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Solstice will increase US uranium production by 20% in response to growing nuclear demand

Solstice Advanced Materials announced on Tuesday that it would?increase production of uranium-hexafluoride?by about 20% at its Metropolis Works facility?in Illinois by 2026.?As increasing nuclear demand?strains?the U.S. fuel?supply?chain?.

The producer of specialty chemicals that Honeywell spun off in October said that the expansion will increase its output from 2024 to over 10 kilotonnes.

Metropolis is currently the only US facility capable of converting uranium to uranium hexafluoride (UF6), a critical input for enriching nuclear fuel.

Global nuclear fuel supply chains are becoming tighter due to renewed interest in nuclear energy, driven by concerns about energy security and the rising demand for electricity from data centres and artificial intelligence.

"Our converting plant in?Illinois has been sold out until 2030," CEO David Sewell?told.

The expansion is supported by a backlog worth more than $ 2 billion. This includes long-term orders from customers, including many U.S. utilities. Washington also has a goal to quadruple nuclear capacity by the year 2050.

Sewell said that the market and U.S. government policy are both involved.

"But,?the primary reason for expansion is our existing customer base and demand generation that we're experiencing."

Solstice stated that it was actively exploring other projects to increase production in its 'Metropolis Works' facility.

The Metropolis plant is currently allowed to produce 15 kilotonnes. The company has hired an engineering firm to investigate further de-bottlenecking and potential capital expansion.

Sewell said that the government has not discussed taking an equity stake in the company.

Solstice is a global supplier of nuclear equipment, but its position as the sole U.S. converter has given it a solid domestic base.

Only a few conversion facilities exist outside of Russia and China. (Reporting by Arunima Kumar in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)