Canada, India agree to $350-million uranium supply deal
Steven Chase And Kim MackraelOttawa — The Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, Apr. 15 2015, 10:59 AM EDT
Last updated Wednesday, Apr. 15 2015, 8:08 PM EDT
Canada and India are back in the nuclear
business together after a decades-long moratorium with a uranium sale to
New Delhi that opens the door for Canadians to profit from a growing
Indian appetite for power from reactors.
Canada banned exports of uranium and
nuclear hardware to India in the 1970s after New Delhi used Canadian
technology to develop a nuclear bomb.
Mr. Modi is the first sitting Indian prime
minister to make a bilateral visit to Canada in more than 40 years –
before relations chilled after New Delhi’s nuclear testing.
“Canada giving uranium to India is a mark of trust and confidence,” the Indian leader said.
Mr. Modi, whose country aims to increase
its share of electricity generated by nuclear power to 25 per cent by
2050 from 4 per cent today, told reporters in Ottawa how highly he
prizes the radioactive ore.
“For me, uranium is not just a mineral.
For me, it is an article of faith [and] trust,” Mr. Modi said. “This is
to save the world, in effect, to save the world from global warming and
climate change.”
Cameco CEO Tim Gitzel said the Indian
uranium deal represents a small portion of annual sales. For instance,
Cameco expects to sell nearly 15,000 metric tonnes in 2015.
The agreement paves the way for the
Saskatchewan company, the world’s second-largest uranium producer, to
sell more in the years ahead as India vastly expands nuclear power
generation. India’s nuclear energy building program is second only to
China’s in scale.
He said much of the long-term growth Cameco sees in the uranium industry will come from India.
“We want to be the preferred seller to India,” he said. “Today is just the start of the relationship.”
Mr. Gitzel said Canada’s competitors
include Kazakhstan, the world leader in uranium production, as well as
Russia and the French.
Nuclear trade between Canada and India has the potential to go far beyond uranium, extending to exports of hardware.
A deal reached by U.S. President Barack
Obama and Mr. Modi in January appears to represent a breakthrough on
this matter. The leaders agreed the legal liability of U.S. nuclear
technology suppliers would be limited. New Delhi would presumably extend
this accommodation to other country’s suppliers.
Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall, who played
a major role in the deal, characterized the sale as helping a country
with similar values and a boon for his province.
He said 45 per cent of Cameco’s work force
in Saskatchewan is aboriginal. “This is the largest industrial employer
of First Nations and Métis people in our province.”
The Premier said a starting job as a miner pays $60,000 to $70,000. “These are good careers.”
Critics
of the deal suggest providing India with uranium for its nuclear power
plants will free up New Delhi to use other stores of the radioactive ore
for nuclear weaponry. Mr. Wall said Canada is “responsible for our
uranium” – and ensuring it is used for peaceful means by India – and
should not deny itself business in rapidly growing markets such as India
and China.
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