GLOBAL URANIUM CORPORATION
Global Uranium Corp. is dedicated to exploring and developing its two key properties, Northwest Athabasca Joint Venture and Wing Lake Property, located within the Athabasca Basin Region’s mineral-rich landscape. Global Uranium also holds 5,040 acres of land in Wyoming, USA.
Global Uranium Corp is dedicated to exploring and developing its key projects located within premium and mineral-rich landscapes in Canada and the United States.
Northwest Athabasca Joint Venture
Global Uranium is earning into a joint venture with industry leaders Cameco Corp. (TSX: CCO), NexGen Energy LTD (TSX: NXE), Orano Canada Inc., and Forum Energy Metals Corp. (TSX.V: FMC) to explore the Northwest Athabasca Joint Venture Project.
Wyoming Projects
Wyoming boasts a rich history of uranium production and is home to active uranium mining and historic mineral resources, with Global Uranium holding 5,040 acres of land.
Wing Lake Property
The Wing Lake Uranium Property is a property of merit with potential to host uranium mineralization. Global Uranium owns 100% interest in the Wing Lake Uranium Property.
Global Uranium is earning into a joint venture with industry leaders Cameco Corp. (TSX: CCO), NexGen Energy LTD. (TSX: NXE), Orano Canada Inc., and Forum Energy Metals Corp. (TSX.V: FMC) to jointly explore the Northwest Athabasca Joint Venture Project.
The Northwest Athabasca Joint Venture historical drilling returned an intersection of 6.0 m @ 5.65% U₃O₈.
Nuclear energy boasts the smallest carbon footprint among all power generation sources, making uranium a key player in achieving net-zero emissions.
Source: Carbon Credits
Global Uranium has a total of five projects covering 5,040 acres, located in mining friendly districts: The Great Divide Basin District, the Copper Mountain Uranium District, and the number one uranium area in Wyoming, the Gas Hills Uranium District.
Nuclear supply chains are a crucial part of the Canada-US Energy Transformation Task Force and the US announced their loan program of 2.5 billion USD for the development of uranium production in the US and Canada.
Source: Small Caps, May 2024
The World Nuclear Association has stated that there are 391 gigawatts of nuclear power capacity globally, meeting a tenth of the world’s power demand. It forecasts that capacity will rise to 686 gigawatts, and potentially as high as 931 gigawatts, by 2040.
Source: Reuters, September 2023