While the situation on the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir will definitely be discussed when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh meets his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, it was emphasised by high-level sources on Wednesday that progress on trade would be made, as there is a concrete agenda to be followed for that.
The sources, who spoke on the condition of confidentiality, said that a significant step forward in exporting electricity to Pakistan could happen as early as next week. It had been held up, they claimed, not for political reasons but because the Pakistani side was evaluating its technical and commercial viability. However, it is believed that process is close to conclusion, and Pakistan may express formal interest in cross-border electricity trade, sending a delegation on the subject, within a week. Sharif and Singh are likely to meet on Sunday.
In another significant development, the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited, or NPCIL, will likely move forward within a few days on evaluating the terms of a possible contract with nuclear supplier Westinghouse. A limited exploratory agreement might be in place between the two companies, according to the highly-placed sources, before Singh meets US President Barack Obama on Friday. This is in spite of concerns expressed domestically that US companies, including Westinghouse, wish to dilute the nuclear liability legislation passed by the Parliament beyond recognition.
A lack of progress in transforming the US-India civil nuclear agreement of 2008 into real projects on the ground is often cited as a major cause for a chill in bilateral relations. However, officials close to the prime minister strongly denied that the United States had any ground for disappointment, and suggested that such claims may just be an American negotiating tactic.
Singh will also make a pitch for more US investment in India. Although the recent diplomatic coolness between India and the US has been driven in large part by the souring of US business on the India story, officials insisted that the outreach was not unusual. Reporters were told that a ramped-up pitch for investment will be the one consistent theme of all major upcoming foreign visits, including to China. The PM is scheduled to meet a group of US CEOs in New York City later this week.