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How the global uranium market works, and why Australia's reserves matter

Nuclear power is surging as nations chase carbon-free energy. Australia holds 30% of the world's uranium but exports almost none of it. Here's the economics and geopolitics of the fuel that powers reactors across the planet.

By The Daily World · Published 30 June 2026, 2:01 am

Updated 12 July 2026, 4:30 pm

How the global uranium market works, and why Australia's reserves matter
Photo by K ZHAO / Pexels

Uranium is the world's most energy-dense fuel. A single kilogram produces as much electricity as a tonne of coal. Yet the uranium market remains one of the least understood commodity chains in global trade, shaped by decades of Cold War politics, safety fears, and a recent reversal: the sudden realisation that nuclear power is essential to meeting climate goals.

Where uranium comes from and who buys it

Uranium ore occurs naturally in the earth's crust. The largest reserves sit in Kazakhstan (the world's leading miner), Canada, Namibia, Uzbekistan, and Australia. Australia holds roughly 30 per cent of proven global reserves, mostly in South Australia and Western Australia, yet exports little of it. The country accounts for just 8 per cent of global uranium production.

Most uranium moves from miner to converter to enricher to reactor operator. The fuel is refined, converted to uranium hexafluoride gas, then enriched (increasing the proportion of the fissile isotope uranium-235) before being manufactured into fuel pellets for nuclear reactors. Each step happens in only a handful of countries. Russia controls about 40 per cent of global enrichment capacity; Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and France dominate conversion and enrichment together.

Electricity utilities and governments buy uranium on a mix of spot contracts (immediate delivery at current prices) and long-term supply agreements (locked in years ahead). Prices fluctuate based on reactor demand, new mine discoveries, and geopolitical disruption, typically ranging between $US20 and $US150 per pound of uranium oxide.

Why the market is tilted and why it matters

The uranium trade reflects Cold War legacies. Enrichment remains concentrated in a few nations for security reasons: enrichment technology can be weaponised. Russia, which dominates enrichment, supplies roughly 20 per cent of the world's reactor fuel directly. Western nations rely partly on a 1990s deal to blend down Russian military uranium and use it in civilian reactors, an arrangement ending in 2020.

Supply has struggled to keep pace with demand. For decades, nuclear power stalled in Western democracies due to safety fears and cheap fossil fuels. But rising electricity demand and climate targets have reversed the mood. The International Atomic Energy Agency projects nuclear capacity will rise 50 per cent by 2050. China and India are building reactors aggressively. Even nations that abandoned nuclear, like Germany, are reconsidering.

This mismatch between rising demand and flat supply has lifted uranium prices sharply since 2020. Spot prices have tripled. Mining companies are racing to restart dormant mines or open new ones. Yet uranium is expensive to extract and refine, and new mines take years to develop.

Australia's paradox: abundant ore, no processing

Australia's three operating uranium mines (Olympic Dam, Ranger, and Beverley) produce high-grade ore. Yet Australia does not enrich uranium domestically. Every tonne of Australian uranium is exported in raw or partially processed form, then enriched overseas and sold back to utilities worldwide as reactor fuel.

This means Australia captures mining revenue but none of the higher-margin conversion or enrichment profits. It also means Australia depends on overseas enrichment capacity, primarily Russian and French, making the nation vulnerable to geopolitical supply shocks. Proposals to build Australian enrichment facilities have periodically surfaced but face political resistance and capital barriers.

What it means for Australia

Australia's uranium reserves represent long-term economic and strategic value. As global nuclear demand rises, prices are likely to remain elevated, lifting mining revenues and supporting employment in regional centres. But Australia captures only a fraction of the supply chain's profit. Investing in domestic conversion or enrichment capacity would deepen the industry and reduce reliance on overseas processing, though such projects require large upfront capital and face domestic political hurdles.

Uranium also anchors Australia's clean energy narrative. Unlike fossil fuels, uranium sits well with global climate commitments. As other nations pivot to nuclear, Australian supply becomes more valuable, provided mining continues to meet environmental and safety standards. The sector's growth depends on sustaining community acceptance and regulatory clarity.

The bottom line

The global uranium market is tightening as nuclear power resurges. Australia holds treasure in the ground but has chosen to be a raw-material supplier rather than a processor. That strategy generates revenue but forgoes downstream value and leaves the nation exposed to enrichment bottlenecks elsewhere. As the world rethinks nuclear, Australia's role in the uranium chain is secure but structurally incomplete.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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