-- Triton Uranium is considering a U.S. listing through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company in 2026, its president Scott Evans told Reuters, as the company seeks to tap rising demand for nuclear fuel and bolster domestic supply.
The Canada-based company has begun development work at its Atlas Project in Uranium City, Saskatchewan, where it controls about 46,742 acres of mineral claims, the report said.
Triton is preparing to launch a 10,000-meter drill programme across four priority targets, including the Dubyna Mine area, with drilling scheduled to commence in June, the report added.
The Reuters report noted earlier this year, Denison Mines Corp (DML.TO), and NexGen Energy (NXE.TO) received approval from the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission to begin construction of their Wheeler River and Rook I projects, respectively, in northern Saskatchewan -- the first approvals for new Canadian uranium mines since 2004.
Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal noted, efforts to build new mines focus on the Athabasca Basin in the far north of western Canada's Saskatchewan province, where uranium-giant Cameco has
operated for years. Cameco runs the world's two largest uranium operations: McArthur River/Key Lake, in service since 1983, and Cigar Lake, which began commercial operations in 2015.
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