The uranium market is currently operating in a structural deficit, with global production lagging behind demand for several decades. Utilities have bridged this gap by drawing down existing stockpiles, but the buffer is thinning. According to the World Nuclear Association, while global resources are technically sufficient, the industry requires immediate investment in exploration to meet future reactor requirements. Ben Elvidge of Uranium.io notes that demand is expected to grow exponentially as nations extend the lives of aging plants and commission new reactors to power energy-intensive technology sectors.
The Looming Russian Supply Gap
The United States maintains the world's largest nuclear fleet but produces only about 1% of the global uranium supply, leaving it heavily dependent on imports from Canada, Australia, and Kazakhstan. This vulnerability is compounded by a looming ban on Russian imports by 2028, which currently account for a significant portion of the U.S. supply chain. Amir Vexler, CEO of Centrus Energy, cautioned that the market will be more strained than at any point in recent history as Western sources race to fill the capacity gap.
Scaling Domestic Infrastructure
To secure the domestic supply chain, companies are pouring billions into enrichment and mining infrastructure. Jean-Luc Palayer, CEO of Orano USA, stated that meeting the federal goal of quadrupling nuclear generation by 2050 would require a twelvefold increase in domestic enrichment capacity. Current industrial efforts to bridge this divide include:
- Centrus Energy is investing $560 million in advanced centrifuges at its Tennessee and Ohio facilities.
- Orano USA is developing a $5 billion enrichment plant in Oak Ridge, with deliveries slated for the early 2030s.
- Eagle Energy Metals is targeting 2032 for first production at its Aurora mining project in Oregon.

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