Search
INDUSTRY TALK
Front Page
--------------------------
ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT
NEW NUCLEAR
REGULATION & SAFETY
NUCLEAR POLICIES
CORPORATE
EXPLORATION &
NUCLEAR FUEL
WASTE & RECYCLING
--------------
Nuclear Event Reports
--------------------------
WNN Overview
WNN Newletters
--------------------------
This information service
is assisted by
WNA
WNU
--------------------------
About WNN
Contact Us
Subscribe Free
RSS News Feed
KazAtomProm responds to acid shortage
15 November 2007
KazAtomProm has announced plans to build its own sulfuric acid plant - shortly after admitting supply problems. The non-reusable substance is the main chemical reagent used in the in-situ leaching process of uranium mining and a recent fire at a supplier led to supply rationing in Kazakhstan. KazAtomProm's new acid plant, near the Kharasan mine, should support the western mining group from 2010 with enough sulfuric acid to produce 5000 tonnes of uranium per year. It will burn 170,000 tonnes of solid sulfur per year which will come from oil and gas production carried out by Tengizhevroil. Separately, a 1.2 million tonne per year plant is already planned at the Kazakhmys copper smelter in Balkhash which should operate from May 2008 to alleviate the current shortage.
Further information
KazAtomProm
WNA's
Uranium and Nuclear Power in Kazakhstan
information paper
WNN:
Acid shortage delays Kazakh expansion
The organizations advertising here support
WNN’s public information mission and
recognize its editorial independence
TOP STORIES
Contract to build new nuclear at Levy
Africa's largest uranium mine gets the go-ahead
B&W completes purchase of NFS
2008: Three reactors shut, ten more begin construction
Arbitration over delays in nuclear build
DON'T MISS
A look at the future of nuclear power
Nuclear decisions delayed in South Africa
Isotope supply further tightened by transport restrictions