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jueves, 27 de octubre de 2011

Brasil redobla la búsqueda de uranio para fortalecer su programa de energía nuclear

La empresa de energía nuclear estatal descubrió un nuevo yacimiento de uranio. El Gobierno pretende llegar a tener una reserva de 1 millón de toneladas.

La estatal Indústrias Nucleares do Brasil (INB) descubrió en el interior de Bahia indicios de uranio con el doble de concentración del extraído de la única mina activa de Brasil. El área está en la región de Caetité, donde la INB ya explora uranio. A pesar de que los datos son preliminares, la estatal considera que la reserva de Caetité duplicará de tamaño con los nuevos descubrimientos.

En la mina en operación en Caetité, el uranio tiene 3.000 partes por millón (ppm). En las muestras que recolectamos, el uranio tiene 6.000 partes por millón. En Brasil, nunca identificamos una región tan rica como esa, dijo el director de Recursos Minerales de INB, Otto Bittencourt. En caso de confirmarse la estimación, la reserva podrá producir el combustible para Angra 3 y para cuatro de lasocho nuevas usinas que el gobierno pretende construir hasta 2030.

Los descubrimientos ocurrieron hace cuatro meses. La primera en encontrar pistas de uranio de alto tenor fue la Companhia Baiana de Pesquisa Mineral (CBPM), que trabajaba junto con INB. La CBPM, que había identificado 34 áreas con indicios en la región donde está la mina, detectó 22 nuevos objetivos.

INB eligió dos de esos puntos para cavar. No precisó llegar hasta el fondo. A cerca de un metro y medio, según Bittencourt, los técnicos pararon en una camada de roca y de ahí colectaron muestras del uranio con 6.000 ppm.
Para hacer un detalle del descubrimiento -saber, por ejemplo, qué extensión tiene el área donde se encontraron las muestras y si en otros puntos el tenor del mineral es tan alto-INB está preparando una licitación para contratar a una empresa que realice un sondeo del suelo. Eso significa perforar cerca de 100 metros de roca con un equipamiento con punta de diamante que permite una lectura más precisa de la riqueza hallada en el suelo. Los nuevos objetivos están en la zona rural de la región del municipio de Caetité, a 750 km de Salvador. INB compró las tierras sobre las cuales puede estar la nueva reserva.
"Por lo que vimos, la perspectiva es que como mínimo dupliquemos el tamaño de la reserva de Caetité", dijo el director de INB. 

Descubierta en los años setenta, la mina de Caetité es la única que produce uranio no sólo en Brasil, sino en toda América latina. La reserva medida, indicada e inferida es de 100.000 toneladas de uranio, de las cuales 80.000 se consideran garantizadas. Ese valor incluye las 34 áreas ya identificadas además del área de la mina en operación. Si la promesa se confirma, son los 22 nuevos objetivos que ampliarán las reservas a 200.000 toneladas. Con una ventaja: con mineral que tiene el doble del tenor, INB gastaría los mismos recursos para producir el doble de concentrado, señaló Bittencourt.

El costo de producción del concentrado es de u$s 50.000 a u$s 60.000 por tonelada. INB tiene el monopolio en Brasil de la venta de concentrado de uranio. Todo lo que produce abastece a Eletronuclear y (después de la etapa de enriquecimiento en Europa) alimenta las usinas de Angra 1 y Angra 2. Brasil no exporta.

Las reservas totales de uranio del país son de 309.000 toneladas. Además de las aproximadas 100.000 de Caetité, la reserva de Santa Quitéria, en Ceará, tiene 140.000 toneladas que debe comenzar a producir en 2017; el resto está distribuido en cantidades más chicas por el país. En 2009, Brasil produjo 400 toneladas de concentrado; en 2010, cayó para menos de 200 toneladas y este año se calcula que volverá a las 400 toneladas. 

El descubrimiento en Bahia es resultado del reinicio de los trabajos de prospección. "Desde mediados de los años 80 hasta 2007, la investigación mineral de uranio estuvo casi desactivada. Las reservas de 300.000 toneladas eran más que suficientes para atender la demanda interna". En 2007, el gobierno nacional retomó el programa nuclear y estableció, entre otras metas, terminar la construcción de Angra 3, construir entre cuatro y ocho usinas hasta 2030 y ampliar las reservas y la producción de concentrado de uranio. "Los últimos levantamientos del Servicio Geológico de Brasil indican varias áreas con anomalías radioactivas de uranio. Es todo nuevo, áreas que no conocíamos debido a esa desactivación de las investigaciones".

INB trabaja en diversos estados, como Pará, Roraima, Ceará, Bahia y Minas Gerais. Bittencourt es optimista. "En cinco o diez años, Brasil habrá aumentado sus reservas a 1 millón de toneladas, el equivalente a las actuales reservas de Australia", concluyó.

Fuente: Marcos de Moura e Souza. Belo Horizonte, 27 octubre 2011.
http://www.cronista.com/contenidos/2011/10/27/noticia_0028.html 

miércoles, 31 de agosto de 2011

Uranium in Canada


(Updated May 2011) 
  • Canada was the world's largest uranium producer for many years, accounting for about 22% of world output, but in 2009 was overtaken by Kazakhstan. 
  • Production comes mainly from the McArthur River mine in northern Saskatchewan province, which is the largest in the world. 
  • Production is expected to increase significantly from 2013 as the new Cigar Lake mine comes into operation. 
  • With known uranium resources of 572,000 tonnes of U3O(485,000 tU), as well as continuing exploration, Canada will have a significant role in meeting future world demand.  
 
Canada is a country rich in uranium resources and a long history of exploration, mining and generation of nuclear power (for coverage of nuclear power, see information page on Nuclear Power in Canada). To 2008, more uranium had been mined in Canada than any other country – 428,000 tU, 18% of world total.
Exploration for uranium ore began in earnest in 1942 under direction of the government for military purposes. A wartime ban on private prospecting was lifted in 1947, which led in the early 1950s to the discovery of major deposits near Elliot Lake, Ontario, and northern Saskatchewan. By 1959, 23 mines and 19 treatment plants were in operation, and Canada's C$330 million in uranium exports exceeded the value for every other mineral.
A second burst of exploration in the 1970s resulted in major discoveries in the Athabasca Basin in northern Saskatchewan. Mines at Rabbit Lake, Cluff Lake and Key Lake started up in 1975, 1980 and 1983, which up until 2000 accounted for most of Canada's uranium production (14,223 tonnes of U3Oin 1998). Cluff Lake, Key Lake and the original open pit at Rabbit Lake have now been mined out (underground mining continues at Rabbit Lake). Mines that began operation just a decade ago now contribute most of Canada's production (see also Appendix 1: Brief History of Uranium Mining in Canada).
Current production
Canada produced 10,617 tonnes of U3O8 in 2008, and in 2009 production was 11,997 tonnes U3O8 (10,173 tU) – 20% of world total. Most of this comes from its third generation mines, which started operation in 1999 at McClean Lake and McArthur River in northern Saskatchewan (the Rabbit Lake mine in the same region is the third source).
The main uranium producers are Cameco and Areva Resources Canada (formerly Cogema Resources), part of France's Areva Group. Cameco was formed in the 1988 merger of Saskatchewan Mining Development Corporation and the government-owned Eldorado Nuclear Ltd. The company issued its first public shares in 1991 and was fully privatized in 2002.
 
In the early 1990s, the Saskatchewan government had considered phasing out uranium mining in the province. This policy was later reversed after a joint Federal-Saskatchewan study panel on health, safety, environment and socio-economic impact found that the jobs provided by the industry would be hard to replace and that the environmental impact of mining could be minimized. Today, the provincial government actively supports uranium mining, and all new Saskatchewan uranium mines have international ISO 14001 environmental certification.
Annual uranium production (tonnes U3O8)a 
 20002001200220032004200520062007200820092010 
McArthur River44097830849068778491849184928492752886549029
Key Lake474353**-------
McClean Lake27222994276227342724249081486714761637785
Rabbit Lake3290207051926902462273223261821161317061726
Cluff Lake17021496191832-------
Total1259714743136891233313676137131163211180106171199711540
cf. World40962428864252941998474304905246499486805161159772 

Domestic production in tonnes of uranium (as opposed to U3O8) is given in Note a.
Canadian uranium exports (tonnes uranium)b 
 200520062007200820092010 
Canadian production11628986394779000101739786
Less: domestic use160716201661*1670*1845*1675*
Canadian export1002182437816733083288111

McArthur River
The McArthur River uranium mine is the world's largest, with enormous reserves (about 150,000 tonnes U3O8) of high grade ore (21%) located 600 metres underground. Remote control raise boring methods are used to mine the ore, which is then trucked 80 km south to be milled at Key Lake, site of the closed mine that once produced 15% of the world's uranium. At the mill, which has been modified for the McArthur River ore, the ore is blended with 'special waste rock' and processed to produce U3O8. Tailings are deposited in a mined-out pit. The licensed capacity of the Key Lake mill is basically 8,485 t/yr U3O8, but after Cameco applied for an increase to 10,000 t/yr permission was given for production up to 9,250 t/yr to catch up earlier year shortfalls. It is now seeking to expand this to 11,340 t/yr U3O8.

Cameco is the majority owner and operator of McArthur mine as well as the Key Lake Mill (Areva is a 30.2% and 16.7% partner, respectively). Areva has applied for a licence to process some McArthur river ore at McClean Lake. 
Other deposits close to McArthur River are prospective.
McClean Lake
After starting operation in mid-1999, McClean Lake produced about 2500 t/yr of U3O8 from 2.4% ore up until 2005, although production was well down in 2006 through to 2010 due to lower ore grades. The mine has now been relicensed at 3640 t/yr. Operations have comprised three open pits, with an underground mine planned for the future. McClean Lake also has high-quality new plant and infrastructure. It uses the first mined-out pit for tailings disposal.
The mill has been expanded to 5,500 t/yr U3O8 to accommodate the ore that eventually will be shipped from the Cigar Lake mine now under construction (see section on Cigar Lake below). Areva says that the mill is the most technologically-advanced in the world, being able to treat ore from less than 1% to 30% U. Efforts to increase production to fill the gap left by the delay in Cigar Lake production have had limited success, and development of the nearby small Caribou deposit awaits improved economic conditions. Mining of Sue E deposit 2005-08 and Sue B in 2008 over 2008-10 provided ore for the mill until mid-2010 when it was shut down and put on to care and maintenance. This will last until about a year before the Cigar Lake ore starts to be processed, unless Areva's 30% share of McArthur River high-grade ore can be diverted there. In March 2010 Areva applied for a licence to divert some McArthur River high-grade ore there for three years, entailing a 950 km road haul. Some 115,000 tonnes of low-grade ore remains stockpiled to be treated when markets improve, or possibly a diluent for the McArthur River ore. Reserves are small.
McClean Lake is majority-owned (70%) and operated by Areva Resources. Denison Mines (22.5%) and the Japanese company Overseas Uranium Resources Development (OURD, 7.5%) are Areva's joint venture partners.
Rabbit Lake
Uranium was discovered at Rabbit Lake in 1968 and it was brought into production by Cameco in 1975. Most of the deposit has been mined out, but reserves still exist at Eagle Point, where 1,613 tonnes of U3O8 from an ore grade of 2.1% were mined underground in 2008. However, production is expected to diminish in the next few years.
Future mines
Uranium production in Canada is likely to increase significantly as several new mines, now planned or under construction, go into operation sometime after 2011. The two largest projects are Cameco's Cigar Lake mine and Areva's Midwest mine, both in northern Saskatchewan. The mill at McClean Lake has been modified to process ore from both mines. The Rabbit Lake mill will also be modified to take ore from Cigar Lake. Total production is expected to be 8,200 t/yr U3O8 from Cigar Lake and 2,600 t/yr from Midwest.
Canadian uranium resourcesc 
MineOperatortonnes Utonnes
U3O8 
Average ore graded Category
Rabbit LakeCameco980011,6000.76%proven & probable reserves
McClean LakeAreva103112160.53%proven reserves
 
 
411548532.14%measured + indicated resources
McArthur RiverCameco67,40079,50017.29%proven reserves
  61,90073,00013.49%probable reserves
 
 
650076807.09%measured + indicated resources
  57,80068,20013.46%inferred resources
Cigar LakeCameco80,50095,00017.04%proven & probable reserves
  4555402.27%indicated resources
  51,50060,68012.61%inferred resources
MidwestAreva16,34018,9003.84%measured + indicated resources
Dawn LakeCameco5,0005,8601.69%indicated resources
MillenniumCameco19,59023,1004.55%indicated resources
  3,9004,6002.12%inferred resources
 Phoenix

 
Cameco13,70016,20017.98%indicated resources
 TamarackCameco690081004.42%indicated resources
KiggavikAreva49,15357,9660.22%inferred resources
MichelinAurora26,00030,6000.11%measured + indicated resources
  13,67016,1000.12%inferred resources
Jacques LakeAurora400047000.08%measured + indicated resources
Wheeler RiverDenison15,18017,90017.5%inferred resources

Cigar Lake 
The proven and probable ore reserves at Cigar Lake are extremely large and very high grade. A 480-metre-deep underground mine is being developed in very poor ground conditions. Hence it will use ground freezing and high pressure water jets at this level to excavate the ore. High-grade ore slurry from remote mining will be trucked for toll treatment at Areva's expanded McClean Lake mill, 70 km northeast, for the first two years. The average feed grade will be 20.7% U3O8. Then, as production approaches full capacity, all of the leaching will be done at McClean Lake but about half of the uranium solution will go on to Cameco's Rabbit Lake mill 70 km east for final production of uranium oxide concentrate. From both mills total production is expected to be 8,200 t/y U3O8 (7,000 tU/y) ramping up to this over four years from production start. Known resources are 150,000 tonnes U3O8 at about 17% average grade, and with other resources the mine is expected to have a life of at least 30 years.
Construction on the project began in 2005 with production originally scheduled to start in 2011. However, underground floods in 2006 and 2008 set the start date back until about mid-2013 and increased the overall cost of the project from C$660 million to more than C$1.8 billion. There are extra requirements for pumping capacity – now 2500 m3/h, and ground refrigeration. In February 2010, dewatering was complete and remediation was proceeding with the expectation that works will be completed during 2010. The estimated average cash operating cost for Cigar Lake has increased from $14.40 per pound U3O8 in 2007 to $23.14.
Some 1.3 million cubic metres of waste rock from Cigar Lake is being emplaced under water in the Sue C pit at McClean Lake, to prevent acid generation from it. Tailings will remain at McClean Lake and Rabbit Lake.
A Cigar Lake II deposit nearby is being investigated.
Cameco, which has 50% ownership, is managing the joint venture, with Areva holding 37%, Idemitsu 8% and TEPCO 5%.
Midwest
Proven and probable reserves at Midwest are 18,900 tonnes of U3O8 with an average ore grade of 5.47%. A further prospect 3 km to the north is also being evaluated. The original plans were for an underground mine, utilising ground freezing and water jet boring, but new plans call for a large open pit mine that will go to a depth of 215 metres. The ore will be shipped 15 km to the McClean Lake mill to produce 2600 t/y U3O8 for seven years. A comprehensive environmental assessment for the project began in 2006.
Production was originally scheduled to begin in 2011, but in late 2008 the starting date was postponed due several factors, including a 50% rise in the initial estimated capital costs of $435 million. The Midwest project is being managed by Areva Resources, which owns 69.16%. Denison Mines has a 25.17% stake and OURD Canada 5.67%.
Dawn Lake
Although its development is much further off, a deposit of more than 5,000 tonnes of indicated uranium resources is prospective at Dawn Lake in northern Saskatchewan. Grades of up to 30% ore at depths of 280 metres have also been reported nearby. Cameco has 57.4%, Areva 23.1% and Japan-Canada Uranium subsidiary JCU (Canada) Exploration 19.4%.
Exploration prospects
In addition to mining operations planned for the near future, active exploration involving more than 40 companies continues in many parts of Canada. While exploration has concentrated on northern Saskatchewan, new prospects extend to Labrador and Nova Scotia in the Atlantic provinces, Quebec province, Nunavut Territory in the far north, and Ontario's Elliott Lake area. Resource figures quoted are generally NI 43-101 compliant.
The 2009 IAEA Red Book says that in 2007-08 "uranium exploration remained focused on areas favourable for the occurrence of deposits associated with Proterozoic unconformities in the Athabasca Basin of Saskatchewan, and to a lesser extent, similar geologic settings in the Thelon and Hornby Bay basins of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. Uranium exploration also remained very active in the Otish Mountains of central Quebec where Strateco Resources Inc. has applied for a licence to conduct underground exploration on the Matoush deposit and is commencing environmental studies for Matoush. Exploration activity in the Central Mineral Belt of Labrador, where Aurora Energy Resources Inc. is proposing to develop the Michelin and Jacques Lake deposits, reduced significantly after April 2008 when the regional aboriginal government imposed a three-year moratorium on uranium mining on their lands." These are described more fully below.
In uranium-rich northern Saskatchewan, exploration projects are now well-advanced at several locations. The Millenniumdeposit (42% owned by Cameco, 30% by JCU and 28% Areva Resources) has indicated resources of 21,000 tonnes of 4.5% grade U3O8 and 4,400 tonnes of 2.1% grade inferred. It is between McArthur River and Key Lake, and ore would be milled at Key Lake. A feasibility study on the project has led to Cameco seeking approval to mine it. Underground development is envisaged over 2013-17. The Tamarack deposit associated with Dawn Lake is also a focus of interest, with an indicated resource of 8100 tonnes U3O8 at 4.42% requiring underground mining.
The Shea Creek project (51% owned by Areva, 49% UEX Corp.) in the western Athabasca Basin 13 km south of Cluff Lake has reported very high grade ore and a 900 metre shaft is being sunk to provide better access. UEX (21.3% owned by Cameco) has invested about C$30 million in exploration. In May 2010, UEX announced indicated resources of 29,000 t U3O8grading1.54% and inferred resources of 11,100 tonnes grading 1.04%, as of January, with cut-off 0.30%. The deposit remains open.
UEX is also exploring the Horseshoe and Raven deposits at Hidden Bay in the eastern Athabasca basin (5 km from Rabbit Lake and 12 km from McClean Lake). The Horseshoe deposit has indicated resources of 10,400 tonnes of U3O8 at a grade of 0.20% at 100 to 400 m depth. Raven has indicated resources of 5500 tonnes at 0.11%, with cut-off 0.05%, at 100 to 300 m deep. These amounts increase slightly with 0.02% cut-off. A Preliminary Technical Assessment of the deposits was positive and recommends a preliminary feasibility study which also includes the smaller but shallow West Bear deposit. The report assumes Horseshoe access by decline and Raven by open cut, with toll milling and tailings management at Rabbit Lake mill over seven years.
Denison is actively exploring the Wheeler River deposit half way between Key Lake and McArthur River. It is a long strike from the latter and geologically very similar, with some high-grade uranium mineralisation. Denison has a 60% interest, Cameco 30% and JCU (Canada) 10%. A NI 43-101 compliant indicated resources at Phoenix Zone A is 16,200 tonnes U3O8 at an average grade of 17.98% U3O8, and an inferred resource at Phoenix Zone B is 1700 t U3O8 at an average grade of 7.27%, for underground mining.
Fission Energy Corp with a consortium led by Korea Electric Power Corp (Kepco) is exploring the Waterbury Lake area near Midwest.
Hathor Exploration has announced for its Roughrider prospect in Athabasca Basin inferred resources of 13,700 t U3O8 at 11.58%, with 0.4% cut-off in the Eastern zone for underground mining, and in the West zone indicated resources of 7800 t U3O8 at 1.98% and 4800 t at 11.03% with 0.5% cut-off for open pit mining. The East Zone is a series of moderately-dipping stacked, parallel lenses (greater than 0.5% U3O8).
The main Labrador prospect centres on the Michelin deposit, which is being drilled in a C$21million program by Aurora Energy Resources (subsidiary of Fronteer Development). Michelin and the adjacent Jacques Lake deposit have measured and indicated resources of 35,000 tonnes of U3O8, plus 16,000 t inferred resources, mostly requiring underground mining. In 2009, a positive economic assessment of the project proposed investment of US$ 984 million to set up mine and mill, with production ramping up to 3000 t/y. A Nunatsiavut government moratorium until March 2011 is in place, and expiry of this will coincide with completion of a land use planning assessment being undertaken jointly by the Nunatsiavut and Newfoundland-Labrador governments. Bayswater Uranium Corp. has announced a very small deposit at Anna Lake nearby.
In Nova Scotia, exploration has been proposed at Millet Brook, but it awaits a review of a 1985 moratorium on uranium mining in the province.
In Quebec, exploration is underway at several locations with a total of more than 40,000 tonnes of indicated or inferred deposits. Strateco Resources has reported indicated resources of 3400 t U3O8 grading 0.75% and inferred resources of 6,000 tonnes grading 0.50% at its Matoush deposit in the Otish Basin of central Quebec. Abitex Resources has 6,000 t U3O8mostly inferred resources at its Lavoie project in the Otish Mountains, and envisages mine production at 1200 t/yr from 2014. The company completed a scoping study in 2008 and will begin underground development in 2010, with a view to mine production in 2013. Azimut Exploration has committed C$42 million to uranium exploration, mainly for the Katavic project in Quebec's northern Nunavik region and other prospects in the Ungava Bay region further north. Uracan Resources reports 19,900 tonnes U3O8 of inferred resources at its North Shore prospect in eastern Quebec.  Areva is establishing a joint venture with Waseco Resources to explore the Labrador Trough project.
In the Nunavut Territory, some 500 km north of Manitoba, a joint venture headed by Areva is conducting a feasibility study on the Kiggavik uranium deposit in the Thelon Basin, with an estimated 67,000 tonnes U3O8 at 0.24% grade. The indigenous Inuit organization, Nunavut Tunngavic, reversed its previous ban on uranium exploration and mining in 2006, but the project has faced opposition from other groups. In March 2010, the Nunavut government ruled that the proposal would be reviewed by a territorial regulator rather than undergo a federal environmental assessment. The project involves the development of three open pit mines at Kiggavik and both an open pit mine and an underground mine at Sissons. Areva and its partners, JCU (Canada) Exploration and Daewoo, hope for a start-up of the mine and mill complex in 2015.e Also in Nunavut, at Amer Lake, Uranium North Resources has reported inferred resources of 8,770 t U3O8.
In Northwest Territories, Cameco has the prospective Boomerang project in the southwest Thelon Basin. Land access issues hinder active exploration at present.
The Elliot Lake area of Ontario, which was the centre of Canada's early uranium mining, is again attracting exploration. In September 2008, Pele Mountain Resources commenced the permitting process for its Eco Ridge underground uranium and rare earth oxides mine and processing facility in the region. Eco Ridge contains indicated resources of 6900 tonnes U3O8and inferred resources of 14,300 tonnes U3O8. The Serpent River-Pecors deposit is a few kilometres east.
In British Columbia, the Blizzard prospect south of Kelowna, which was first explored in the 1980s, has been revived by Boss Power. The company has challenged a provincial government moratorium on exploration and mining imposed in April 2008, and the British Columbia government has indicated the Blizzard project may be able to go forward.
Uranium exploration appears to be on the upswing throughout Canada. Cameco spent C$57 million on exploration in 2008 (plus a further $32 million in three strategic partnerships with junior explorers) and plans C$50-55 million for 2009, mainly in Saskatchewan, Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. In late 2007, Cameco announced an agreement with the Russian company Uranium Holding ARMZ (JSC Atomredmetzoloto) to create a joint venture to explore and mine uranium in northwest Russia, Saskatchewan and Nunavut.

Further Information 
Appendix
Related information pages
Notes 
a. Data: company sources. Where an asterisk (*) is shown, the figures are small and included with the McArthur River figure.
Annual uranium production (tonnes U)
 199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010 
McArthur River 37396640719958317200720072007199638373397656
Key Lake3731402299**-------
McClean Lake56023082539234223182310211269073412491388666
Rabbit Lake26932790175544022812087231619721544136814471464
Cluff Lake123414431269162627-------
Total8214106821250111607104581159711628986394779000101739786
cf. World3106534734363663606335613402194159539429412794376450684 

b. Data: company sources. Where an asterisk (*) is shown, the figures are from the World Nuclear Association Market Report. [Back]
c. Data: company sources. In Canadian figures resources do not include reserves and are reported in accordance with Canadian standard NI-43-101. [Back]
d. Average ore grades given as percentage of U3O8 in the ore. [Back]
e. The two parts of the project (Kiggavik and Sissons) are operated by Areva Resources Canada Inc.; Sissons is held 50% by Areva in joint venture with JCU (Canada) Exploration Co. Ltd. (48%) and Daewoo Corporation (2%); and Kiggavik itself is held 99% by Areva and 1% by Daewoo. [Back]
General sources
Uranium webpage on Natural Resources Canada website (www.nrcan.gc.ca)
Cameco annual reports
Uranium in Saskatchewan series of fact sheets available on Cameco's website (www.cameco.com)
Areva Resources website (www.cri.ca)
Canadian Nuclear Association website (www.cna.ca)
Red Books:
Uranium 2007 - Resources, Production and Demand, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency and International Atomic Energy Agency, OECD Publishing, June 2008 (ISBN: 9789264047662)
Uranium 2009 - Resources, Production and Demand, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency and International Atomic Energy Agency, OECD Publishing, July 2010 (ISBN: 9789264047907)
Fuente: http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf49.html

domingo, 28 de agosto de 2011

Mercado del Uranio


Uranium Market

(last updated 9 Jul 2011)

Contents:

Uranium Calculators


The WISE Uranium Project Calculators

Nuclear Fuel Chain Calculators:
> view some output samplesNuclear Fuel Processing Calculators:
Radiation Activity Calculators:Dose and Risk Calculators:

Nuclear Fuel Production Waste Treatment Facilities


Nuclear Fuel Production Waste Treatment Facilities

CountryOwner/ControllerPlant Name/LocationCapacity a) [MTU/year]
SwedenRanstad Mineral ABRanstad [ISSUES] 
United StatesIUCWhite Mesa Mill, Utah [ISSUES] 
a) Nominal capacity


Source: Originally based on: U.S. DOE / Energy Information Administration: Nuclear Power Generation and Fuel Cycle Report 1996, DOE/EIA-0436(96), Washington DC, October 1996;
Updated from IAEA - NFCIS external link and other sources.



Further Information


Planta de Fabricación de Combustible Nuclear para HWR.


Heavy Water Reactor Fuel Fabrication Facilities

Map (Java required)
CountryOwner/ControllerPlant Name/LocationCapacity a) [MTU/year]
Argentina67% Pecom-Nuclear S.A., 33% CNEA external linkEzeiza [ISSUES]160
CanadaCameco Corp. external linkPort Hope, Ontario [ISSUESb)1,500
GE-Hitachi Nuclear Energy Canada Inc. external linkPeterborough, Ontario [ISSUESc)1,200
ChinaCNNC external linkBaotou, Inner Mongolia200
IndiaDAE Nuclear Fuel Complex external linkHyderabad135
Trombay135
IranAEOI external linkIsfahan [ISSUES]35
RomaniaSocietatea Nationala Nuclearelectrica SA external linkFabrica de Combustibil Nuclear Pitesti, Mioveni-Arges [ISSUES]240
South KoreaKEPCO Nuclear Fuel Co., Ltd. (KNFC) external linkTaejon400
PakistanPakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) external linkChashma20
Total4,025
a) Nominal capacity
b) Processing of UO2 only. Conversion of U3O8 to UO3 is performed at Cameco's Blind River external link plant [ISSUES], and conversion of UO3 to UO2 at Cameco's Port Hope external link plant [ISSUES].
c) UO2 pellets are produced in GE-Hitachi Nuclear Energy Canada Inc.'s Toronto facility [ISSUES] and then assembled into fuel bundles in Peterborough.
MTU = metric tonnes of uranium.


Planta de Fabricación de Combustible Nuclear para LWR.


Light Water Reactor Fuel Fabrication Facilities


Uranium Oxide Fuel Fabrication Map (Java required)
CountryOwner/ControllerPlant Name/LocationCapacity a) [MTU/year]
ArgentinaDioxitek S.A. external linkCórdoba b) [ISSUES] 
BelgiumFBFC (49% COGEMA external link, 51% Framatome external link)Dessel750
BrazilFEC (INB external link)Resende external link100
ChinaCNNC external linkYibin [ISSUES]400
FranceFBFC (49% COGEMA external link, 51% Framatome external link)Romans-sur-Isère [ISSUES]820
SICN (100% COGEMA external link)Veurey-Voroise (closed) [ISSUES](150)
GermanyAdvanced Nuclear Fuels external link (66% Areva external link, 34% Siemens external link)Lingen [ISSUES]650
IndiaDAE Nuclear Fuel Complex external linkHyderabad [ISSUES]25
JapanJapan Nuclear Fuel Co., Ltd.Yokosuka City750
Mitsubishi Nuclear Fuel Co. Ltd. external link (30% Areva external link - planned)Tokai-Mura440
Nuclear Fuel Industries Ltd external linkKumatori284
Tokai-Mura200
KazakhstanUlba Metallurgical Co external link (90% Kazatomprom external link)Ust-Kamenogorsk [ISSUES]2,000
South KoreaKEPCO Nuclear Fuel Co., Ltd. (KNFC) external linkTaejon400
PakistanPakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) external linkKundian?
RussiaJSC TVEL external linkELEMASH external link, Elektrostal [ISSUES]1,020
NCCP external link, Novosibirsk [ISSUES]1,000
SpainENUSA external linkJuzbado [ISSUES]300
SwedenBNFL/Westinghouse Atom external linkVästerås [ISSUES]600
United KingdomBritish Nuclear Fuels, Ltd. external linkSpringfields, Lancashire [ISSUES]330
United StatesAreva NP, Inc. external linkLynchburg, Virginia [ISSUES]400
Richland, Washington [ISSUES]700
Westinghouse external link (100% BNFL external link)Hematite, Missouri (closed) [ISSUESOLD ISSUES](450)
Columbia, S. Carolina [ISSUES]1,600
Global Nuclear Fuel - Americas, L.L.C.Wilmington, N. Carolina [ISSUES]1,200
Total13,969




Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel Fabrication Map (Java required)
CountryOwner/ControllerPlant Name/LocationCapacity a) [MTIHM/year]
BelgiumBelgonucléaire SA external linkDessel (closes July 31, 2006) [ISSUES]37
FranceAreva NC external linkCadarache (somewhat closed) [ISSUES](40)
MELOX SA (100% Areva NC external link)Marcoule [ISSUES]195
IndiaDAE Nuclear Fuel Complex external linkTarapur50
JapanJNC external linkTokai-Mura10
United KingdomBritish Nuclear Fuels, Ltd. external linkSellafield [ISSUES]128
Total420
a) Nominal capacity
b) conversion to UO2
MTU = metric tonnes of uranium.
MTIHM = metric tonnes of initial heavy metal.