![Paladin Energy http://uraniumworld.blogspot.com/](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjt5xbCOWXx9zJQG2o8JR1fV9oWfd2SXvK-eTPomXqwa0HhdfcsK_YBw3xIr43JeSRmajObgAfLx65uvI8W0_hlgusvvZraeq1WZju-IoyUmPxKRYpq6Eg-UhZGxONNpFvojpxwAkRalkE/s400/Paladin-Energy.jpg)
The initial agreement with China Guangdong Nuclear may guide to partnership opportunities, expansion of a joint venture in Australia’s Northern Territory and extensive-term sales, Perth-based Paladin said in an Aug. 5 statement on the deal. The accord is a “natural match” because China has less than 10 percent of its uranium needs by 2020 enclosed by contracts or mine ownership, Citigroup Inc.’s Sydney-based analyst Clarke Wilkins said Aug. 6. Paladin rose as much as 3.2 percent to a$3.83, the major gain since Aug. 5, and was at A$3.82 a 12:13 p.m. in Sydney trading. That’s more than the 1.7 percent raise in the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index.
Paladin expects uranium insist to outpace supplies, driving prices higher from their “stubbornly static” levels this year, Borshoff said in a conference call with analysts earlier today. “Fewer and fewer of the undeveloped uranium deposits wait available to be exploited,” he said. In July, Paladin offers A$27 million for NGM Resources Ltd. The Australian uranium manufacturer will continue to pursue potential mergers and acquisitions, Borshoff said on the analyst call. Paladin plans to double uranium oxide manufacture to almost 14 million pounds by its 2016 financial year, from a predictable 7 million pounds in the 12 months ending June 30, 2011, the company said in a presentation accompanying the teleconference.
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