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jerpy

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Keep threatening to start a thread on Thorium as a long term energy possibility so here goes.

 

What is Thorium?

 

Thorium (pronounced /ˈθɔəriəm/, THOHR-ee-əm) is a chemical element with the symbol Th and atomic number 90.

 

Thorium is a naturally occurring, slightly radioactive metal. It is estimated to be about three to four times more abundant than uranium in the Earth's crust.

 

Thorium was successfully used as an alternative nuclear fuel to uranium in the molten-salt reactor experiment (MSR) from 1964 to 1969 to produce thermal energy, as well as in several light-water reactors using fuel composed of a mixture of 232Th and 233U, including the Shippingport Atomic Power Station (operation commenced 1957, decommissioned in 1982). Currently, officials in the Republic of India are advocating a thorium-based nuclear program, and a seed-and-blanket fuel utilizing thorium is undergoing irradiation testing at the Kurchatov Institute in Moscow.[2][3] Advocates of the use of thorium as the fuel source for nuclear reactors state that they can be built to operate significantly cleaner than uranium based power plants as the waste products are much easier to handle.[4].......

 

Thorium, as well as uranium and plutonium, can be used as fuel in a nuclear reactor. A thorium fuel cycle offers several potential advantages over a uranium fuel cycle, including greater abundance on Earth, superior physical and nuclear properties of fuel, enhanced proliferation resistance, and reduced nuclear waste production.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium

 

So how realistic is Thorium as a fuel alternative?

 

Lets see what the WNA say

 

Thorium continues to be a tanatalising possibility for use in nuclear power reactors, though for many years India has been the only sponsor of major research efforts to use it, though other endeavours by Thorium Power (now Lightbridge Corporation) were focusing on Russian reactors.

 

and guess who else is starting to take an interest

 

In mid-2009, Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd (AECL) signed agreements with three Chinese entities to develop and demonstrate the use of thorium fuel in its CANDU reactors at Qinshan in China. This carries forward an earlier programme to utilise recycled PWR fuel in the Qinshan reactors. Another mid-2009 agreement, between Areva and Thorium Power, is to assess the use of thorium fuel in Areva's EPR, drawing upon earlier research.

 

Rather than copy the whole article i'll pick out the part on the developing the thorium fuel cycles main features and problems

 

The main attractive features are:

 

The possibility of utilising a very abundant resource which has hitherto been of so little interest that it has never been quantified properly.

The production of power with few long-lived transuranic elements in the waste.

Reduced radioactive wastes generally.

 

The problems include:

 

The high cost of fuel fabrication, due partly to the high radioactivity of U-233 chemically separated from the irradiated thorium fuel. Separated U-233 is always contaminated with traces of U-232 (69 year half-life but whose daughter products such as thallium-208 are strong gamma emitters with very short half-lives). Although this confers proliferation resistance to the fuel cycle, it results in increased costs.

The similar problems in recycling thorium itself due to highly radioactive Th-228 (an alpha emitter with two-year half life) present.

Some concern over weapons proliferation risk of U-233 (if it could be separated on its own), although many designs such as the Radkowsky Thorium Reactor address this concern.

The technical problems (not yet satisfactorily solved) in reprocessing solid fuels. However, with some designs, in particular the molten salt reactor (MSR), these problems are likely to largely disappear.

 

Much development work is still required before the thorium fuel cycle can be commercialised, and the effort required seems unlikely while (or where) abundant uranium is available. In this respect, recent international moves to bring India into the ambit of international trade might result in the country ceasing to persist with the thorium cycle, as it now has ready access to traded uranium and conventional reactor designs.

 

Nevertheless, the thorium fuel cycle, with its potential for breeding fuel without the need for fast neutron reactors, holds considerable potential in the long-term. It is a significant factor in the long-term sustainability of nuclear energy.

 

http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf62.html

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Thorium reactors

 

"The greatest cost for thorium reactors remains their initial construction. If these reactors can be made to last hundreds of years instead of just 60, the cost per kWh comes down even further."

 

thorium_reactor.jpg

 

http://www.thorium.tv/en/thorium_reactor/t...m_reactor_1.php

 

Typical Thorium costs today are "relatively expensive - about $5,000 per kilogram. However, this is only because of there is currently little demand for thorium, so as a specialty metal, it is expensive".

 

One view on comparative costings

 

Thorium could cost a lot less than uranium fuel because it doesn’t need to be enriched to be used as fuel. As stated before, enriched uranium oxide gas costs $1633/kg, and 1-gigawatt nuclear power plants buy about $30 million in fuel annually, which works out to about 20,000 kg. You can read more at the wikipedia entry for the uranium market.

 

Even if the price of thorium never goes below $50/kg, it still represents a factor-of-32 economy improvement over uranium oxide. If a 1-gigawatt thorium reactor consumes amounts of thorium similar to the amount of uranium consumed by nuclear reactors today, fueling it for a year would only cost $1 milion, using the $50/kg price point, or $200,000, using the $10/kg price point.

 

Building a 1-gigawatt uranium plant today costs about $1.1 billion. Building a 1-gigawatt thorium plant will cost only about $250 million, or less, because meltdown concerns can be tossed out the window. This fundamentally changes the economics of nuclear power. We can call this the capital cost benefit of thorium.

 

Fueling a 1-gigawatt uranium plant today costs $30 million/year. Fueling a 1-gigawatt thorium plant will cost only $1 million/year, because thorium is four times more abundant than uranium and does not need to be enriched - only purified - prior to being used as fuel. We can call this the fuel cost benefit of thorium.

 

Staffing a 1-gigawatt uranium plant today costs $50 million/year. With greater automation, and (especially) fewer safety/security requirements, we will decrease that cost to $5 million/year. Instead of requiring 500 technicians, guards, personal assistants, janitors, and paper pushers to run a nuclear plant, we will only need a small group of 30 or so technicians to run the plant. (When the technology reaches maturity.) Generation IV nuclear plants will be designed to be low-maintenance.

 

Based on these numbers, over a 60-year operating lifetime, both plants produce 60 gigawatt-years of power. The total cost for the uranium plant is $4.9 billion, at a rate of $81.6 million per gigawatt-year. The total cost for the thorium plant is $490 million, at a rate of $8.16 million per gigawatt-year. Thorium power makes nuclear power ten times cheaper than it used to be, right off the bat.

 

Of course, ten times cheaper electricity is impressive, and blows everything else out of the water, but it doesn’t quite qualify as the “unlimited source of energy” I was talking about. Why will thorium lead to practically unlimited energy?

 

Because thorium reactorss will make nuclear reactors more decentralized. Because of no risk of proliferation or meltdown, thorium reactorss can be made of almost any size. A 500 ton, 100MW SSTAR-sized thorium reactor could fit in a large industrial room, require little maintenance, and only cost $25 million. A hypothetical 5 ton, truck-sized 1 MW thorium reactor might run for only $250,000 but would generate enough electricity for 1,000 people for the duration of its operating lifetime, using only 20 kg of thorium fuel per year, running almost automatically, and requiring safety checks as infrequently as once a year. That would be as little as $200/year after capital costs are paid off, for a thousand-persons worth of electricity! An annual visit by a safety inspector might add another $200 to the bill. A town of 1,000 could pool $250K for the reactor at the cost of $250 each, then pay $400/year collectively, or $0.40/year each for fuel and maintenance. These reactors could be built by the thousands, further driving down manufacturing costs.

 

Smaller reactors make power generation convenient in two ways: decreasing staffing costs by dropping them close to zero, and eliminating the bulky infrastructure required for larger plants. For this reason, it may be more likely that we see the construction of a million $40,000, 100 kW plants than 400 $300 million, 1GW plants. 100 kW plants would require minimal shielding and could be installed in private homes without fear of radiation poisoning. These small plants could be shielded so well that the level of radiation outside the shield is barely greater than the ambient level of radiation from traces of uranium in the environment. The only operating costs would be periodic safety checks, flouride salts, and thorium fuel. For a $40,000 reactor, and $1,000/year in operating costs, you get enough electricity for 100 people, which is enough to accomplish all sorts of antics, like running thousands of desktop nanofactories non-stop.

 

http://www.thorium.tv/en/thorium_costs/thorium_costs.php

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Norway's interest in Thorium dates back to 2007 when Statkraft (which translates to "state power") announced an alliance with regional power providers Vattenfall in Sweden, and Fortum in Finland, along with Norwegian energy investment company, Scatec AS, to produce the thorium-fuelled plant.

 

Back then polls showed 80% in favour of Thorium reactors unlike Australian governments where there is also huge potential reserves, Norway's bureaucrats were supportive.

 

Some argued "Norway as an important energy nation and with its advanced technology and large Thorium reserves should take a special responsibility in the development of such a nuclear reactor. This would be the best Norwegian contribution to preserve the living conditions for future generations".

 

http://web.ift.uib.no/~lillestol/Energy_We...nd_Thorium.html

 

Egil Lillestøl, a nuclear physicist at the University of Bergen, mentioned above was a keen supporter of the ADS (Accelerated Driven System) technology used in thorium-fuelled reactors.

 

Here is a snippet of a quick interview with links to his website.

 

http://www.divainternational.ch/spip.php?article161

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Could the U.S jump on board?

 

A recent U.S.Geological Survey noted an abundance of thorium in the States, of which is the Lemhi Pass District in Montana and Idaho are the bigest.

 

As noted by the blog "One could imagine a world in which the United States spends five years developing thorium technology, a decade building pilot plants and making long-term plans for nuclear waste, and then five years building massive numbers of a single type of thorium power plant.

 

In two decades, then, much of our energy use could come from a home-grown source, would produce no carbon dioxide and we wouldn't have to worry about cloudy or windless days".

 

http://blogs.chron.com/sciguy/archives/2009/04/thorium.html

 

Then there is Australia as previuosly mentioned Australia has an abundance that was noted in a September 2007 report to Parliament, but as yet little interest other than from places like the Daily Reckoning

 

Making Thorium work on a commercial scale is complicated (far beyond the bounds of this letter). But I thought I'd mention it because it's an avenue Australia's mineral sands producers may have open to them in a few years. Thorium would go from being a toxic by product of zircon and rutile production, to a commercial product all its own.

 

According to GeoScience Australia, Australia has monazite resources of 5.2 million tonnes. With an estimated Thorium content of 7%, that gives Australia a Thorium resource of around 364,000 tonnes. Nolan's Bore-the location of Arafura's REO operations-is a Thorium hot bed.

 

http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/thorium/2008/07/02/

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More on the technical side Kirk Sorensen's Tech Talk

 

From:

 

Lots more like this and other news articles can be found here

 

http://www.energyfromthorium.com/forum/

 

Then there is IThEO.org an International Thorium Energy Organisation

 

http://www.itheo.org/

 

Both these flag up for example the recent article in Wired "Uranium Is So Last Century — Enter Thorium, the New Green Nuke"

 

You just know that despite the last line saying the Thorium battalion is small, it's getting more attention and press of late.

 

http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/12/ff_new_nukes/all/1

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009...-report-nuclear

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/155...r-stations.html

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Interesting posts Riggers. I know you have mentioned thorium a few times recently.

 

I am suddenly reminded of this excellent thread

 

http://www.greenenergyinvestors.com/index....mp;#entry118680

 

I have just put 2 & 2 together - are Hyperion using Thorium ?

 

http://www.hyperionpowergeneration.com/about.html

 

+ a google search for: hyperion thorium brings up some interesting results which I will have to look over - a selected few

 

http://www.greencarcongress.com/2009/11/hy...n-20091121.html

 

http://alfin2100.blogspot.com/2009/11/best...d-fluoride.html

now this looks interesting - will have to watch vid's shown at some stage

 

http://thoriumenergy.blogspot.com/

-------------

edit other links

http://thoriumenergy.blogspot.com/

http://www.neimagazine.com/newsMenu.asp?se...amp;st=&nt=

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Been meaning to do a thread ever since I bought into THPW, which I held and traded as they became Lightbridge; so you can guess whats coming next :lol:

 

Aware of the blogspot you'll find Kirk's broadcast there along with others. Most of the high profile speakes/ fountains of knowledge are on the energyfromthorium discussion board though. I'm just playing at it compared to those guys.

 

But I like both the trading play which came from research after the Telegraph article and the concept, which kind of grows on you. Just maybe long way to go.

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The trading play LTBR : NASDAQ derived from Thorium Power Ltd (THPW) which changed its name to Lightbridge Corporation 29th Sept 2009. Share Price wise they have been as high as $10-12 in the last 12 months on news spikes.

 

Website http://www.ltbridge.com/company

 

Seth Grae is Chief Executive Officer, President, Executive Director and Member of Executive Committee, plenty can be found of him in the press, in addition to latest interviews o the website.

 

Overview "Lightbridge Corporation is a nuclear energy pioneer and the leading developer of thorium-based nuclear fuel designs. The Company’s technologies include nuclear fuel designs optimized to address key concerns about traditional nuclear power, including nuclear proliferation and nuclear waste".

 

Patrick Cox at Breakthrough Technology Alert recently said

Lightbridge Corp. is the only real pure play in thorium power today and the stars have lined up to push this company to the forefront of the rapidly growing nuclear power industry. Because Thorium reactors can’t suffer meltdowns, they are much cheaper to build.

 

http://phx.corporate-ir.net/External.File?...XBlPTM=&t=1

 

Unsurprisingly such backing from Agora's Patrick Cox using the article above as one of "6 Companies Ready to Change the World and Deliver Your Unending Wealth in 2010" noted by Doctor Solar on another unrelated play NanoViricides Inc. (OTCBB:NNVC) has seemingly found a similar blip. Coincidence? :rolleyes:

 

http://breakthroughtechnologyalert.agorafi...wealth-in-2010/

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Could the U.S jump on board?

 

Excerpts from climate Scientist James Hanson, recent message to Obama on Thorium potential.

 

 

Nuclear Power. Some discussion about nuclear power is needed. Fourth generation nuclear power has the potential to provide safe base-load electric power with negligible CO2 emissions.

 

All nuclear plants in the United States today are Light Water Reactors (LWRs), using ordinary water (as opposed to ‘heavy water’) to slow the neutrons and cool the reactor. Uranium is the fuel in all of these power plants. One basic problem with this approach is that more than 99% of the uranium fuel ends up ‘unburned’ (not fissioned). In addition to ‘throwing away’ most of the potential energy, the long-lived nuclear wastes (plutonium, americium, curium, etc.) require geologic isolation in repositories such as Yucca Mountain.

 

The other compelling alternative is to use thorium as the fuel in thermal reactors. Thorium can be used in ways that practically eliminate buildup of long-lived nuclear waste.

The United States chose the LWR development path in the 1950s for civilian nuclear power because research and development had already been done by the Navy, and it thus presented the shortest time-to-market of reactor concepts then under consideration. Little emphasis was given to the issues of nuclear waste. Today the situation is very different. If

nuclear energy is to be used widely to replace coal, in the United States and/or the developing world, issues of waste, safety, and proliferation become paramount. Nuclear power plants being built today, or in advanced stages of planning, in the United States, Europe, China and other places, are just improved LWRs.

 

The Liquid-Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR) is a thorium reactor concept that uses a chemically-stable fluoride salt for the medium in which nuclear reactions take place. This fuel form yields flexibility of operation and eliminates the need to fabricate fuel elements.

 

This feature solves most concerns that have prevented thorium from being used in solidfueled reactors. The fluid fuel in LFTR is also easy to process and to separate useful fission products, both stable and radioactive. LFTR also has the potential to destroy existing nuclear waste, albeit with less efficiency than in a fast reactor such as IFR. Both IFR and LFTR operate at low pressure and high temperatures, unlike today’s LWR’s. Operation at low pressures alleviates much of the accident risk with LWR. Higher temperatures enable more of the reactor heat to be converted to electricity (40% in IFR, 50% in LFTR vs 35% in LWR). Both IFR and LFTR have the potential to be air-cooled and to use waste heat for desalinating water.

 

Both IFR and LFTR are 100-300 times more fuel efficient than LWRs. In addition to solving the nuclear waste problem, they can operate for several centuries using only uranium and thorium that has already been mined. Thus they eliminate the criticism that mining for nuclear fuel will use fossil fuels and add to the greenhouse effect.

 

The Obama campaign, properly in my opinion, opposed the Yucca Mountain nuclear repository. Indeed, there is a far more effective way to use the $25 billion collected from utilities over the past 40 years to deal with waste disposal. This fund should be used to develop fast reactors that consume nuclear waste, and thorium reactors to prevent the

creation of new long-lived nuclear waste. By law the federal government must take responsibility for existing spent nuclear fuel, so inaction is not an option. Accelerated development of fast and thorium reactors will allow the US to fulfill its obligations to dispose of the nuclear waste, and open up a source of carbon-free energy that can last centuries, even

millennia.

 

It is commonly assumed that 4th generation nuclear power will not be ready before 2030. That is a safe assumption under ‘business-as-usual”. However, given high priority it is likely that it could be available sooner. It is specious to argue that R&D on 4th generation nuclear power does not deserve support because energy efficiency and renewable energies may be able to satisfy all United States electrical energy needs. Who stands ready to ensure that energy needs of China and India will be entirely met by efficiency and renewables?

 

China and India have strong incentives to achieve pollution-free skies as well as avert dangerous climate change. The United States, even if efficiency and renewables can satisfy its energy needs (considered unlikely be many energy experts), needs to deal with its large piles of nuclear waste, which have lifetime exceeding 10,000 years.

Development of the first large 4th generation nuclear plants may proceed most rapidly if carried out in China or India (or South Korea, which has a significant R&D program), with the full technical cooperation of the United States and/or Europe.

 

Priorities, in order, for solving the climate and energy problems, while stimulating the economy are steps to: (1) improve energy efficiency, (2) develop and deploy renewable energies, (3) modernize and expand a ‘smart’ electric grid, (4) develop 4th generation nuclear power, (5) develop carbon capture and sequestration capability.

 

Prompt development of safe 4th generation nuclear power is needed to allow energy options for countries such as China and India, and for countries in the West in the event that energy efficiency and renewable energies cannot satisfy all energy requirements. Deployment of 4th generation nuclear power can be hastened via cooperation with China, India and other countries. It is essential that dogmatic ‘environmentalists’, opposed to all nuclear power, not be allowed to delay the R&D on 4th generation nuclear power. Thus it is desirable to avoid appointing to key energy positions persons with a history of opposition to nuclear power development. Of course, deployment of nuclear power is an option, and some countries or regions may prefer to rely entirely on other energy sources, but opponents of nuclear power should not be allowed to deny that option to everyone.

 

Frank communication with the public is essential. At present, all around the world, many governments are guilty of greenwash, an implausible approach of goals and halfmeasures that will barely slow the growth of CO2. The world, not just the United States, needs an open honest discussion of what is needed. It is a tremendous burden to place on the President-elect. The only chance seems to be if he understands the truth – the whole truth.

http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/mailings/200...81121_Obama.pdf

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INDIA's current plan involves using a Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWHR) powered by Thorium and U233.

 

The construction of the AHWR in the 11th Plan period (2007-2012) will signal the beginning of the third stage of the country’s nuclear power programme. The first stage is in commercial domain, with 15 PHWRs that use natural uranium as fuel, operating in different parts of the country.

 

Besides, India has two Boiling Water Reactors at Tarapur, Maharashtra.

 

The second stage, which envisages the building of Fast Breeder Reactors, has begun with the construction of a 500-MWe Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam in Tamil Nadu.

 

 

http://www.hindu.com/2008/04/09/stories/2008040959691700.htm

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Just wanted to say im enjoying the thread riggers. Need to take more time to research this area further and the links here are a great way to do that. Cheers

 

Thanks, tend to go for themes and pick stocks on that basis. When i'm invested try and trade positions to build stakes. Always happy to keep an eye on the story even if downsize/sell out though, helps not to miss possible re-entry points.

 

Bit limited here and expect this may go quiet at times, but the concept is also interesting longer term.

 

p.s Still waiting a suitable fall on NNVC

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  • 2 months later...

The mighty thorium

 

Richard Denning, a professor of mechanical engineering at Ohio State University who studies the safety of nuclear reactor designs, agreed that uranium is a proven technology that is here to stay.

 

"Right now, we're so into the fuel cycle," he said. "There is enough uranium to fuel the next generation of plants, which will look much like the last generation."

 

Sorensen and others warn that if we don't invest in thorium, others will beat us to it. In addition to India, which is pursuing less-efficient, water-cooled thorium reactors, he said, the Czech Republic is exploring liquid fluoride thorium reactors similar to reactors tested at Oak Ridge.........

 

With the United States holding 16 percent of the world's thorium supply - about 1.4 million tons - he said, there is enough to power the country safely for thousands of years.

 

"We're not advocating that we build a full power plant or reactor," said George Schmidt, deputy director for research and technology at NASA Glenn. "We think it deserves some attention from an R&D standpoint to really look at the performance of the system and see if it does live up to its great advantages."

 

The Department of Energy approved $200,000 in funding at Oak Ridge for analytical studies this year of molten salt reactors using thorium and uranium, a department spokeswoman said.

 

In 2008, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nevada., introduced a bill that would direct thorium research begin at the Idaho National Laboratory. They introduced a new bill last week.

 

http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/scien...-1.html?sid=101

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Lightbridge Comments on Text of Senate Bill S.3060: Thorium Energy Security Act of 2010

 

"We applaud the efforts of Senators Hatch and Reid in formally introducing this bill to the Senate," said Seth Grae, Lightbridge (Nasdaq: LTBR) CEO. "This is a significant milestone for the nuclear industry and offers the hope that alternative nuclear fuels will be considered for new and existing reactors as global power demand continues to require fresh thinking."

 

 

 

"The introduction of this important legislation by Senators Hatch and Reid, which will advance the cause of peaceful nuclear energy in the context of nuclear non-proliferation, is an appropriate recognition of the 40th anniversary of the entry into force of the NPT," said Ambassador Thomas Graham, Jr., Lightbridge Corporation Executive Chairman of the Board. Speaking as the former Special Representative of the President of the United States for Arms Control, Non-Proliferation, and Disarmament and leader of the U.S. delegation to the international conference that successfully achieved the permanent extension of the NPT, Graham continued, "the legislation introduced by Senators Hatch and Reid is a major step forward for the industry and validation for the thorium-based nuclear fuel technology being developed by Lightbridge."

 

 

 

http://www.streetinsider.com/Earnings/Ligh...10/5422218.html

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Comment on trading play from Lightbridge Corporation Reports Full Year and Fourth Quarter 2009 Financial Results

 

Seth Grae, Lightbridge Chief Executive Officer, commented, "We're pleased with our progress this year in both our fuel

development and advisory services businesses. Additionally, we believe that Lightbridge is poised to benefit from a noticeable and favorable shift in the nuclear energy dialogue in both Washington and in other regions of the world. In 2010, we expect to expand our fuel development work and revenue with AREVA. We also plan to address what we believe will be the last significant technical risk until testing and demonstration of fuel bundles in reactors with the fabrication of a full-length 3-meter metal seed rod.

In our consulting and advisory services business we expect to secure additional work from the UAE and in other regions of the world and have been in active discussions for our services and capabilities with governmental and foreign entities."

 

Technological and Strategic Highlights:

 

Completion of a preliminary analysis for a VVER-1000 fuel assembly design for an 18-month fuel cycle;

 

A strategic agreement with SOSNY, the Company's prime contractor in Russia to manage the research and development

activities related to the lead test assembly ("LTA") program for Russian-designed VVER-1000 reactors;

 

Continued expansion of work with AREVA on fuel design;

 

An S-3 Shelf Registration Statement with the SEC to provide future capital raising flexibility;

 

Listing of the Company's common shares on the NASDAQ Capital Market and completion of a 1-for-30 reverse stock

split;

 

Effective March 21, 2010, Lightbridge will be added to the World Nuclear Association's (WNA) Nuclear Energy Index;

the WNA Nuclear Energy Index is a capitalization-weighted, float-adjusted index of the most prominent nuclear energy

stocks in the world;

 

Received an unqualified opinion on the Company's Sarbanes Oxley compliance for internal controls over financial reporting;

 

Recent introduction of the Thorium Energy Security Act of 2010, presented by Sen. Orin G. Hatch (R-Utah) and Harry

Reid (D-Nev.), to accelerate the use of thorium-based nuclear fuel in existing and future international reactors

See website for details

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Then there is Australia as previuosly mentioned Australia has an abundance that was noted in a September 2007 report to Parliament, but as yet little interest other than from places like the Daily Reckoning

 

http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/thorium/2008/07/02/

 

More on Australia interest link to attempt to map Australia's Thorium assets

 

http://www.ga.gov.au/minerals/research/nat...orium/index.jsp

 

Also guest post by Alex Goodwin, found on Barry brooks blog "which canvasses the idea of a large-scale deployment of Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors (LFTR) to clean up Australia’s power generation sector. On the Energy from Thorium forums, he’s known as fnord".

 

Summation reveals

Using LFTR, we can:

 

- solve the current ETS “problem”

 

- convert all our coal and natural gas powered plants, cutting their carbon emissions by 99%

 

- eliminate 275 million tonnes of annual emissions, forever

 

- upgrade coal for export (made possible by the LFTR) and eliminate another 55 million tonnes – the coal industry pocketing 5.5 billion dollars of export earnings yearly for its trouble

 

- revitalise power generation, freeing it from worries about carbon emissions

 

- quit worrying about safety – no meltdowns, boiler explosions, etc

 

- power Australia while producing merely 48 tonnes of by-product per year (12 bathtubs of valuable, reusable and recyclable by-product, for such uses as lightbulbs, catalytic converters and jewellery)

 

But much more detail in the article

 

 

http://bravenewclimate.com/2009/12/17/lftr-in-australia/

 

 

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Thorium Energy Generation Pty. Limited (TEG) ..........

 

an Australian Research and Development company dedicated to the worldwide commercial development of Accelerator Driven Sub-critical Thorium cycle power generation systems and nuclear waste elimination systems (Thorium ADS) in particular and advanced Thorium cycle based high temperature (more efficient) nuclear power systems in general. The latter include molten salt and advanced gas cooled concepts. TEG has forged strong research and business links with the Czech nuclear industry and other leading European nuclear agencies and research facilities.

 

Thorium ADS is an essential input into an energy starved world. It is environmentally friendly, eliminates proliferation and meltdown risks and removes the spectre of ever increasing high level nuclear waste.

 

Thorium is important to Australia, which hosts the worls's largest resource - refer to Government paper.

 

http://thoriumenergy.com.au/

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  • 4 weeks later...

Interesting link off the TEG site, only just got round to seeing is the early 2008 Norwegian Thorium report that details the odd 160 pages of opportunities for Thorium (light reading :blink: )

 

It does however recommend that essentially the debate remains open. Norway has a much vested interest, but cannot go it alone; so being involved with global partners and steering development seems the script ;)

 

http://thoriumenergy.com.au/ThoriumReport2008.pdf

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The Czechs also have more than a passing interest to date. most of their work eminates from the Rez research institute

 

http://www.ujv.cz/web/ujv/hlavni-strana

 

Which was credited with carrying out this piece into the Reprocessing of Molten-Salt Reactor Fuel. Which concluded there were two main benefits in using thorium as the MSR fuel:

 

• Minimizing of long-lived radioactive waste –There is practically no production of higher actinides within the Th – U cycle

 

• Sustainable development of nuclear power –MSR is the reactor type, where the Th-breeding factor can be positive (about 1.04 in “one-fluid system” and about 1.1 in “two-fluid system” with separated U and Th circuits)

 

http://www.energyfromthorium.com/ans09/Uhl...eprocessing.pdf

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  • 2 months later...
MCLEAN, Va., Jun 23, 2010 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) -- Lightbridge Corporation /quotes/comstock/15*!ltbr/quotes/nls/ltbr (LTBR 9.49, +3.58, +60.58%) , the leading developer of non-proliferative nuclear fuel technology and provider of comprehensive advisory services for civil nuclear energy programs, today announced a major technological breakthrough that has the potential to transform the nuclear power industry. Lightbridge's new fuel technology based on a proprietary all-metal fuel assembly design could reduce both initial capital costs per megawatt and annual operating costs per kilowatt-hour of nuclear power, making it more competitive with other forms of electricity generation while contributing to a significant reduction of CO2 emissions.

 

It is expected that Lightbridge's all-metal fuel technology could be applied to currently operating or new light water reactors as well as small modular reactors which provide the same benefits as in larger commercial nuclear power plants. It is also highly synergistic with fast reactor fuel designs.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/lightbrid...nk=MW_news_stmp

 

+60%

 

I looked at this stock after looking at this thread just now. This is a valuable thread.

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  • 1 month later...
Blimey A.E.P on the scent :lol:

 

Obama could kill fossil fuels overnight with a nuclear dash for thorium

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment...or-thorium.html

 

Nice. Might be tempted to stick a small sum in one of the Thorium plays (and I mean small) :lol:

 

Links taken from comments at bottom of article which are kinda interesting in themselves, apologies if these have been posted already.

 

The actual development costs of a test facility are not massive given the sums spent in the energy industry, it does look as if the French :angry: and possibly big oil are against it. Still the Chinese seem pretty smart I wonder what they are up to ?

 

http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf62.html

 

http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/fe...horium-reactors

 

http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/features/pri...lear?page=1%2C0

 

 

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Ok LOL just read through one of Riggers original posts and that mentions China and India having justifiable economic reasons for looking at thorium

 

some more links

 

Jack Lifton

http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/65370-ja...uclear-reactors

 

http://www.cs-re.org.cn/en/modules.php?nam...icle&sid=16

 

 

+ Wonders if Riggers has checked out - seems to tick a large number of boxes - except it does NOT seem to be listed - oh well

 

http://www.thoriumenergy.com/

 

Thorium: "The Lemhi Pass district has the largest known resource of thorium veins in the United States” US Geological Survey

Thorium Energy, Inc. has one of the largest documented high-grade thorium properties in the world-approximately 80% of the U.S. known and estimated reserves. Thorium is a superior nuclear fuel and has several important advantages over uranium:

 

Thorium powered nuclear reactors are more efficient and produce less than 1% of the waste of today's uranium nuclear reactors.

 

Thorium reactors are safer, less expensive, smaller and can be configured to eliminate the possibility of melt downs or accidents.

 

Thorium does not produce plutonium and thus, could effectively eliminate further weapons production in volatile regions and reduce proliferation on a global scale, thus ending stalemate arguments over dubious nuclear programs such as exist in Iran and North Korea.

 

Proprietary thorium technology, capable of safely and efficiently dismantling nuclear stockpiles and eliminating spent uranium, now exists.

 

 

Rare Earth Metals: "The Lemhi Pass thorium veins not only have substantial resources of rare earths but also tend to be abnormally enriched in Nd (neodymium).” - US Geological Survey

In addition, Thorium Energy, Inc. also has large resources and reserves of high-grade, rare earth metals within its properties. The United States uses over $1 Billion of rare earth metals annually - the majority of which is becoming increasingly owned by and imported from China at a rapid pace.

 

Rare earth metals are VITALLY important to the US national security and defense.

Rare earth metals are CRITICAL to many "green" technologies such as; wind generation, hybrid vehicles and magnets.

Rare earth metals have a growing US government and industrial demand, and a supply that is INCREASINGLY jeopardized by restrictive Chinese export quotas

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