Alt Investments
The Upcoming Uranium Supply Crunch

Over the past two years, the positive narrative around uranium has been driven almost entirely by demand but this could be about to change. Supply challenges may soon become the dominant force.
Nuclear power is staging something of a renaissance in the West and other regions, with approaches such as small modular reactors, for example, gaining attention. Decarbonizing energy puts nuclear in the frame, along with renewables. A realization that baseload electricity generation isn’t dependent on weather also plays to nuclear power’s case. Historically, of course, concerns about safety and up-front costs have been problems. With nuclear on the rise, however, it means that demand for uranium will become a key issue.
Goehring & Rozencwajg, a commodities-focused investment firm in New York, argues that the uranium market is entering a sustained period of structural deficit. The firm contends that while demand for nuclear power is set to rise significantly through 2040, supply is struggling to keep pace – with production challenges at major producers such as Kazatomprom and Cameco highlighting the constraints. The firm thinks that the next phase of the market will be driven less by incremental demand surprises and more by persistent supply tightness – a dynamic that could underpin a longer-term re-rating in uranium prices. To explore the terrain is Adam Rozencwajg, a co-founder and managing partner at Goehring & Rozencwajg. (More on the author below.)
The editors are pleased to share these views; the usual editorial disclaimers apply. To comment and get involved in the conversation, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
Global uranium markets have been awash in bullish developments
over the past two years, as governments, utilities, investors,
and even long-sceptical environmental groups have begun casting
aside the narratives that constrained nuclear power for four
decades. After years of stagnation – during which global
generating capacity failed to recover from Fukushima – it
was only in 2023 that nuclear output finally crept past its 2010
peak. Today, the outlook for nuclear power looks radically
different.
In its newly-released report, the World Nuclear Association (WNA)
lays out a series of projections based on its assessment of
global nuclear trends. From a 2025 base of 398 GWe of installed
generating capacity, the WNA’s base-case scenario now expects
capacity to reach 746 GWe by 2040 – an increase of roughly
90 per cent from today’s levels. On the uranium fuel side, the
WNA now expects global reactor requirements to total roughly
179.1 million pounds this year. Even the most conservative
projection puts 2040 demand at 278 million pounds – almost
100 million pounds more than current consumption.
Given these enormous growth assumptions, the expansion of uranium
supply over the next 15 years will be critical and, on that
front, the challenges are already beginning to surface. The
supply problems emerging today will only deepen the structural
deficits now developing in global uranium markets.
The uranium market in 2025 has already fallen in deficit when
investment demand is included, and we believe uranium markets
next year will slip into outright operating deficit. We estimated
uranium mine supply in 2025 will reach 160 million pounds,
secondary supply will be approximately 25 million pounds,
and investment demand will approach 10 million pounds
– producing a deficit of 5 million pounds. For 2026, we
estimate both uranium mine supply to be down and reactor demand
to be up, producing an outright deficit in the global uranium
market before investment demand is factored in.
Production downgrades
Issues are appearing across several fronts. In Kazakhstan, the
eastern anchor of global uranium supply, Kazatomprom – the
world’s largest producer – continues to struggle with its
production expansion plans.
In a development that stunned the uranium analytical community,
Kazatomprom announced in September 2024 that it was cutting its
2025 production forecast from 80 million pounds to 69 million.
Much of the blame for this reduction had been attributed to
shortages of sulfuric acid but far deeper production issues were
already embedded in the company’s massive Budenovskoye 6 and 7
greenfield developments – projects beset by both political
complications and geological difficulties.
In its first-half 2025 financial release, the company attributed
most of the production downgrade to “production adjustments” at
Budenovskoye. It also noted that financing had finally been
secured for an 800,000-tonne sulfuric acid plant – critical
for the viability of the project – and construction was
underway on additional Budenovskoye processing facilities
expected to add 6,000 tonnes of annual capacity. No timeline was
provided for completion; the release offered only that
construction was progressing in accordance with its schedule.
The project was expected to play a central role in closing the
emerging structural gap between global uranium supply and demand.
However, it now appears that much of the originally envisioned
output may never materialize.
Western setbacks
Uranium supply problems are not confined to the eastern
hemisphere. Cameco – the largest uranium producer in the
West – has also been forced to trim its 2025 production
guidance for the McArthur River mine, one of the world’s premier
uranium assets.
The company had originally projected that McArthur River would
produce 18 million pounds of uranium in 2025. However, due to
development delays and slower-than-expected progress on ground
freezing operations, Cameco has lowered its forecast to between
14 and 15 million pounds.
Cameco has not indicated whether these issues will affect its
2026 production, but the implications are clear. Production
setbacks at McArthur River add yet another data point to the
growing evidence that supply constraints will only widen the
uranium market’s emerging structural deficit in the years
ahead.
Future uncertainties
Finally, it is imperative to address one potentially significant
risk to future supply. One of the largest sources of new uranium
expected to enter the market between now and 2030 is NexGen’s
Arrow/Rook I project in Saskatchewan. Currently, only one
approval remains before construction can begin: authorization
from the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC). If granted,
and there are no immediate reasons to expect difficulties, the
project can move directly into construction. And it is at that
point, that the real challenges may begin.
The company has stated that it will take just under four years
from the start of construction to first production. If the CNSC
grants its approval for the Rook project at its meeting early
next year, that timeline would imply initial uranium output in
early 2030. However, there is a meaningful risk that Rook’s
schedule will slip. This is an enormous undertaking – one
that requires not only the development of the mine itself but
also the construction of a full ore- and uranium-processing
complex.
NexGen is confident that it can meet its aggressive timetable,
but given the realities of northern Saskatchewan – its
climate infrastructure limitations and logistical constraints
– holding to that schedule will be extremely difficult.
Delays would not reflect the quality of the project or its
management but rather a natural consequence of the complexities
inherent in building a mine of this scale. Large-scale mine
developments always present unforeseen challenges, and it would
be highly unusual for a project of Rook’s scale to proceed
without encountering setbacks.
Rook is projected to begin production at 21 million pounds per
year, ramping to as much as 30 million pounds – a
contribution unmatched by any other new uranium project over the
next decade. Any delay in achieving those volumes will further
widen the global uranium market’s structural deficit,
particularly as demand accelerates into the 2030s.
A widening deficit
The WNA’s forecast that uranium demand is set to surge between
now and 2040 appears achievable given nuclear power’s formidable
advantage in producing low-cost, carbon-free electricity. What
remains far less clear is where the necessary uranium supply will
come from.
Problems are already emerging at several of the world’s largest
prospective sources of new production, and the structural deficit
in global uranium markets looks poised to widen sharply in the
near term as these supply issues continue to
accumulate.
Over the past two years, the positive narrative around uranium
has been driven almost entirely by demand but this could be about
to change. Supply challenges may soon become the dominant force
pushing uranium prices materially higher in the short term.
About the author
Adam Rozencwajg
Before co-founding G&R in 2015, Adam Rozencwajg (pictured above) served as vice president at Chilton Investment Company, where he partnered with Leigh Goehring to manage the Chilton Global Natural Resource Fund from 2007 to 2015. Under their leadership, the fund reached peak assets exceeding $5 billion. Earlier in his career, Rozencwajg gained experience in financial markets as part of the investment banking division at Lehman Brothers from 2006 to 2007.