Australia offers uranium, coal to energy-starved India
By Manoj Kumar
NEW DELHI, Sept 5 (Reuters) – Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said he would seal a civil nuclear deal to sell uranium to India on Friday, offering to ramp up supplies of energy to help the emerging Asian giant overcome chronic shortages.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi greeted Abbott with full state honours during his two-day visit to India. The two leaders were due to hold formal talks later and sign the deal to sell uranium for peaceful power generation.
"Prime Minister Modi and I will today sign a nuclear cooperation agreement," Abbott told business leaders.
"My hope is we can become (a) reliable source of energy resources and food security for India," Abbott said.
Nuclear power accounts for just 3 percent of output, down from 3.7 percent three years ago.
The Australian government in July approved a A$16.5 billion coal and rail project in the province of Queensland by Indian firm Adani Mining Pty Ltd
However, nuclear power is key to future energy plans in India, where a quarter of the 1.2 billion population has little or no access to electricity, a situation Modi has vowed to tackle.
Earlier this week, Modi was in Japan where he sought to accelerate negotiations of a civil nuclear agreement modeled on a deal with the United States in 2008 that ended years of isolation after India tested a nuclear weapon in 1998.
India operates 20 mostly small reactors at six sites with a capacity of 4,780 MW, or 2 percent of its total power capacity, 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.
In an apparent bid to remove an irritant between the two nations, Abbott was due hand over to Modi a $5 million statue of the Hindu god Shiva that had been illegally trafficked and a stone statue that had been displayed in an Australian gallery.
Abbott says ties between the two former British colonies are not as close as they should be.