In the excitement over the Biden Administration’s uranium ‘awakening’ many investors may have overlooked one of the names as a potential beneficiary of an emphasis on domestic uranium production. Lightbridge Corporation (LTBR: Nasdaq) is bringing to the market one of the first innovations in nuclear fuel in decades. Its proprietary metallic nuclear fuel with a unique lobed design offers a more efficient and safer alternative for large water nuclear power reactors.
Lightbridge’s fuel core is made from a uranium-zirconium alloy that affords exceptional thermal conductivity. The fuel is housed in a helically-twisted four-lobed rod that offers increased fuel surface area and a shorter distance for heat to reach cooling water. The increased fuel rod surface area makes it possible for the Lightbridge fuel rod to operate at low temperatures. The design also helps eliminate most of the potentially dangerous fuel rod swelling that plague conventional round fuel rods.
The company claims its fuel rod can deliver real savings for its nuclear power plant target market. Power output can be increased as much as 10% and the operating cycle extended by six months in existing power reactors. Those numbers should turn the heads of nuclear power plant owners all over the world. Even more compelling is the potential efficiency in created in new reactors, which can achieve as much as 30% power uprate with Lightbridge fuel rods deployed in large power reactors.
There are 419 water
reactors around the world with 100 of them located in the U.S. Lightbridge’s fuel rod can be used in each
and every one of them as well as the new reactors that are under construction. A nuclear power plant spends about $50
million each year to fuel a reactor.
This implies an addressable market for Lightbridge near $5 billion in
the U.S. alone.
We expect nuclear
power to continue receiving considerable attention by policy makes as well as
investors in the next few years. Nuclear
power plant operators need to increase power output to meet the world’s clean energy
goals. More efficient fuel technology
could be an important element in reaching those targets. Getting more energy out of an existing nuclear
reactor reduces pressure to find sites and raise capital for new reactors.
Sometime this
year or next Lightbridge expects to begin manufacturing at least samples of its
nuclear fuel materials for use in test reactors. The company also plans to product and test
its multi-lobed fuel rod with enriched uranium inside. Successful test results should put Lightbridge
closer to commercial stage.
Of course, the
practical side of prototypes and test materials is the construction of a pilot
plant to fabricate its fuel and rod assemblies. That requires capital. At the end of March 2022, Lightbridge had
$28.2 million in cash on its balance sheet. The company uses about $2.0 million each
quarter to keep operations going, implying a requirement for $16 million over
the next two years to keep the lights on.
This budget leaves about $12 million for capital investments over the next
two years.
Lightbridge management
has not issued a budget for its investment plans. Given inflation in nearly all aspects of construction,
it is likely $12 million might not be sufficient. In the past the company has issued new shares
of common stock to raise capital and it is likely they would seek the same resource
in the future. That said, the LTBR price
could be a factor. The shares have been
on a roller coaster ride over the past year, falling by 67% from its 52-week
high price of $14.60 in early November 2021, to the current price near $4.75. Insiders hold 3% of outstanding shares and
even at that modest stake are likely to side with shareholders in not wanting
to see excessive dilution by selling shares at a bargain.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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