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Uranium fell to 76.40 USD/Lbs on December 1, 2025, down 0.07% from the previous day. Over the past month, Uranium's price has fallen 5.45%, and is down 1.80% compared to the same time last year, according to trading on a contract for difference (CFD) that tracks the benchmark market for this commodity. Uranium - values, historical data, forecasts and news - updated on December of 2025.
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TwitterIn June 2025, the global average price per pound of uranium stood at roughly 59.58 U.S. dollars. Uranium prices peaked in June 2007, when it reached 136.22 U.S. dollars per pound. The average annual price of uranium in 2024 was 69.69 U.S. dollars per pound. Global uranium production Uranium is a heavy metal, and it is most commonly used as a nuclear fuel. Nevertheless, due to its high density, it is also used in the manufacturing of yacht keels and as a material for radiation shielding. Over the past 50 years, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan together dominated uranium production worldwide. Uranium in the future Since uranium is used in the nuclear energy sector, demand has been constantly growing within the last years. Furthermore, the global recoverable resources of uranium increased between 2015 and 2021. Even though this may appear as sufficient to fulfill the increasing need for uranium, it was forecast that by 2035 the uranium demand will largely outpace the supply of this important metal.
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TwitterThe average annual price for one pound of uranium was ******U.S. dollars in 2024. This is the highest annual average since 2007, and comes in the wake of greater fuel demand as the global economy began recovering from the coronavirus pandemic as well as the energy crisis.
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Twitterhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-citation-requiredhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-citation-required
Graph and download economic data for Global price of Uranium (PURANUSDM) from Jan 1990 to Jun 2025 about uranium, World, and price.
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The efficient extraction of abundant uranium resources from seawater can provide important raw materials for the sustainable development of green nuclear energy. The electrochemical extraction with fast kinetics and adjustable selectivity is a very promising method, which overcomes the capacity limitations of traditional physicochemical adsorption. However, conventional electrochemical systems face challenges such as high energy consumption, low extraction efficiency, and poor selectivity. Herein, we have proposed a bipolar electrochemical uranium extraction (EUE) system with ultra-low voltage. The working principle of this bipolar EUE system are based on anodic electrochemistry-assisted indirect uranium reduction coupled with cathodic direct electro-reduction of uranium species. Such a bipolar EUE device exhibits most promising EUE voltage. At an ultra-low voltage (0.6 V), the bipolar EUE efficiency is ~100% within mere 4 h encompassing a wide range of uranium concentrations (1-100 ppm). This bipolar EUE system in natural seawater displays excellent U selectivity, extraction percentage (above 85.3%), long-term stability (45 cycles) and the low energy consumption (1944 kWh kg-1 U) and economic cost (83.2 USD kg-1 U). This design and research concept of the bipolar EUE system also provides a reference for sustainable recycling of other waste resources.
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TwitterUranium mining in Australia began in 1954 at Rum Jungle in the Northern Territory and Radium Hill in South Australia. The first mining of uranium for electricity generation in nuclear reactors began in 1976, at Mary Kathleen in Queensland.
Australia is now the world's second largest producer. In 2004, Canada accounted for 29% of world production, followed by Australia with approximately 22%. Australia's output came from three mines: Ranger, which produced 5138 tonnes of U3O8 (11% of world production), Olympic Dam (4370 t, 9%) and Beverley (1084 t, 2%).
Exports have increased steadily to a record level of 9648 tonnes of U3O8 in 2004, valued at A$411 million.
Australia's uranium sector is based on world-leading resources and high and increasing annual output. Our resources are generally amenable to low-cost production with minimal long-term environmental and social impacts.
Around 85 known uranium deposits, varying in size from small to very large, are scattered across the Australian continent (McKay & Miezitis 2001). After five decades of uranium mining, Australia still has the world's largest uranium resources recoverable at low-cost (less than US$40/kg U, or US$15/lb U3O8). In April 2005, these remaining low-cost resources amounted to 826 650 t U3O8 (= 701 000 t U), or roughly 40% of world resources in this category. Australia's total remaining identified resources in all cost categories amount to 1 347 900 t U3O8.
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TwitterWe evaluate phosphorus (P) and biogenic barium (bio-Ba) as nutrient burial and export productivity indicators for the Late Cretaceous and early Paleogene, combining these with calcium carbonate (CaCO3), organic carbon (C), and bulk CaCO3 C isotopes (d13C). Sample ages span 36-71 Ma (~1 sample/0.5 m.y.) for a depth transect of sites in the western North Atlantic (Blake Nose, Ocean Drilling Program Leg 171B, Sites 1052, 1051, and 1050). We use a multitracer approach including redox conditions to investigate export productivity surrounding the global Paleocene d13C maximum (~57 Ma). Reducing conditions render most of the bio-Ba record not useful for export productivity interpretations. P and organic C records indicate that regional nutrient and organic C burial were high at ~61 and ~69 Ma, and low during the Paleocene d13C maximum, a time of proposed global high relative organic C burial. Observed organic C burial changes at Blake Nose cannot explain this C isotope excursion.
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Uranium fell to 76.40 USD/Lbs on December 1, 2025, down 0.07% from the previous day. Over the past month, Uranium's price has fallen 5.45%, and is down 1.80% compared to the same time last year, according to trading on a contract for difference (CFD) that tracks the benchmark market for this commodity. Uranium - values, historical data, forecasts and news - updated on December of 2025.