Uranium output expected to grow
Global uranium consumption is expected to rise 5% this year.
New analysis by research and consulting firm GlobalData has forecast global uranium output to rise at a compound yearly growth rate of 4.3%, to 76 493 tons in 2020.
The company's latest report states that growth in production is needed to meet upcoming demand from new reactors.
There are 22 new reactors scheduled for completion in 2017, with a total capacity of 22 444MW. This includes eight reactors in China with a combined capacity of 8 510MW, two reactors in South Korea with a combined capacity of 2 680 megawatts, two reactors in Russia with a combined capacity of 2 199MW, and four reactors in Japan with a combined capacity of 3 598MW.
Global uranium consumption is forecast to rise by 5%, to reach 88 500 tonnes of uranium oxide this year. The major expansions to nuclear capacity are projected to occur in China, India, Russia and South Korea over the next two years. The US is forecast to remain the largest producer of nuclear power in the short term, with the recent completion of the 1 200MW Watts Bar Unit 2 reactor, in Tennessee, Global Data said.
“Commercial operations at the Cigar Lake project in Canada commenced in 2014, with an annual uranium metal capacity of 6 900 tons. The project produced 4 340 tons of uranium in 2015, compared with 130 tons in 2014. Meanwhile, production at the Four Mile project, in Australia, rose from 750 tons in 2014 to 990 tons in 2015,” GlobalData head of research and analysis for mining Cliff Smee stated.By contrast, production from the US fell by 32% in 2015, while in Namibia it decreased by 20%. “This was due to respective declines of 33% each at the Smith Ranch-Highland and Crow Butte mines in the US, and falls of 20% and 13.6% at the Rossing and Langer Heinrich mines, in Namibia,” Smee added. Spot uranium prices continued to rise this year and analysts believe prices have bottomed after major producer Kazakhstan said earlier this year it will curtail its uranium output by about 10%, and on growing optimism that shuttered Japanese reactors will finally be restarted.
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The company's latest report states that growth in production is needed to meet upcoming demand from new reactors.
There are 22 new reactors scheduled for completion in 2017, with a total capacity of 22 444MW. This includes eight reactors in China with a combined capacity of 8 510MW, two reactors in South Korea with a combined capacity of 2 680 megawatts, two reactors in Russia with a combined capacity of 2 199MW, and four reactors in Japan with a combined capacity of 3 598MW.
Global uranium consumption is forecast to rise by 5%, to reach 88 500 tonnes of uranium oxide this year. The major expansions to nuclear capacity are projected to occur in China, India, Russia and South Korea over the next two years. The US is forecast to remain the largest producer of nuclear power in the short term, with the recent completion of the 1 200MW Watts Bar Unit 2 reactor, in Tennessee, Global Data said.
“Commercial operations at the Cigar Lake project in Canada commenced in 2014, with an annual uranium metal capacity of 6 900 tons. The project produced 4 340 tons of uranium in 2015, compared with 130 tons in 2014. Meanwhile, production at the Four Mile project, in Australia, rose from 750 tons in 2014 to 990 tons in 2015,” GlobalData head of research and analysis for mining Cliff Smee stated.By contrast, production from the US fell by 32% in 2015, while in Namibia it decreased by 20%. “This was due to respective declines of 33% each at the Smith Ranch-Highland and Crow Butte mines in the US, and falls of 20% and 13.6% at the Rossing and Langer Heinrich mines, in Namibia,” Smee added. Spot uranium prices continued to rise this year and analysts believe prices have bottomed after major producer Kazakhstan said earlier this year it will curtail its uranium output by about 10%, and on growing optimism that shuttered Japanese reactors will finally be restarted.
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