General conclusions of the analysis are:
1. After a 20-year period of dormancy, reactor orders are on the rise because of nuclear’s low operating costs, grid reliability, and zero carbon footprint. Nuclear may be the best new source of power for an electricity-hungry world. We see uranium demand growing by 2.5-3.0% per year between now and 2015. Developing countries, which today account for 15% of global uranium demand will account for 53% of incremental consumption in the period 2006-2020.
2. New uranium mine development was forgotten during uranium’s long price drought (1980-2003). That fact, combined with the “arsenal overhang” that resulted when Russia and the U.S. downblended nuclear warheads into utility fuel after the Cold War, gave the nuclear industry no reason to invest in new mines. Now miners are scrambling to keep up with demand. Given time, the supply problem will resolve itself, but that could be 10 years, as new mines are nearly as hard to authorize and build in many places, as are nuclear reactors.
3. Uranium supply (primary and secondary material) could fall short of demand by 14,000 tons per year out to 2012. The gap will be filled by inventory liquidation (enrichment tailings, ore tailings, and strategic stockpiles) and other tactics (perhaps longer refueling cycles) but uranium prices are likely to remain quite high – though very volatile – by historical standards. We believe than uranium yellowcake will trade in the $75-125 per pound level through the next several years, though it could easily spike or sag out of that range at least temporarily. http://resourcexinvestor.com/news.php?id=2304
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OK lets have a look back to the year 1986 and we will see the pink elephant (enough uranium) again....IAEA report
http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publicatio ... 95_web.pdf
Yes, the reality now is totally different from the past projections
http://www.nea.fr/html/ndd/reports/2006 ... nglish.pdf
http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publicatio ... 04_scr.pdf
http://www.fraw.org.uk/mobbsey/papers/oies_article.pdf
http://www.world-nuclear.org/sym/2005/pdf/Maeda.pdf
http://www.world-nuclear.org/sym/2003/pdf/graul.pdf
http://www.naka.jaea.go.jp/SCI/Long-Ter ... Supply.pdf
http://www.gnr2.org/pdf/NF_20070618.pdf








