• Connect with us
    • Information
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Careers
      • Partnerships
      • Advertise With Us
      • Authors
      • Browse Topics
      • Events
      • Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
    • Australia
      North America
      World
    Login
    Investing News NetworkYour trusted source for investing success
    • North America
      Australia
      World
    • My INN
    Videos
    Companies
    Press Releases
    Private Placements
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Reports & Guides
      • Market Outlook Reports
      • Investing Guides
    • Button
    Resource
    • Precious Metals
    • Battery Metals
    • Base Metals
    • Energy
    • Critical Metals
    Tech
    Life Science
    Energy Market
    Energy News
    Energy Stocks
    • Energy Market
    • Energy News
    • Energy Stocks
    uranium investing

    Securing Uranium Supplies Still Essential to China’s Energy Security

    Melissa Pistilli
    Aug. 25, 2011 11:11AM PST
    Energy Investing

    In this post-Fukushima uranium market the one saving grace has been booming demand from energy-hungry Asian nations like China, on which the major players in the uranium industry have hung their hopes for future demand.

    By Melissa Pistilli—Exclusive to Uranium Investing News

    If the flat-lined spot price and declining share values are any indication, the March 11 earthquake and tsunami-damaged Fukushima Dai-Ichi power station continues to have a devastating impact on the uranium industry worldwide. Fears of similar catastrophes happening closer to home have prompted nations like Germany, the UK, Finland, Italy and Switzerland to rethink their nuclear power programs.

    Earlier this year, prior to the March meltdown, the spot price of uranium was trading at $70 per pound, but plunged to $49 per pound shortly after. Uranium spot prices have hovered around that mark for over five months, trading at $50.50 per pound near August’s end, prompting participants to label the market a “ghost town,” reports Ux Consulting Co., with sellers unwilling to part with their goods at such low prices and buyers not willing to pay more. The market is oversupplied after growing demand over the past few had spurred a worldwide increase in uranium production.

    In this post-Fukushima uranium market the one saving grace has been booming demand from energy-hungry Asian nations like China, on which the major players in the uranium industry have hung their hopes for future demand.

    China has 14 operational nuclear reactors and according to the World Nuclear Association, 77 more reactors are either planned or under construction with aim toward increasing nuclear capacity to 80 GWe by 2020, 200 by 2030 and 400 GWe by 2050. However, the nation’s domestic uranium resources don’t even come close to the amount needed to fuel such an expansion. To secure uranium reserves, China has been aggressively moving to sign supply contracts and joint venture mining agreements as well as to purchase uranium mines overseas. By 2020, China is expected to account for 20 percent of global uranium demand, according to Resource Capital Research.

    Slowing growth?

    Despite the voracious appetite for uranium resources China has displayed over the past few years, recent reports indicate that the Fukushima tragedy may have dampened even China’s desire for nuclear power.

    Following the disaster in March, China announced the suspension of new nuclear power plant approvals until the government completes a six-month long national nuclear facility safety check on existing plants and issues a revised nuclear development plan. Of course, the announcement further depressed uranium company share prices.

    The setback has slowed uranium imports to China for the first half of 2011 by 13 percent year-on-year to 5,356 tons of uranium, meaning 2011 import levels are mostly likely not on track to match or beat the record 17,136 tons of uranium imported in 2010.

    Despite the slump in imports, China’s continued search for uranium resources worldwide is evidence the Asian powerhouse is not giving up on its aggressive nuclear power program.

    Uzbekistan deal signals China is still hungry for uranium

    Although China’s quest for uranium resources has a global reach, the nation is particularly interested in resources close to home in Central Asia and has used its wealth and diplomatic influence to gain access to the region’s resources. China’s failed attempts to marshal a strong position in Mongolia over the last few years have been overshadowed by the country’s success in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

    Reports are surfacing that Uzbekistan and China are negotiating joint venture agreements to explore and develop Uzbekistan’s uranium sands fields. The Central Asian nation is the world’s seventh largest producer of uranium at nearly 2,500 tonnes of annual production, and twelfth largest in reserves estimated at 111,000 tonnes with more than 40 explored deposits.

    The partnership between the Uzbekistan and China is not a new development. Bilateral trade has quadrupled since 2006, according to reports and the Central Asian nation now supplies a number of natural resources to China, including rare earths, natural gas, fertilizers and precious metals. In 2009, China and Uzbek mining authorities initiated a $4.6 million 50-50 joint venture with China’s CGNPC Uranium Resources to explore for resources in the Kyzyl Kum Desert in central Uzbekistan.

    In April of this year, the two trading partners signed $5 billion in investment deals and Chinese banks agreed to $1.5 billion in credit lines for a number of Uzbek banks. No doubt these investment agreements have paved the way toward further Chinese involvement in the Uzbek state-controlled uranium sector.

    Long-term uranium outlook remains positive

    Despite the oversupply in the global market, Goldman Sachs analysts have said that current inventories are still less than 1990s levels, making a total market collapse unlikely, reports Paul French, Asian correspondent for Nuclear Energy Insider.

    “Prices may be depressed post-Fukushima, but securing uranium is still a strategic national energy security goal for China, India and a number of other emergent nuclear nations,” said French.

    indianuclear energynuclear powerchinajoint ventureuranium investinggermany
    The Conversation (0)

    Go Deeper

    AI Powered

    CGNPC Offers $2.2 billion for Extract Resources’ Husab Uranium Project in Namibia

    Uranium Hot Spots: Mauritania, Gabon and Zambia

    Latest News

    Lo Herma Hydrogeology Testing & Resource Expansion Drilling

    AuKing to Acquire 100% of Cloncurry Gold Project

    Chemical assay confirms high-grade uranium

    Terra Clean Energy Corp. Announces Agreement to Earn 100% Interest in 75 Past Producing Uranium Claims on The San Rafael Swell, Utah, United States

    Uranium.io Shakes Up Uranium Market With Launch of Real-Time Price Oracle

    More News

    Outlook Reports

    Resource
    • Precious Metals
      • Gold
      • Silver
    • Battery Metals
      • Lithium
      • Cobalt
      • Graphite
    • Energy
      • Uranium
      • Oil and Gas
    • Base Metals
      • Copper
      • Nickel
      • Zinc
    • Critical Metals
      • Rare Earths
    • Industrial Metals
    • Agriculture
    Tech
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Cybersecurity
      • Gaming
      • Cleantech
      • Emerging Tech
    Life Science
      • Biotech
      • Cannabis
      • Psychedelics
      • Pharmaceuticals

    Featured Energy Investing Stocks

    Skyharbour Resources

    SYH:CA

    xU3O8 (uranium.io)

    Saga Metals

    SAGA:CA

    Basin Energy

    BSN:AU

    AuKing Mining

    AKN:AU

    North Shore Uranium

    NSU:CC
    More featured stocks

    Browse Companies

    Resource
    • Precious Metals
    • Battery Metals
    • Energy
    • Base Metals
    • Critical Metals
    Tech
    Life Science
    MARKETS
    COMMODITIES
    CURRENCIES