Add You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Finance > Investing > Russians Expecting $100/Pound Uranium

Tags

  • total
  • always
  • russia nearly
  • world wanting
  • called atomprom

  • Links

  • Tearing Up the Tracks: The Down Side of Digital Phone Service
  • Bedroom Closet Organizer - Keeping Your Bedroom Closet Organized For Maximum Effectiveness
  • Sports Betting 101
  • Add You - Russians Expecting $100/Pound Uranium

    Multiple Path Link Building
    In just about any form of marketing, when something works it gets repeated to death until the strategy is no longer effective. Good product tag lines get over used (got milk?, got sand? got Jesus?), TV shows have to get more and more "cutting edge" (NYPD Blue, Family Guy, CSI), and movies have to be bigger and better than their predecessors (Matrix, Lord of the Rings, Pirates of the Caribbean). It's not long until yesterday's big thing is today's normal thing.Online marketing, especially link building, is similar. While there is no replacing the concept of building a good site worthy of links and letting people know about it, there are actually numerous strategies available for attracting good links through solid marketing efforts. In any kind of marketing it’s good to have multiple strategies, or multiple paths, which one can travel to get to the goal. Putting aside the whole concept of persona marketing which understands that you need to reach different people via different means, it's a good idea not to put too put all of your time, money or effort into a single marketing approach. Again, this is especially true with link building.Over the past few years we've seen the rise and fall of single-path link building practices: automated reciprocal links, link swapping, link buying, link spamming, etc. I'm not suggesting that all of these methods are dead or useless, but their use as a quick and easy solution is extremely limited. Many times, when one finds a link strategy that works, they drop all else and run with it. This ta
    iously, another reactor manufacturer, General Electric, had merged with Utah International to spin off Pathfinder Minerals. Its uranium mining subsidiary filled its requirements.

    By dangling uranium contracts as an incentive to purchase a reactor, a reactor manufacturer might overlook existing utilities in need of uranium. “It would be foolish for them to go existing utilities and say, ‘we’d like to sell you four million pounds of uranium and give you a long-term contract,’” said Bambrough. “Why would they want to make just a couple hundreds of millions of dollars, when they can sell the same uranium for the same price to someone, who wants to build a new reactor, and then pack another two billion dollars on the order? That puts the existing U.S. utilities behind the eight-ball, those who aren’t stepping up and buying orders.”

    Tough Times Ahead for Uranium-Seeking U.S. Utilities

    Yesterday, David Christian, Dominion Resources’s chief nuclear officer, held a media tour to a site in Louisa County (Virginia) where the company hopes to build a third nuclear reactor at the North Anna power station. He explained to the media that between now and 2025, U.S. energy consumption will increase by about one-third. Another 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power generation will be needed by 2020 just to maintain the existing energy supply diversity.

    The push for new reactors has begun with thirty new nuclear reactors being planned or proposed, according to recent statement made by the Nuclear Energy Institute. That’s about the same number Russian is proposing. China is planning or proposing twice as many. “It is going to be extremely difficult for existin

    Innovation Management - Reducing Hierarchy
    Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.There are other useful definitions in this field, for example, creativity can be defined as consisting of a number of ideas, a number of diverse ideas and a number of novel ideas.There are distinct processes that enhance problem identification and idea generation and, similarly, distinct processes that enhance idea selection, development and commercialisation. Whilst there is no sure fire route to commercial success, these processes improve the probability that good ideas will be generated and selected and that investment in developing and commercialising those ideas will not be wasted. Reducing Hierarchy Theory consistently states that the reduction of hierarchy and “flat” organisations are better suited to increasing optimal performance. Reality shows us that even the flattest organisations have hierarchy and that it cannot be completely eliminated. Further, hierarchy has value – for example, there are compelling arguments that people look for and follow good leaders.But results from organisations that consciously and forcefully attempt to reduce status differences produce superior results:a) Good leaders, though of higher status, make others feel valuable by increasing their value and hence status.Status deference hinders rather than increases output:a) People tend to shut down when confronted by higher status individu
    In a speech at the 50th annual regular session of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) General Conference in Vienna, IAEA chief Mohammed Elbaradei confirmed what many of us knew in praising China and Russia, which “currently have the most ambitious plans for short-term nuclear expansion.” Nine months ago, he might not have made that statement.

    Today, Russia has emerged as one of the more vocal proponents for, and aggressive strategists in, the full spectrum of the nuclear fuel cycle. From nuclear waste disposal to uranium mining and enrichment, and in moving forward to construct nuclear reactors, Russia could possibly become an even more significant future player in the nuclear sector than China is envisioned. Russia’s civilian nuclear chief Sergei Kiriyenko told Russian television earlier this week, “Russia believes 25 percent of the world’s market in nuclear fuel-cycle services, including uranium enrichment, is an optimal share. Technically and technologically, we are well positioned for this.”

    And whoever control this much market share should help decide the price. “The Russian people I’ve spoken with seem to think $100/pound is a given,” Sprott Asset Management Market Strategist Kevin Bambrough told us upon his return from the recent World Nuclear Association Conference in London. “If anyone is in the know, or can affect market psychology, it would be them.”

    Russia’s Nuclear Progress in 2006

    Last week, Tenex’s general director Vladimir Smirnov announced the formation of a new national uranium exploration and mining company, provisionally named The Uranium Mining Company. He said it will be established by the end of this year, and hopes to boost production by tenfold over the next two years.

    This week, Kiriyenko announced Russia’s “international” center to enrich uranium should be built by the end of this year, and ready to launch by early 2007. As announced earlier, the site will be in eastern Siberia at the Angarsk Electrolysis Chemical Plant. The city is located 3,000 miles east of Moscow. Russian President Putin suggested at the current IAEA conference that the international community set up enrichment centers under the supervision of the IAEA to prevent discrimination in access to nuclear energy. Putin’s veiled remarks were likely aimed at encouraging Iran’s civilian nuclear energy program, for which Russia is rebuilding the Bushehr nuclear power plant. Russia also proposes to joint venture another uranium enrichment center in Kazakhstan with that country.

    In early September, Sergei Obozov, head of Rosenergoatom, Russia’s nuclear power monopoly, announced plans to start building nine nuclear reactors in 2007. But, it won’t stop there. According to an estimate calculated in September by the World Nuclear Association, Russia has 26 reactors proposed or planned by 2020. The country hopes to power 23 percent of its electricity with nuclear energy. This would give Russia nearly 60 reactors, almost as many as France and Japan presently have operational.

    Russia is also revamping its nuclear industry, consolidating its civilian nuclear companies into one state-run company. It will be called Atomprom, and the country hopes to compete with other industry giants, such as AREVA, General Electric and Toshiba to build reactors.

    This is where the business might get even more interesting. “Pairing of new reactors with uranium contracts could be huge,” Bambrough explained. “Companies wanting to build reactors are going around the world, wanting to joint ventures with mining companies to increase uranium supply for themselves. The reason they want to do that is to offer a full suite of services. They know they can not sell a reactor without supply.” Based upon how Russia’s nuclear ambitions are unfolding, this is their likely course of action. AREVA, which sells reactors, has mining operations in Canada, Africa and elsewhere.

    Major Flaw in Uranium Requirement Calculations

    In his research Bambrough observed a significant flaw in uranium price modeling. “No one is modeling for ‘new reactors’ inventory,” he pointed out to us. According to the World Nuclear Association’s (WNA) most recent report, another 222 nuclear reactors are planned or proposed by more than 20 countries worldwide. And each month those estimates grow larger. At the time of the WNA report, the United States was marked for 23 proposed/planned. This week, that number grew to 30. To remain conservative, we agreed to use a base figure of 160 new reactors before 2020.

    “When you start looking at the demand that comes from these new reactors, from what is called the ‘initial core,’ the numbers some people are using is anywhere between 1.5 to 1.8 million pounds,” Bambrough explained. “That is how much is required on the day you commission it. It’s prudent to purchase that uranium about four years prior to commissioning your reactor.” Prudent nuclear plant operators would prefer to have three to five years of uranium inventory in advance. “That’s two million pounds per reactor,” Bambrough calculated. “Spread that number out over a decade, and that means 32 million pounds per year,” he said. “If you can imagine, even just one million pounds per all of the 600 (total) reactors, it could be possible there may be 600 million pounds just for inventories between now and 2020.”

    What will that do to the spot uranium price? “I am hearing about deals being done in the $60s,” Bambrough announced. “I still think we are going to challenge the inflation-adjusted highs (for spot uranium), somewhere between $110 to $120/pound, and I think it’s going to test that looking out a couple of years.” Because of the how the energy market has been changing, Bambrough added, “The fundamentals are going to be more compelling than in the 1970s.”

    And it is a compelling time for analysts who have been re-thinking their pricing of yellowcake. In early September UBS raised its estimates on spot uranium to $70/pound. Many industry insiders told us uranium would not eclipse $50/pound this year. TradeTech’s Gene Clark forecast $55/pound earlier this year; Ux Consulting’s Jeff Combs thought it might go higher before year end. “There’s more and more talk that $75 and $80/pound are in the offing shortly,” Bambrough told us.

    The combination of “new reactor build” and the pairing of uranium contracts with new reactor sales is not a new one. This helped cause the uranium price rise in the 1970s in the United States. Westinghouse, the world’s leading reactor manufacturer, got into the uranium mining business in the 1970s through a consortium called Wyoming Minerals and began producing uranium through the in situ recovery (ISR) method. Previously, another reactor manufacturer, General Electric, had merged with Utah International to spin off Pathfinder Minerals. Its uranium mining subsidiary filled its requirements.

    By dangling uranium contracts as an incentive to purchase a reactor, a reactor manufacturer might overlook existing utilities in need of uranium. “It would be foolish for them to go existing utilities and say, ‘we’d like to sell you four million pounds of uranium and give you a long-term contract,’” said Bambrough. “Why would they want to make just a couple hundreds of millions of dollars, when they can sell the same uranium for the same price to someone, who wants to build a new reactor, and then pack another two billion dollars on the order? That puts the existing U.S. utilities behind the eight-ball, those who aren’t stepping up and buying orders.”

    Tough Times Ahead for Uranium-Seeking U.S. Utilities

    Yesterday, David Christian, Dominion Resources’s chief nuclear officer, held a media tour to a site in Louisa County (Virginia) where the company hopes to build a third nuclear reactor at the North Anna power station. He explained to the media that between now and 2025, U.S. energy consumption will increase by about one-third. Another 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power generation will be needed by 2020 just to maintain the existing energy supply diversity.

    The push for new reactors has begun with thirty new nuclear reactors being planned or proposed, according to recent statement made by the Nuclear Energy Institute. That’s about the same number Russian is proposing. China is planning or proposing twice as many. “It is going to be extremely difficult for existing

    Access the Hidden Job Market in 7 Easy Steps
    It is estimated that the hidden job market accounts for more than half of the positions vacant. It is common knowledge that many positions are never advertised. Being able to tap into this market may mean you can find the career you’ve always dreamt of having. Here’s a few tips to help you along the way.1. Networking can help you find jobs that are never advertised.2. Firstly you need to work out what type of occupation and position you would like and what type of business/company you would like to work for.3. Now write a list of all the people you know professionally and personally that you are able to contact.4. Next, use the Six Degrees of Separation method. Firstly identify the companies you would like to work for. Search the net, read articles, or tap into word of mouth referrals to discover some opportunity. Go over your list of contacts in your network group and try to find a connection. Contact only these people and try to get a referral for another name. Keep doing this until you’ve got a solid lead and are closer to the decision maker.5. Contact companies directly. This doesn’t mean just sending your resume to a company of choice and that’s it. Companies receive several unsolicited resumes a week and few of them are acted upon.6. Contact 5 to 10 people in the company and speak to them. Sell yourself as someone that can contribute to the company. If the person you are talking to can’t help you, ask them to suggest someone else in the company that may be able to help you. This way y
    and hopes to boost production by tenfold over the next two years.

    This week, Kiriyenko announced Russia’s “international” center to enrich uranium should be built by the end of this year, and ready to launch by early 2007. As announced earlier, the site will be in eastern Siberia at the Angarsk Electrolysis Chemical Plant. The city is located 3,000 miles east of Moscow. Russian President Putin suggested at the current IAEA conference that the international community set up enrichment centers under the supervision of the IAEA to prevent discrimination in access to nuclear energy. Putin’s veiled remarks were likely aimed at encouraging Iran’s civilian nuclear energy program, for which Russia is rebuilding the Bushehr nuclear power plant. Russia also proposes to joint venture another uranium enrichment center in Kazakhstan with that country.

    In early September, Sergei Obozov, head of Rosenergoatom, Russia’s nuclear power monopoly, announced plans to start building nine nuclear reactors in 2007. But, it won’t stop there. According to an estimate calculated in September by the World Nuclear Association, Russia has 26 reactors proposed or planned by 2020. The country hopes to power 23 percent of its electricity with nuclear energy. This would give Russia nearly 60 reactors, almost as many as France and Japan presently have operational.

    Russia is also revamping its nuclear industry, consolidating its civilian nuclear companies into one state-run company. It will be called Atomprom, and the country hopes to compete with other industry giants, such as AREVA, General Electric and Toshiba to build reactors.

    This is where the business might get even more interesting. “Pairing of new reactors with uranium contracts could be huge,” Bambrough explained. “Companies wanting to build reactors are going around the world, wanting to joint ventures with mining companies to increase uranium supply for themselves. The reason they want to do that is to offer a full suite of services. They know they can not sell a reactor without supply.” Based upon how Russia’s nuclear ambitions are unfolding, this is their likely course of action. AREVA, which sells reactors, has mining operations in Canada, Africa and elsewhere.

    Major Flaw in Uranium Requirement Calculations

    In his research Bambrough observed a significant flaw in uranium price modeling. “No one is modeling for ‘new reactors’ inventory,” he pointed out to us. According to the World Nuclear Association’s (WNA) most recent report, another 222 nuclear reactors are planned or proposed by more than 20 countries worldwide. And each month those estimates grow larger. At the time of the WNA report, the United States was marked for 23 proposed/planned. This week, that number grew to 30. To remain conservative, we agreed to use a base figure of 160 new reactors before 2020.

    “When you start looking at the demand that comes from these new reactors, from what is called the ‘initial core,’ the numbers some people are using is anywhere between 1.5 to 1.8 million pounds,” Bambrough explained. “That is how much is required on the day you commission it. It’s prudent to purchase that uranium about four years prior to commissioning your reactor.” Prudent nuclear plant operators would prefer to have three to five years of uranium inventory in advance. “That’s two million pounds per reactor,” Bambrough calculated. “Spread that number out over a decade, and that means 32 million pounds per year,” he said. “If you can imagine, even just one million pounds per all of the 600 (total) reactors, it could be possible there may be 600 million pounds just for inventories between now and 2020.”

    What will that do to the spot uranium price? “I am hearing about deals being done in the $60s,” Bambrough announced. “I still think we are going to challenge the inflation-adjusted highs (for spot uranium), somewhere between $110 to $120/pound, and I think it’s going to test that looking out a couple of years.” Because of the how the energy market has been changing, Bambrough added, “The fundamentals are going to be more compelling than in the 1970s.”

    And it is a compelling time for analysts who have been re-thinking their pricing of yellowcake. In early September UBS raised its estimates on spot uranium to $70/pound. Many industry insiders told us uranium would not eclipse $50/pound this year. TradeTech’s Gene Clark forecast $55/pound earlier this year; Ux Consulting’s Jeff Combs thought it might go higher before year end. “There’s more and more talk that $75 and $80/pound are in the offing shortly,” Bambrough told us.

    The combination of “new reactor build” and the pairing of uranium contracts with new reactor sales is not a new one. This helped cause the uranium price rise in the 1970s in the United States. Westinghouse, the world’s leading reactor manufacturer, got into the uranium mining business in the 1970s through a consortium called Wyoming Minerals and began producing uranium through the in situ recovery (ISR) method. Previously, another reactor manufacturer, General Electric, had merged with Utah International to spin off Pathfinder Minerals. Its uranium mining subsidiary filled its requirements.

    By dangling uranium contracts as an incentive to purchase a reactor, a reactor manufacturer might overlook existing utilities in need of uranium. “It would be foolish for them to go existing utilities and say, ‘we’d like to sell you four million pounds of uranium and give you a long-term contract,’” said Bambrough. “Why would they want to make just a couple hundreds of millions of dollars, when they can sell the same uranium for the same price to someone, who wants to build a new reactor, and then pack another two billion dollars on the order? That puts the existing U.S. utilities behind the eight-ball, those who aren’t stepping up and buying orders.”

    Tough Times Ahead for Uranium-Seeking U.S. Utilities

    Yesterday, David Christian, Dominion Resources’s chief nuclear officer, held a media tour to a site in Louisa County (Virginia) where the company hopes to build a third nuclear reactor at the North Anna power station. He explained to the media that between now and 2025, U.S. energy consumption will increase by about one-third. Another 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power generation will be needed by 2020 just to maintain the existing energy supply diversity.

    The push for new reactors has begun with thirty new nuclear reactors being planned or proposed, according to recent statement made by the Nuclear Energy Institute. That’s about the same number Russian is proposing. China is planning or proposing twice as many. “It is going to be extremely difficult for existin

    Resume Tune Up
    Employers have fears, uncertainty and DOUBT (the FUD factor) over your ability to actually do what you claim you can do in your resume and cover letter.Combine this with the fact that EVERY candidate looks good on paper, no-one leaves their previous job because they were paid too much, the work was too interesting and all the people were fantastic, and you can see the challenge you're facing. (I'm yet to see a resume or cover letter that says the candidate is just average...) Specifically, here's what they fear about YOU:They fear:* Your resume is too good to be true and you won't be able to do the job. * You won't stick around. * You don't play well with others.So with all that in mind, over the next week or so we thought we'd share some thoughts, ideas and tips that help remove some of the FUD factor surrounding YOU (and our business too).--------------------------------How to make an employer WANT to read your application--------------------------------Employers don't really care about YOU, they only care about what you can do for THEM.I've lost count of the cases I've seen where applicants with the best education, training or experience lose the job to someone with less education, skills and experience. The reason for this is that the applicant with the better skills or experience simply didn't sell themselves to the employer as well as the less skilled applicant. This leads us to a really important question: how do you know if your application is selling you as
    ore interesting. “Pairing of new reactors with uranium contracts could be huge,” Bambrough explained. “Companies wanting to build reactors are going around the world, wanting to joint ventures with mining companies to increase uranium supply for themselves. The reason they want to do that is to offer a full suite of services. They know they can not sell a reactor without supply.” Based upon how Russia’s nuclear ambitions are unfolding, this is their likely course of action. AREVA, which sells reactors, has mining operations in Canada, Africa and elsewhere.

    Major Flaw in Uranium Requirement Calculations

    In his research Bambrough observed a significant flaw in uranium price modeling. “No one is modeling for ‘new reactors’ inventory,” he pointed out to us. According to the World Nuclear Association’s (WNA) most recent report, another 222 nuclear reactors are planned or proposed by more than 20 countries worldwide. And each month those estimates grow larger. At the time of the WNA report, the United States was marked for 23 proposed/planned. This week, that number grew to 30. To remain conservative, we agreed to use a base figure of 160 new reactors before 2020.

    “When you start looking at the demand that comes from these new reactors, from what is called the ‘initial core,’ the numbers some people are using is anywhere between 1.5 to 1.8 million pounds,” Bambrough explained. “That is how much is required on the day you commission it. It’s prudent to purchase that uranium about four years prior to commissioning your reactor.” Prudent nuclear plant operators would prefer to have three to five years of uranium inventory in advance. “That’s two million pounds per reactor,” Bambrough calculated. “Spread that number out over a decade, and that means 32 million pounds per year,” he said. “If you can imagine, even just one million pounds per all of the 600 (total) reactors, it could be possible there may be 600 million pounds just for inventories between now and 2020.”

    What will that do to the spot uranium price? “I am hearing about deals being done in the $60s,” Bambrough announced. “I still think we are going to challenge the inflation-adjusted highs (for spot uranium), somewhere between $110 to $120/pound, and I think it’s going to test that looking out a couple of years.” Because of the how the energy market has been changing, Bambrough added, “The fundamentals are going to be more compelling than in the 1970s.”

    And it is a compelling time for analysts who have been re-thinking their pricing of yellowcake. In early September UBS raised its estimates on spot uranium to $70/pound. Many industry insiders told us uranium would not eclipse $50/pound this year. TradeTech’s Gene Clark forecast $55/pound earlier this year; Ux Consulting’s Jeff Combs thought it might go higher before year end. “There’s more and more talk that $75 and $80/pound are in the offing shortly,” Bambrough told us.

    The combination of “new reactor build” and the pairing of uranium contracts with new reactor sales is not a new one. This helped cause the uranium price rise in the 1970s in the United States. Westinghouse, the world’s leading reactor manufacturer, got into the uranium mining business in the 1970s through a consortium called Wyoming Minerals and began producing uranium through the in situ recovery (ISR) method. Previously, another reactor manufacturer, General Electric, had merged with Utah International to spin off Pathfinder Minerals. Its uranium mining subsidiary filled its requirements.

    By dangling uranium contracts as an incentive to purchase a reactor, a reactor manufacturer might overlook existing utilities in need of uranium. “It would be foolish for them to go existing utilities and say, ‘we’d like to sell you four million pounds of uranium and give you a long-term contract,’” said Bambrough. “Why would they want to make just a couple hundreds of millions of dollars, when they can sell the same uranium for the same price to someone, who wants to build a new reactor, and then pack another two billion dollars on the order? That puts the existing U.S. utilities behind the eight-ball, those who aren’t stepping up and buying orders.”

    Tough Times Ahead for Uranium-Seeking U.S. Utilities

    Yesterday, David Christian, Dominion Resources’s chief nuclear officer, held a media tour to a site in Louisa County (Virginia) where the company hopes to build a third nuclear reactor at the North Anna power station. He explained to the media that between now and 2025, U.S. energy consumption will increase by about one-third. Another 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power generation will be needed by 2020 just to maintain the existing energy supply diversity.

    The push for new reactors has begun with thirty new nuclear reactors being planned or proposed, according to recent statement made by the Nuclear Energy Institute. That’s about the same number Russian is proposing. China is planning or proposing twice as many. “It is going to be extremely difficult for existin

    The Tales of the 0% APR Credit Card
    People used to think that they had enough on their benefits with their credit cards. They thought that the rewards they get and the low interest they have is already enough to last a lifetime.However, there are instances when they get to have the chance of seeing promotions like 0% APR. Now, this is really something. But the question is, is it true? Is there a great probability that credit card companies can actually offer a 0% APR?For most financial experts, they contend that it is, indeed, possible. In fact, credit card companies would definitely go for this kind of scheme just to get the consumers on their hook.That sounds too good to be true, indeed. But the question is how come they can offer something so good just like that?Normally, 0% annual percentage rate or APR lasts only for 6 months. The countdown starts from the day the credit card is claimed.In most instances, 0% APR are attractive to people who would want to have a balance transfer. This is because they would want to consolidate all of their debts into one payment only. And because they have a huge pile of debt, they would rather go to a credit company that can offer them lower interest rates.With things like 0% APR credit card, who can resist them?Moreover, with the 6-month timeframe, people will get to have the chance of paying their standing debts for a whole six month-period only. That would be a lot of savings.But then again, 0% APR credit cards are not at all beneficial to everybody. As they say, there is always
    ounds per reactor,” Bambrough calculated. “Spread that number out over a decade, and that means 32 million pounds per year,” he said. “If you can imagine, even just one million pounds per all of the 600 (total) reactors, it could be possible there may be 600 million pounds just for inventories between now and 2020.”

    What will that do to the spot uranium price? “I am hearing about deals being done in the $60s,” Bambrough announced. “I still think we are going to challenge the inflation-adjusted highs (for spot uranium), somewhere between $110 to $120/pound, and I think it’s going to test that looking out a couple of years.” Because of the how the energy market has been changing, Bambrough added, “The fundamentals are going to be more compelling than in the 1970s.”

    And it is a compelling time for analysts who have been re-thinking their pricing of yellowcake. In early September UBS raised its estimates on spot uranium to $70/pound. Many industry insiders told us uranium would not eclipse $50/pound this year. TradeTech’s Gene Clark forecast $55/pound earlier this year; Ux Consulting’s Jeff Combs thought it might go higher before year end. “There’s more and more talk that $75 and $80/pound are in the offing shortly,” Bambrough told us.

    The combination of “new reactor build” and the pairing of uranium contracts with new reactor sales is not a new one. This helped cause the uranium price rise in the 1970s in the United States. Westinghouse, the world’s leading reactor manufacturer, got into the uranium mining business in the 1970s through a consortium called Wyoming Minerals and began producing uranium through the in situ recovery (ISR) method. Previously, another reactor manufacturer, General Electric, had merged with Utah International to spin off Pathfinder Minerals. Its uranium mining subsidiary filled its requirements.

    By dangling uranium contracts as an incentive to purchase a reactor, a reactor manufacturer might overlook existing utilities in need of uranium. “It would be foolish for them to go existing utilities and say, ‘we’d like to sell you four million pounds of uranium and give you a long-term contract,’” said Bambrough. “Why would they want to make just a couple hundreds of millions of dollars, when they can sell the same uranium for the same price to someone, who wants to build a new reactor, and then pack another two billion dollars on the order? That puts the existing U.S. utilities behind the eight-ball, those who aren’t stepping up and buying orders.”

    Tough Times Ahead for Uranium-Seeking U.S. Utilities

    Yesterday, David Christian, Dominion Resources’s chief nuclear officer, held a media tour to a site in Louisa County (Virginia) where the company hopes to build a third nuclear reactor at the North Anna power station. He explained to the media that between now and 2025, U.S. energy consumption will increase by about one-third. Another 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power generation will be needed by 2020 just to maintain the existing energy supply diversity.

    The push for new reactors has begun with thirty new nuclear reactors being planned or proposed, according to recent statement made by the Nuclear Energy Institute. That’s about the same number Russian is proposing. China is planning or proposing twice as many. “It is going to be extremely difficult for existin

    Website Promotion - Writing Articles Generates Traffic Four Different Ways
    Writing articles and submitting them to free content sites is a great way to promote your Website at no cost. This technique generates traffic for your Website in at least four different ways.There are many different ways to promote your Website in order to generate traffic. Most of them cost money, but one of the most effective techniques is free – writing articles about topics relating to your Website and submitting them to “free content” sites. It’s easy to do, takes relatively little time, and can increase your Website traffic in at least four different ways.The article-writing technique is simple. You write articles about topics that relate to your Website. The articles don’t have to be overly long or complicated; 250-500 words will do nicely. Then you submit them to “free content” Websites that publish them and make them available to their own readers. This helps your own Website’s traffic in four different ways:Your article on the free content site contains a link to your own Website. Readers of the article may, if they choose, click on the link to pay your site a visit.The free content site makes your article available to other Webmasters who may wish to publish the article on their own site. If they do, your article will include a link back to your site, and anyone who reads the article on that site may click on the link to pay your site a visit.As your list of published articles grows larger, and more and more of your articles appear on different Websites, the cumu
    iously, another reactor manufacturer, General Electric, had merged with Utah International to spin off Pathfinder Minerals. Its uranium mining subsidiary filled its requirements.

    By dangling uranium contracts as an incentive to purchase a reactor, a reactor manufacturer might overlook existing utilities in need of uranium. “It would be foolish for them to go existing utilities and say, ‘we’d like to sell you four million pounds of uranium and give you a long-term contract,’” said Bambrough. “Why would they want to make just a couple hundreds of millions of dollars, when they can sell the same uranium for the same price to someone, who wants to build a new reactor, and then pack another two billion dollars on the order? That puts the existing U.S. utilities behind the eight-ball, those who aren’t stepping up and buying orders.”

    Tough Times Ahead for Uranium-Seeking U.S. Utilities

    Yesterday, David Christian, Dominion Resources’s chief nuclear officer, held a media tour to a site in Louisa County (Virginia) where the company hopes to build a third nuclear reactor at the North Anna power station. He explained to the media that between now and 2025, U.S. energy consumption will increase by about one-third. Another 50,000 megawatts of new nuclear power generation will be needed by 2020 just to maintain the existing energy supply diversity.

    The push for new reactors has begun with thirty new nuclear reactors being planned or proposed, according to recent statement made by the Nuclear Energy Institute. That’s about the same number Russian is proposing. China is planning or proposing twice as many. “It is going to be extremely difficult for existing utilities to contract and build up future supply in an environment where there is an explosion in growth of new reactor demand,” Bambrough warned.

    Until now, U.S. utilities have nearly always called the shots in uranium pricing. Stiff competition from China, Japan and now Russia has changed the pricing climate as evidenced by the nearly 800-percent price rise in spot uranium over the past six years. “It’s tough to compete out there,” Bambrough explained. “I think the existing utilities are painted into a tighter box than they realize. They have got to get behind funding exploration and development of uranium for themselves. The problem is the U.S. utilities may not want to sign those contracts, but are competing against nations. Countries, like China and Russia, can go in and sign big deals.”

    Bambrough brought up Russia again, “They’ve put out notes of late saying they want to invest in mining, where it would be profitable, anywhere in the world. They’ve said they want to seek out junior miners anywhere in the world.” On September 12th, China’s state-owned Sinosteel bought into Australian junior miner PepinNini to develop uranium deposits in northeastern Australia.

    This past summer, Russia’s state-owned RosAtom struck a deal with Kazakhstan for extensive uranium mining and additional exploration in that country. “When Russia says we’re going to fund uranium development, they’re not thinking about funding uranium exploration and development for the Western World,” Bambrough pointed out. “They want it for their own domestic needs. They want to build and sell power plants. And they’ve got to get supply.” According to the Natural Resources Ministry, if Russia does not act to expand it uranium production, the country’s stockpiles could dry up within a decade.

    What advice does Bambrough have for U.S. utilities? “They have to start getting their own supply,” he told us. “They need to have domestic production, and can’t just rely on dwindling down inventories.”

    He urged utilities to strike joint ventures with U.S. uranium developers before others do. Bambrough pointed to the recent joint venture negotiations in progress between Uranium Resources (OTC BB: URRE) and Japanese mega-conglomerate Itochu corporation. But what about rumors we’ve heard from uranium developments companies who have been quietly talking with U.S. utilities? “Uranium developers don’t need to sell it,” he advised. “They’re not permitted yet. What’s the point of selling it now, they’re only going to be penalized for it. There may be some companies willing to do a small token deal, as a small percentage of future production, just to show they have a contract.”

    And which uranium developers now score high on the Sprott Asset Management Market Strategist’s list? “Right now, Strathmore Minerals (TSX: STM, Other OTC: STHJF) has got to be one of my top stock ideas,” Bambrough said. “I think it’s one of the stocks that should be making new highs. I haven’t been more positive on Strathmore since the first day when we started buying it in our funds. I think it’s time for its next leg up.”

    The Itochu joint venture with Uranium Resources is the reason behind Bambrough’s bullishness on Strathmore. “They’ve taken the correct steps to permit some of the best properties – with good grades and some sizeable deposits – and bring up solid resource numbers,” he explained. But the catalyst is the quiet progress now taking place in New Mexico. “The region needs a mill,” Bambrough pointed out. “In the region is Energy Metals (TSX: EMC), and Laramide (TSX: LAM) has some good property,” he added. “The bottom line is Itochu is partnered with Uranium Resources, the property is right next door to Strathmore Minerals, and Itochu knows they need to build a mill. And they want to have production by 2009. In a couple of months, that’s only two years away.”

    And by then, will we be wondering how much beyond $100/pound spot uranium will run?

    COPYRIGHT © 2007 by StockInterview, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.addyou.info/article/102914/addyou-Russians-Expecting-100Pound-Uranium.html">Russians Expecting $100/Pound Uranium</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.addyou.info/article/102914/addyou-Russians-Expecting-100Pound-Uranium.html]Russians Expecting $100/Pound Uranium[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Developing your Media Tools

    Paperless Office - With Multiple Monitors

    Get Rid of Your Lead Generation Problems Once and for All (Part 2)

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com