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The Forum > Article Comments > Uranium on the rocks > Comments

Uranium on the rocks : Comments

By Jim Green, published 17/5/2016

Indicative of the uranium industry's worldwide malaise, mining giant Cameco recently announced the suspension of production at Rabbit Lake and reduced production at McArthur River/Key Lake in Canada.

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Hell if you're worried about the low employment in the Uranium industry, lets build a couple of power stations. one to replace the brown coal power station at Port Augusta that just closed would be great.
Posted by Cobber the hound, Tuesday, 17 May 2016 1:13:23 PM
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For Trump's Sake!

Such negativity Greeno.

I feel a warm inner glow about the explosive properties of highly enriched Uranium.

Don't you?
Posted by plantagenet, Tuesday, 17 May 2016 1:43:00 PM
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Yes the market is oversupplied with raw unprocessed uranium. We should process it here, using the much cheaper Aussie invented pulsed laser light method.

And with the rubbish removed, export it as a finished product that is power grade only. Thereby reducing the total transport component cost.

And given newer vastly safer reactors, we could and should use it here to decarbonize the economy?

And use the innovation of others to build, mass produced in factories, modules that are cooled by helium and able to be trucked onsite and producing power within days? And react to increased need by just bolting on another factory manufactured module, which as the preferred model, may well make uranium derived power, much cheaper than coal?
Alan B.
Posted by Alan B., Tuesday, 17 May 2016 2:03:00 PM
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Jim Green,

Your irrational anti-nuke rants are contributing to killing people. Since 1985 round 5 million early deaths have been caused by the irrational beliefs, propaganda and disinformation spread by you and your ilk.

If the costs of nuclear power had continued at the rate demonstrated up to about 1970: https://judithcurry.com/2016/03/13/nuclear-power-learning-rates-policy-implications/, and deployment continued at the rate reached by 1985, i.e. 30 GW per year, then nuclear would have avoided about 5 million immediate and latent fatalities between 1985 and 2015. If, however, the accelerating rate that was demonstrated from 1960 to 1976, had continued, nuclear would have replaced the equivalent of all coal and most gas by 2000.

The anti-nukes are the main cause of the disruption to progress. If they were objective, rational and not in denial, they’d accept they are responsible for 5 million fatalities, lower standard of living, less people with electricity than would have been … and a lot more.

The anti-nukes, like Jim Green, have a lot to answer for.

See the excellent article published 2 weeks ago by Michael Schellenberger: ‘CLEAN ENERGY IS ON THE DECLINE — HERE'S WHY, AND WHAT WE CAN DO ABOUT IT’ http://epillinois.org/news/2016/5/1/why-environmentalists-changed-their-mind-on-nuclear

See the debate between Mark Jacobson (passionate but irrational advocate for 100% renewables) and the rational and objective Michael Schellenberger (plus two others): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kh7aaW8Leco&feature=youtu.be
Posted by Peter Lang, Tuesday, 17 May 2016 2:25:43 PM
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$US28/lb is about $A85/kg which seems like good money to me. Cigar Lake Canada is a high cost mine that has to be continuously pumped to remove water. Our Olympic Dam is dry and has copper, gold and silver as well as uranium. In situ leach mines like Honeymoon need a higher uranium price. Think of it as saving some for later.

It's possible 4th generation technology may one day mean we no longer need to mine fresh uranium. Could be why China, Russia and India are putting more into it than other countries. The beauty of current cheap uranium is that we can use it once in 3rd generation plants, put it to one side and get more value out of it later if the price increases. The low price means it is easier to displace coal.
Posted by Taswegian, Tuesday, 17 May 2016 3:50:15 PM
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And besides Australia can't build nuclear weapons unless we build totally mistimed, uneconomic, multi-$Billion, power reactors

- as nuclear fuel cycle learning wheels?
Posted by plantagenet, Tuesday, 17 May 2016 4:49:49 PM
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