According to m.economictimes.com, India and Australia have finalized administrative arrangements enabling the export of Australian uranium to India for exclusively peaceful purposes under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards — fulfilling obligations outlined in their 2015 Australia-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement.
Uranium Trade Under IAEA Safeguards
The agreement marks the formal operationalization of a long-standing bilateral commitment. Both governments confirmed that uranium shipments will be subject to strict verification by the International Atomic Energy Agency, ensuring compliance with non-proliferation standards. As stated in the joint statement issued on July 09, 2026, the arrangement is designed to support India’s civil nuclear energy program while reinforcing Australia’s adherence to its global non-proliferation responsibilities.
Australia has maintained a policy prohibiting uranium exports to countries without comprehensive IAEA safeguards agreements — a condition India met in 2008 following the U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Agreement. The finalized administrative framework now permits licensed Australian suppliers, including Energy Resources of Australia (ERA) and Paladin Energy, to engage in verified trade with Indian nuclear entities such as the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL). According to the report, this unlocks access to up to 1,500 tonnes per year of Australian uranium — a volume consistent with India’s projected reactor fuel requirements through 2030.
Energy Trade Expansion via ECTA and CECA
Beyond uranium, the two nations pledged to advance bilateral energy trade and investment through the existing Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA), which entered into force in December 2022, and ongoing negotiations for a Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA). The CECA talks — launched in June 2023 — aim to eliminate tariffs on over 90% of traded goods and expand market access across services, digital trade, and critical minerals.
The joint statement emphasized mutual dependence in hydrocarbon flows: Australia is a key supplier of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to India, while India exports liquid fuels and downstream petroleum products to Australia. Both sides committed to supporting the uninterrupted flow of energy products and enhancing trade volumes — a priority underscored by shared concerns over Middle East instability’s impact on global commodity prices and supply chains.
Supply Chain Resilience and Indo-Pacific Cooperation
India and Australia jointly identified supply chain resilience as central to economic security. They agreed to deepen regional cooperation to accelerate the energy transition, promote renewable energy adoption, and maintain open trade arrangements for energy and liquid fuels. According to the report, both countries will collaborate on building supply chains for emerging technical industries — including hydrogen, battery storage, and critical mineral processing — leveraging India’s manufacturing scale and Australia’s resource endowment.
The partnership also includes a new Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap, aimed at strengthening naval interoperability, information sharing, and joint exercises. In addition, India and Australia reaffirmed their commitment to trilateral cooperation with the United States and Japan to advance a stable, secure, and prosperous Indo-Pacific region. This includes coordinated efforts to safeguard maritime chokepoints and ensure reliable coal, diesel, natural gas, and low-carbon fuel supplies — with Australia explicitly noting India’s leadership in the Global Biofuels Alliance, launched in September 2023.
“Exclusively peaceful purposes”: Albanese confirms Australian uranium supply deal with India
The announcement followed high-level talks between Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India, and Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister of Australia, in Canberra. During the visit, Modi described the two nations as “natural and trusted partners” amid global uncertainty — a framing echoed in official communications. The uranium agreement is expected to facilitate construction of additional pressurized heavy water reactors (PHWRs) in India, supporting national targets to generate 225 GW of renewable and nuclear power by 2030.
Source: m.economictimes.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










