On July 18, the U.S. Department of Commerce launched its fourth investigation in 15 months under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to determine whether imports should be restricted as threats to national security. The latest investigation is examining “the present quantity and circumstances of uranium ore and product imports”. Unlike the other 232 investigations that Commerce initiated on its own authority, the uranium case responds to a petition from two U.S. uranium producers. It also differs from the others with its proposed remedies: quotas and Buy American requirements, instead of tariffs. This post reviews the issues in the investigation, which could include the Department of Interior's determination that uranium is a critical mineral, as well as the petition’s proposed remedies.
Two U.S. uranium mining companies, UR-Energy and Energy Fuels, submitted a petition to the Commerce Department on January 17, requesting a Section 232 investigation into imports of uranium ore and products. After a 6-month review, Commerce accepted the petition and initiated an investigation. Commerce has 270 days to prepare its report for the president.
According to the petition, the U.S. imported uranium from a number of countries in 2016 and 2017: 38% of the imports came from Russia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan; 40% from Canada and Australia; and the remainder from a number of countries (Brazil, Bulgaria, China, Czech Republic, Germany, Malawi, Namibia, Niger, South Africa and Ukraine).
In conducting its investigation, Commerce “will canvass the entire uranium sector from the mining industry through enrichment, defense, and industrial consumption”. It descried the “key considerations” that prompted the investigation as including:
- 99 U.S. commercial nuclear reactors use uranium to produce 20% of the electricity for the U.S. electric grid, which Commerce called “a key element to U.S. critical infrastructure”;
- Uranium is used to power the Navy’s nuclear fleet of submarines and aircraft carriers and “a required component” of the U.S. nuclear arsenal;
- U.S. uranium production fulfilled 49% of U.S. requirements in 1987, but only 5% today;
- In recent years, three U.S. companies with mining operations have been idled; and
- The petitioners, which account for over half of all U.S.-mined uranium, have laid off more than half of their workforce and operate at 9% and 13% of their capacity.