Despite environmental concerns, Colorado has approved the nation’s first new uranium mill in more than 25 years, the Los Angeles Times reports.
The state’s regulators granted the radioactive fuels license to Energy Fuels Resources Corp., a Canadian company that has long sought to open the mill near the town of Naturita in southwestern Colorado. The company has indicated that most of the yellowcake uranium from the new mill would be exported to Asia.
Environmental groups have voiced concerns that radioactive residues from the mill could contaminate the Colorado and Dolores rivers. In the central part of the state, near Cañon City, groundwater contamination persists from a closed uranium mill that was declared a Superfund cleanup site 25 years ago.
The New York Times said that the $175 million plant, known as Piñon Ridge, still needs to win approval for transportation and air emissions permits, but that the license approval marks a major step forward for the controversial project.
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