Uzbekistan, China eye joint uranium exploration

Eurasianet says a state-owned uranium producer in Uzbekistan is in talks with China Nuclear Uranium, also state-run, on the possibility of working together to develop a pair of mines. Navoiuran said in a statement on March 12 that the black shale uranium deposits under consideration — Jantuar and Madanli — are both in Uzbekistan’s Navoi […]

Eurasianet

Eurasianet says a state-owned uranium producer in Uzbekistan is in talks with China Nuclear Uranium, also state-run, on the possibility of working together to develop a pair of mines.

Navoiuran said in a statement on March 12 that the black shale uranium deposits under consideration — Jantuar and Madanli — are both in Uzbekistan’s Navoi region. Black shale uranium refers to uranium deposits found within black shale rock formations.

Navoiuran has been operating since 2022, when it was hived off from the Navoi Mining and Metallurgical Plant.

The tie-up with China Nuclear Uranium is part of a broader agenda promoted by President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, who issued a resolution in July 2022 setting a national uranium production target of 7,100 tons by 2030, up from around 3,500 tons in 2021.

In seeking to hit that target, the government has actively solicited international partners.

In November, Mirziyoyev’s office reported that Uzbekistan was looking to expand its partnership with France’s state-run Orano SA, which deals with the entire cycle of uranium from mining to fuel production.  The French company has been present in Uzbekistan since 2019.  That same year it set up a joint venture called Nurlikum Mining.

“Deep processing of strategic raw materials and the production of industrial products based on advanced technologies are an important area for cooperation,” the president’s office said in its statement at the time.

That announcement was timed to coincide with a visit of French President Emmanuel Macron to Uzbekistan.

There will be a strong component of quid pro quo in any such cooperation.  Ahead of Macron’s visit, energy analysts suggested that France might see Uzbekistan, as well as neighboring Kazakhstan, as strong alternative sources for the uranium that it needs to keep its vital nuclear power sector running.

Uzbek Mining and Geology Minister Bobir Islamov later announced that Orano had pledged to invest up to US$500 million in uranium mining in Uzbekistan.

“A strategic agreement stipulates that [Orano SA] will carry out geological exploration work at two additional sites [in the Tamdyn district of the Navoi region]. Everything will, of course, be decided by a feasibility study, but everything is going very positively at the moment,” Islamov was quoted as saying by Gazeta.uz.

An initial memorandum of understanding on cooperation in the uranium sector was signed between China Nuclear Uranium and Navoiuran just a matter of days after Macron’s visit. That agreement was sealed on the sidelines of the first-ever International Forum on Natural Uranium Industry, held in Beijing.

Uzbekistan hopes that Kazakhstan, currently the world largest producer of uranium, can help its cause too.

In late February, Aigul Kuspan, who chairs the International Affairs, Defense and Security Committee in Kazakhstan’s lower house of parliament, told her colleagues that Uzbekistan had expressed interest in jointly mining and processing uranium in areas along the shared border.

 

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