| The future of
the nuclear fuel business presents many opportunities. But those opportunities
are clouded by uncertainties larger than the strict market fundamentals
that have propelled the price of uranium from about $10 a pound for U3O8
three years ago to over $30 a pound today. In this issue of Insight, speakers
at the upcoming Platts Nuclear Fuel Strategies conference address some
of those opportunities and challenges.
The nuclear fuel business should clearly benefit from the many bullish
signs indicating that nuclear power is poised to expand around the world
from the 440 reactors in operation today to perhaps 470 by 2015, and more
beyond that date.
But there are questions about where the uranium will come from to fuel
those reactors, given that, as RWE NUKEM’s James Cornell notes,
today’s uranium production only meets about 60% of demand, the rest
coming from so-called secondary supplies, such as the uranium liberated
from the downblending of Russian high-enriched uranium (HEU) in warheads.
But that downblending, done under a 1993 agreement between the U.S. and
Russia, will end in 2013. Whether there will be a new agreement remains
uncertain.
Some utilities, understanding this uncertainty in the market, are being
proactive in developing innovative strategies to minimize supply risks.
Two such utilities are the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and Florida
Power & Light Co. (FP&L). TVA’s Mark Burzynski outlines
a cooperative project with the U.S. Department of Energy to make use of
excess, but nontraditional, feedstock from DOE’s uranium inventories.
FP&L’s Rajiv Kundalkar notes that U.S. utilities are interested
in broadening supply sources for fabricated fuel and are considering purchasing
fabrication services from European, Japanese, Korean, and Russian fabricators.
Meanwhile, transporting nuclear materials is becoming more challenging
for transportation companies, especially in a post-9/11 world, according
to Edlow International Co.’s Jack Edlow. Dealing with spent, or
used, nuclear fuel also remains a continuing challenge, with the date
for the opening of DOE’s Yucca Mountain repository still uncertain.
But Areva Inc.’s Alan Hanson argues that, while efforts to open
Yucca Mountain should remain intense, the U.S. must now consider adopting
a “complementary” path to sustain a nuclear renaissance—a
path that would include reprocessing and recycling spent fuel.
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