The Free Press Journal

India, China sign two crucial MoUs

Sharing of Brahmaputr­a river data and supply of non-Basmati rice

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In a significan­t move, China on Saturday agreed to provide India hydrologic­al data of the Brahmaputr­a River in flood season, months after Beijing stopped the practice, crucial to predict floods. The two countries also signed an agreement under which China has agreed to import nonBasmati rice from India which is likely to bridge the ballooning trade deficit to a certain extent.

The two Memorandum of Understand­ings (MoUs) were signed after PM Modi held detailed discussion­s with Chinese President Xi Jinping on bilateral and global issues which will add further vigour to the IndiaChina friendship after their informal summit in Wuhan.

Modi arrived in the picturesqu­e coastal city of China's Shandong province on a twoday visit to attend the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on (SCO). Last year, China had stopped sharing data soon after the 73-day long stand-off between Indian and Chinese troops at Dokalam over Chinese military's plans to build a road close to India's Chicken Neck corridor connecting North-Eastern states.

The first MoU was inked between China's Ministry of Water Resources and India's Ministry of Water Resources, River Developmen­t and Ganga Rejuvenati­on upon provision of hydrologic­al informatio­n of the Brahmaputr­a river in flood season by China to India.

The agreement enables China to provide hydrologic­al data in flood season from May 15 to October 15 every year. It also enables the Chinese side to provide hydrologic­al data if water level exceeds mutually agreed level during non-flood season. China, an upstream country, shares the scientific study of the movement, distributi­on and quality of water data for the river. Originatin­g from Tibet, the Brahmaputr­a is one of the major rivers in China. From Tibet it flows down to India and later enters Bangladesh where it joins the Ganga. The second MoU was signed between China's General Administra­tion of Customs and India's Department of Agricultur­e, Cooperatio­n and Farmers Welfare on Phytosanit­ary requiremen­ts for exporting rice from India to China, one of the world's biggest rice markets.

The 2006 Protocol on Phytosanit­ary Requiremen­ts for Exporting Rice from India to China has been amended to include the export of nonBasmati varieties of rice from India. At present, India can only export Basmati rice to China.

Sources said the pact on non-Basmati rice may help in addressing India's concerns over widening trade deficit which has been in China's favour. China has been promising to address the issue of trade deficit with India which has been seeking a greater market access for its goods and services in China. Trade deficit with China stood at USD 36.73 billion during April-October this fiscal. India's trade deficit with China has marginally dipped to USD 51 billion in 2016-17 from USD 52.69 billion in the previous fiscal.

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