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Uranium is an investment phenomenon. Take a look at the chart below of uranium "spot" price
for a breathtaking view of a wild bull market.

In any wild bull market, wild stories get created to justify ever-increasing
prices. These are typically "sound-bite" stories that can mobilize hot money
from the investment public. I had followed the uranium market as a technical
trader and did not pay too much attention to the fundamentals as long as the
trend was up. Recent developments such as Cameco's Cigar Lake mine flood ratcheted
up the hype surrounding uranium to a frightening level. So I decided it was
time to do an in-depth fundamental analysis of the uranium market to separate
the facts from the hype. This will not be a "bull or bear" analysis but a cool-headed
examination of both the opportunities and risks in the uranium market.
Because of its length, this article will be published in 2 parts.
Uranium Sources
Uranium has the chemical symbol U and
is the heaviest of the 92 naturally occurring chemical elements. Natural uranium
is slightly radioactive with an average half-life of 4.2 billion years. Half-life
is the time it takes for half a sample to decay radioactively into another
chemical element. The longer the half-life of the element the less radioactive
the element is. Radioactivity is a normal part of the environment and is present
everywhere. There is a small amount of slightly radioactive potassium-40 in
your body with a half-life of 1.5 billion years. These low levels of radioactivity
are not particularly dangerous but uranium is toxic if ingested. The decay
of uranium, thorium, potassium and other radioactive materials in the Earth's
core is responsible for its interior heat and creates the energy behind continental
drift, volcanoes, and earthquakes.
Uranium comes in several forms called "isotopes". These isotopes are different
in the number of neutrons in the nucleus of the uranium atom. There are two
isotopes contained in natural uranium designated U-238 and U-235. Over 99%
of natural uranium is U-238 and about 0.7% is U-235. The half-life of U-235
is 700 million years, which makes it significantly more radioactive than U-238.
U-235 is "fissile" which
means that it can sustain a nuclear chain reaction. This makes U-235 valuable
as nuclear fuel, and also as an atomic weapon. The common U-238 isotope is
also referred to as "depleted" uranium.
Refined uranium is typically in the form of an oxide called U3O8 or "yellowcake".
After refinement, uranium goes through a process called "enrichment" where
the concentration of U-235 is increased for use as nuclear fuel. Enrichment
is an extremely difficult process that requires separation by weight of two
isotopes that differ in weight by only about 1%. Uranium enriched to a concentration
of 3-20% U-235 is called "low-enriched uranium" or LEU. Uranium enriched above
20% is called "high-enriched uranium" or HEU. Uranium enriched above 85% is
weapons-grade. Enrichment is usually performed via either centrifuge or gas
diffusion processes. The depleted U-238 uranium is typically stockpiled as
waste.
Uranium is not a particularly rare element; it is more plentiful than antimony,
tin, cadmium, mercury, or silver and is about as abundant as arsenic or molybdenum.
However, concentrated uranium deposits that lend to profitable mining are not
common. Uranium is distributed worldwide and 21 countries export uranium ore,
with Canada, Australia and Niger being the three largest exporters and the
United States, Congo, South Africa, Gabon, Russia and China also having significant
deposits.
Primary Sources
Primary production of uranium is obtainted by extraction from ores or other
natural source. There are a number of mineral ores that contain uranium. The
most common is uranite,
also known as pitchblende. The largest known deposits of uranium ores are located
in Australia with almost 40% of global reserves. The largest single deposit
is located at the Olympic Dam in South Australia. The largest uranium mining
company is the Canadian Cameco (CCJ-NYSE).
Uranium is mined via a number of methods including open-pit, underground,
or in-situ. Each has advantages and disadvantages. Uranium mining is dangerous.
Extreme measures must be taken to protect workers from toxic uranium ore dust
and, more importantly, radon gas that is always present as a decay product
of uranium.
Uranium is present in minute quantities almost everywhere. There are a number
of alternative sources of uranium that could be exploited at the right price.
For example, uranium is dissolved in seawater at a concentration of about 3mg
per cubic meter. This concentration, although low, is a potentially gigantic
resource and could theoretically provide for limitless supply if the technical
hurdles could be overcome. A Japanese study estimated cost of seawater extraction
at about US$120/lb, not too far from current prices. The US Dept. of Energy
also studied seawater extraction end estimated that the Earth's oceans contain
some 2 billion tons of recoverable uranium. This is enough to support 6000
years of 300GW generation using modern reactors. There are several test seawater
extraction projects already in operation.
A hidden source of uranium is in the fly ash residue from coal burning furnaces.
This fly ash is collected in scrubbers from smokestacks and disposed in storage
pits. The concentration of uranium in typical fly ash ranges from 30-100 parts
per million (PPM) but has been measured as high as 1500ppm. These huge fly
ash dumps contain a large uranium resource. Such a low concentration would
be unprofitable in a typical hard rock mine, but the soft fly ash could be
extracted competitively at the right price.
Secondary Sources
Secondary sources of uranium are from stockpiles or recycled from previous
use.
Traditional nuclear power plants are quite inefficient at "burning" their
uranium fuel load and much of the U-235 fissile material is discarded as waste.
This fuel is recoverable in a procedure called "reprocessing".
Many countries already perform reprocessing on their spent fuel to both increase
efficiency and reduce waste. The US has elected to store spent reactor fuel
as waste since the 1970s. US nuclear waste storage is a highly contentious
issue that could be solved by a political decision to recycle rather than discard
spent fuel.
Uranium is stockpiled globally as a both a strategic metal and as a fuel.
There are a number of different estimates of total global supply but the true
extent is unknown. Some studies suggest that total above-ground supplies are
in the range of 100 million lbs. At first glance, stockpiles seem low considering
that global consumption of uranium is currently around 180 million pounds.
But these stockpiles represent a mix of natural, LEU, and HEU. One pound of
20% HEU is equivalent to some 27 pounds of natural uranium as measured by the
critical U-235 content. Russia is estimated to have over 1 million lbs. of
HEU in its strategic military stockpile. Assuming that Russian military HEU
is enriched to near bomb-grade, then this stockpile represents the equivalent
to 50-80 million lbs. of natural uranium. Any rigorous analysis of uranium
stockpiles must take into account enrichment grades.
Global stockpiles of "depleted" uranium are estimated at 2.6 billion pounds.
Although depleted uranium has had most of its U-235 removed, there still remains
residual U-235 content of around 0.2% that can be recovered through re-enrichment.
Russia has been doing this for years using its excess enrichment capability.
This is a huge resource that becomes economic when market prices for uranium
are high.
The current global arsenal of nuclear weapons is another potential uranium
secondary source. Million of pounds of HEU are incorporated into nuclear weapons
worldwide. In the 1990s, Russia dismantled a large part of their arsenal and
sold much of the uranium as nuclear fuel which glutted the market. As these
weapons age, the bomb materials become contaminated with decay products so
they will need to have their uranium cores reprocessed. If global nuclear tensions
subside, much of this uranium may end up in the fuel cycle for nuclear reactors.
Uses of Uranium
Prior to the nuclear age, uranium had very limited usefulness. When mixed
with silica, it makes a beautiful yellow or greenish glass which has been long
treasured by glassblowers and collectors. Uranium is also used in some pottery
dyes. The metal has some unique properties that make it useful in armor-piercing
artillery shells. Many armored tanks use a uranium alloy to protect it from
heavy artillery fire.
Uranium has its most important use in nuclear power and weapons. The rare
isotope U-235 has the ability
to fission, which is the process of a uranium atom splitting in two and releasing
two neutrons that can cause more atoms to split in a chain reaction. U-235
is the only naturally occurring substance with that property. Fission releases
an awesome amount of energy. One pound of U-235 releases as much energy 700
tons of coal. The vast majority of uranium production goes to fuel nuclear
power plants. This makes uranium essentially a single-use resource.
Nuclear Reactors
Light Water Reactors
There are a number of designs for nuclear reactors in operation today. The
vast majority are called "light
water" reactors that use LEU uranium (typically 3% U-235) to sustain a
continuous chain reaction. Water in the reactor core is used as a coolant and
as a "moderator" to control the neutron flux to maximize the efficiency of
nuclear fission. The reactor generates heat which creates steam that runs a
turbine for electrical generation.
Although U-235 is its major fuel, the uranium 238 atoms also contribute to
the fission process by converting to plutonium 239 -- about one-half of which
is consumed with the reactor. Light-water reactors are generally refueled every
12 to 18 months, at which time, about 25 percent of the fuel supply is replaced.
Spent reactor fuel is not completely exhausted. It still contains about 1.8%
of U-235 and a small percentage of fissile plutonium. Spent fuel rods can be
recycled to recover the remaining fissile fuel but the US and other major countries
have elected to dispose of them instead due to cost and political pressure.
Therefore the light water fuel cycle is very inefficient, using only about
1% of the fuel potential and produces significant waste byproducts that have
been difficult to dispose of.
Heavy Water Reactors
A more advanced design is called the "heavy water" or CANDU reactor
design. This reactor utilizes heavy water as the neutron moderator instead
of normal "light" water. The important feature of the CANDU reactor is the
ability to use natural unenriched uranium as a reactor fuel. The CANDU design
is dramatically more efficient that traditional light water reactors. The traditional
light-water reactor burns very little of the "fertile" U-238.
The common U-238 isotope can be a primary fuel under the right circumstances
and therefore contains enormous untapped energy. The CANDU reactor can burn
U-238 along with other alternative fuels including thorium, plutonium, and
even spent fuel from light water reactors. The CANDU reactor design is inherently
safer than light water reactors because the low enrichment level of the fuel
makes an uncontrolled chain reaction almost impossible.
CANDU reactors are significantly more expensive to build and maintain however.
This is primarily due to the large supply of extremely pure heavy water (D2O)
required by the design. Refined designs have been built that use less heavy
water and retain many of the advantages of fuel efficiency and flexibility.
Breeder Reactors
A third type of reactor is called a "Breeder
reactor". This fast-neutron design uses its neutron generation capability
to continuously create fuel from "fertile" material. These fertile materials
include U-238 and thorium (three
times more plentiful than uranium). The breeder reactor can create more fuel
than it uses by transmuting the fertile material into a fissile material
such as plutonium 239 and U-233 by irradiation with fast neutrons. Irradiated
materials are periodically removed from the reactor and reprocessed into
primary fuel. Breeder designs are difficult to build and have some operational
hazards. The primary hazard is in the reprocessing of fertile fuels into
highly radioactive and dangerous materials such as plutonium. The breeder
reactor has the potential, however, to generate humanity's energy requirements
for centuries using commonly available fuels.
New breeder reactor designs such as the Integral
Fast Reactor (IFR) have been created that retain all fuels until completely
burned down to low level waste. The IFR is the "holy grail" of nuclear reactor
designs that operate at almost 99% fuel efficiency, require no reprocessing,
and generate only small amounts of low-level radioactive waste. The IFR breeder
reactor project in the US was cancelled in the 1990's due to political pressure.
All three basic reactor designs are currently in operation and do not represent "speculative" technology.
Nuclear reactor science and technology are very mature. Refinements are coming
faster in recent years due to increased research and the availability of newer
engineered materials. Global warming and high fossil fuel prices are weakening
the political opposition to nuclear power. Many environmentalists have now
become pro-nuclear, viewing it as the lesser of evils. It is expected that
the next generation of nuclear power plants will operate safer and more efficiently
than ever.
Nuclear Power Plant Construction and Decommission
There are over 440 reactors operating in
the world. They represent a variety of designs but most use the light water
system which requires the standard 3% enriched uranium fuel.
Reactor construction had been almost nil during the period from 1980-200,
but the recent steep rise in the cost of fossil fuels has re-ignited interest
in nuclear power. The greatest construction and planning activity is in the
developing world, most notably China, India, and Russia. The chart below shows
the best information that I could obtain about power plants currently under
construction and planned in the major nuclear countries.
| |
Under construction |
APPROVED or Ordered* |
| China |
5 |
5 |
| France |
1 |
0 |
| India |
7 |
4 |
| Japan |
1 |
1 |
| Russia |
4 |
1 |
| USA |
1 |
0 |
| |
|
*estimated |
A total of 28 reactors are in process of construction globally. Most of the
new reactors are being built with advanced designs that are much more efficient
and can utilize alternative fuels. It is difficult to project future uranium
demand from these new reactors since they can be operated in a number of different
modes with a variety of fuel configurations.
The most aggressive nuclear expansion is in China where there are at least
20 additional nuclear power plants proposed for construction in the next 20
years. These were not included in the above chart since they are in the proposal
stage and are not yet approved or ordered. China has announced its intention
to be completely nuclear independent in the future, using its own sources of
fuel and its own processing facilities.
Many of the reactors currently operating in the world are nearing the end
of their planned lifetimes. In the past, over 90 commercial reactors have been
decommissioned. The US and Russia have the oldest operating reactors that are
likely to be decommissioned in the near future. 6 reactors are in the process
of being decommissioned in the US. Figures from other countries are difficult
to obtain and are in constant change. Germany and Belgium are considering decommissioning
their entire nuclear program. Projections of future uranium demand must take
into account the reductions in consumption represented by reactor decommissioning.
****
In Part 2 we will look at uranium from an economic and investment perspective.
Special thanks to Nuclear Materials Engineer Mark Hugo for his technical
assistance on this article.
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