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URANIUM
STOCKS
ABOUT TO GAP HIGHER
by Elliott H.
Gue
Editor, The Energy
Letter
April 9, 2007
Charles Steen was born in
Caddo, Texas in 1919. He went on to study at John Tarleton Agricultural
College in Stephenville and in 1940 transferred to the Texas College of
Mines and Metallurgy at El Paso, receiving a bachelor’s degree in
geology in 1943. Ineligible for the draft because of his poor eyesight,
Steen spent World War II working as a geologist in Bolivia and Peru.
Returning to the US in 1945, he married and took a job doing field work
for the Standard Oil Company of
Indiana.
Down on his luck after losing his job, Steen read an article in the
December 1949 issue of the Engineering
and Mining Journal which discussed how the US federal
government had issued incentives for prospectors to locate domestic
supplies of uranium.
As part of the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, the US Atomic Energy
Commission had the authority to withdraw lands from the private sector
in order to examine them as possible sites for uranium mining. During
World War II, the Manhattan Project received most of its uranium from
foreign sources in Canada and the Belgian Congo.
However, it also received some from vanadium miners in the American
Southwest where uranium was often a by-product of mining (before the
first use of the atomic bomb, uranium wasn’t seen as a terribly
valuable metal).
As the Soviet Union was reportedly seizing uranium mines in
Czechoslovakia and East Germany at the beginning of the Cold War and
running them with slave labor consisting of political prisoners, there
was anxiety throughout the federal government that the US wouldn’t
have enough uranium for its budding nuclear weapons program. A domestic
supply of uranium would enable the government to maintain a nuclear
self-sufficiency with control of all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle.
Despite the fact that his three sons were all less than four-years-old,
and his wife was expecting a fourth child, Steen borrowed $1,000 from
his mother and headed for the Colorado Plateau determined to strike it
rich. He couldn’t afford the standard equipment used by uranium
prospectors such as the Geiger counter, which could detect sources of
radiation in ore. Instead, he used a secondhand diamond drill rig and
his geologic training for his prospecting.
At the time, each individual prospector had his own idiosyncratic theory
on where to find uranium. The uranium industry was composed primarily of
individual prospectors and geologists who would attempt to find a large
claim and either mine it for themselves or for a large company (such as Union
Carbide) which would then transport the ore from the mine to
the uranium mill where it could be converted into yellowcake. Steen's
theory on uranium deposits was that they would collect in anticlinal
structures in the same manner as would oil. Others on the Plateau
dismissed the theory as "Steen's folly."
After Steen's fourth child was born, he moved his family into a small
trailer at Dove Creek, Colorado, and then later into a tarpaper shack
near Cisco, Utah. He fed them on poached venison and cereal--it was a
highly marginalized state of existence that lasted for two years. But on
July 6, 1952, Steen hit it big--he found a massive, relatively
highly-enriched uranium deposit in the Big Indian Wash of Lisbon Valley,
southeast of Moab, Utah. He named it the "Mi Vida" mine (My
Life), and it was the first big strike of the uranium boom. Steen made
millions off his claims, and provoked a "uranium rush" of
prospectors into the Four Corners region, similar to the Gold Rush of
the 1850s in California.
In Moab, Steen built a $250,000 hilltop mansion--to replace his tarpaper
shack--with a swimming pool, greenhouse and servants' quarters. He
formed a number of companies to continue his uranium work, including the
Utex Exploration Co, Moab
Drilling Co, Mi Vida Co,
Big Indian Mines and Uranium
Reduction Co.
He made his wealth known by inviting the entire population of Moab to
annual parties in a local airport hangar, having his original and worn
prospecting boots bronzed and flying to Salt Lake City in his private
plane for weekly Rumba lessons. In his later years, Steen was elected to
the Utah State Senate and became a philanthropist, donating money for a
new hospital in Moab and giving land for churches and schools.
URANIUM BOOM II
The first Western uranium boom answered a call in 1948 for domestic
uranium stockpiles for atomic bombs, making millionaires and overnight
towns.
Now, suddenly, nuclear power is back in demand as a relatively cheap,
reliable and emissions-free solution to the world's insatiable demand
for energy. Even some leading environmentalists have endorsed nuclear
power as an antidote to global warming. More than 50 nuclear plants are
planned or under construction in a dozen countries, according to US and
international nuclear agencies.
The nuclear comeback has reinvigorated a North American mining industry
that, during the 1950s, was the stuff of legends. Uranium claims--which
grant an exclusive right to mine a piece of federal land--were bought
and sold like stock.
The federal government dumped its uranium stocks on the market,
depressing the price in the early 1980s. After bottoming out at $7 in
2001, the spot price for milled uranium yellowcake jumped sharply to
over $90 a pound recently.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission says US utilities are looking at
building as many as 27 reactors, and it just licensed a $1.5 billion
uranium enrichment plant near Eunice, New Mexico, where a groundbreaking
ceremony was held last summer.
Louisiana Energy Services,
a subsidiary of Urenco, is building the first US installation that will
use modern centrifuge technology. USEC,
formerly the United States Enrichment Corporation and an arm of the
federal government until 1998, operates a gaseous diffusion plant in
Paducah, Kentucky, where pumps and filters separate lighter uranium
atoms from heavier atoms in a slower, more power-intensive process.
The nation's 103 operating nuclear power plants already are experiencing
dwindling stockpiles of uranium--some of it converted from Russian
bombs--while energy-hungry China and India are rushing to build their
own nuclear power plants.
Uranium concentrate is in short supply with world consumption of 180
million pounds outpacing annual production of 100 million pounds,
according to industry and government estimates. For now, the difference
is being made up by dwindling stockpiles--and the shortage is expected
to get worse as new plants come online.
US utilities looking at building or adding reactors are motivated partly
by the escalating cost of natural gas, and partly by fears the
government may tax coal-fired plants for the carbon emissions they
release into the air.
Outside of the US, the Nuclear Energy Institute says 27 nuclear plants
are under construction in 11 other countries, adding to the world's 442
nuclear plants.
Federal policy, meanwhile, is changing to expedite development of
nuclear power.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is streamlining licensing and
operating approvals for a standardized--and vastly improved--new
generation of reactors. The Energy Act of 2005 offered loan guarantees,
production tax credits and partial reimbursement against regulatory
delays for builders of nuclear plants.

© 2007 Elliott H. Gue
Editorial Archive

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