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    Ex-prince Andrew’s Helmand uranium pitch to Epstein: project risk lens for miners

    February 11, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Ex-prince Andrew’s Helmand uranium pitch to Epstein: project risk lens for miners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    A confidential 2010 UK government briefing on Helmand province mineral prospects, including uranium, thorium, gold, iridium, marble and possible oil and gas, was emailed by then trade envoy Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to Jeffrey Epstein, the BBC reports. The document cited “significant high value mineral deposits” and “potential for low cost extraction” in Helmand, where most uranium indications still rely on Soviet-era surveys and early-stage USGS assessments. Any move to develop Afghan uranium would confront major security, infrastructure and safeguards barriers in an already supply‑constrained, geopolitically sensitive uranium market.

    Technical Brief

    • Soviet surveys from the 1970s–80s underpin most mapped Afghan uranium occurrences, including in Helmand.
    • Later USGS work broadened the inventory to multiple “strategic minerals”, but few sites progressed beyond reconnaissance.
    • Uranium, thorium, gold, iridium and marble were all grouped as “high value” in the Helmand brief.
    • The document was produced by the Helmand Provincial Reconstruction Team specifically to support a December 2010 visit.
    • Andrew served as UK special representative for international trade and investment from 2001 to 2011, shaping his access.
    • Additional trade-related reports from Singapore, Hong Kong and Vietnam were also emailed to Epstein as compressed files.
    • For uranium project developers, Afghanistan’s legacy Soviet datasets resemble other frontier jurisdictions where modern QA/QC is minimal.

    Our Take

    Uranium and thorium appear in only 26 keyword-matched pieces across nearly 1,000 mining stories in our database, signalling that detailed coverage of nuclear-fuel-linked opportunities remains relatively niche compared with bulk commodities and battery metals.

    Afghanistan, Namibia, Kazakhstan and Canada all feature in our uranium project coverage, but usually via listed developers or state entities rather than politically exposed individuals, underscoring how unusual it is for high-level political figures to be directly associated with early-stage uranium investment pitches.

    Sprott’s presence in the article is notable given its prominent role in listed uranium vehicles in our coverage; any association with speculative frontier uranium ideas could be reputationally sensitive for institutional investors already navigating ESG scrutiny around nuclear fuel and governance risk.

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    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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