US, Vietnam sign
nuclear trade agreement
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (R) and Vietnam's Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh
smile during an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meeting in Bandar Seri Begawan
July 2, 2013. PHOTO: REUTERS
The US and Vietnam
on Thursday signed a pact that would allow the transfer of nuclear technology
to the Southeast Asian nation and open the way for U.S.
investment in the burgeoning industry, in another sign that Washington is seeking stronger economic
and strategic ties in the region.
US Secretary of State John Kerry said
the U.-Vietnam Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement would allow US firms to
tap Vietnam's future
nuclear power market, although the State Department said the deal will not
allow Vietnam
to enrich or reprocess US-origin nuclear materials.
"This agreement will create
numerous opportunities for our businesses," Kerry told Vietnam's Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh on
the sidelines of an Asian summit in Brunei. "Obviously our
nuclear cooperation is quite significant."
Vietnam is working
with Russia to build its
first nuclear plant in 2014 for completion in 2020 in the south-central province of Ninh Thuan, as demand for energy grows
rapidly in response to economic growth of around 5 percent a year.
It has also signed an agreement with
a Japanese consortium to develop a second nuclear power plant in the same
province, with two reactors to become operational in 2024-2025.
Vietnam has the
second-largest market after China
for nuclear power in East Asia, which was
expected to grow to $50 billion by 2030, according to Kerry.
The US
has moved to improve economic and security ties with Vietnam, part of its strategic rebalancing
towards Asia that some see as a policy to counter China's rising clout.
China's assertive
claims over the East Sea, internationally known as the South China
Sea, have raised tensions with Vietnam, as well as other
Southeast Asian nations.
The deal will be submitted to US President Barack Obama for his review
before it is sent to Congress for its approval by the end of the year, a US official
said.
"Getting to this stage … moves
us closer to an expanded civil nuclear cooperation with Vietnam," the official, who briefed
reporters in Washington,
said.
"Vietnam is actively taking steps
now toward development of a robust domestic infrastructure to support a
nuclear energy program," the official added.
With Vietnam
at an early stage of nuclear development, the official said the agreement
provides the basis for US firms to enter the market early as it builds
nuclear power plants and for the US government to ensure the
proper safeguards.
The US official said the agreement
"will also strengthen the Obama administration's long-standing policy of
limiting the spread or enrichment and reprocessing capabilities around the
world."
The deal stems from US President
Barack Obama's Prague
initiative, a drive for global nuclear security which he launched in his
first term.
Reuter/Thanh Nien News
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