"I am actually confident that we are going to be moving more aggressively towards implementation (of the civil nuclear deal) in 2016," US Ambassador to India Richard Verma told a group of Indian journalists here.
Verma also told a Washington audience that "there will be a lot of progress on the civil nuclear deal in the first half of 2016".
The India-US contact group, which was set up in January, last met in Washington in November.
"Even in the last two months, I was in Mumbai to have those discussions. We are working very hard on its implementation. It's not enough to say we reached an understanding on liability," he added.
The implementation is the key, the Ambassador asserted.
"We really have had good discussions with Department of Atomic Energy, with NPCIL and with the Prime Minister's office. Everyone wants to see the deal move towards implementation," Verma said when asked about the long pending implementation of the nuclear deal, under which US companies are expected to establish nuclear power plants in the country.
The Ambassador noted that nuclear power is not fast in terms of time lines.
"The notion of building a nuclear reactor is a long term process. That's not an excuse. That's a reality. So it's a multi-year effort," he said.
After India had passed domestic nuclear liability law in 2010, the foreign suppliers of nuclear reactors including the US had expressed concerns over what they interpreted as unlimited financial burden under the legislation.
