Showing posts with label John Borshoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Borshoff. Show all posts

November 16, 2010

Uranium Demand Rising as China `Piles Up' Contracts, Paladin Energy Says

Published on Tuesday Nov 16 2010
 

Australia's Uranium Miner Paladin Energy, expects prices to keep rising as China drives demand for nuclear fuel.

China has “piled up” contracts to import uranium, Paladin Chief Executive Officer John Borshoff told analysts on a call today. “Although they have sucked a chunk out of new production, they are nowhere near their target of acquiring in the vicinity of 45 to 50 million pounds per annum by 2020.”

Paladin, which operates the Langer Heinrich mine in Namibia and the Kayelekera project in Malawi, forecasts increasing uranium demand as countries such as China expand the use of nuclear power to curb emissions from burning coal. The Perth- based company aims to double uranium oxide output to almost 14 million pounds by 2016 from a projected 7 million pounds in the year ending June 30, 2011.

Paladin’s uranium production rose 83 percent to 1.36 million pounds in the three months through September from a year earlier, it said last month.

Uranium oxide prices have rallied in the past month to about $59 a pound, compared with $40 in the second quarter of the year, Macquarie Group Ltd. said in a report today. Chinese imports have increased, particularly between June and September, according to Macquarie. Uranium peaked at $136 a pound in 2007.

Paladin is targeting uranium shipments to China in 2011 after signing a preliminary agreement with the nation’s second- biggest builder of nuclear power plants. The Australian company aims to convert a memorandum of understanding with China Guangdong Nuclear Power Group Co. into supply contracts later this year or early 2011, Borshoff said Sept. 1.

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October 20, 2010

Supply Crunch Signals "URANIUM BOOM"

Published on Wednesday Oct 20 2010

GOLD is justifiably hogging investors' attention at the moment, but the uranium market is looking interesting, judging by presentations from uranium producers at recent investment conferences.

Executives such as Paladin Resources CEO John Borshoff (presenting at the Africa Down Under conference in Perth, Australia) and Denison Mines CEO Ron Hochstein (addressing the Modern Energy Forum in Denver, in the United States) reckon the uranium price is about to start moving because of a looming supply crunch.

There are two key factors they maintain will trigger that crunch. While there’s no shortage of the metal worldwide, there’s been a dearth of successful new uranium mining companies able to supply it. That’s due to under-investment in the sector, because the uranium price has been so low for so long while many of the companies that have entered the business have made a mess of it.

Borshoff loves to rub it in on that point, emphasising how Paladin has successfully developed two mines over the past five years – Langer Heinrich (in Namibia) and Kayelekera (in Malawi) – while a string of its competitors have either failed outright or are performing way below expectation.

South Africa provides two classic examples.
Uranium One failed outright with the development of the Dominion Mine, against which it took a $1,8bn impairment charge when it shut it down last year. And First Uranium has run way behind on its production schedules at Ezulwini and its Mine Waste Solutions and is still in business mainly because it was bailed out financially by shareholder Simmer & Jack Mines.

“This is a highly complicated metal to produce. People just don’t seem to understand the complexities of it,” says Borshoff.

But the crunch factor is probably going to be the end of the highly enriched uranium (HEU) deal through which uranium has been provided to the nuclear power generating industry from decommissioned Russian nuclear weapons.

That secondary supply is what has kept the uranium price depressed for the past 20 years, bar the short-lived spike in 2007/2008. Hochstein says that deal ends in 2013 and it’s not going to be renewed, which will leave a large gap in the market.

Hochstein reckons there are 440 nuclear reactors currently operating that require 184m lbs of uranium oxide (U308) to keep them running. World supply of newly mined uranium oxide currently sits at around 130m lbs/year.

Article Continues .....................

Link Provided: 
www.miningmx.com/news/energy/Supply-crunch-signals...



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