"The two sides have had a substantive and pragmatic exchange on the issue of NSG membership, which is a priority for India because of our plans for civil nuclear energy.
"On certain issues such as development and clean energy, there should not be differences between the two sides," MEA spokesperson Vikas Swarup said at his weekly briefing here.
He added that the two countries have agreed that both sides should approach these issues with mutual sensitivity to each others' concerns and priorities.
"The exchange was useful in enhancing understanding of each other's perspective and will be continued," he said.
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Swarup said the two sides were also of the view that a process has been set in motion after the Seoul NSG plenary on the issue of membership and they should support this process.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hua Chunying told media in Beijing yesterday that India and China are "yet to agree on accession of any specific member into the group".
She said this referring to Tuesday's first round of talks between the two countries on India's admission into NSG, which controls global nuclear commerce.
The talks came nearly two-and-a-half months after China scuttled India's NSG membership bid.
"That is why we had this dialogue. The understanding of the two sides is that this is both a bilateral and a multilateral issue. There is no contradiction," he said.
In the June Plenary of NSG in Seoul, despite strong American support, China stonewalled India's bid to join the group on the grounds that it was a not a signatory to the NPT.
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