Few Steps Left To Implement Indo-U.S. N-Deal: White House


Washington: The U.S has said that few steps are still needed to be put in place to implement the landmark civil nuclear deal with India and there will be a meeting soon on the proposed insurance pool.

"A few steps still need to be put in place; for example, there will be a conference in the relative near term on how to build the insurance pool elements that will go into actually making this a reality," Phil Reiner, senior director South Asia Affairs at the National Security Council of the White House, told reporters.

Describing the agreement between India and the U.S on creation of an insurance pool to cater to the concerns of the American nuclear power industry on nuclear liability as a "breakthrough", the White House official said that with this there are no further roadblocks at the policy level.

"What you're seeing with the breakthrough on civ-nuke is that at a policy level, there are no further impediments. It's now for operationalisation. The governments don’t necessarily get involved in the decisions that companies make," said Reiner, who traveled with President Barack Obama to India last month during which the breakthrough in the deal was reached.

"At this point, what we've done is we've removed the ambiguity that was preventing those companies from moving forward. There's a few steps that still need to be put in place," he reiterated.

"But it's a massive breakthrough that's held us up for years, that's prevented us from being able to take those next steps. At a policy level, we've been able to push at the leader level to get past that," Reiner added.

According to reports, India has proposed setting up an insurance pool with a liability cap of Rs 1500 crore, half of which will come from the government of India.

The state-run Nuclear Power Corporation of India would pay premiums to cover its liability. Suppliers would take out separate insurance against their secondary liability - which could not exceed that of the operator - at a "fraction" of the cost.

Significant work remains on the fine print of a 2008 deal aimed at unlocking projects worth tens of billions of dollars that have been stuck the drawing board for years.

India has 21 nuclear reactors with an installed capacity of 21,300 MW. It plans to launch construction of 40,000 MW of capacity in the next decade.

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Source: PTI