Canada’s Cameco (TSX:CCO) (NYSE:CCJ), the world’s largest publicly traded uranium miner, is placing its plant at the Port Hope conversion facility, in Ontario, in a temporary safe shutdown state for four weeks.
The move comes as the company faces
the increasing challenge of maintaining an adequate workforce as a result of
screening protocols and other measures put in place to combat the covid-19 pandemic.
Since the majority of the UO3 produced at the Blind River refinery is used to produce UF6 at the conversion facility, the refinery’s production would also be temporarily suspended and, where possible, summer maintenance work brought forward.
“The UF6 plant is designed for continuous operation, and we need to prevent unplanned interruptions arising from personnel shortages,” president and chief executive, Tim Gitzel, said on Wednesday.
While production at the refinery is
temporarily suspended, the operation will remain open to receive uranium
concentrate deliveries, Cameco said.
The news come a day after uranium giant Kazatomprom said it expected to produce about 4,000 tonnes or 17.5% less this year as measures designed to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus has hit operations.
The Kazakhstan-based producer’s
guidance for 2020 was 22,750 to 22,800 tonnes, on a 100% basis.
The producer said it would provide
updated production revenue, capital expenditure and costs targets on May 4. Last
year, Kazakhstan accounted for more than 42% of the world’s uranium output.
Cameco had said on Tuesday the Kazatomprom cuts would also weigh on its 40% ownership in the Inkai Joint Venture, an in-situ recovery uranium mine in Kazakhstan. The mine is expected to produce about 12% fewer pounds this year, translating to about 600,000lb less uranium oxide for the miner’s account.
Last week, the uranium major announced the closure for a month of Cigar Lake, which
produces about 13% of global uranium mine supply. This was followed by a 21-day
lockdown of mines in another important uranium supplier, Namibia.
Before the announced output cuts, Cameco expected to buy 4.9 million pounds of uranium on the spot market this year.
Price revival
Uranium prices have been on the
rise in the past two weeks as investors worried about ongoing disruption to
supply, which is divided between a handful of major companies. Year to date,
however, prices have dropped more than 15%.
Prior to Kazatomprom’s
announcement, BMO Capital Markets was forecasting a deficit in uranium supply/demand
balance of about 30 million pounds. The experts now experts that figure to
climb up to 40 million pounds.
“The additional 10 million removed from the
market will only accelerate the depletion of above ground inventories and
potentially result in more utilities reclassifying excess inventories as
strategic,” BMO analyst Alexander Pearce, said in a note on Tuesday.
With construction of nuclear power plants at a
10-year low, however, uranium demand remains weak.