Cameco Corp. and partner to develop Inkai uranium deposit in Kaz

Published: 3 April 2004 y., Saturday
The companies will develop the Inkai deposit through their Inkai Joint Venture, which is 60 per cent owned by Cameco, the uranium-mining and energy company based in Saskatoon. The cost to build the mine will be $38 million US, and Cameco will lend the joint venture $40 million US, to be repaid through Inkai production. Subject to regulatory approval, it is expected to achieve commercial production in 2007 and ramp up to 2.6 million pounds annually by 2009. The mine will employ up to 200 workers during construction and 230 once full production is reached. About 97 per cent of the employees will be hired locally, Cameco said. Cameco estimated there were 91.5 million pounds of proven and probable reserves that would provide an estimated mine life of more than 30 years. Cameco bills itself as the world's largest uranium producer. Its shares (TSX:CCO) traded up 65 cents at $65.88 in Thursday trading on the Toronto stock market.
Šaltinis: stockhouse.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Investment Potential Seen in Eurasia's Transitional Economies

A leading economist says Russia, Ukraine, and other East European countries have made significant progress in reforming their economies and embracing market principles more »

TURKMENISTAN RAISES PRICE OF NATURAL GAS SUPPLIED TO RUSSIA

Turkmenistan's president Saparmurat Niyazov and Gazprom's CEO Alexei Miller, who arrived in the Turkmen capital last night for a one-day visit, discussed the whole range of Turkmenistan's cooperation with Gazprom in the energy sphere more »

GAZPROM, CITIGROUP DISCUSS WAYS TO FUND GAS GIANT

On Friday, Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller and Citigroup Vice President Stanley Fisher discussed prospects for the two companies' cooperation more »

BA flying into hefty bill for new EU law on compensation

BRITISH Airways is facing a "substantial" bill for "badly drafted" European Union (EU) regulations coming into force this week, which demand that airlines compensate passengers for flight delays and cancellations more »

The Law «About home building savings».

It will be possible to use the credits of «Zhilstroybank» (Kazakhstan) not only for purchase and building of the dwellings, but also for the repairing, exchange and modernization of apartments more »

Snooping trial begins

Sonera defendants deny deliberate violation of telecommunications privacy more »

Ukraine leader pledges fiscal amnesty

Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko is set to declare an “amnesty for capital” to make the economy more transparent more »

BRE Bank posts shocking 2004 loss of zł.278.4 million

Warsaw-based BRE Bank has suffered its largest ever quarterly loss, as its Q4 results were zł.385.9 million in the red more »

Roughly 16 mln VISA cards in Russia by 2005

The number of VISA credit cards in Russia reached around 16 million by the end of 2004, up from 9.4 million cards one year earlier more »

Ukraine posts highest CIS growth in 2004

Ukraine posted the highest economic growth among CIS nations in 2004, with GDP rising 12%, the CIS Interstate Statistical Committee said more »