Uranium Energy completes acquisition of Sweetwater plant and uranium assets, Wyoming
Uranium Energy Corp. [NYSE: UEC] reported the completion of the previously announced agreement with Rio Tinto America Inc. to acquire 100% of Rio Tinto’s Wyoming assets, comprised of the wholly-owned and fully-licensed Sweetwater Plant and a portfolio of uranium mining properties, including the Red Desert Project and the Green Mountain Project, with approximately 175 million pounds of historic resources. The purchase price paid was approximately $175.4 million in cash and was funded with UEC’s available liquidity.
Amir Adnani, President and CEO, stated: “The Transaction presents a rare opportunity to acquire U.S. licensed facilities and uranium mining properties from a leading global miner. These assets will significantly enhance and accelerate UEC’s production capabilities in Wyoming’s Great Divide Basin. The Sweetwater Plant, a 3,000-ton-per-day processing mill with a licensed capacity of 4.1 million pounds U3O8 annually, can also be adapted to recover uranium from loaded resins produced by In-Situ-Recovery (ISR) operations, offering UEC the flexibility to support both ISR and conventional mining. With the addition of the Sweetwater Plant, UEC has the largest licensed production capacity in the U.S.
The recent investments in nuclear power by Big Tech companies, including Microsoft, Amazon, Google and Meta, demonstrates unprecedented interest from several of the world’s largest and most sophisticated companies in expanding America’s nuclear energy baseload capacity. These companies fully realize nuclear power is a key source of highly reliable, clean and safe energy to power the increased energy demands required by AI computing. As the largest U.S.-based uranium company, UEC will play a critical role in supplying the fuel required for today and the future – a point further underscored by Russia’s recently announced uranium export restrictions.”
Transaction Highlights: Creates UEC’s Third U.S. Hub-and-Spoke Production Platform; acquisition of a Highly Invested Asset Base with Operating Synergies; combined U.S. licensed production capacity of 12.1 million pounds of U3O8 per year; drives Sizeable and Accretive Resource Growth; unlocks Significant Scarcity Value and Production Optionality; and adds Extensive Land Package, Geological Data and Exploration Opportunities.
The company’s next steps for the acquired asset portfolio include completing a SEC Regulation S-K 1300 technical resource summary report to upgrade and confirm historic estimates, building out a dedicated team to focus on advancing the Sweetwater hub-and-spoke production platform, and refurbishing parts of the Sweetwater Plant and completing equipment modifications for In-Situ Recovery processing.
The Red Desert Project is a development-stage uranium project, encompassing approximately 20,005 acres of exploration and mining rights in the Great Divide Basin, including 17,750 acres of unpatented mining claims, 1,975 acres of patented lands and 1,280 acres of state uranium leases.
Between three deposits, historic uranium resources are estimated at approximately 42 million pounds of U3O8. There is potential for further discoveries, particularly in the shallow mineralization adjacent to the Sweetwater Plant. The deposits are favorable for ISR mining, with uranium hosted below the water table at depths suitable for oxygen dissolution, and in fluvial sands confined by low permeability silts or clays.
The Green Mountain Project is a development-stage uranium project located 22 miles north of the Sweetwater plant. The project spans approximately 32,040 acres of exploration and mining rights, including 29,400 acres of unpatented mining claims, 640 acres of patented lands and 2,000 acres of state uranium leases. Between five deposits, historic uranium resources are estimated at approximately133 million pounds of U3O8. Desert View and Whiskey Peak have large areas that have been identified as having good potential for ISR mining, whereas the other deposits are considered appropriate for conventional mining.
The Sweetwater Plant is a 3,000 ton-per-day conventional processing mill with a licensed capacity of 4.1 million pounds of U3O8. It is located approximately 40 miles northwest of Rawlins and 75 miles northeast of Rock Springs, Wyoming. Access to the mill is via 30 miles of paved road from US Highway 287 to the east of the site. The fully licensed mill operated from 1981 to 1983 and has been kept under diligent care and maintenance since then. It is the only conventional processing mill in Wyoming.
The plant has considerable infrastructure in place, including well-maintained buildings and equipment, a wash bay, warehouse, workshop, offices, access road and utilities. There is potential for the plant to be adapted for the recovery of uranium from loaded resins produced by ISR operations, subject to obtaining any necessary modifications to permits and licenses.
Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC and Rothschild & Co acted as financial advisors to UEC in connection with the Transaction. Holland & Hart LLP and McMillan LLP acted as its legal advisors.
Uranium Energy is America’s largest and fastest growing supplier of uranium. UEC is advancing the next generation of low-cost, environmentally friendly ISR mining uranium projects in the United States and high-grade conventional projects in Canada. The company has two production-ready ISR hub and spoke platforms in South Texas and Wyoming.
These two production platforms are anchored by fully operational Central Processing Plants (CPPs) and served by seven U.S. ISR uranium projects with all their major permits in place. In August 2024, production began at the Christensen Ranch project in Wyoming, sending uranium loaded resin to the CPP at Irigaray (Wyoming hub).
Additionally, the company has diversified uranium holdings including one of the largest physical uranium portfolios of U.S. warehoused U3O8; a major equity stake in Uranium Royalty Corp., the only royalty company in the sector; and a Western Hemisphere pipeline of resource stage uranium projects.