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Laramide Resources (TSX:LAM) - Kazakhstan Exit Accelerates US Uranium Focus Ahead of 2027 Permitting

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description

Interview with Marc Henderson, President & CEO of Laramide Resources Ltd.

Our previous interview: https://www.cruxinvestor.com/posts/laramide-resources-tsxlam-uranium-giant-preps-triple-continent-play-as-ai-drives-nuclear-boom-7870

Recording date: 23rd January 2026

Laramide Resources has strategically repositioned its portfolio following Kazakhstan's effective nationalization of uranium exploration through legislation requiring 75-90% state ownership in future joint ventures. After securing substantial land packages and completing initial targeting work, the company was preparing to drill when the government introduced rules that CEO Marc Henderson characterized as making commercial development "unviable." The decision represents a significant shift in Kazakhstan's approach to its strategic uranium assets, despite maintaining western-style mining codes for other minerals.

With Kazakhstan no longer viable, Laramide has refocused on its Churchrock in-situ recovery project in New Mexico, which is advancing toward Q2 2027 permitting under the federal FAST-41 process. The project offers compelling economics with operating costs estimated at approximately $30 per pound—positioning it in the lower quartile of the global cost curve—while current uranium prices hover around $85. Churchrock will commence production at 1 million pounds annually with expansion capacity to 3 million pounds, benefiting from Laramide's ownership of processing infrastructure that provides competitive advantages over peers requiring third-party toll milling.

Henderson emphasized growing supply-demand imbalances as global uranium demand projects to 400 million pounds by 2040 while Kazakhstan and other major producers face declining reserve profiles. The market has entered its first year of primary deficit, yet utilities have been slow to secure long-term supply contracts. The CEO drew parallels to silver markets, which required years of physical deficits before prices responded materially.

The company's Australian Westmoreland project—containing 65 million pounds with potential 5-million-pound annual production—remains politically constrained despite Australia's commitment to nuclear submarine programs. However, Boss Resources' acquisition of approximately 20% of Laramide signals external validation of the asset's strategic value. Henderson noted the low-technical-risk open-pit operation could unlock substantial value if political obstacles resolve.

Looking forward, Henderson emphasized the industry's need for horizontal consolidation to create diversified mid-tier producers generating 8-10 million pounds annually, as utilities require supply diversification beyond major producers and junior developers.

View Laramide Resources' company profile: https://www.cruxinvestor.com/companies/laramide-resources

Sign up for Crux Investor: https://cruxinvestor.com

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