Originally posted by andrew a:
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Latest update Glasier on Western Uranium & Vanadium’s processing technology and high-grade Sunday Mine Published on Mar 26, 2019 All of our assets are in North America. In Western United States. We have got the highest grade vanadium probably in the world. That is why we have got a competitive advantage. Grades are everything no matter what commodity you are in. If you have the grades you have the low cost. That’s what we have certainly in vanadium. With Uranium we have got the technology which makes us the low cost producer. So again it’s the issue of your grades and your technology that drive your cost to the lower percentage of your competitors." States George Glasier, President, CEO and Director of Western Uranium & Vanadium Corp. (CSE: WUC | OTCQX: WSTRF), in an interview with InvestorIntel's Tracy Weslosky.Tracy Weslosky: You are one of the few stocks that actually made people money last year. Can you tell us what made Western Uranium & Vanadium different from many of your competitors?George Glasier: Obviously it’s our vanadium content. Vanadium was the hottest commodity last year. It went from $10 to over $30 and we have got a large high-grade vanadium resource. I credit most of it to the fact that we were in the right commodity at the right time.Tracy Weslosky: Many of our readers have been following the Sunday Mine Complex. We are very excited about the progress towards production. Can you tell us what’s happening?George Glasier: We had an announcement late last year that we are going to open the mine primarily to sample and sent samples to a number of vanadium customers. We are still on track to do that. The best time to open the mine is in the spring. We are working on that. I would say that within the next several months we will see the opening and the beginning of the process, first to sample and then to define the high-grade vanadium resource that was left, without mining the uranium.Tracy Weslosky: Would you mind giving our audience kind of an overview about your competitiveness and include how you are based in North America.George Glasier: All of our assets are in North America. In Western United States. We have got the highest grade vanadium probably in the world. That is why we have got a competitive advantage. Grades are everything no matter what commodity you are in. If you have the grades you have the low cost. That’s what we have got certainly in vanadium. With Uranium we have the technology which makes us the low cost producer. So again it’s the issue of your grades and your technology that drive your cost to the lower percentage of your competitors. That’s where we are. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NX51WmIej78
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Latest- looks like a capital raising in in progress at 98c - US$3m raised approx Extract of article: "It appears as though Western Uranium & Vanadium Corp. (WUC:CSE; WSTRF:OTCQX) will be closing its $0.98 funding shortly and it looks as though it blew through the US$2 million mark and then exercised the 50% overallotment option, which is apparently almost filled as well. With US$2 million feeling like a bit of a stretch thirty days ago, to be oversubscribed this week with US$3 million in the bank is quite an accomplishment but not exactly surprising. Despite the pullback in uranium and vanadium prices in the last four months, the WUC private placement has attracted serious interest from the investors and speculators alike; speculators are betting that a positive Section 232 outcome ignites the share prices of the domestic producers (and developers); investors are buying into the uranium supply/demand story." https://www.streetwisereports.com/article/2019/04/15/god-bless-winston.html Also: recent interview https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJLSl2aQ1Wc&list=PLwh5gwIJAV6wUikj3urAhMhxRzmlnbCBm&index=5&t=0s Latest update s232.. The US Department of Commerce has submitted the results of its
Section 232 national security investigation into uranium imports to
the White House. However, just like the automotive tariff investigation
released in February, the recommendations of the review have been
kept confidential. The US President now has 90 days (13 July) to
decide whether to act upon the recommendations. The decision to
keep the DoC Section 232 investigation findings confidential, could result
in up to another 90 days of waiting before we have some clarity on the
outlook for the US uranium market.