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Paladin Energy Ltd PALAF

Paladin Energy Ltd is an Australia-based independent uranium producer with a 75% ownership of the world-class long life Langer Heinrich Mine (LHM) located in Namibia. The Company also owns a portfolio of uranium exploration and development assets in Canada and Australia. Its segments include Exploration, Namibia and Australia. The LHM is located in central western Namibia approximately 80 kilometers (km) east of Swakopmund and 85 km northeast of the Walvis Bay major deepwater harbor. Its exploration projects include Michelin, Manyingee and Mount Isa. The Company, through its subsidiary Aurora Energy Ltd, holds a 100% interest in over 98,320 hectares of mineral exploration licenses. These are located within the Central Mineral Belt of Labrador, Canada. It has a 100% interest in the Manyingee Project. This project is a sandstone hosted uranium project consisting of 41 Mlb across two deposits. It wholly-owns a project comprised of three promising uranium exploration sites in Queensland.


OTCQX:PALAF - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by madbiker44on Apr 17, 2007 7:02pm
598 Views
Post# 12627226

Can you believe this!!!

Can you believe this!!! This was taken from Kitco today. Jars of yellowcake found in BHP camp Andrew Trounson April 18, 2007 BHP Billiton has been ordered to audit its stocks of uranium samples after being embarrassed by the apparent theft and recovery of 3kg of the radioactive material, which is used to make nuclear fuel and weapons. Ten glass jars of unprocessed uranium oxide, also known as yellowcake, were discovered on Monday night at the mining camp outside BHP's giant Olympic Dam copper and uranium mine in outback South Australia. Police are investigating the find amid rumours the jars were found in someone's room at the camp that houses 1350 workers. While the samples posed no immediate health risk, with radiation near normal "background levels," the incident casts doubt over the security of Australia's uranium-handling procedures when the country is gearing up to supply it to nuclear-armed China. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, which has ordered BHP to count its stocks, yesterday said the quantity was too small to present a weapons proliferation risk. About 70tonnes of uranium oxide is needed to make enough nuclear material for a weapon, and it would need complex processing that is not done in Australia. Ron Huisken of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University in Canberra said the incident would weigh on Australia's reputation as a secure handler of uranium. "It isn't a good look," he said. The Australian Conservation Foundation said the occurrence highlighted the limitations of safeguards aimed at preventing nuclear material falling into the wrong hands. It also cast doubt over the effectiveness of the tracking systems that Australia will rely on to ensure uranium sold to China does not end up feeding the country's nuclear arsenal, the ACF said. The uranium samples had been sent for testing to a US nuclear fuel processor, Honeywell, and were being returned. But it is unclear when the box of jars went missing, whether it was at Roxby Downs airport, enroute to the mine site, or at BHP's facilities. It is also unclear what may have motivated the apparent theft. There were suggestions yesterday from the industry that it may been an attempt to discredit the uranium industry ahead of the ALP conference next week. While the oxide could be used to "doctor" drill samples in a fraudulent bid to inflate the value of a uranium discovery, uranium mining executive Warwick Grigor said that was unlikely. "It is more likely to be a larrikin, or part of an attempt to discredit the uranium industry," Mr Grigor said. In a statement, BHP said the jars were now being held in a secure location ahead of a forensic investigation by the police. It sure seems that some people will go to any lengths to get what they want!!...Mad
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