Niger pulls French firm's permit for big uranium mine

niger pulls french firm's permit for big uranium mine

Orano has been mining in Niger for more than 50 years

Niger's military government has revoked a French fuel producer's permit to operate at one of the world's biggest uranium mines, the company says.

Orano had been licensed to work on the Imouraren mine in northern Niger, which sits on an estimated 200,000 tonnes of the metal that is vital for producing nuclear energy.

Following years of production delays, the West African nation had warned that Orano's licence would lapse unless work resumed at the site.

On 11 June, roughly a week before the deadline, Orano announced that work had begun.

But on Thursday Orano said its permit had been withdrawn - a move that comes amid tensions between France and Niger's ruling junta.

Since the Nigerien military took power in last year's coup, it has been reducing its ties to France and establishing closer links to Russia.

Relations with France hit rock bottom in December after the junta expelled French troops deployed to fight Islamist militants in the region.

The military government also vowed to review foreign mining concessions in the country after it took power.

"Orano fears that this decision to withdraw the mining permit for the deposit will have a negative impact on the economic, social and societal development of the region," the company said in a statement.

It reserved the right to take legal measures against the withdrawal and "remains willing to keep all channels of communication open with the Niger authorities on this subject", Orano added.

The government in Niger, which is one of the largest producers of uranium in the world, has not commented on Orano's statement.

However, it had previously warned that it would rescind Orano's licence if development work had not started at Imouraren by June 19.

Mining was meant to have begun there in 2015 but production was halted after a collapse in world uranium prices in the wake of the 2011 Japanese nuclear disaster.

The French firm has been present in Niger for more than 50 years.

A uranium mine at Akokan has been closed since 2021 but Orano runs another in the northern region of Arlit.

You may also be interested in:

niger pulls french firm's permit for big uranium mine

Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

BBC Africa podcasts

OTHER NEWS

1 hour ago

Baltimore police officers face discipline over lackluster response to mass shooting

1 hour ago

Bernhardt Furniture unveils award-winning Power Motion Collection

1 hour ago

Eater Twin Cities’ Best Dishes of the Month: June 2024

2 hrs ago

I’m a Career Expert: 5 Best First Jobs To Have To Set Up Your Financial Future

2 hrs ago

LIST: 2024 NBA Rookie Draft first round picks

2 hrs ago

I doubled my salary by becoming a travel nurse. You can't just wait around for a raise — you need to take bold actions.

2 hrs ago

European stocks muted; Mucron hits sentiment ahead of key US inflation release

2 hrs ago

Why NCR skies turned vivid orange on Wednesday

2 hrs ago

Batting Around: True or false for second-half questions, including Pete Alonso's trade odds, Yanks' title shot

2 hrs ago

Kalen DeBoer's astonishing 2025 Alabama football recruiting class renaissance

2 hrs ago

Tensions flare between far right, Macron camp ahead of France vote

2 hrs ago

Phillies superstar part of historic NL MVP race 'coming down to two players'

2 hrs ago

Red Sox closer 'still expendable' at the MLB trade deadline despite team's recent success

2 hrs ago

US dollar rally unlikely to be sustained going forward - UBS

2 hrs ago

Max Verstappen explains private TPC test after Ferrari’s ‘clear development’ theory

2 hrs ago

Roma Mae Doromal brings leadership to her future PVL team

2 hrs ago

Volkswagen to invest $5B in Rivian, form joint venture

2 hrs ago

The Court Can’t Think Straight When It Comes to Corruption

2 hrs ago

The Supreme Court just made it much harder to go after financial fraud

2 hrs ago

Some like it not: LA bars demolition of Marilyn Monroe home

2 hrs ago

Explainer-F-16s' arrival not a silver bullet for Ukraine in war with Russia

2 hrs ago

Look Around Morrow Steak, New Orleans’s Vibiest Restaurant Yet

2 hrs ago

Playmaker from Marinduque pursues PVL dream

2 hrs ago

SoftBank to Back AI Startup Perplexity at $3 Billion Value

2 hrs ago

Michigan Reunion: The list of Wolverines Jim Harbaugh has brought with him

2 hrs ago

The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Thursday, June 27

3 hrs ago

UConn stars go in top 10 of NBA Draft

3 hrs ago

'Baby Gronk' pays visit to football powerhouse Bishop Gorman

3 hrs ago

Hendrix autograph to go under the hammer

3 hrs ago

ESPN recruiting rankings place TCU at top of Big 12 Conference for Class of 2025

3 hrs ago

ESPN president opens up about Pat McAfee, Aaron Rodgers

3 hrs ago

Cardinals TE Trey McBride gets shout out from George Kittle at Tight End University

3 hrs ago

Why high school QBs are committing earlier than ever -- and then putting on their hard hats

3 hrs ago

Lupita Nyong'o says new 'Quiet Place' movie helped her cope with loss of Chadwick Boseman

3 hrs ago

Timor-Leste grants Philippines' request for Arnie Teves extradition

3 hrs ago

How the Memphis Grizzlies are approaching round two of the NBA Draft

3 hrs ago

Work friends are over and maybe that's actually fine

3 hrs ago

Commanders listed as one of top 5 most underrated Week 1 games

3 hrs ago

49ers rookie receiver Ricky Pearsall signs four-year deal

3 hrs ago

Vikings giving Blake Brandel 'every opportunity' to earn a starting role