Canada’s Cameco Corp. might be one of the companies to ink a deal. The Saskatoon-based Cameco is the world’s largest uranium miner, making it vital to the global supply.
India will require about 1,600 metric tons of uranium per year to achieve the energy output it desires
The cash-rich Cameco reported an 86% increase in revenue for the fourth quarter of 2008, and Chief Executive Officer Gerald W. Grandey remains optimistic that his company will continue to weather the global financial crisis.
“Our customers are well-established electrical utilities, many government-owned or with regulated rate structures. In tough times, they run their low-cost nuclear plants at full capacity, assuring demand for our products,” Grandey said in a conference call last Tuesday. “Our strategy of seeking price protection in our contracting has reduced the sensitivity of our revenue to softening spot prices and we are seeing the benefit now,”
Uranium use will increase 3% annually over the next 10 years, as new reactors are built around the world, Grandey said. A short-term loan taken last June to help finance investments in new assets has been extended on good terms, and Cameco has also received new credit of $100 million.
Among those scheduled to meet with Indian interests, was Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. However, Rudd decided to postpone his visit when Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh became ill and underwent heart surgery.
When the two leaders do eventually catch up with one another, they’ll have plenty to talk about with respect to India’s nuclear buildup. Australia is the world’s second-largest uranium producer, trailing only Canada. Australia exports about 10,000 metric tons of uranium a year - representing a $900 million injection into the domestic economy.