Gold might be hitting the headlines with its sky-high prices, but Uranium is the real sleeper making a mark in the energy circles.With fuel shortages coming under the spotlight, amid closed routes and supply-line disruptions due to the US-Iran conflict. Nations are now looking forward to cleaner power, and demand for nuclear fuel is surging to power massive reactors that provide carbon-free electricity for millions.
And China just hit the jackpot as a massive reserve of Uranium was discovered in the country!
30 million tons of Uranium found under China’s desert – could this fuel the world amid the LPG crisis? (Representative Image)
China’s massive Uranium trove in the Ordos Desert
China recently made a massive Uranium discovery under the Ordos Desert in Inner Mongolia’s Jingchuan area, with estimates pegging it at 30 million tons, according to a Futura Sciences report. This super-large deposit, announced by the China Geological Survey (CGS) under the Ministry of Natural Resources, marks the world’s first ultra-large Uranium haul in aeolian sandstone landforms.
Discovery comes at the perfect time for China
China is rapidly shifting away from fossil fuels and constructing 11 new nuclear reactors to meet surging energy demands. This vast uranium reserve could power the nation for generations, cutting dependence on imports from leading producers like Kazakhstan, Canada, Australia, and Namibia, according to a Chuna Daily report.It is believed that it will greatly enhance energy security as nuclear capacity grows. “The discovery is a game-changer for China’s energy security,” said Lin Boqiang, head of the China Institute for Studies in Energy Policy at Xiamen University, according to China Daily.CGS chief scientist Jin Ruoshi described it as a “new frontier for uranium exploration worldwide.” He pointed to aeolian sandstone covering 200,000 square kilometers in the Ordos Basin and others like Tarim and Junggar, suggesting more discoveries ahead.
Global ripples and power shifts
If mined big, China could flood the market, crashing prices and changing trade rules. Self-sufficiency means less sway from abroad, arming Beijing in climate talks and energy deals. Zhao Xiangbin, chief strategist at Beijing Gold and Forex Fortune Investment Management, called it a “safeguard against supply chain vulnerabilities” for China’s nuclear push.And this is not just hype, China’s already producing from Ordos via its National Uranium No.1 project, the biggest domestic mine.
Representative Image
Desert mining ain’t easy
Water-guzzling operations, radioactive waste, and ecosystem hits loom large in this dry, fragile zone. Worker safety and community buy-in hinge on green safeguards. Still, it slots into China’s mix of nukes, solar, and wind for a low-carbon future.
