Friday Feb 20, 2026
Friday, 12 December 2014 05:45 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
The two leaders presided over the signing of a ‘vision’ document setting out a roadmap for cooperation over an extended period, with the most ambitious area nuclear energy.
Russia’s state-owned Rosatom said that under an agreement signed on Thursday it would supply 12 nuclear energy reactors for India over 20 years.
A 1,000-megawatt reactor is operating at the Russian-built Kudankulam power station in south India, with a second due onstream in 2015. Putin had been pushing for Rosatom to increase the number of reactors it could supply to as many as 25.
Indian officials say a total of six reactors will be built at Kudankulam, with a further six to follow at a site that has not yet been determined.
Other strategic deals were expected to cover oil exploration and supply, infrastructure and an increase in direct diamond sales to India by Russian state monopoly Alrosa.
On defence, the two sides will seek to move ahead with long-delayed projects to develop a joint fifth-generation fighter jet and a multi-role transport aircraft.
A spokesman for India’s foreign minister said he was not officially aware of Crimean leader Sergey Aksyonov’s visit.
Gul Kripalani, a Mumbai businessman who met the Crimean leader at a New Delhi hotel as head of the Indian-Crimean Partnership, told Reuters the talks were unofficial and Aksyonov had ‘happened to be on the flight with His Excellency President Putin’.
Western countries imposed sanctions against Russia over the annexation of Crimea in February and the Kremlin’s support for an uprising by pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine.