Mining Mirror March 2019 | Page 35

Lessons from the past The DRC Namibia Africa has been a significant world producer of uranium since the 1920s following the discovery in 1915 in the DRC (then the Belgian Congo) at Shinkolobwe, 25km west of Likasi in Katanga, by Union Mieniére du Haut Katanga. The Société Générale Métallurgique de Hokoben began extracting uranium, which is used for the medical treatment of certain cancers. Following a brief closure in 1937, Shinkolobwe was reopened and the United States government purchased about 3 000 tonnes of uranium (tU) for the Manhattan Project in the early 1940s. About 25 000tU was produced over the subsequent two decades from this vein-hosted deposit, but production ceased on independence in 1960, when the shafts were sealed and guarded. The deposit has been unofficially mined since 1997 for cobalt, although a United Nations report in 2004 prompted concerns that some uranium from Shinkolobwe might be contributing to illicit weapons programmes in some countries. In 2009, Areva signed a uranium exploration agreement for Katanga with the government, focused on Shinkolobwe, but has since said that it will not embark on any plans for mining in the near future and there is no current mining or exploration for uranium in the DRC. Granite-hosted uranium mineralisation was first noted in Namibia in the early 1920s close to the Rössing Mountain. Rio Tinto discovered numerous uranium occurrences and in 1966 took the rights over the low- grade Rössing deposit, 65km inland from Swakopmund, and a mine has been in operation there since 1976. Two other significant deposits found in early exploration in Namibia were Trekkopje, a calcrete-hosted deposit 80km north-east of Swakopmund, and Langer Heinrich, a calcrete-hosted deposit discovered in 1973 by Gencor, 80km inland from Walvis Bay and 50km south-east of Rössing. More recently, several primary-hosted deposits have been developed, including the world- class Husab deposit. www.miningmirror.co.za Niger In Niger, uranium was discovered at Azelik in 1957 by the French Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Miniéres (BRGM), who were looking for copper. Further discoveries were made in the late 1950s and 1960s, including Abokurum (1959), Madaouela (1963), Arlette, Ariege, Artois & Tassa/Taza (1965), Imouraren (1966) and Akouta (1967). On the basis of these discoveries, Niger’s uranium industry was founded in 1968, with the first production from Arlit in 1971. Capacity was expanded to 2 100tU per year in 1981 and at its peak in the 1980s, 40% of the world’s uranium production came from Arlit, and uranium represented 90% of Niger’s exports by value. In 1981, production was cut by half and in the late 1980s, Arlit suffered from a steep decline in world uranium prices. The value of Niger’s uranium ‘boom’ has never recovered to its 1980s level. South Africa In South Africa, uranium production began in 1951, peaking in 1959 when 26 mines, feeding 17 plants, supplied 4 954tU. This material was exported for the nuclear weapons programme but with its curtailment, output was reduced until the world oil crisis in 1973, when uranium production resumed as a source for nuclear energy. By 1980, 20 mines produced 6 000tU. The price slump in 1980 led to reduced output and by 1994, only three producers remained. Source: Special issue of Episodes – Journal of International Geoscience: The Great Mineral Fields of Africa vol. 39 No. 2, June 2016. From the article by Kinnaird, J. A. & Nex, P. A. M. Uranium in Africa. School of Geosciences, University of the Witwatersrand. MARCH 2019 MINING MIRROR [35]