal
even as Obama landed in the Indian capital on Jan. 25.

The talks focused on two key issues. The first was whether, in the
event of some catastrophe, victims could sue in Indian courts and win
unlimited sums, as permitted under India's 2010 legislation. The other
main concern hinged on coming up with a way of keeping track of U.S.
nuclear fuel sold to India to make sure it doesn't go to military use.

On the liability front, Indian officials said that they will create an
insurance pool to cover $250 million in damages in the event of a
major accident, and the government would cover an additional $200
million after that. The country is also planning to align itself with
the Vienna Convention on Supplementary Compensation, which governs
nuclear liability globally. Still, critics charge, those sums are
nowhere near the $200 billion estimated from the Fukushima disaster in
Japan.

Analysts say the real test will be whether the two American-Japanese
companies now sign commercial contracts with the Nuclear Power
Corporation of India. The Indian government has already slated sites
for nuclear power facilities for Westinghouse Toshiba in the western
state of Gujarat and GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy in the state of Andhra
Pradesh.

"My feeling is that there's not as much there," said Daryl Kimball,
executive director of the nonprofit Arms Control Association, a
non-proliferation watchdog group. "The real test is, will GE or
Westinghouse say 'this is good enough for us' or not and whether they
will sign contracts."

Jonathan Allen, a spokesman for GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy, issued a
statement that said that they "look forward to reviewing the
governmental agreement."

The key issue will be whether the conflict between international law
and Indian law can be waved away by a memorandum from India's attorney
general. The memorandum would have to say that the 2010 liability law
"doesn't mean what it says," said a Washington lawyer familiar with
the issues but who asked for anonymity to protect his professional
relationships.

"The fear is that the U.S. government will say this is good enough,"
the lawyer added. "Even if the [Indian] attorney general comes out
with a memorandum saying the law doesn't apply to suppliers, that's
not binding on Indian courts."

The second obstacle has been the requirement in the Hyde Act of 2006
that the Indian government and an independent auditor annually provide
information about the form, amounts and location of any uranium
supplied to make sure it is not diverted for military use.

Obama officials said that the two sides came up with a tracking system
specific to India that will rely heavily on a series of information
exchanges, as well as some information that would come from the
International Atomic Energy Agency, which monitors some but not all
Indian nuclear plants.

The senior Obama administration official said they were "satisfied"
and would "be able to comply with" U.S. legal requirements.

But India is a special case -- and non-proliferation experts have
special concerns about it. India's first nuclear reactor dates to
1956; it now has 21 reactors at seven power plant sites. The United
States and Canada withdrew support of the nuclear program after the
country tested nuclear weapons in 1974, and the United States and
Japan imposed sanctions after the 1998 tests.

Members of Congress will want to make sure that India cannot skirt the
Bush-era legislation and that India did not simply wear down American
negotiators.

"To get this contentious issue off the table, the Administration
simply signed off on the same measures taken by India that the
Administration had previously said were unacceptable," said House
Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Edward R. Royce (R-Calif.) in a
statement.

He took aim at the liability side of the agreement too, saying, "India
has still not met its commitment to give U.S. companies the protection
against unlimited damages that they need to do business there."

Meanwhile, as India's economy has grown, nuclear power has provided a
tiny portion of its power generating capacity -- just 2.5 percent. In
the future, analysts say, India will continue to depend on its vast
coal resources for the bulk of its electricity until 2030 at least.

And the energy landscape is changing rapidly. Solar power, for
example, is becoming cheaper and easier to launch than a nuclear power
plant. Modi's government recently announced an ambitious plan to
expand solar capacity to 100 gigawatts by 2020.

Even if the thorny details of the liability question are worked out --
a big "if," analysts say -- American companies still face the political
realities of India. Although the government concedes that nuclear
power must remain part of its energy mix, particularly to counter
rising greenhouse gas emissions, the plants remain unpopular with
local residents and land acquisition can take years.

M.V. Ramana, a researcher at Princeton University who has written a
book about India's nuclear industry called "The Power of Promise,"
said importing nuclear reactors from America may be an expensive
choice. Ramana studied the costs of electricity at a proposed
French-backed nuclear plant that would be built on India's western
coast and found that the electricity rates could be three times as
high as those tied to other forms of energy.

"There is going to be a huge economic challenge," Ramana said. "How
can they make electricity affordable?"

In the end, M.K. Bhadrakumar, a former Indian ambassador and analyst,
said the "breakthrough" touted by Obama and Modi may well end up being
more of a diplomatic success than a commercial one.

"It was a sensible thing because the next time Modi meets Obama they
don't have to talk about something they are not going to resolve,"
Bhadrakumar said. "They set it aside. It was creating bad air."

Mufson reported from Washington.


Annie Gowen is The Post's India bureau chief and has reported for the
Post throughout South Asia and the Middle East.

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