1 00:00:00,320 --> 00:00:06,559 Speaker 1: Stomic test. The Russians have a bomb, were supposed to 2 00:00:06,559 --> 00:00:10,000 Speaker 1: be years ahead of them, but thumps, What were you 3 00:00:10,039 --> 00:00:11,559 Speaker 1: guys doing in Los Almus. 4 00:00:15,040 --> 00:00:18,880 Speaker 2: Uranium, of all things, has become a hot topic this summer, 5 00:00:19,280 --> 00:00:21,920 Speaker 2: in part, of course, because of the hit movie Oppenheimer 6 00:00:22,040 --> 00:00:25,000 Speaker 2: about the Manhattan Project and the man often called the 7 00:00:25,160 --> 00:00:26,840 Speaker 2: father of the atomic bomb. 8 00:00:27,520 --> 00:00:32,400 Speaker 3: A shark. Time ago, an American aeroplane dropped one bomb 9 00:00:32,440 --> 00:00:37,600 Speaker 3: on Hiroshima and destroyed its usefulness to the enemy. That 10 00:00:37,680 --> 00:00:41,159 Speaker 3: bomb has more power than twenty thousand tons of T 11 00:00:41,440 --> 00:00:41,760 Speaker 3: and T. 12 00:00:43,280 --> 00:00:47,400 Speaker 2: The bomb President Truman was talking about that devastated Hiroshima 13 00:00:47,520 --> 00:00:51,680 Speaker 2: on August sixth, nineteen forty five, contained about one hundred 14 00:00:51,720 --> 00:00:55,440 Speaker 2: and forty one pounds of enriched uranium. Uranium is still 15 00:00:55,520 --> 00:00:59,040 Speaker 2: used in nuclear weapons, but it's the non military uses 16 00:00:59,080 --> 00:01:02,240 Speaker 2: that we're talking about today and the reason it's in 17 00:01:02,280 --> 00:01:03,480 Speaker 2: the news now. 18 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:07,200 Speaker 4: Uranium is the basic fuel that's used in nuclear power plants. 19 00:01:07,240 --> 00:01:11,720 Speaker 4: It's not particularly rare, but the whole process of getting 20 00:01:11,760 --> 00:01:15,240 Speaker 4: the U two thirty five isotopes concentrated high enough to 21 00:01:15,360 --> 00:01:18,280 Speaker 4: run in a nuclear power plant very complicated. 22 00:01:18,880 --> 00:01:22,800 Speaker 2: That's Bloomberg's Will Wade he and Jonathan Tyrone report that 23 00:01:22,920 --> 00:01:26,840 Speaker 2: for decades, the US has depended on Russia for much 24 00:01:26,880 --> 00:01:30,840 Speaker 2: of this hard to enrich uranium needed to fuel nuclear 25 00:01:30,920 --> 00:01:34,760 Speaker 2: power plants, and that picture has become much more complicated 26 00:01:34,920 --> 00:01:37,679 Speaker 2: since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. 27 00:01:37,840 --> 00:01:41,759 Speaker 5: It's not just the enrichment that Russia is supplying, it's 28 00:01:41,800 --> 00:01:46,440 Speaker 5: also conversion, it's also raw uranium, and so you see 29 00:01:46,520 --> 00:01:50,360 Speaker 5: weak links along the nuclear fuel supply chain at every stage. 30 00:01:50,880 --> 00:01:53,520 Speaker 2: Will and Jonathan are here to talk about a new 31 00:01:53,560 --> 00:01:58,040 Speaker 2: push to rebuild the West's uranium capabilities. Some are likening 32 00:01:58,040 --> 00:02:01,520 Speaker 2: it to a Manhattan Project two point zero, but this 33 00:02:01,600 --> 00:02:12,320 Speaker 2: time for peaceful purposes. I'm Weskosova today on the big take. 34 00:02:12,639 --> 00:02:23,760 Speaker 2: Can the US wean itself from Russian uranium? Jonathan? Why 35 00:02:23,880 --> 00:02:28,520 Speaker 2: is the US dependent on Russia of all places for uranium. 36 00:02:29,160 --> 00:02:31,880 Speaker 5: Well, it goes back to the end of the Cold War, 37 00:02:32,120 --> 00:02:36,040 Speaker 5: and what happened was the US began a commercial relationship 38 00:02:36,160 --> 00:02:39,840 Speaker 5: with Russia's national energy company Rosa Tolment. It was called 39 00:02:40,280 --> 00:02:46,120 Speaker 5: Mega tons to megawatts, and basically we began importing Russian 40 00:02:46,520 --> 00:02:50,720 Speaker 5: weapons grade uranium down blended into a mixture that could 41 00:02:50,760 --> 00:02:54,640 Speaker 5: be made into fuel assemblies for American nuclear power plants. 42 00:02:55,040 --> 00:02:58,880 Speaker 5: And that commercial relationship, you know, has extended for the 43 00:02:58,960 --> 00:03:02,480 Speaker 5: last thirty year years. In that period of time, there 44 00:03:02,480 --> 00:03:06,920 Speaker 5: are also serious stresses to the nuclear industry, first and 45 00:03:06,919 --> 00:03:10,720 Speaker 5: foremost being the Fukushima Daishi nuclear power plants following the 46 00:03:10,760 --> 00:03:14,000 Speaker 5: earthquake in twenty eleven. Then also we had the fracking 47 00:03:14,040 --> 00:03:17,000 Speaker 5: boom in the United States with massive supply of natural 48 00:03:17,080 --> 00:03:22,120 Speaker 5: gas to American electricity generators, which also served to displace 49 00:03:22,440 --> 00:03:24,200 Speaker 5: participants in the nuclear fuel cycle. 50 00:03:25,520 --> 00:03:28,040 Speaker 2: Will As Jonathan says, after the Cold War was over 51 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:31,400 Speaker 2: in the US and the Soviet Union were no longer 52 00:03:31,440 --> 00:03:34,520 Speaker 2: competing in an arms race, it set up a whole 53 00:03:34,560 --> 00:03:38,320 Speaker 2: different dynamic when it came to what uranium was actually worth. 54 00:03:39,080 --> 00:03:43,120 Speaker 4: Yeah, the whole US uranium industry is kind of almost gone. 55 00:03:43,200 --> 00:03:46,760 Speaker 4: There's very little mining. The closest big mining is in Canada. 56 00:03:47,320 --> 00:03:50,960 Speaker 4: There's almost no enrichment except for the plant in New Mexico, 57 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:54,400 Speaker 4: which is actually a European company. There's not a whole 58 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:58,000 Speaker 4: lot of conversion. There's one facility, but it was shut down. 59 00:03:58,000 --> 00:04:01,800 Speaker 4: They're about to reopen it. In just the past several years, 60 00:04:01,800 --> 00:04:05,040 Speaker 4: there have been about a dozen nuclear reactors have closed 61 00:04:05,040 --> 00:04:07,880 Speaker 4: down for economic reasons because they just couldn't compete with 62 00:04:07,960 --> 00:04:09,840 Speaker 4: the cheap natural gas electricity. 63 00:04:10,480 --> 00:04:15,440 Speaker 5: So the last US owned commercial enrichment plant was in Paducah, 64 00:04:15,840 --> 00:04:20,960 Speaker 5: Kentucky that used a radically different technology to enrich uranium 65 00:04:20,960 --> 00:04:24,039 Speaker 5: called gaseous diffusion. The gaseous diffusion is a way of 66 00:04:24,120 --> 00:04:28,799 Speaker 5: enriching uranium that uses uranium hexafluorid gas pressed through different 67 00:04:28,880 --> 00:04:34,160 Speaker 5: membranes transferred through different chambers to enrich the uranium two 68 00:04:34,240 --> 00:04:37,320 Speaker 5: thirty five isotope into a concentration necessary to sustain a 69 00:04:37,320 --> 00:04:41,279 Speaker 5: fission chain reaction. The US is basically the last country 70 00:04:41,320 --> 00:04:45,120 Speaker 5: to use gaseous diffusion for enriching uranium, the reason being 71 00:04:45,600 --> 00:04:48,920 Speaker 5: it takes a lot more energy to enrich uranium through 72 00:04:48,920 --> 00:04:53,120 Speaker 5: gaseous diffusion, and why did the US do that Because 73 00:04:53,520 --> 00:04:56,719 Speaker 5: they were drawing massive electricity reserves off of the Tennessee 74 00:04:56,760 --> 00:05:01,640 Speaker 5: Valley Authority, and so this whole industry of the nuclear 75 00:05:01,640 --> 00:05:04,000 Speaker 5: fuel cycle in the US was wrapped up with national 76 00:05:04,320 --> 00:05:08,400 Speaker 5: defense policy is about stockpiling during the Cold War, and 77 00:05:08,880 --> 00:05:12,680 Speaker 5: the commercial enrichment services for nuclear power plants came from 78 00:05:12,720 --> 00:05:14,400 Speaker 5: the same plant, but there wasn't much of a cost 79 00:05:14,480 --> 00:05:16,880 Speaker 5: benefit analysis when it came to looking for the most 80 00:05:16,920 --> 00:05:22,600 Speaker 5: efficient way to make uranium for fuel for reactors until 81 00:05:22,920 --> 00:05:27,479 Speaker 5: after the Cold War ended and the commercial imperatives of 82 00:05:27,480 --> 00:05:30,600 Speaker 5: competing in the market were thrust upon the US, and 83 00:05:30,720 --> 00:05:34,080 Speaker 5: that's when they had to start developing what everybody else 84 00:05:34,080 --> 00:05:36,520 Speaker 5: in the world is using for enriching uranium, which is 85 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:42,239 Speaker 5: the centrifuge. Centrifuges, which are supersonic spinning cylinders, is similar 86 00:05:42,279 --> 00:05:46,359 Speaker 5: to your washing machine. These actually use only about five 87 00:05:46,560 --> 00:05:52,120 Speaker 5: percent of the energy requirements that gashous diffusion requires. Centrifuges 88 00:05:52,240 --> 00:05:55,800 Speaker 5: became the technology of choice in the post Cold War era. 89 00:05:56,560 --> 00:06:00,960 Speaker 2: So will how much uranium does the US get from Russia? 90 00:06:01,040 --> 00:06:04,320 Speaker 4: Well, Russia is the world's biggest supplier of enriched uranium, 91 00:06:04,600 --> 00:06:06,920 Speaker 4: about a quarter of the fuel and our nuclear power 92 00:06:06,920 --> 00:06:10,799 Speaker 4: plants comes from Russia. The uranium supply chain is long 93 00:06:10,880 --> 00:06:14,799 Speaker 4: and complicated. You start with raw uranium ore. It's milled 94 00:06:14,839 --> 00:06:17,800 Speaker 4: down into a powder they call it yellow cake. The 95 00:06:17,920 --> 00:06:21,159 Speaker 4: yellow cake is mixed with a fluorine gas and it's 96 00:06:21,160 --> 00:06:25,760 Speaker 4: converted into uranium hexafluoride. That's the conversion step of the process. 97 00:06:26,080 --> 00:06:28,640 Speaker 4: The UF six gets sent to the enrichment site and 98 00:06:28,680 --> 00:06:32,360 Speaker 4: that's where they concentrate it into the five percent necessary 99 00:06:32,440 --> 00:06:35,440 Speaker 4: for fuel. And once you have the enriched uranium, and 100 00:06:35,520 --> 00:06:38,640 Speaker 4: remember that's what we get mostly from Russia, then enriched 101 00:06:38,760 --> 00:06:42,800 Speaker 4: uranium gets sent to a fabricator where they create nuclear 102 00:06:42,800 --> 00:06:43,840 Speaker 4: fuel rods out of it. 103 00:06:44,560 --> 00:06:47,640 Speaker 2: And so this can pass through a lot of different 104 00:06:47,720 --> 00:06:50,440 Speaker 2: countries and a lot of different companies on the way 105 00:06:50,480 --> 00:06:52,680 Speaker 2: to being the final product. 106 00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:55,360 Speaker 4: It can, but it doesn't have to. Russia has all 107 00:06:55,400 --> 00:06:57,400 Speaker 4: of the steps, China has all of the steps. It's 108 00:06:57,440 --> 00:06:59,640 Speaker 4: only the US in Europe that's really broken it down 109 00:06:59,720 --> 00:07:02,120 Speaker 4: into so many different places and people, and that kind 110 00:07:02,120 --> 00:07:04,240 Speaker 4: of makes the whole process a lot more complicated. 111 00:07:05,040 --> 00:07:08,760 Speaker 2: Does any of the uranium that comes from Russia wind 112 00:07:08,839 --> 00:07:10,680 Speaker 2: up in US and nuclear weapons? 113 00:07:11,400 --> 00:07:11,560 Speaker 1: No. 114 00:07:12,120 --> 00:07:13,880 Speaker 5: The dirty secret is that there's not a lack of 115 00:07:13,960 --> 00:07:16,320 Speaker 5: nuclear fuel. It just that it's in the wrong place. 116 00:07:16,800 --> 00:07:18,520 Speaker 5: Like the US has a lot of nuclear fuel, it 117 00:07:18,600 --> 00:07:21,240 Speaker 5: just all in bombs. We could really screw up the 118 00:07:21,280 --> 00:07:23,880 Speaker 5: nuclear fuel market if we decide to disarm and start 119 00:07:23,880 --> 00:07:28,440 Speaker 5: to downblend. You can downblend the highly enriched uranium found 120 00:07:28,480 --> 00:07:32,560 Speaker 5: in nuclear weapons and reconvert that into a lower enriched 121 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:35,960 Speaker 5: blend necessary for power plants. 122 00:07:36,440 --> 00:07:37,920 Speaker 4: It's like you're unenriching it. 123 00:07:38,560 --> 00:07:43,280 Speaker 2: And will you visited the only enricher of uranium in 124 00:07:43,320 --> 00:07:47,040 Speaker 2: the US. It's a company called Urinko. What was that like. 125 00:07:47,720 --> 00:07:50,400 Speaker 4: Well, it's in a tiny town called Unice, New Mexico. 126 00:07:50,440 --> 00:07:53,520 Speaker 4: It's right on the eastern border of New Mexico. It's 127 00:07:53,560 --> 00:07:59,520 Speaker 4: a mile from Texas. It was this spotless, pristine industrial 128 00:07:59,560 --> 00:08:02,400 Speaker 4: site in the middle of the desert. There's armed guards, 129 00:08:02,880 --> 00:08:06,120 Speaker 4: a lot of security getting in. It's been open for 130 00:08:06,240 --> 00:08:09,800 Speaker 4: a long time, but it was spotless, just spotless that 131 00:08:09,840 --> 00:08:12,480 Speaker 4: all the machines were gleaming. I was really impressed by 132 00:08:12,480 --> 00:08:15,000 Speaker 4: how clean it is. So they take us into the 133 00:08:15,040 --> 00:08:19,160 Speaker 4: room with the centrifuges and there's just hundreds and hundreds 134 00:08:19,200 --> 00:08:21,200 Speaker 4: of them, all in a row. It just stretches on 135 00:08:21,320 --> 00:08:23,960 Speaker 4: to the end of this vast room. I couldn't even 136 00:08:24,000 --> 00:08:27,280 Speaker 4: see the end of it. They're spinning so fast. There's 137 00:08:27,320 --> 00:08:30,160 Speaker 4: this really high pitched wine. We had to wear ear 138 00:08:30,200 --> 00:08:33,120 Speaker 4: protection and it didn't sound that loud, but they told 139 00:08:33,200 --> 00:08:36,720 Speaker 4: us that the frequency is exactly the right frequency that'll 140 00:08:36,760 --> 00:08:39,920 Speaker 4: really damage your ears if you're not careful. So all 141 00:08:39,920 --> 00:08:43,520 Speaker 4: the centrifuges, they look like long, thin tubes about twenty 142 00:08:43,720 --> 00:08:46,880 Speaker 4: something feet tall. I couldn't tell for sure. The tops 143 00:08:46,920 --> 00:08:49,720 Speaker 4: of it were concealed by these curtains because that's where 144 00:08:49,720 --> 00:08:52,600 Speaker 4: they have the piping that connects one to the next, 145 00:08:52,640 --> 00:08:54,719 Speaker 4: to the next to the next. They call that a cascade, 146 00:08:55,080 --> 00:08:58,200 Speaker 4: and that is apparently a really important trade secret on 147 00:08:58,280 --> 00:09:00,800 Speaker 4: how they managed to get the gear to flow from 148 00:09:00,840 --> 00:09:02,680 Speaker 4: one to the next. They wouldn't let anybody see what 149 00:09:02,679 --> 00:09:03,160 Speaker 4: that looks like. 150 00:09:04,080 --> 00:09:08,080 Speaker 2: And once the process there is done, what happens with 151 00:09:08,160 --> 00:09:09,280 Speaker 2: that uranium? Where does it go? 152 00:09:09,960 --> 00:09:12,040 Speaker 4: Then it gets sent to the fabricator where it is 153 00:09:12,080 --> 00:09:16,680 Speaker 4: converted into fuel pellets. The pellets are inserted into fuel rods. 154 00:09:17,160 --> 00:09:20,120 Speaker 4: Every reactor has its own specific design for what those 155 00:09:20,160 --> 00:09:22,800 Speaker 4: fuel rods are supposed to look like, and those get 156 00:09:22,880 --> 00:09:26,240 Speaker 4: sent to the power plants after the break. 157 00:09:26,480 --> 00:09:29,400 Speaker 2: What is the US doing to limit its reliance on 158 00:09:29,559 --> 00:09:40,600 Speaker 2: Russian uranium? So, Jonathan, we've been talking about how and 159 00:09:40,640 --> 00:09:44,160 Speaker 2: why the US is so dependent on Russia for uranium, 160 00:09:44,480 --> 00:09:47,720 Speaker 2: and now the US government seems to have woken up 161 00:09:47,760 --> 00:09:49,720 Speaker 2: to the fact that they need to change this. What 162 00:09:49,760 --> 00:09:50,400 Speaker 2: are they doing. 163 00:09:50,960 --> 00:09:54,760 Speaker 5: They're working with their allies to address this as a 164 00:09:54,800 --> 00:09:58,239 Speaker 5: common security problem and not just a national security problem. 165 00:09:58,640 --> 00:10:02,440 Speaker 5: There's different levels of concern. It's not just the US, 166 00:10:02,520 --> 00:10:07,360 Speaker 5: it's also Eastern European allies, which, as former Soviet satellites, 167 00:10:07,440 --> 00:10:11,640 Speaker 5: are operating about two dozen so called Vveer reactors which 168 00:10:11,640 --> 00:10:17,640 Speaker 5: are almost exclusively fueled by Rosatum, Russia's national nuclear giant. 169 00:10:18,080 --> 00:10:21,400 Speaker 5: So I mean that's a very acute problem affecting European 170 00:10:21,800 --> 00:10:24,840 Speaker 5: power supplies. Then you move over to the North American 171 00:10:24,880 --> 00:10:28,240 Speaker 5: supply chains, the nuclear supply chains, and there we see 172 00:10:28,440 --> 00:10:32,640 Speaker 5: it's not just the enrichment that Russia is supplying, it's 173 00:10:32,679 --> 00:10:37,319 Speaker 5: also conversion, it's also raw uranium, and so you see 174 00:10:37,400 --> 00:10:41,360 Speaker 5: weak links along the nuclear fuel supply chain at every stage. 175 00:10:41,679 --> 00:10:45,679 Speaker 5: So when President Biden met his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau 176 00:10:45,800 --> 00:10:50,400 Speaker 5: earlier this year, they agreed to reboot North American nuclear 177 00:10:50,440 --> 00:10:51,440 Speaker 5: fuel cycle. 178 00:10:51,520 --> 00:10:54,720 Speaker 1: Because of our shared prosperity is deeply connected to our 179 00:10:54,760 --> 00:10:58,319 Speaker 1: shared security in the past. In the past years have 180 00:10:58,400 --> 00:11:02,400 Speaker 1: proved the Canada the United Days are not insulated from 181 00:11:02,440 --> 00:11:04,360 Speaker 1: the challenge to impact the rest of the world. 182 00:11:05,080 --> 00:11:08,480 Speaker 5: They subsequently went to the G seven meeting in Sapporo, Japan. 183 00:11:08,520 --> 00:11:11,360 Speaker 5: A couple weeks later in April, they convinced the UK 184 00:11:11,480 --> 00:11:13,960 Speaker 5: and France to come on board and the joint statement 185 00:11:14,000 --> 00:11:16,679 Speaker 5: from Sapporo, they said that they want to push Vladimir 186 00:11:16,720 --> 00:11:20,600 Speaker 5: Putin and Russia out of the nuclear fuel cycle entirely. Now, 187 00:11:20,600 --> 00:11:23,160 Speaker 5: that will be pretty hard, because you know, even during 188 00:11:23,200 --> 00:11:26,800 Speaker 5: the darkest times in the Cold War, the US, for example, 189 00:11:26,880 --> 00:11:30,920 Speaker 5: was buying titanium from the Soviets for their nuclear deterrence. 190 00:11:31,280 --> 00:11:34,200 Speaker 5: I think the important point to recognize is that it 191 00:11:34,240 --> 00:11:36,280 Speaker 5: won't be easy to knock Roseat to them out of 192 00:11:36,320 --> 00:11:41,920 Speaker 5: the nuclear fuel business. They continue supplying Eastern European utilities 193 00:11:41,960 --> 00:11:45,440 Speaker 5: with the fuel they need for their reactors, and that 194 00:11:45,559 --> 00:11:49,559 Speaker 5: business has in fact grown in the twelve months after 195 00:11:49,640 --> 00:11:53,320 Speaker 5: the war began and continues to this day. 196 00:11:53,960 --> 00:11:55,640 Speaker 4: But you know what, we should point out that they 197 00:11:55,640 --> 00:11:58,319 Speaker 4: are starting to lose some of that business. Westinghouse, the 198 00:11:58,440 --> 00:12:01,560 Speaker 4: US nuclear company, just this year, has picked up a 199 00:12:01,559 --> 00:12:05,640 Speaker 4: couple contracts to supply fuel rods to those Eastern European reactors. 200 00:12:05,640 --> 00:12:07,880 Speaker 4: Then they're going to have to build a new design 201 00:12:08,040 --> 00:12:09,679 Speaker 4: fuel rod to fit those reactors. 202 00:12:11,520 --> 00:12:13,400 Speaker 2: And will you also write in the story that the 203 00:12:13,400 --> 00:12:17,760 Speaker 2: Biden administration is pushing Congress to spend a lot of 204 00:12:17,840 --> 00:12:22,120 Speaker 2: money to try to jumpstart the US uranium process. Again, 205 00:12:22,720 --> 00:12:25,880 Speaker 2: there's a push in Congress right now. To create a 206 00:12:26,160 --> 00:12:29,560 Speaker 2: domestic stockpile of nuclear fuel, it'd be kind of like 207 00:12:29,600 --> 00:12:33,200 Speaker 2: the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which is exactly what it sounds like. 208 00:12:33,280 --> 00:12:35,679 Speaker 2: It's a huge amount of oil that stored and they 209 00:12:35,720 --> 00:12:40,320 Speaker 2: release that oil to adjust pricing when necessary. And so 210 00:12:40,400 --> 00:12:43,440 Speaker 2: the US wants to have a stockpile of nuclear fuel 211 00:12:43,800 --> 00:12:47,240 Speaker 2: just as a buffer against any kind of international tensions. 212 00:12:47,679 --> 00:12:52,160 Speaker 2: You said earlier that Russia has their entire uranium fuel 213 00:12:52,200 --> 00:12:54,959 Speaker 2: cycle in their own country. They do it from beginning 214 00:12:54,960 --> 00:12:57,720 Speaker 2: to end, and the US doesn't. What will it actually 215 00:12:57,800 --> 00:13:01,080 Speaker 2: take for the US to get that capability. 216 00:13:01,840 --> 00:13:05,240 Speaker 4: It would take long term commitments from customers. Especially remember 217 00:13:05,280 --> 00:13:08,319 Speaker 4: talking to the head of Converdine, that's the company that 218 00:13:08,360 --> 00:13:11,880 Speaker 4: does conversion, the process of turning the yellow cake into 219 00:13:12,080 --> 00:13:16,000 Speaker 4: UF six. He said that they'd be happy to do it. 220 00:13:16,000 --> 00:13:19,040 Speaker 4: It's not that complicated, but it's not that cheap. He'd 221 00:13:19,080 --> 00:13:21,800 Speaker 4: need long term commitments, like long term means about ten 222 00:13:21,880 --> 00:13:25,839 Speaker 4: years from about ten customers to justify really going into 223 00:13:25,880 --> 00:13:28,559 Speaker 4: the expansion in a way that would be big enough 224 00:13:28,600 --> 00:13:29,920 Speaker 4: to displace the Russians. 225 00:13:30,559 --> 00:13:33,600 Speaker 2: To have that many customers will would that mean that 226 00:13:33,679 --> 00:13:38,240 Speaker 2: the US would have to really ramp up its nuclear energy. 227 00:13:38,320 --> 00:13:41,200 Speaker 4: It would mean that the utilities that operate nuclear power 228 00:13:41,280 --> 00:13:44,079 Speaker 4: plants now would need to start signing contracts to buy 229 00:13:44,120 --> 00:13:48,359 Speaker 4: all of their fuel from US suppliers instead of international suppliers. 230 00:13:48,800 --> 00:13:52,280 Speaker 4: And in fact, the people at Urenko in New Mexico 231 00:13:52,360 --> 00:13:56,200 Speaker 4: told me that since Russia invaded Ukraine, their orders have 232 00:13:56,240 --> 00:13:59,560 Speaker 4: gone up about twenty five percent because they're American utility. 233 00:13:59,559 --> 00:14:01,760 Speaker 4: Customers have come to them and said, we'd like to 234 00:14:01,760 --> 00:14:05,120 Speaker 4: start buying more from the United States than from Russia. 235 00:14:05,600 --> 00:14:09,160 Speaker 5: And there's another dimension as well, which is more future oriented, 236 00:14:09,280 --> 00:14:13,880 Speaker 5: and it involves the next generation of American reactors. Foreseeing, 237 00:14:13,960 --> 00:14:17,520 Speaker 5: these are the so called small modular reactors, which require 238 00:14:17,559 --> 00:14:21,400 Speaker 5: a different kind of nuclear fuel, a higher concentration. It's 239 00:14:21,440 --> 00:14:25,320 Speaker 5: called high assay low enriched uranium. Rather than five percent 240 00:14:25,720 --> 00:14:28,200 Speaker 5: uranium two thirty five bus topes, you're looking closer to 241 00:14:28,280 --> 00:14:31,600 Speaker 5: nineteen nineteen point seventy five percent. And the reason is 242 00:14:31,640 --> 00:14:35,440 Speaker 5: that if you're deploying more nuclear reactors that are smaller, 243 00:14:35,960 --> 00:14:39,600 Speaker 5: you want to have to refuel them less often. And 244 00:14:39,680 --> 00:14:43,360 Speaker 5: so the higher grade, the higher concentration nuclear fuel, allows 245 00:14:43,400 --> 00:14:48,200 Speaker 5: them to burn longer without being refueled. And right now, 246 00:14:48,320 --> 00:14:52,880 Speaker 5: the US is one hundred percent dependent on Russia for 247 00:14:53,080 --> 00:14:56,840 Speaker 5: high assay low enriched uranium, and this is a key 248 00:14:57,440 --> 00:15:00,600 Speaker 5: bottleneck that has to be solved right now, because if 249 00:15:00,600 --> 00:15:03,200 Speaker 5: we want to be deploying SMR reactors at the end 250 00:15:03,200 --> 00:15:07,120 Speaker 5: of this decade, then that part of the supply chain 251 00:15:07,200 --> 00:15:09,640 Speaker 5: has to be solved now. Because these are all long 252 00:15:09,680 --> 00:15:12,840 Speaker 5: engineering processes. Factories have to be built, lines have to 253 00:15:12,880 --> 00:15:17,400 Speaker 5: be built, environmental regulations, safety regulations. It takes a long process. 254 00:15:17,680 --> 00:15:19,600 Speaker 5: So if we want to get it done by twenty thirty, 255 00:15:19,880 --> 00:15:20,880 Speaker 5: it has to start now. 256 00:15:22,640 --> 00:15:25,720 Speaker 2: And you write that some plants that had closed down 257 00:15:25,800 --> 00:15:27,320 Speaker 2: are now being reopened. 258 00:15:28,160 --> 00:15:32,720 Speaker 4: Well, the converdyine conversion facility in Illinois that was shut 259 00:15:32,760 --> 00:15:35,840 Speaker 4: down if several years ago for economic reasons because the 260 00:15:35,880 --> 00:15:38,600 Speaker 4: market was so oversupplied. They basically said, we can't make 261 00:15:38,640 --> 00:15:40,600 Speaker 4: money selling this stuff. We're just going to sell out 262 00:15:40,600 --> 00:15:43,800 Speaker 4: of inventory until further notice. And now they're starting to 263 00:15:43,800 --> 00:15:46,440 Speaker 4: reopen that because the price has gone up about tenfold. 264 00:15:47,600 --> 00:15:49,560 Speaker 2: When we come back, what would it take for the 265 00:15:49,560 --> 00:15:53,640 Speaker 2: West to cut Russia out of the international nuclear fuel cycle. 266 00:16:02,800 --> 00:16:06,200 Speaker 4: Nazier's new military rulers are in a standoff with the West, 267 00:16:06,360 --> 00:16:09,360 Speaker 4: and some of their neighbors, refusing to hand back power 268 00:16:09,440 --> 00:16:11,920 Speaker 4: to the man they oustd it. Nizer's coup leaders have 269 00:16:12,000 --> 00:16:14,280 Speaker 4: closed the country's airspace until further notice. 270 00:16:14,360 --> 00:16:17,960 Speaker 5: The regional bloc ECOWAS has said it wants a diplomatic 271 00:16:18,040 --> 00:16:21,960 Speaker 5: and peaceful resolution to the takeover, but that no options 272 00:16:22,000 --> 00:16:23,000 Speaker 5: are off the table. 273 00:16:23,920 --> 00:16:27,800 Speaker 2: Jonathan, you write that the recent coup in Niger, which 274 00:16:28,160 --> 00:16:31,120 Speaker 2: is one of the top uranium producers in the world, 275 00:16:31,280 --> 00:16:34,920 Speaker 2: shows the geopolitical stakes of this business. What should other 276 00:16:34,920 --> 00:16:37,200 Speaker 2: countries take away from what's happening there. 277 00:16:37,800 --> 00:16:41,160 Speaker 5: So, Nizier's the sixth biggest producer of uranium or in 278 00:16:41,200 --> 00:16:44,400 Speaker 5: the world. It's a key supplier for France and other 279 00:16:44,440 --> 00:16:50,080 Speaker 5: European utilities. The lesson of Niger is what the companies 280 00:16:50,120 --> 00:16:53,520 Speaker 5: call depth and defense. They need to have a redundant 281 00:16:53,520 --> 00:16:57,800 Speaker 5: supply chain and so you will see or no investing 282 00:16:58,040 --> 00:17:02,240 Speaker 5: in Canadian minds. You see additional Canadian minds responding to 283 00:17:02,800 --> 00:17:07,040 Speaker 5: tightness in the ore market by opening up mothballed minds. 284 00:17:07,080 --> 00:17:09,760 Speaker 5: Just another example. Everybody is talking about Niger right now, 285 00:17:09,760 --> 00:17:15,800 Speaker 5: but you see Rosatom displacing US and European fuel makers 286 00:17:16,040 --> 00:17:19,280 Speaker 5: and entering into a new agreement with South Africa to 287 00:17:19,400 --> 00:17:24,000 Speaker 5: reboot that country's nuclear fuel cycle. So the thing to 288 00:17:24,320 --> 00:17:27,399 Speaker 5: pay attention to isn't just income statement the balance sheet, 289 00:17:27,800 --> 00:17:32,320 Speaker 5: it's also the geopolitical states that are shifting as Western 290 00:17:32,320 --> 00:17:35,399 Speaker 5: companies try to displace Russia and vice versa. 291 00:17:36,119 --> 00:17:38,399 Speaker 4: I think the lesson from Niger is the same lesson 292 00:17:38,520 --> 00:17:41,680 Speaker 4: from Russia, which is you don't want to be dependent 293 00:17:41,920 --> 00:17:45,200 Speaker 4: on countries that may not be stable as your supplier. 294 00:17:45,600 --> 00:17:48,720 Speaker 4: And also we saw in South Africa, uranium isn't just 295 00:17:48,800 --> 00:17:51,000 Speaker 4: a product you buy and sell to make a profit. 296 00:17:51,480 --> 00:17:55,600 Speaker 4: It's a key part of international diplomacy. 297 00:17:56,440 --> 00:18:00,840 Speaker 2: That's really interesting point. Will and you write then that 298 00:18:01,080 --> 00:18:03,800 Speaker 2: the US government is grappling with this very question. 299 00:18:04,640 --> 00:18:07,879 Speaker 5: The US Department of Energy has what is called the 300 00:18:07,880 --> 00:18:11,720 Speaker 5: one two to three Agreement, which is a nuclear agreements 301 00:18:11,760 --> 00:18:15,359 Speaker 5: that it enters into with different states which will trade 302 00:18:15,680 --> 00:18:20,200 Speaker 5: US nuclear technology as long as countries do not enter 303 00:18:20,240 --> 00:18:22,600 Speaker 5: the nuclear fuel cycle. This is what we've seen in 304 00:18:22,640 --> 00:18:25,760 Speaker 5: the United Arab Emirates. This is a crux of negotiations 305 00:18:25,760 --> 00:18:29,160 Speaker 5: with Saudi Arabia. This is why the US takes such 306 00:18:29,160 --> 00:18:33,520 Speaker 5: a grim view of Iran entering into the nuclear fuel cycle. 307 00:18:33,840 --> 00:18:35,800 Speaker 5: So this is a big deal because of its dual 308 00:18:36,160 --> 00:18:41,359 Speaker 5: use potential, and just in terms of how you can 309 00:18:41,720 --> 00:18:45,919 Speaker 5: build this resiliency in your supply chain. The CEO of 310 00:18:46,040 --> 00:18:49,119 Speaker 5: Urenco told me something interesting. He was talking about the 311 00:18:49,160 --> 00:18:53,919 Speaker 5: fact that some of his oldest centrifuges operating in Europe 312 00:18:54,080 --> 00:18:57,800 Speaker 5: have been running now for fifty years. Imagine your washing 313 00:18:57,840 --> 00:19:00,640 Speaker 5: machine on the spin cycle running from the last fifty 314 00:19:00,720 --> 00:19:04,240 Speaker 5: years without ever stopping. In those centrifusias. They've been running 315 00:19:04,280 --> 00:19:07,240 Speaker 5: through three Mile Island, they've been running through Chernobyl, they've 316 00:19:07,280 --> 00:19:10,719 Speaker 5: been running through the Fukushima meltdowns. And he said, you know, 317 00:19:10,840 --> 00:19:14,640 Speaker 5: the only thing that they don't like is to stop. 318 00:19:15,359 --> 00:19:17,399 Speaker 5: He was talking about in terms of like a very 319 00:19:17,440 --> 00:19:19,800 Speaker 5: physical material sense, and that you know, when you try 320 00:19:19,840 --> 00:19:23,560 Speaker 5: to stop something spinning at supersonic speeds, sometimes mistakes happen 321 00:19:23,600 --> 00:19:25,240 Speaker 5: and they spin out of control, so you want to 322 00:19:25,280 --> 00:19:28,159 Speaker 5: keep them running. But more broadly, it's an anecdote about 323 00:19:28,200 --> 00:19:33,080 Speaker 5: the commitment that economies need to make nuclear power profitable 324 00:19:33,240 --> 00:19:36,439 Speaker 5: and it requires a long term vision, probably sometimes with 325 00:19:36,480 --> 00:19:42,000 Speaker 5: state support. That is nurturing a strategic industry. You know, 326 00:19:42,160 --> 00:19:47,200 Speaker 5: touches far more than simple company profit and loss statements. 327 00:19:48,320 --> 00:19:51,840 Speaker 2: You've talked about how It'll take many years and a 328 00:19:51,880 --> 00:19:54,199 Speaker 2: lot of money for the US to be able to 329 00:19:54,600 --> 00:20:00,159 Speaker 2: be independent of Russia and other places for uranium. What 330 00:20:00,280 --> 00:20:05,879 Speaker 2: happens if the situation in Ukraine escalates and the US 331 00:20:05,920 --> 00:20:09,719 Speaker 2: and Russia no longer do any business. What would that 332 00:20:09,800 --> 00:20:11,240 Speaker 2: mean for the US industry? 333 00:20:12,080 --> 00:20:15,159 Speaker 4: Oh, you mean the worst case scenario, like if Russia 334 00:20:15,280 --> 00:20:17,440 Speaker 4: decides to completely cut US off or we decide to 335 00:20:17,480 --> 00:20:22,760 Speaker 4: completely boycott them, that would be bad. Most utilities tend 336 00:20:22,800 --> 00:20:25,760 Speaker 4: to keep about eighteen months of inventory on hand. They 337 00:20:25,840 --> 00:20:29,040 Speaker 4: have to refuel the reactors every eighteen months, so basically, 338 00:20:29,359 --> 00:20:31,960 Speaker 4: it's like they've got one spare set of fuel rods 339 00:20:32,000 --> 00:20:34,800 Speaker 4: laid around to put in when they need it, and 340 00:20:35,840 --> 00:20:38,560 Speaker 4: eighteen months after that, if they don't have another set 341 00:20:38,600 --> 00:20:40,800 Speaker 4: of fuel rods, then they have to turn the reactor off. 342 00:20:41,280 --> 00:20:44,560 Speaker 4: No gas, out of gas. Personally, I don't think that's 343 00:20:44,600 --> 00:20:47,040 Speaker 4: going to happen. I think that the chances of that 344 00:20:47,119 --> 00:20:51,399 Speaker 4: are near zero. But yeah, if there was no uranium supply, 345 00:20:51,480 --> 00:20:55,200 Speaker 4: if there was no nuclear fuel rod supply, that's what happens. 346 00:20:55,680 --> 00:20:57,680 Speaker 4: Nuclear power plants aren't magic. You got to fill the 347 00:20:57,720 --> 00:20:58,719 Speaker 4: tank every so often. 348 00:20:59,400 --> 00:21:01,600 Speaker 2: And why do you think it's a near zero chance. 349 00:21:01,640 --> 00:21:04,240 Speaker 2: Given how chill the situation is right now. 350 00:21:04,840 --> 00:21:09,359 Speaker 4: I think the international community would come together somehow. They 351 00:21:09,440 --> 00:21:11,680 Speaker 4: could figure out who needs some today and who could 352 00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:14,359 Speaker 4: wait six months. I think there would be some ability 353 00:21:14,680 --> 00:21:16,560 Speaker 4: to coordinate if necessary. 354 00:21:17,320 --> 00:21:22,120 Speaker 5: It's not just an American problem. This is a transatlantic problem, 355 00:21:22,359 --> 00:21:27,440 Speaker 5: and right now there is an installed industrial base that 356 00:21:27,600 --> 00:21:33,399 Speaker 5: is underutilized in Europe and Oro. For example, the French 357 00:21:33,480 --> 00:21:36,879 Speaker 5: National Champion is also sitting on a potential two billion 358 00:21:36,960 --> 00:21:41,760 Speaker 5: expansion of its uranium enrichment capacity. But just like Converdyne, 359 00:21:41,920 --> 00:21:46,040 Speaker 5: the conversion company here in the US, they're also waiting 360 00:21:46,320 --> 00:21:48,920 Speaker 5: signals from clients that they're ready to enter into long 361 00:21:49,040 --> 00:21:51,800 Speaker 5: term contracts. So there's a lot of money sitting on 362 00:21:51,840 --> 00:21:54,240 Speaker 5: the sideline. There's a lot of ways to expand capacity, 363 00:21:54,440 --> 00:21:58,520 Speaker 5: to create redundancies and supply chains, but it's a slow 364 00:21:58,680 --> 00:22:00,440 Speaker 5: train that's just starting to get moving. 365 00:22:02,480 --> 00:22:05,680 Speaker 2: Will looking ahead is someone who covers this industry. Where 366 00:22:05,680 --> 00:22:07,440 Speaker 2: do you think it goes from here? Do you think 367 00:22:07,480 --> 00:22:11,680 Speaker 2: the US eventually does wean itself from Russian uranium? 368 00:22:12,200 --> 00:22:14,520 Speaker 4: Maybe not one hundred percent, but I think there's a 369 00:22:14,680 --> 00:22:18,919 Speaker 4: really strong desire to build up enough domestic capacity to 370 00:22:19,119 --> 00:22:21,320 Speaker 4: not be so dependent upon them. 371 00:22:22,200 --> 00:22:26,440 Speaker 5: The US was the biggest enricher of uranium during the 372 00:22:26,520 --> 00:22:30,359 Speaker 5: nineteen seventies. It supplied all Western capitalist economies. It was 373 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:33,960 Speaker 5: the biggest player out there. That's when Uranka was just starting, right. 374 00:22:34,040 --> 00:22:36,320 Speaker 5: So this is like around nineteen seventy two, seventy three, 375 00:22:36,359 --> 00:22:39,680 Speaker 5: seventy four. You fast forward a half a century, and 376 00:22:40,240 --> 00:22:45,080 Speaker 5: the US looks like it's a rebooting Manhattan Project version 377 00:22:45,119 --> 00:22:48,640 Speaker 5: two point zero, this time for exclusively peaceful purposes. It's 378 00:22:48,680 --> 00:22:52,320 Speaker 5: a massive undertaking, but the US is proven it's capable 379 00:22:52,400 --> 00:22:54,919 Speaker 5: and up to the task before it can do so again. 380 00:22:55,280 --> 00:22:58,320 Speaker 5: But in terms of accomplishing some of the loftier goals 381 00:22:58,320 --> 00:23:01,560 Speaker 5: of the G seven statement of pushing Russia out of 382 00:23:01,600 --> 00:23:07,879 Speaker 5: the international nuclear fuel cycle entirely, that's probably less likely. Russia, 383 00:23:08,000 --> 00:23:11,200 Speaker 5: even if it loses the Western markets, is busy building 384 00:23:11,200 --> 00:23:16,480 Speaker 5: new reactors in Bangladesh, Egypt, Turkey, Iran, a bunch of 385 00:23:16,480 --> 00:23:19,239 Speaker 5: different countries, and they're filling their pipeline up with new 386 00:23:19,280 --> 00:23:21,240 Speaker 5: customers for decades ahead. 387 00:23:22,000 --> 00:23:24,920 Speaker 2: Jonathan Will, thanks so much for coming on the show. 388 00:23:25,280 --> 00:23:28,720 Speaker 2: Thanks thanks for listening to us here at the Big Take. 389 00:23:28,920 --> 00:23:32,080 Speaker 2: It's a daily podcast from Bloomberg and iHeartRadio for more 390 00:23:32,119 --> 00:23:36,119 Speaker 2: shows from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or 391 00:23:36,160 --> 00:23:38,600 Speaker 2: wherever you listen, and we'd love to hear from you. 392 00:23:38,960 --> 00:23:42,240 Speaker 2: Email us questions or comments to Big Take at Bloomberg 393 00:23:42,280 --> 00:23:45,639 Speaker 2: dot net. The supervising producer of The Big Take is 394 00:23:45,720 --> 00:23:50,600 Speaker 2: Vicky Virgolina. Our senior producer is Katherine Fink. Federica Romaniello 395 00:23:50,760 --> 00:23:55,639 Speaker 2: is our producer. Our associate producer is Zenobsidiki. Hilde Garcia 396 00:23:55,720 --> 00:23:59,720 Speaker 2: is our engineer. Our original music was composed by Leo Sidrin. 397 00:24:00,119 --> 00:24:03,160 Speaker 2: I'm west Kasova. We'll be back tomorrow with another Big 398 00:24:03,240 --> 00:24:03,480 Speaker 2: Take