By Maxwell Akalaare Adombila
DAKAR (Reuters) -French nuclear group Orano has said 1,500 metric tons of uranium are stockpiled at its expropriated SOMAIR mine in northern Niger, and that it will seek compensation and pursue criminal charges if the material is seized or sold without authorisation.
A source at the mine said Niger had not yet sold any uranium athough “potential buyers include Iranians, Russians and Turkey”.
Orano launched arbitration at the World Bank’s International Center for the Settlement of International Disputes in January after Niger’s military government blocked operations at SOMAIR before moving to nationalise it.
INTERNATIONAL COURT BANS NIGER URANIUM TRANSFERS
Niger, the world’s seventh-largest producer of the nuclear fuel and cancer treatment material, accounted for 15% of Orano’s uranium supplies when its mines were in full operation.
Niger’s expropriation of Orano’s 63.4% stake mirrors a broader regional shift, with military-led governments in Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea asserting more control over resources.
A World Bank tribunal on September 23 ordered Niger to halt the sale or transfer of uranium that Orano said had been mined before the military government suspended operations.
The company has no information about subsequent production at the mine, Orano said in an emailed response to questions from Reuters.
“To the best of our knowledge, the uranium is still stored at the SOMAIR site,” it added
With the uranium spot price at $82 a lb, Orano’s stockpile at the Somair mine is worth about $270 million. Prices have gained around 30% since mid-March but are still below a peak of $106 touched in February 2024.
Orano declined to comment on prospective buyers approaching Niger, citing its focus on the arbitration.
Niger’s government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
NIGER TAKES CONTROL OF URANIUM PRODUCTION
The source in SOMAIR told Reuters about 1,570 tons of uranium is stored in the mine.
Production is now supervised by the state-owned SOPAMIN (Société du patrimoine des mines du Niger), they added.
“To my knowledge, there have been no official sales,” the source said, asking not to be named due to sensitivity of the issue. “There is a lot of demand for purchases.”
The Somair mine has produced over 70,000 tons of uranium near the city of Arlit since the 1970s.
The military government, which seized power in a coup in July 2023, has tightened control over Niger’s gold, oil and coal.
At the U.N. General Assembly, Prime Minister Ali Lamine Zeine accused foreign firms of decades of exploitation, saying uranium had brought “misery, pollution, rebellion, corruption and desolation” to Nigeriens while enriching France.
(Reporting by Maxwell Akalaare Adombila in Dakar; Additional reporting from Niger newsroom; Editing by Veronica Brown and Kevin Liffey)