Cameco acquires BHP Australian uranium deposit for $430-million – by Pav Jordan (Globe and Mail – August 28, 2012)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

Cameco Corp. is growing its uranium holdings even as other players back away from an industry stuck in a low-price trough for over a year. Saskatoon-based Cameco, already the world’s largest publicly traded uranium producer, announced plans to buy the Yeelirrie uranium project in Western Australia for $430-million (U.S.), adding one of the country’s top undeveloped uranium deposits to its portfolio.

It was the second acquisition by Cameco since May, when it reached a deal to buy nuclear fuel broker Nukem Energy for about $300-million, including debt.

“We believe Cameco could be using the current period of disillusionment with uranium and the nuclear industry to build an inventory of larger projects that could find their way into the company’s development pipeline over the next decade,” Greg Barnes, an analyst with TD Securities Inc. in Toronto, said in a research report on Monday.

Global uranium demand is expected to grow over the next decade with ballooning needs around the world for clean energy to generate electricity, particularly in China and other fast-growing economies.

Prices for the material have been depressed since March 2011, when an earthquake and subsequent tsunami in Japan caused a meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant and saw the world’s second-largest uranium consumer back off from nuclear power, idling its entire fleet of reactors.

Uranium spot prices were trading at around $49 per pound on Monday, or 33 per cent below peaks of $73 reached in February. The industry expects it could be two years before a significant rebound, when new reactors start to come online.

Cameco is buying Yeelirrie from BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s largest diversified miner which is stepping off from bets on uranium in the wake of Fukushima and a broader commodity market slowdown. Last week the company said it would delay a $20-billion expansion at Olympic Dam, a project in southern Australia that would supply 20 per cent of the world’s uranium if developed.

“Yes we are in a bit of uncertainty post-Fukushima, but clearly the future looks good for the business, and that is what drives us,” Cameco chief executive Tim Gitzel said by telephone. He would not comment on the price tag for Yeelirrie, other than to say it was “fair.”

For the rest of this article, please go to the Globe and Mail website: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/industry-news/energy-and-resources/cameco-acquires-bhp-australian-uranium-deposit-for-430-million/article4500275/