This sounds like a good idea. Green technologies like these would do a lot to address the energy needs of the future. It would also hopefully create a lot of jobs in both countries, and also provide a boost for funding in space tech related fields.
India-America Cooperation in space has already yielded great results....the Indian Chandraayan Moon mission, along with some of the American instruments it carried was the first one to provide evidence of water on the moon.
India’s lunar mission finds evidence of water on the MoonDreams of establishing a manned Moon base could become reality within two decades after India’s first lunar mission found evidence of large quantities of water on its surface.
Data from Chandrayaan-1 also suggests that water is still being formed on the Moon. Scientists said the breakthrough — to be announced by Nasa at a press conference today — would change the face of lunar exploration.
The discovery is a significant boost for India in its space race against China. Dr Mylswamy Annadurai, the mission’s project director at the Indian Space Research Organisation in Bangalore, said: “It’s very satisfying.”
The search for water was one of the mission’s main objectives, but it was a surprise nonetheless, scientists said.
The unmanned craft was equipped with Nasa’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper, designed specifically to search for water by picking up the electromagnetic radiation emitted by minerals. The M3 also made the unexpected discovery that water may still be forming on the surface of the Moon, according to scientists familiar with the mission.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/space/article6846639.ece PS:
One of the advantages of a space based solar power program could be the super-thin solar panels one could use in vacuum...thus resulting in huge swathes being covered with energy producing panels.