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Uranium Rush


Published July 7, 2008

Can the Grand Canyon survive it?

Many attribute this rush to the belief that nuclear power is poised for a revival, with a new facelift of ‘zero co2 emissions’. In the five western states in the us where uranium is mined, 4,333 new claims were filed in 2004, according to the Interior Department; last year the number swelled to 43,153. “We have seen a kind of gold rush,” says William von Till, chief of the uranium recovery branch at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (nrc) in Washington. In the last four years, mining interests have staked new claims on a whopping 9,30,780 ha of western public lands.

The nrc expects orders for 28 new reactors over the next two years; scores more are planned worldwide over the next decade, says Larry Camper, director of nrc’s division of waste management and environmental protection. Trading at us $7 a pound in 2001, ‘yellowcake’ hit us $120 a pound in May, 2007. The surging price has lured more than two dozen companies to the high-desert uranium fields in just the past year, says John Indall, a Santa Fe lawyer for the Uranium Producers of America.

A three-month Environmental Working Group (ewg) investigation found mining claims registered with the Bureau of Land Management (blm) rose from 2,20,265 at the end of 2002 to 3,24,551 in September 2006, a 47 per cent increase. Many of these are for potential uranium mines.

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