SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Dino's Bar & Grill -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Goose94 who wrote (15250)12/31/2015 10:40:39 AM
From: Goose94Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 203031
 
FCU-T four month high... Go Paris Go!!!



To: Goose94 who wrote (15250)1/11/2016 2:36:57 PM
From: Goose94Respond to of 203031
 
Ontario Moving Forward with Nuclear Refurbishment at Darlington and Pursuing Continued Operations at Pickering to 2024

Projects will Boost Economic Activity, Create Jobs and Help Fight Climate Change

Ontario is moving forward with nuclear refurbishment at Darlington Generating Station, securing 3,500 megawatts of affordable, reliable, and emission free power.

Nuclear refurbishment at Darlington will contribute $15 billion to Ontario’s gross domestic product (GDP) throughout the project and create up to 11,800 jobs annually. The refurbishment of all four units is expected to involve about 30 million hours of work over 10 years and will support Ontario’s globally recognized CANDU nuclear supply chain, with more than 180 companies employing thousands of highly skilled workers.

Ontario Power Generation (OPG) is on track to begin refurbishment of the first unit at Darlington in October 2016. To best protect Ontario ratepayers and ensure OPG delivers refurbishment on-time and on-budget, the government has established off-ramps that require OPG to obtain government approval prior to proceeding with each of the remaining unit refurbishments. The budget for the project is $12.8 billion, about $1.2 billion less than originally projected by OPG, and all four units are scheduled for completion by 2026.

The Province has also approved OPG’s plan to pursue continued operation of the Pickering Generating Station beyond 2020 up to 2024, which would protect 4,500 jobs across the Durham region, avoid 8 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions, and save Ontario electricity consumers up to $600 million. OPG will engage with the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission and the Ontario Energy Board to seek approvals required for the continued operation of Pickering Generating Station.

Securing clean, reliable power for decades to come is part of the government’s plan to build Ontario up. The four-part plan includes investing in people's talents and skills, making the largest investment in public infrastructure in Ontario’s history, creating a dynamic, innovative environment where business thrives and building a secure retirement savings plan.

QUICK FACTS
Nuclear energy plays a fundamental role in Ontario’s electricity system. Ontario’s nuclear fleet currently supplies enough power to meet about 60 per cent of Ontario’s daily electricity needs, and is our largest source of reliable, affordable power.

OPG electricity rates are regulated by the Ontario Energy Board (OEB). All costs for the Darlington refurbishment will be subject to review and approval by the OEB through a public and transparent process to ensure they are prudently incurred. The average cost of power from Darlington nuclear units post-refurbishment is estimated to range between $72/MWh and $81 MWh, or 7 and 8 cents per kilowatt hour.

The average cost of power from Darlington after refurbishment is within the range assumed in the 2013 Long-Term Energy Plan for refurbished nuclear energy and lower than the average price of electricity generation in Ontario, which in 2015 was $92/MWh.

The Pickering Generating Station employs about 4,500 people and is the largest employer in Durham Region.

Continuing operations at Pickering Generating Station will avoid 8 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions, which is the equivalent to taking 490,000 cars off Ontario roads.




To: Goose94 who wrote (15250)1/13/2016 11:34:27 AM
From: Goose94Respond to of 203031
 
CGN to build floating reactor

China General Nuclear (CGN) expects to complete construction of a demonstration small modular offshore multi-purpose reactor by 2020, the company announced yesterday.

An artist's impression of how CGN's floating plant will look (Image: CGN)

CGN said development of its ACPR50S reactor design had recently been approved by China's National Development and Reform Commission as part of the 13th Five-Year Plan for innovative energy technologies.

The company said it is currently carrying out preliminary design work for a demonstration ACPR50S project. Construction of the first floating reactor is expected to start next year, it said, with electricity generation to begin in 2020.

The 200 MWt (60 MWe) reactor has been developed for the supply of electricity, heat and desalination and could be used on islands or in coastal areas, or for offshore oil and gas exploration, according to CGN.

The Chinese company said it is also working on the ACPR100 small reactor for use on land. This 450 MWe reactor would be suitable for providing power to large-scale industrial parks or to remote mountainous areas.

CGN said the development of small-scale offshore and onshore nuclear power reactors will complement its large-scale plants and provide more diverse energy options.

Last October, Lloyd's Register of the UK announced it had signed a framework agreement with the Nuclear Power Institute of China - a subsidiary of China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) - to support the design and development of a floating nuclear power plant utilizing a small modular reactor. That plant would be based on a marine version of CNNC's ACP100 SMR design, known as the ACP100S. This 100 MWe design with passive safety features has been under development since 2010 and its preliminary design was completed in 2014.

The only floating nuclear power plant today is the Akademik Lomonosov, under construction in Russia, where two 35 MWe reactors similar to those used to propel ships are being mounted on a barge to be moored at a harbour. The Baltiysky Zavod in St Petersburg is on schedule to deliver the first floating nuclear power plant to its customer, Russian nuclear power plant operator Rosenergoatom, in September 2016. It could start operating in Chukotka as early as in 2017.

Floating plants offer various advantages: construction in a factory or shipyard should bring efficiencies; siting is simplified; environmental impact is extremely low; and decommissioning can take place at a specialised facility. However, the offshore environment brings important considerations, such as access for personnel and equipment and the need to ensure radioactive materials never enter the sea.

world-nuclear-news.org



To: Goose94 who wrote (15250)1/21/2016 7:45:09 AM
From: Goose94Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 203031
 
Fission Uranium FCU-T) Targets R600W, Triple R and High-Priority Regional Drilling With 35 Hole Program

Drilling to focus on aggressive R600W expansion and key exploration targets identified during the 2015 summer program

Jan 21, '16 - NR

Fission Uranium is pleased to announce the commencement of a $7.2M winter exploration program consisting of 11,800m in 35 holes of drilling and a 214 line-km airborne HeliSAM MMC (Magnetometric Conductivity) survey at its PLS property in Canada's Athabasca Basin. The drill program will include 10,000m in 29 holes of core (DDH) drilling and 1,800m in 6 holes of Reverse Circulation (RC) drilling. Drill program highlights are as follows:

Eighteen holes will focus on further growth of the high-grade, shallow mineralized zones including the R600W, R780E and R1620E. It should be noted that neither the R600W nor R1620E are yet included in the Triple R deposit resource estimate.

Eleven holes will test high-priority exploration targets, including closer follow up associated with the PLG-1B conductor, located 470m north of the R600W zone, where holes PL15-419 and PLS15-425 intersected anomalous radioactivity in the down-hole gamma survey (PLS15-419 with a maximum of 7,965 cps at 153.5m and PLS15-425 with a maximum of 4,168 cps at 100.8m).

Six RC exploration holes will test for basement bedrock uranium mineralization along the PLG-3B EM Conductor approximately 200m to 500m west along strike of the R600W zone.

Pre-collaring of the DDH core holes by the RC drill rigs has already begun and core drilling is expected to commence in the last week of January.

An advanced, tight-spaced airborne HeliSAM MMC survey is designed to obtain high-resolution geophysical detail of the bedrock within a particularly prospective area of the Patterson Lake Conductive Corridor including the Triple R's deposit and the 2.33km mineralized trend, with particular emphasis on hydrothermal clay alteration and structural controls to mineralization. The survey has the potential to identify specific areas with the greatest prospectivity of finding additional mineralization.

Ross McElroy, President, COO, and Chief Geologist for Fission, commented,

"We have entered a new and exciting phase at PLS, with three clear areas of focus. We will of course continue building on the resource size and associated economics of the Triple R deposit, which were established by the recently-completed Preliminary Economic Assessment (PEA). We will also be targeting further growth of the high-grade R600W zone with a view to adding it to an updated Triple R resource estimate later this year as well as further evaluating the eastern R1620E zone. In addition, we will drill test a number of highly prospective and promising exploration targets, including five on the PLG-1B conductor as a follow up to the strong, anomalous alteration and radioactivity we encountered in two holes during the summer 2015 program. Altogether an exciting time for the company, particularly with the CGN Mining deal expected to close on or before January 28, 2016."

Key Technical Information

11,800m of drilling utilizing up to 3 diamond drill core rigs and 2 RC drill rigs.

Resource Growth Drilling: approximately 55% of the drill meter budget will be allocated towards resource growth and will be targeted as follows:

R600W - seven holes
R780E - six holes
R1620E - five holes

Exploration Drilling: approximately 45% of the drill meter budget will be allocated towards exploration targeting, testing favorable high priority areas associated with bedrock alteration, structural features and radon anomalies along electromagnetic (EM) conductors as interpreted from geophysics surveys.

Prospective targets include:

PLG-1B EM Conductor - five holes

Follow up of results from anomalous holes PLS15-419, 422 and 425

Holes will test down-dip and along strike of the anomalous radioactivity identified in hole PLS15-419 (peak of 7965 cps) and PLS15-425 (peak of 4168 cps)

PLG-3B West EM Conductor - two DDH core holes and six RC holes



1 DDH hole located 80m east of R600W between R600W and R00E zones where many strong radon anomalies have been identified

1 DDH hole located 135m west of R600W zone

3 RC holes drilled along a fence pattern across the conductor located 200m to the west of the R600W zone

3 RC holes drilled along a fence pattern across the conductor located 500m to the west of the R600W zone

PLG-3A EM Conductor - one hole

1 hole targeting the PLG-3A conductor approximately 1 km east of the high-grade uranium boulder field, where promising geophysical signatures including a resistivity low associated with flexures in the conductor are present.

Area B - one hole

Area B represents an area of anomalous radon anomalies to the North-East of main Patterson Lake Corridor. The drill hole will follow up on the large brittle graphitic fault encountered in PLS15-323 over an 87m (down-hole) wide interval. Previous holes in this area failed to intersect this fault structure

Area C - one hole

Area C represents an area of anomalous lake bottom spectrometer uranium readings. One hole will target the most prospective portion of this anomalous area.

Forrest Lake Conductive Corridor - one hole

This target represents a gravity low coincident with a break in the PLV-41D EM conductor and thus may be a suitable location for focusing uranium mineralized fluids. One hole will evaluate this target.

Airborne geophysics - HeliSAM MMC (Magnetometric Conductivity) Survey

214 line-km helicopter supported airborne survey at 50m line-spacing with readings every 10m

Survey will cover an area of 4.4 km x 2.4 km over a highly prospective section of the Patterson Lake Conductive Corridor, which includes the 2.33km trend of mineralization (including the Triple R deposit and R600W and R1620E zones) associated with the PLG-3B EM conductor and also the highly prospective PLG-1B EM conductor where 3 holes PLS15-419, PLS15-422 and PLS15-425 encountered anomalous radioacitivity and highly prospective clay alteration.

The survey will be evaluated as an alternative to more expensive ground DC Resistivity surveys for the detailed resolution of low-resistivity. This survey has the potential to detect structures and alteration features that may be associated with uranium mineralized systems. The potential exists to detect new mineralization with this system, because of the tight lines-spacing, and because the ground is energized in a much different manner than a conventional 200 m line-spaced pole-dipole resistivity method

Environmental Baseline and Community Engagement



Working with Canada North Environmental Services (CanNorth) Fission will continue with its baseline environmental monitoring and advance its Community Engagement efforts with local stakeholders

The diamond drill coring contract has been awarded to Bryson Drilling, of Archeville, SK. RC Drilling, has been awarded to Northspan Explorations Ltd. of Kelowna, BC. The winter drill program follows six prior programs that have seen unprecedented success in the uranium sector and delivered a world class, large, shallow depth, high-grade uranium resource now known as the Triple R deposit.

PLS Mineralized Trend & Triple R Deposit Summary

Uranium mineralization at PLS has been traced by core drilling approximately 2.33km of east-west strike length in four separate mineralized "zones". From west to east, these zones are: R600W, R00E, R780E and R1620E.

The discovery hole of what is now referred to as the Triple R uranium deposit was announced on November 05, 2012 with drill hole PLS12-022, from what is considered part of the R00E zone. Through successful exploration programs completed to date, it has evolved into a large, near surface, basement hosted, structurally controlled high-grade uranium deposit.

The Triple R deposit consists of the R00E zone on the western side and the much larger R780E zone further on strike to the east. Within the deposit, the R00E and R780E zones have an overall strike length of approximately 1.2km with the R00E measuring approximately 125m in strike length and the R780E zones measuring approximately 900m in strike length. A 225m gap separates the R00E zone to the west and the R780E zones to the east, though sporadic narrow, weakly mineralized intervals from drill holes within this gap suggest the potential for further significant mineralization in this area. The R780E zones are located beneath Patterson Lake which is approximately six metres deep in the area of the deposit. The entire Triple R deposit is covered by approximately 50 m of overburden.

Mineralization remains open along strike both to the western and eastern extents. Mineralization is both located within and associated with a metasedimentary lithologic corridor, associated with the PL-3B basement Electro-Magnetic (EM) Conductor. Recent very positive drill results returning wide and strongly mineralized intersections approximately 555m west of the Triple R deposit, have significantly upgraded the R600W zone to a very prospective area for further growth of the PLS resource.

An updated map can be found on the Company's website at http://fissionuranium.com/project/pls/.

Samples from the drill core will be split in half sections on site. Where possible, samples will be standardized at 0.5m down-hole intervals. One-half of the split sample will be sent to SRC Geoanalytical Laboratories (an SCC ISO/IEC 17025: 2005 Accredited Facility) in Saskatoon, SK for analysis which includes U3O8 (wt %) and fire assay for gold, while the other half will remain on site for reference. Analysis will include a 63 element ICP-OES, and boron.

Patterson Lake South Property

The 31,039 hectare PLS project is 100% owned and operated by Fission Uranium Corp. PLS is accessible by road with primary access from all-weather Highway 955, which runs north to the former Cluff Lake mine and passes through the nearby UEX-Areva Shea Creek discoveries located 50km to the north, currently under active exploration and development.

The technical information in this news release has been prepared in accordance with the Canadian regulatory requirements set out in National Instrument 43-101 and reviewed on behalf of the company by Ross McElroy, P.Geol., President and COO for Fission Uranium Corp., a qualified person.

About Fission Uranium Corp.

Fission Uranium Corp. is a Canadian-based resource company specializing in the strategic exploration and development of the Patterson Lake South uranium property - host to the world-class Triple R uranium deposit - and is headquartered in Kelowna, British Columbia. Common Shares are listed on the TSX Exchange under the symbol "FCU" and trade on the OTCQX marketplace in the U.S. under the symbol "FCUUF." Fission announced on July 6, 2015 that it had entered into an agreement whereby shareholders of Fission will receive, subject to the terms and conditions of the agreement, 1.26 common shares of Denison Mines Corp. and $0.0001 per common shares of Fission Uranium Corp. (the 'Transaction'). The Transaction is subject to conditions including approval by the Fission and Denison shareholders.

ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD

Ross McElroy, President and COO


Fission Uranium Corp.
Rich Matthews
Investor Relations
TF: 877-868-8140
rich@fissionuranium.com
www.fissionuranium.com