Australian Energy Minister Declares Nuclear Power Tech Threat to Renewable Energy Industry
Australia is one of the few nations in the world where the use of nuclear energy for power generation is effectively banned. The nation has
Australia is one of the few nations in the world where the use of nuclear energy for power generation is effectively banned. The nation has
ASX listed uranium mining stocks headed toward bull territory Monday after weekend developments indicated significant supply shortages ahead. Meanwhile, the geopolitical and energy demand outlook
“History never repeats itself, but it does often rhyme.” 17 years ago, the massive Cigar Lake Uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan, Canada was shut down
In recent years, the global nuclear sector has been experiencing a notable resurgence in interest and investment. The confluence of energy security concerns, climate change
US President Biden has banned uranium mining from swaths of land in Arizona, in what amounts to a ‘gift to Putin’, according to the Wall
Sweden is going all in on nuclear power. The nation, led by centre-right coalition government and Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson is scrapping a renewable target
Fossil fuel-rich oil and gas Middle East nations are ready to invest untold billions in massive new nuclear power fleets and a US-Saudi-Israel deal is
The United Arab Emirates and South Korea are in talks to build even more nuclear energy power plants and partner to build reactors elsewhere in
The uranium price can only go one way, up. So says Boss Energy boss Duncan Craib to the crowd at the annual Diggers & Dealers
Another massive financial hit from wind power, this week it’s Seimens Energy, taking a massive multi-billion Euro hit to major renewable projects. The company reported
Scientists at the US government research facility, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, have announced they achieved net energy gain in a fusion reaction a second time.
In 2007, uranium’s price spiked dramatically, to roughly $300/kg (or ~$135/lb). The spike was largely speculative, driven by a combination of growing demand expectations and
The holy grail of materials science, room-temperature superconductors, could soon become a reality if experiments by scientists in South Korea and now China prove true.