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Russia Becomes Major Uranium Supplier

by Tatyana Sinitsyna
Moscow (UPI) Jul 14, 2008
Russia has overtaken Niger to become the world's fourth-largest uranium producer, after Canada, Australia and Kazakhstan. Russia received its new rating in 2007, when it produced 3,527 tons of uranium.

It has ambitious plans to move even further up the league, based on promising deposits in Eastern Siberia and other regions, and opportunities for mutually advantageous cooperation with countries rich in uranium ore.

Today the uranium market is very busy and full of optimism. It is characterized by a high level of monopolization -- three-quarters of all uranium is produced by five countries. Having placed its stake on nuclear energy, Russia has left itself no choice but to replenish its uranium reserves under a clear-cut and rational program.

In 2006 Russia launched cooperation with Kazakhstan. It owns 49 percent of shares in the Zarechnoye Joint Venture, which is in charge of a 19,000-ton uranium deposit. Last year Russia signed a bilateral agreement with Australia, which will supply it with $1 million worth of uranium for civilian purposes every year.

Also last year, Russia set up joint ventures with Canada's Cameco Corp. to undertake uranium prospecting and extraction in both countries. Potential for uranium production also has been assessed in Armenia, and Russia and Armenia have signed an agreement on uranium prospecting and production.

Mongolia may also occupy a major place in the global nuclear industry. In theory, its uranium resources are the biggest in the world, and it only remains to explore and produce them.

Russia's state-owned nuclear energy corporation, Rosatom, will have to work hard to guarantee the steady growth of its nuclear industry. Expansion is encouraged by uranium prices that are growing even faster than those for oil and gold.

The world is not short of uranium. On the contrary, nature has preordained a future atomic renaissance. Experts believe there are billions of tons of uranium ore in the entrails of the Earth -- much more than silver or mercury. It was the nuclear industry that stood behind the dazzling career of the modest 92nd element in Mendeleev's Periodic Table, having invented technologies that release enormous amounts of energy from it. Against the background of the global energy crisis, this soft, silver-white metal has become highly precious. One cubic centimeter of uranium is equivalent to 60,000 liters of gasoline, 110 to 160 tons of coal, or almost 60,000 cubic meters of natural gas.

The Priargun mining and dressing plant in the city of Krasnokamensk in the Chita region of Russia's Far East produces 93 percent of Russia's uranium. The deposit's proven reserves are estimated at 150,000 tons, with 2,500 to 3,000 tons mined annually using expensive conventional methods. Another 7 percent is extracted more cheaply by underground leaching in the Kurgan region (Dalur) and in Russia's Buryat Republic (Khiagda). These deposits are enough to meet the national demand for uranium, but this is about it.

Meanwhile, Russia has to supply uranium to nuclear power plants that were built abroad in Soviet times, and it also has export contracts for uranium enrichment and processing. If we take into account all these factors, the gap between demand and supply adds up to 6,000 tons a year. Russia currently makes up for the shortfall with uranium from "secondary reserves" -- depots of fissionable materials, converted nuclear weapons and so-called depleted uranium tails (uranium ore used twice). But these secondary reserves, which every nuclear power has stockpiled since the start of the nuclear era, are disappearing fast. They will last no more than 10 or 15 years.

Aware of the situation, Russia is building up its uranium ore production. The process is carried out by Rosatom's uranium monopoly, Atomredmetzoloto. This year the company plans to produce 3,880 tons of uranium, bringing its extraction to 20,000 tons by 2024.

Russia has some 564,000 tons of proven uranium reserves, including its biggest deposit at Elkon (344,000 tons) on the shores of the Aldan River in the north of the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic. This deposit is hard to access; it is located in permafrost, and the ore lies deep. But the requirements of the nuclear renaissance are tough and call for extreme efforts. Russia wants to extract no less than 5,000 tons of uranium from the Elkon deposit by 2020. At the same time, it is planning to increase uranium production at its joint ventures in Kazakhstan.

Experts believe Russia's total uranium potential (natural and weapons-grade) will enable it to enrich 45 percent of the world's uranium for nuclear power plants by the year 2030.

(Tatyana Sinitsyna is a commentator for RIA Novosti. This article is reprinted by permission of RIA Novosti. The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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Lithuania plans EU talks to delay Soviet-era reactor closure
Vilnius (AFP) July 11, 2008
Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus said Friday he was planning talks with fellow EU leaders, as Vilnius pushes to delay the closure of an aging Chernobyl-type nuclear plant which provides the bulk of its power.







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