Eagle Nuclear’s Aurora uranium project: permitting and PFS signals for mine planners
Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

First reported on MINING.com
30 Second Briefing
Eagle Nuclear Energy has completed key environmental and site-readiness work at its Aurora uranium project on the Oregon–Nevada border, including installation of a meteorological station, a wetland delineation study, and a full cultural and archaeological survey to support permitting. Aurora hosts an indicated resource of 32.75 million lb and nearly 5 million lb inferred, making it the largest conventional measured and indicated uranium deposit in the US and central to Eagle’s planned 27,000-foot pre-feasibility study. The project underpins a strategy to pair domestic uranium supply with advanced SMR technology, in a market where US reactors consume about 32 million lb of uranium annually but domestic production was only 677,000 lb in 2024.
Technical Brief
- Meteorological station data will inform site-specific wind, precipitation and dispersion inputs for environmental impact modelling.
- Wetland delineation outcomes will constrain infrastructure footprints and influence surface water management and mitigation design.
- Cultural and archaeological survey completion reduces permitting risk linked to heritage finds during future drilling and construction.
- Aurora’s location on the Oregon–Nevada border introduces dual-state regulatory interfaces for land use and environmental approvals.
- Eagle Nuclear’s “integrated nuclear energy platform” concept anticipates co-ordinated mine planning with advanced SMR deployment timelines and fuel specifications.
Our Take
Aurora’s 32.75 million lb indicated uranium resource is roughly equivalent to a single year of current US reactor requirements in our database, which signals that even one mid-sized US project like this can materially shift domestic supply–demand balances if it reaches production.
Energy Fuels’ involvement, alongside its White Mesa Mill in Utah, positions Aurora as a potential feed source into an existing US processing hub, which could shorten time-to-market compared with greenfield mill builds seen in other uranium stories in our coverage.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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