Miner in talks with Japanese companies on uranium mine stake
George Lekakis and Felicity Williams
The Courier Mail
RIO Tinto is talking to several Japanese energy companies on a potential sale of its 68 per cent stake in Energy Resources Australia.
ERA's Ranger mine in the Northern Territory is the second-largest uranium operation in Australia and accounts for about 11 per cent of global output of the sought-after nuclear feedstock.
"Rio has received several expressions of interest from Japanese companies involved in power generation," one source said.
"It's at an early stage, but Rio is now testing that interest."
ERA enjoyed one of its strongest years on record in the 12 months to the end of December, after boosting profit almost 200 per cent to $221.7 million.
With emerging economies such as India and China embracing nuclear power, Rio will have little difficulty inducing competitive interest in the Ranger asset.
A consortium of Japanese power utilities previously held equity in the Ranger mine but sold out in 2005.
Mitsui paid $104 million to Canada's Uranium One for a 49 per cent stake in the Honeymoon project in South Australia in October.
However the potential sale of ERA to Japanese interests runs the risk of angering China, which started receiving shipments of uranium from the Ranger mine in the second half of last year.
That, in turn, could cause a policy headache for the Federal Government, as it grapples with the issue of foreign ownership of Australia's key resources assets.
The sale of ERA to a foreign company is also likely to be politically sensitive because Ranger and its undeveloped Jabiluka deposit are located in the World Heritage-listed Kakadu National Park.