2008-07-31 20:38:42 - AGREEMENT FOR COOPERATION BETWEEN
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
CONCERNING PEACEFUL USES OF NUCLEAR ENERGY (123 AGREEMENT)
The Government of India and the Government of the United States of
America, hereinafter referred to as the Parties,
RECOGNIZING the significance of civilian nuclear energy for meeting
growing global energy demands in a cleaner and more efficient
manner;
DESIRING to cooperate extensively in the full development and use of
nuclear energy for peaceful purposes as a means of achieving energy
security, on a stable, reliable and predictable basis;
DESIRING to establish the necessary legal framework and
basis for cooperation concerning peaceful uses of nuclear energy;
AFFIRMING that cooperation under this Agreement is between two States
possessing advanced nuclear technology, both Parties having the same
benefits and advantages, both committed to preventing WMD
proliferation;
NOTING the understandings expressed in the India - U.S. Joint
Statement of July 18, 2005 to enable
full civil nuclear energy cooperation with India covering aspects of
the associated nuclear fuel cycle;
AFFIRMING their support for the objectives of the International
Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) and its safeguards system, as applicable to
India
and the United States of America, and its importance in ensuring that
international cooperation in development and use of nuclear energy
for
peaceful purposes is carried out under arrangements that will not
contribute to the proliferation of nuclear weapons or other nuclear
explosive devices;
NOTING their respective commitments to safety and security of
peaceful
uses of nuclear energy, to adequate physical protection of nuclear
material and effective national export controls;
MINDFUL that peaceful nuclear activities must be undertaken with a
view to protecting the environment;
MINDFUL of their shared commitment to preventing the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction; and
DESIROUS of strengthening the strategic partnership between them;
Have agreed on the following:
ARTICLE 1 - DEFINITIONS
For the purposes of this Agreement:
(A) "By-product material" means any radioactive material (except
special fissionable material) yielded in or made radioactive by
exposure to the radiation incident to the process of producing or
utilizing special fissionable material. By-product material shall not
be subject to safeguards or any other form of verification under this
Agreement, unless it has been decided otherwise by prior mutual
agreement in writing between the two Parties.
(B) "Component" means a component part of equipment, or other item so
designated by agreement of the Parties.
(C) "Conversion" means any of the normal operations in the nuclear
fuel
cycle, preceding fuel fabrication and excluding enrichment, by which
uranium is transformed from one chemical form to another - for
example,
from uranium hexafluoride (UF6) to uranium dioxide (UO2) or from
uranium oxide to metal.
(D) "Decommissioning" means the actions taken at the end of a
facility's useful life to retire the facility from service in the
manner that provides adequate protection for the health and safety of
the decommissioning workers and the general public, and for the
environment. These actions can range from closing down the facility
and
a minimal removal of nuclear material coupled with continuing
maintenance and surveillance, to a complete removal of residual
radioactivity in excess of levels acceptable for unrestricted use of
the facility and its site.
(E) "Dual-Use Item" means a nuclear related item which has a technical
use in both nuclear and non-nuclear applications.
(F) "Equipment" means any equipment in nuclear operation including
reactor, reactor pressure vessel, reactor fuel charging and
discharging
equipment, reactor control rods, reactor pressure tubes, reactor
primary coolant pumps, zirconium tubing, equipment for fuel
fabrication
and any other item so designated by the Parties.
(G) "High enriched uranium" means uranium enriched to twenty percent
or greater in the isotope 235.
(H) "Information" means any information that is not in the public
domain and is transferred in any form pursuant to this Agreement and
so
designated and documented in hard copy or digital form by mutual
agreement by the Parties that it shall be subject to this Agreement,
but will cease to be information whenever the Party transferring the
information or any third party legitimately releases it into the
public
domain.
(I) "Low enriched uranium" means uranium enriched to less than twenty
percent in the isotope 235.
(J) "Major critical component" means any part or group of parts
essential to the operation of a sensitive nuclear facility or heavy
water production facility.
(K) "Non-nuclear material" means heavy water, or any other material
suitable for use in a reactor to slow down high velocity neutrons and
increase the likelihood of further fission, as may be jointly
designated by the appropriate authorities of the Parties.
(L) "Nuclear material" means (1) source material and (2) special
fissionable material. "Source material" means uranium containing the
mixture of isotopes occurring in nature; uranium depleted in the
isotope 235; thorium; any of the foregoing in the form of metal,
alloy,
chemical compound, or concentrate; any other material containing one
or
more of the foregoing in such concentration as the Board of Governors
of the IAEA shall from time to time determine; and such other
materials
as the Board of Governors of the IAEA may determine or as may be
agreed
by the appropriate authorities of both Parties. "Special fissionable
material" means plutonium, uranium-233, uranium enriched in the
isotope
233 or 235, any substance containing one or more of the foregoing,
and
such other substances as the Board of Governors of the IAEA may
determine or as may be agreed by the appropriate authorities of both
Parties. "Special fissionable material" does not include "source
material". Any determination by the Board of Governors of the IAEA
under Article XX of that Agency's Statute or otherwise that amends
the
list of materials considered to be "source material" or "special
fissionable material" shall only have effect under this Agreement
when
both Parties to this Agreement have informed each other in writing
that
they accept such amendment.
(M) "Peaceful purposes" include the use of information, nuclear
material, equipment or components in such fields as research, power
generation, medicine, agriculture and industry, but do not include
use
in, research on, or development of any nuclear explosive device or
any
other military purpose. Provision of power for a military base drawn
from any power network, production of radioisotopes to be used for
medical purposes in military environment for diagnostics, therapy and
sterility assurance, and other similar purposes as may be mutually
agreed by the Parties shall not be regarded as military purpose.
(N) "Person" means any individual or any entity subject to the
territorial jurisdiction of either Party but does not include the
Parties.
(O) "Reactor" means any apparatus, other than a nuclear weapon or
other
nuclear explosive device, in which a self-sustaining fission chain
reaction is maintained by utilizing uranium, plutonium, or thorium or
any combination thereof.
(P) "Sensitive nuclear facility" means any facility designed or used
primarily for uranium enrichment, reprocessing of nuclear fuel, or
fabrication of nuclear fuel containing plutonium.
(Q) "Sensitive nuclear technology" means any information that is not
in the public domain and that is important to the design,
construction,
fabrication, operation, or maintenance of any sensitive nuclear
facility, or other such information that may be so designated by
agreement of the Parties.
ARTICLE 2 - SCOPE OF COOPERATION
1. The Parties shall cooperate in the use of nuclear energy for
peaceful purposes in accordance with the provisions of this
Agreement.
Each Party shall implement this Agreement in accordance with its
respective applicable treaties, national
laws, regulations, and license requirements
concerning the use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.
2. The purpose of the Agreement being to enable full civil nuclear
energy cooperation between the Parties, the Parties may pursue
cooperation in all relevant areas to include, but not limited to, the
following:
a. Advanced nuclear energy research and development in such areas as
may be agreed between the Parties;
b. Nuclear safety matters of mutual interest and competence, as set
out in Article 3;
c. Facilitation of exchange of scientists for visits, meetings,
symposia and collaborative research;
d. Full civil nuclear cooperation activities covering nuclear
reactors
and aspects of the associated nuclear fuel cycleincluding technology
transfer on an industrial or commercial scale between the Parties or
authorized persons;
e. Development of a strategic reserve of nuclear fuel to guard
against
any disruption of supply over the lifetime of India's reactors;
f. Advanced research and development in nuclear sciences including
but
not limited to biological research, medicine, agriculture and
industry,
environment and climate change;
g. Supply between the Parties, whether for use by or for the benefit
of the Parties or third countries, of nuclear material;
h. Alteration in form or content of nuclear material as provided for
in Article 6;
i. Supply between the Parties of equipment, whether for use by or for
the benefit of the Parties or third countries;
j. Controlled thermonuclear fusion including in multilateral
projects; and
k. Other areas of mutual interest as may be agreed by the Parties.
3. Transfer of nuclear material, non-nuclear material, equipment,
components and information under this Agreement may be undertaken
directly between the Parties or through authorized persons. Such
transfers shall be subject to this Agreement and to such additional
terms and conditions as may be agreed by the Parties. Nuclear
material,
non-nuclear material, equipment, components and information
transferred
from the territory of one Party to the territory of the other Party,
whether directly or through a third country, will be regarded as
having
been transferred pursuant to this Agreement only upon confirmation,
by
the appropriate authority of the recipient Party to the appropriate
authority of the supplier Party that such items both will be subject
to
the Agreement and have been received by the recipient Party.
4. The Parties affirm that the purpose of this Agreement is to
provide
for peaceful nuclear cooperation and not to affect the unsafeguarded
nuclear activities of either Party. Accordingly, nothing in this
Agreement shall be interpreted as affecting the rights of the Parties
to use for their own purposes nuclear material, non-nuclear material,
equipment, components, information or technology produced, acquired
or
developed by them independent of any nuclear material, non-nuclear
material, equipment, components, information or technology
transferred
to them pursuant to this Agreement. This Agreement shall be
implemented
in a manner so as not to hinder or otherwise interfere with any other
activities involving the use of nuclear material, non-nuclear
material,
equipment, components, information or technology and military nuclear
facilities produced, acquired or developed by them independent of
this
Agreement for their own purposes.
ARTICLE 3 - TRANSFER OF INFORMATION
1. Information concerning the use of nuclear energy for peaceful
purposes may be transferred between the Parties. Transfers of
information may be accomplished through reports, data banks and
computer programs and any other means mutually agreed to by the
Parties. Fields that may be covered include, but shall not be limited
to, the following:
a. Research, development, design, construction, operation,
maintenance and use of reactors, reactor experiments, and
decommissioning;
b. The use of nuclear material in physical, chemical, radiological
and biological research, medicine, agriculture and industry;
c. Fuel cycle activities to meet future world-wide civil nuclear
energy
needs, including multilateral approaches to which they are parties
for
ensuring nuclear fuel supply and appropriate techniques for
management of nuclear wastes;
d. Advanced research and development in nuclear science and
technology;
e. Health, safety, and environmental considerations related to the
foregoing;
f. Assessments of the role nuclear power may play in national energy
plans;
g. Codes, regulations and standards for the nuclear industry;
h. Research on controlled thermonuclear fusion including bilateral
activities and contributions toward multilateral projects such as the
International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER); and
i. Any other field mutually agreed to by the Parties.
2. Cooperation pursuant to this Article may include, but is not
limited
to, training, exchange of personnel, meetings, exchange of samples,
materials and instruments for experimental purposes and a balanced
participation in joint studies and projects.
3. This Agreement does not require the transfer of any information
regarding matters outside the scope of this Agreement, or information
that the Parties are not permitted under their respective treaties,
national laws, or regulations to transfer.
4. Restricted Data, as defined by each Party, shall not be transferred
under this Agreement.
ARTICLE 4 - NUCLEAR TRADE
1. The Parties shall facilitate nuclear trade between themselves in
the
mutual interests of their respective industry, utilities and
consumers
and also, where appropriate, trade between third countries and either
Party of items obligated to the other Party. The Parties recognize
that
reliability of supplies is essential to ensure smooth and
uninterrupted
operation of nuclear facilities and that industry in both the Parties
needs continuing reassurance that deliveries can be made on time in
order to plan for the efficient operation of nuclear
installations.
2. Authorizations, including export and import licenses as well as
authorizations or consents to third parties, relating to trade,
industrial operations or nuclear material movement should be
consistent
with the sound and efficient administration of this Agreement and
should not be used to restrict trade. It is further agreed that if
the
relevant authority of the concerned Party considers that an
application
cannot be processed within a twomonth period it shall immediately,
upon
request, provide reasoned information to the submitting Party. In the
event of a refusal to authorize an application or a delay exceeding
four months from the date of the first application the Party of the
submitting persons or undertakings may call for urgent consultations
under Article 13 of this Agreement, which shall take place at the
earliest opportunity and in any case not later than 30 days after
such
a request.
ARTICLE 5 - TRANSFER OF NUCLEAR MATERIAL, NON-NUCLEAR MATERIAL,
EQUIPMENT, COMPONENTS AND RELATED TECHNOLOGY
1. Nuclear material, non-nuclear material, equipment and components
may
be transferred for applications consistent with this Agreement. Any
special fissionable material transferred under this Agreement shall
be
low enriched uranium, except as provided in paragraph 5.
2. Sensitive nuclear technology, heavy water production technology,
sensitive nuclear facilities, heavy water production facilities and
major critical components of such facilities may be transferred under
this Agreement pursuant to an amendment to this Agreement. Transfers
of
dual-use items that could be used in enrichment, reprocessing or
heavy
water production facilities will be subject to the Parties'
respective
applicable laws, regulations and license policies.
3. Natural or low enriched uranium may be transferred for use as fuel
in reactor experiments and in reactors, for conversion or
fabrication,
or for such other purposes as may be agreed to by the Parties.
4. The quantity of nuclear material transferred under this Agreement
shall be consistent with any of the following purposes: use in
reactor
experiments or the loading of reactors, the efficient and continuous
conduct of such reactor experiments or operation of reactors for
their
lifetime, use as samples, standards, detectors, and targets, and the
accomplishment of other purposes as may be agreed by the Parties.
5. Small quantities of special fissionable material may be
transferred
for use as samples, standards, detectors, and targets, and for such
other purposes as the Parties may agree.
6.
(a) The United States has conveyed its commitment to the
reliable
supply of fuel to India. Consistent with the July 18, 2005, Joint
Statement, the United States has also reaffirmed its assurance to
create the necessary conditions for India to have assured and full
access to fuel for its reactors. As part of its implementation of the
July 18, 2005, Joint Statement the United States is committed to
seeking agreement from the U.S. Congress to amend its domestic laws
and
to work with friends and allies to adjust the practices of the
Nuclear
Suppliers Group to create the necessary conditions for India to
obtain
full access to the international fuel market, including reliable,
uninterrupted and continual access to fuel supplies from firms in
several nations.
(b) To further guard against any disruption of fuel supplies,
the
United States is prepared to take the following additional steps:
i) The United States is willing to incorporate assurances
regarding fuel supply in the bilateral U.S.-India agreement on
peaceful
uses of nuclear energy under Section 123 of the U.S. Atomic Energy
Act,
which would be submitted to the U.S. Congress.
ii) The United States will join India in seeking to negotiate with
the IAEA an India-specific fuel supply agreement.
iii) The United States will support an Indian effort to develop
a
strategic reserve of nuclear fuel to guard against any disruption of
supply over the lifetime of India's reactors.
iv) If despite these arrangements, a disruption of fuel supplies
to India occurs, the United States and India would jointly convene a
group of friendly supplier countries to include countries such as
Russia, France and the United Kingdom to pursue such measures as
would
restore fuel supply to India.
(c) In light of the above understandings with the United States,
an India-specific safeguards agreement will be negotiated between
India
and the IAEA providing for safeguards to guard against withdrawal of
safeguarded nuclear material from civilian use at any time as well as
providing for corrective measures that India may take to ensure
uninterrupted operation of its civilian nuclear reactors in the event
of disruption of foreign fuel supplies. Taking this into account,
India
will place its civilian nuclear facilities under India-specific
safeguards in perpetuity and negotiate an appropriate safeguards
agreement to this end with the IAEA.
ARTICLE 6 - NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE ACTIVITIES
In keeping with their commitment to full civil nuclear cooperation,
both Parties, as they do with other states with advanced nuclear
technology, may carry out the following nuclear fuel cycle
activities:
i) Within the territorial jurisdiction of either Party, enrichment up
to twenty percent in the isotope 235 of uranium transferred pursuant
to
this Agreement, as well as of uranium used in or produced through the
use of equipment so transferred, may be carried out.
ii) Irradiation within the territorial jurisdiction of either Party
of
plutonium, uranium-233, high enriched uranium and irradiated nuclear
material transferred pursuant to this Agreement or used in or
produced
through the use of non-nuclear material, nuclear material or
equipment
so transferred may be carried out.
iii) With a view to implementing full civil nuclear cooperation as
envisioned in the Joint Statement of the Parties of July 18, 2005,
the
Parties grant each other consent to reprocess or otherwise alter in
form or content nuclear material transferred pursuant to this
Agreement
and nuclear material and by-product material used in or produced
through the use of nuclear material, non-nuclear material, or
equipment
so transferred. To bring these rights into effect, India will
establish
a new national reprocessing facility dedicated to reprocessing
safeguarded nuclear material under IAEA safeguards and the Parties
will
agree on arrangements and procedures under which such reprocessing or
other alteration in form or content will take place in this new
facility. Consultations on arrangements and procedures will begin
within six months of a request by either Party and will be concluded
within one year. The Parties agree on the application of IAEA
safeguards to all facilities concerned with the above activities.
These
arrangements and procedures shall include provisions with respect to
physical protection standards set out in Article 8, storage standards
set out in Article 7, and environmental protections set forth in
Article 11 of this Agreement, and such other provisions as may be
agreed by the Parties. Any special fissionable material that may be
separated may only be utilized in national facilities under IAEA
safeguards.
iv) Post-irradiation examination involving chemical dissolution or
separation of irradiated nuclear material transferred pursuant to
this
Agreement or irradiated nuclear material used in or produced through
the use of non-nuclear material, nuclear material or equipment so
transferred may be carried out.
ARTICLE 7 - STORAGE AND RETRANSFERS
1. Plutonium and uranium 233 (except as either may be contained in
irradiated fuel elements), and high enriched uranium, transferred
pursuant to this Agreement or used in or produced through the use of
material or equipment so transferred, may be stored in facilities
that
are at all times subject, as a minimum, to the levels of physical
protection that are set out in IAEA document INFCIRC 225/REV 4 as it
may be revised and accepted by the Parties. Each Party shall record
such facilities on a list, made available to the other Party. A
Party's
list shall be held confidential if that Party so requests. Either
Party
may make changes to its list by notifying the other Party in writing
and receiving a written acknowledgement. Such acknowledgement shall
be
given no later than thirty days after the receipt of the notification
and shall be limited to a statement that the notification has been
received. If there are grounds to believe that the provisions of this
sub-Article are not being fully complied with, immediate
consultations
may be called for. Following upon such consultations, each Party
shall
ensure by means of such consultations that necessary remedial
measures
are taken immediately. Such measures shall be sufficient to restore
the
levels of physical protection referred to above at the facility in
question. However, if the Party on whose territory the nuclear
material
in question is stored determines that such measures are not feasible,
it will shift the nuclear material to another appropriate, listed
facility it identifies.
2. Nuclear material, non-nuclear material, equipment, components, and
information transferred pursuant to this Agreement and any special
fissionable material produced through the use of nuclear material,
non-nuclear material or equipment so transferred shall not be
transferred or re-transferred to unauthorized persons or, unless the
Parties agree, beyond the recipient Party's territorial
jurisdiction.
ARTICLE 8 - PHYSICAL PROTECTION
1. Adequate physical protection shall be maintained with respect to
nuclear material and equipment transferred pursuant to this Agreement
and nuclear material used in or produced through the use of nuclear
material, non-nuclear material or equipment so transferred.
2. To fulfill the requirement in paragraph 1, each Party shall apply
measures in accordance with (i) levels of physical protection at
least
equivalent to the recommendations published in IAEA document
INFCIRC/225/Rev.4 entitled "The Physical Protection of Nuclear
Material
and Nuclear Facilities," and in any subsequent revisions of that
document agreed to by the Parties, and (ii) the provisions of the
1980
Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material and any
amendments to the Convention that enter into force for both
Parties.
3. The Parties will keep each other informed through diplomatic
channels of those agencies or authorities having responsibility for
ensuring that levels of physical protection for nuclear material in
their territory or under their jurisdiction or control are adequately
met and having responsibility for coordinating response and recovery
operations in the event of unauthorized use or handling of material
subject to this Article. The Parties will also keep each other
informed
through diplomatic channels of the designated points of contact
within
their national authorities to cooperate on matters of out-of-country
transportation and other matters of mutual concern.
4. The provisions of this Article shall be implemented in such a
manner
as to avoid undue interference in the Parties' peaceful nuclear
activities and so as to be consistent with prudent management
practices
required for the safe and economic conduct of their peaceful nuclear
programs.
ARTICLE 9 - PEACEFUL USE
Nuclear material, equipment and components transferred pursuant to
this
Agreement and nuclear material and by-product materialused in or
produced through the use of any nuclear material, equipment, and
components so transferred shall not be used by the recipient Party
for
any nuclear explosive device, for research on or development of any
nuclear explosive device or for any military purpose.
ARTICLE 10 - IAEA SAFEGUARDS
1. Safeguards will be maintained with respect to all nuclear
materials
and equipment transferred pursuant to this Agreement, and with
respect
to all special fissionable material used in or produced through the
use
of such nuclear materials and equipment, so long as the material or
equipment remains under the jurisdiction or control of the
cooperating
Party.
2. Taking into account Article 5.6 of this Agreement, India agrees
that
nuclear material and equipment transferred to India by the United
States of America pursuant to this Agreement and any nuclear material
used in or produced through the use of nuclear material, non-nuclear
material, equipment or components so transferred shall be subject to
safeguards in perpetuity in accordance with the India-specific
Safeguards Agreement between India and the IAEA [identifying data]
and
an Additional Protocol, when in force.
3. Nuclear material and equipment transferred to the United States of
America pursuant to this Agreement and any nuclear material used in
or
produced through the use of any nuclear material, non-nuclear
material,
equipment, or components so transferred shall be subject to the
Agreement between the United States of America and the IAEA for the
application of safeguards in the United States of America, done at
Vienna November 18, 1977, which entered into force on December 9,
1980,
and an Additional Protocol, when in force.
4. If the IAEA decides that the application of IAEA safeguards is no
longer possible, the supplier and recipient should consult and agree
on
appropriate verification measures.
5. Each Party shall take such measures as are necessary to maintain
and
facilitate the application of IAEA safeguards in its respective
territory provided for under this Article.
6. Each Party shall establish and maintain a system of
accounting
for and control of nuclear material transferred pursuant to this
Agreement and nuclear material used in or produced through the use of
any material, equipment, or components so transferred. The procedures
applicable to India shall be those set forth in the India-specific
Safeguards Agreement referred to in Paragraph 2 of this Article.
7. Upon the request of either Party, the other Party shall report or
permit the IAEA to report to the requesting Party on the status of
all
inventories of material subject to this Agreement.
8. The provisions of this Article shall be implemented in such a
manner
as to avoid hampering, delay, or undue interference in the Parties'
peaceful nuclear activities and so as to be consistent with prudent
management practices required for the safe and economic conduct of
their peaceful nuclear programs.
ARTICLE 11 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
The Parties shall cooperate in following the best practices for
minimizing the impact on the environment from any radioactive,
chemical
or thermal contamination arising from peaceful nuclear activities
under
this Agreement and in related matters of health and safety.
ARTICLE 12 - IMPLEMENTATION OF THE AGREEMENT
1. This Agreement shall be implemented in a manner designed:
a) to avoid hampering or delaying the nuclear activities in the
territory of either Party;
b) to avoid interference in such activities;
c) to be consistent with prudent management practices required for
the safe conduct of such activities; and
d) to take full account of the long term requirements of the nuclear
energy programs of the Parties.
2. The provisions of this Agreement shall not be used to:
a) secure unfair commercial or industrial advantages or to
restrict trade to the disadvantage of persons and undertakings of
either Party or hamper their commercial or industrial interests,
whether international or domestic;
b) interfere with the nuclear policy or programs for the promotion of
the peaceful uses of nuclear energy including research and
development;
or
c) impede the free movement of nuclear material, non nuclear material
and equipment supplied under this Agreement within the territory of
the
Parties.
3. When execution of an agreement or contract pursuant to this
Agreement between Indian and United States organizations requires
exchanges of experts, the Parties shall facilitate entry of the
experts
to their territories and their stay therein consistent with national
laws, regulations and practices. When other cooperation pursuant to
this Agreement requires visits of experts, the Parties shall
facilitate
entry of the experts to their territory and their stay therein
consistent with national laws, regulations and practices.
ARTICLE 13 - CONSULTATIONS
1. The Parties undertake to consult at the request of either Party
regarding the implementation of this Agreement and the development of
further cooperation in the field of peaceful uses of nuclear energy
on
a stable, reliable and predictable basis. The Parties recognize that
such consultations are between two States with advanced nuclear
technology, which have agreed to assume the same responsibilities and
practices and acquire the same benefits and advantages as other
leading
countries with advanced nuclear technology.
2. Each Party shall endeavor to avoid taking any action that
adversely
affects cooperation envisaged under Article 2 of this Agreement. If
either Party at any time following the entry into force of this
Agreement does not comply with the provisions of this Agreement, the
Parties shall promptly hold consultations with a view to resolving
the
matter in a way that protects the legitimate interests of both
Parties,
it being understood that rights of either Party under Article 16.2
remain unaffected.
3. Consultations under this Article may be carried out by a Joint
Committee specifically established for this purpose. A Joint
Technical
Working Group reporting to the Joint Committee will be set up to
ensure
the fulfillment of the requirements of the Administrative
Arrangements
referred to in Article 17.
ARTICLE 14 - TERMINATION AND CESSATION OF COOPERATION
1. Either Party shall have the right to terminate this Agreement
prior
to its expiration on one year's written notice to the other Party. A
Party giving notice of termination shall provide the reasons for
seeking such termination. The Agreement shall terminate one year from
the date of the written notice, unless the notice has been withdrawn
by
the providing Party in writing prior to the date of termination.
2. Before this Agreement is terminated pursuant to paragraph 1 of
this
Article, the Parties shall consider the relevant circumstances and
promptly hold consultations, as provided in Article 13, to address
the
reasons cited by the Party seeking termination. The Party seeking
termination has the right to cease further cooperation under this
Agreement if it determines that a mutually acceptable resolution of
outstanding issues has not been possible or cannot be achieved
through
consultations. The Parties agree to consider carefully the
circumstances that may lead to termination or cessation of
cooperation.
They further agree to take into account whether the circumstances
that
may lead to termination or cessation resulted from a Party's serious
concern about a changed security environment or as a response to
similar actions by other States which could impact national
security.
3. If a Party seeking termination cites a violation of this Agreement
as the reason for notice for seeking termination, the Parties shall
consider whether the action was caused inadvertently or otherwise and
whether the violation could be considered as material. No violation
may
be considered as being material unless corresponding to the
definition
of material violation or breach in the Vienna Convention on the Law
of
Treaties. If a Party seeking termination cites a violation of an IAEA
safeguards agreement as the reason for notice for seeking
termination,
a crucial factor will be whether the IAEA Board of Governors has made
a
finding of non-compliance.
4. Following the cessation of cooperation under this Agreement,
either
Party shall have the right to require the return by the other Party
of
any nuclear material, equipment, non-nuclear material or components
transferred under this Agreement and any special fissionable material
produced through their use. A notice by a Party that is invoking the
right of return shall be delivered to the other Party on or before
the
date of termination of this Agreement. The notice shall contain a
statement of the items subject to this Agreement as to which the
Party
is requesting return. Except as provided in provisions of Article
16.3,
all other legal obligations pertaining to this Agreement shall cease
to
apply with respect to the nuclear items remaining on the territory of
the Party concerned upon termination of this Agreement.
5. The two Parties recognize that exercising the right of return
would
have profound implications for their relations. If either Party seeks
to exercise its right pursuant to paragraph 4 of this Article, it
shall, prior to the removal from the territory or from the control of
the other Party of any nuclear items mentioned in paragraph 4,
undertake consultations with the other Party. Such consultations
shall
give special consideration to the importance of uninterrupted
operation
of nuclear reactors of the Party concerned with respect to the
availability of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes as a means of
achieving energy security. Both Parties shall take into account the
potential negative consequences of such termination on the on-going
contracts and projects initiated under this Agreement of significance
for the respective nuclear programmes of either Party.
6. If either Party exercises its right of return pursuant to
paragraph
4 of this Article, it shall, prior to the removal from the territory
or
from the control of the other Party, compensate promptly that Party
for
the fair market value thereof and for the costs incurred as a
consequence of such removal. If the return of nuclear items is
required, the Parties shall agree on methods and arrangements for the
return of the items, the relevant quantity of the items to be
returned,
and the amount of compensation that would have to be paid by the
Party
exercising the right to the other Party.
7. Prior to return of nuclear items, the Parties shall satisfy
themselves that full safety, radiological and physical protection
measures have been ensured in accordance with their existing national
regulations and that the transfers pose no unreasonable risk to
either
Party, countries through which the nuclear items may transit and to
the
global environment and are in accordance with existing international
regulations.
8. The Party seeking the return of nuclear items shall ensure that
the
timing, methods and arrangements for return of nuclear items are in
accordance with paragraphs 5, 6 and 7. Accordingly, the consultations
between the Parties shall address mutual commitments as contained in
Article 5.6. It is not the purpose of the provisions of this Article
regarding cessation of cooperation and right of return to derogate
from
the rights of the Parties under Article 5.6.
9. The arrangements and procedures concluded pursuant to Article
6(iii)
shall be subject to suspension by either Party in exceptional
circumstances, as defined by the Parties, after consultations have
been
held between the Parties aimed at reaching mutually acceptable
resolution of outstanding issues, while taking into account the
effects
of such suspension on other aspects of cooperation under this
Agreement.
ARTICLE 15 - SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
Any dispute concerning the interpretation or implementation of the
provisions of this Agreement shall be promptly negotiated by the
Parties with a view to resolving that dispute.
ARTICLE 16 - ENTRY INTO FORCE AND DURATION
1. This Agreement shall enter into force on the date on which the
Parties exchange diplomatic notes informing each other that they have
completed all applicable requirements for its entry into force.
2. This Agreement shall remain in force for a period of40 years. It
shall continue in force thereafter for additional periods of 10 years
each. Each Party may, by giving 6 months written notice to the other
Party, terminate this Agreement at the end of the initial 40 year
period or at the end of any subsequent 10 year period.
3. Notwithstanding the termination or expiration of this Agreement or
withdrawal of a Party from this Agreement, Articles 5.6(c), 6, 7, 8,
9,
10 and 15 shall continue in effect so long as any nuclear material,
non-nuclear material, by-product material, equipment or components
subject to these articles remains in the territory of the Party
concerned or under its jurisdiction or control anywhere, or until
such
time as the Parties agree that such nuclear material is no longer
usable for any nuclear activity relevant from the point of view of
safeguards.
4. This Agreement shall be implemented in good faith and in accordance
with the principles of international law.
5. The Parties may consult, at the request of either Party, on
possible
amendments to this Agreement. This Agreement may be amended if the
Parties so agree. Any amendment shall enter into force on the date on
which the Parties exchange diplomatic notes informing each other that
their respective internal legal procedures necessary for the entry
into
force have been completed.
ARTICLE 17 - ADMINISTRATIVE ARRANGEMENT
1. The appropriate authorities of the Parties shall establish an
Administrative Arrangement in order to provide for the effective
implementation of the provisions of this Agreement.
2. The principles of fungibility and equivalence shall apply to
nuclear
material and non-nuclear material subject to this Agreement. Detailed
provisions for applying these principles shall be set forth in the
Administrative Arrangement.
3. The Administrative Arrangement established pursuant to this
Article
may be amended by agreement of the appropriate authorities of the
Parties.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned, being duly authorized, have signed
this Agreement.
DONE at , this day of , 200 , in duplicate.
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA:
FOR THE GOVERNMENT
OF INDIA:
AGREED MINUTE
During the negotiation of the Agreement for Cooperation Between the
Government of the United States of America and the Government of
India
Concerning Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy ("the Agreement") signed
today, the following understandings, which shall be an integral part
of
the Agreement, were reached.
Proportionality
For the purposes of implementing the rights specified in Articles 6
and
7 of the Agreement with respect to special fissionable material and
by-product material produced through the use of nuclear material and
non-nuclear material, respectively, transferred pursuant to the
Agreement and not used in or produced through the use of equipment
transferred pursuant to the Agreement, such rights shall in practice
be
applied to that proportion of special fissionable material and
by-product material produced that represents the ratio of transferred
nuclear material and non-nuclear material, respectively, used in the
production of the special fissionable material and by-product
material
to the total amount of nuclear material and non-nuclear material so
used, and similarly for subsequent generations.
By-product material
The Parties agree that reporting and exchanges of information on
by-product material subject to the Agreement will be limited to the
following:
(1) Both Parties would comply with the provisions as contained in the
IAEA document GOV/1999/19/Rev.2, with regard to by-product material
subject to the Agreement.
(2) With regard to tritium subject to the Agreement, the Parties will
exchange annually information pertaining to its disposition for
peaceful purposes consistent with Article 9 of this Agreement.
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA:
FOR THE GOVERNMENT
Naresh Sagar