"The low-price environment has choked off exploration activity for uranium and we are at the point where there are not enough uranium projects in the pipeline that can adequately meet the coming demand," the London Telegraph quoted Cantor as saying.
All of this coincides with a phenomenal number of new nuclear reactors being built, which will also enter the market at the same time.
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The end result? We're looking at the biggest deficit ever in the uranium market by 2018.
So we have over 20 Chinese nuclear reactors already under construction, plans from India to significantly increase its nuclear demand, and plans to restart over 20 Japanese reactors. These three things are major demand drivers that will wake the sleeping giant that is uranium.
And as demand soars, North America is sure to play a key role in the future of uranium supply.
In North America—and even from a global standpoint—there is no better place to explore for uranium than Saskatchewan's Athabasca Basin, which is to uranium what Saudi Arabia is to oil.
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Two of the largest producing uranium mines in the world—McArthur River and Cigar Lake--are in the Athabasca Basin. In and around this area, where Canada's Cameco is the key player, junior IsoEnergy is focusing on new exploration and development at Thorburn Lake, Radio, North Thorburn and Madison.
Now that Trump is president-elect, the speculation is that Trump will make good on promises to reform the licensing and permitting processes for nuclear power plants. What this means is that we could be sitting right on the edge of a revolution in next generation nuclear technology.
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