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DOE Announces Policy for Managing Excess Uranium InventoryMarch 19, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS
DOE has a significant inventory of depleted, natural and enriched uranium that is excess to U.S. defense needs and located at various DOE sites across the nation. This uranium is equivalent to approximately 59,000 metric tons of natural uranium. The DOE uranium inventory is expensive to maintain and secure, and is in various forms, many of which are not readily usable. This uranium inventory was acquired over the years from defense programs, uranium enrichment and other activities. Under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, DOE has broad authority to loan, sell, transfer or otherwise utilize the uranium in its inventory. During 2008, DOE will continue its ongoing program for downblending excess highly enriched uranium (HEU) into low enriched uranium (LEU), evaluate the benefits of enriching a portion of its excess natural uranium into LEU and complete an analysis on enriching and/or selling some of its depleted uranium. Consistent with applicable law, DOE will review the impacts of particular sales and transfers from its excess uranium inventory on the market and the domestic uranium industry, before undertaking these sales and transfers. "Substantial increases in market prices for uranium in recent years have made the Department's excess uranium inventory a valuable commodity," U.S. Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman said. "We will manage this commodity in a prudent manner that recognizes a variety of factors including our national security interest, departmental missions, realities of the global marketplace, and impacts on domestic industry, while assuring that transactions involving this inventory yield the best economic value for DOE and the American taxpayers." The policy statement commits DOE to manage its excess uranium inventories in a manner that:
The policy statement also confirms the position set forth in the draft uranium sales strategy posted by DOE in Fiscal Year 2007. That is, as a general matter, the introduction into the domestic market of uranium from DOE inventories in amounts that do not exceed 10% of domestic demand in any one year period should not have an adverse material impact on the domestic uranium industry. To read the Secretarial Policy Statement, as well as other related DOE materials, visit the Office of Nuclear Energy web site (http://www.ne.doe.gov/). Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
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