March 25, 2026

Savannah River to supply 22.8 tons of uranium for DOE

By ExchangeMonitor

Uranium production is ramping up at the Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site (SRS), with plans to produce nearly 23 metric tons of high-level uranium for fuel production,and other purposes for the DOE nuclear complex.

That was the message that the SRS Citizens Advisory Board heard Tuesday during the panel’s regular bimonthly meeting at the University of South Carolina-Aiken.

SRS is restarting recovery of uranium at its H-Canyon facility, DOE announced recently.  

DOE’s Nuclear Energy Office has estimated a potential  for 26 metric tons of high-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU within the DOE nuclear complex that can be used  for advanced reactors, said Tara Armstead, operations manager with Fluor prime Savannah River Nuclear Solutions (SRNS), 

Of that 26 tons, SRS already has 3.1 metric tons, Armstead said. 

The current pathway to HALEU production and distribution includes making repairs at H Canyon, a large scale chemical separations facility at the 310-square-mile site in South Carolina. Those should be completed around July of this year, followed by a first production cycle in October 2027, said the SRNS manager. 

 By January 2028, SRS expects to be sending its first HALEU shipment to Oak Ridge National Lab (ORNL), about 300 miles north in Tennessee, Armstead said. That would be the first of about 15 shipments in that initial part of the mission, while DOE continues ramping up production.

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