Kazakhstan to exchange uranium mine shares for Chinese nuclear powerproject stakes
SHANGHAI. Nov 22 (Interfax-China) - The president of Kazakhstan's state-run nuclear power company Kazatomprom has revealed that the company intends to swap some of its shares in a uranium mine in exchange for stakes in Chinese nuclear power projects, local media reported. According to China Business News, Kazatomprom president Mukhtar Dzhakishev said recently that Kazatomprom will give China National Nuclear Corp. (CNNC) and China Guangdong Nuclear Power Holding Co. Ltd. (CGNPC) a combined 49% stake in a Kazakh uranium mine company in return for stakes in unspecified nuclear fuel processing facilities or nuclear power plants in China. Kazatomprom will retain a controlling 51% stake in the uranium mine. Lu Gang, a senior researcher with the Shanghai Institute for International Studies (SIIS), told Interfax that the move could show that Kazakhstan may intend to develop its own nuclear power industry. Uranium imports are obviously critical for China as it continues to push forward with its ambitious nuclear power development plans, under which it aims to attain an installed nuclear power capacity of 40,000 megawatts by 2020. If the country is successful, it's annual uranium demand is expected to reach 7,000 tonnes by 2020. Some researchers have told Interfax that China will still need to source at least some uranium from overseas in order to fuel its nuclear power plants in the future, and that up to 30% percent of the country's uranium demands will have to be met by imports by 2020. Li Junjie, the director of the China Atomic Energy Authority's uranium material department, told China Business News that if China hopes to meet two-thirds of its uranium demand in 2020 with domestically production uranium, some RMB 7 billion to RMB 8 billion ($0.95 billion to $1.08 billion) needs to be invested in supportive exploration activities between now and then.
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