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United States President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers have already set in motion a series of measures that will deregulate American oil, gas and coal sectors and India sees an opportunity to enhance bilateral cooperation in these areas in the coming years. Thirty per cent of all increase in world’s energy demand from now to 2040 will be from India, and energy cooperation will be an increasingly key component of bilateral relations, Petroleum Minister Dharmendra Pradhan has said after a meeting with U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry.
This was the first ministerial-level interaction between India and the U.S. under the new administration. India will start importing Liquefied Natural Gas from the U.S. in 2018 under contracts signed during the previous Obama administration. Right pricing will enable India to ramp up imports from the U.S., Mr. Pradhan has said.
The Trump administration’s focus is on making American oil and gas sector competitive in the world market and it does not want environmental concerns holding back the sector. By deregulating oil and gas, and rolling back incentives available to non-conventional energy industry, the Trump administration is hoping to create a boom in the U.S oil and gas market. Three Indian public sector companies, GAIL, Oil India and IOC and Reliance have invested in U.S. shale gas production.
The Obama administration’s focus was on pushing renewable energy cooperation with India, but Trump administration’s focus is different, said an Indian official. Mr. Pradhan has said Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s commitment to increase the share of nonconventional sources in India’s energy mix is independent of what the American administration thinks or does. “The PM is clear that India will go ahead with its COP 21 commitments,” the Minister said.
Source: The Hindu
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