Spent fuel starts with uranium
The government decided in the middle of October that, precisely according 
to the minister Urban's proposal, it will continue the mining of uranium at least 
until 2008 (but probably longer) in Dolni Rozinka near Zdar nad Sazavou where 
the last remaining operational uranium mine in the EU is situated. At the same 
time it will continue in the related operation of the chemical concentrator in 
Rozna. As a result, the redevelopment of the location has been postponed, which 
as a result involves an increase in costs and load on the environment. The surroundings 
of Dolni Rozinka are burdened with 406 000 m2 of waste-piles following the mining 
of solvent radons. However, no complex assessment of the ecological impacts of 
further mining has been presented to the ministers. 
 The Minister of Industry 
explains this recent prolonging with the higher price of Uranium on the world 
markets. He is hiding with this the fact this price does not include the costs 
for the redevelopment after mining, its processing and the re-cultivation of the 
landscape. These have been estimated to amount to 57.6 billion CZK up to the year 
2040. The taxpayer will have to pay for this, because these costs are not included 
in the price of selling uranium, which is now almost exclusively extracted by 
the Czech energy producer ČEZ. Programme for the decreasing of uranium mining 
have cost 18.8 billion CZK of public finances since 1989. At present there are 
listed 3 768 former stress-points of the uranium industry within the Czech Republic, 
of which 2 523 are principal mining grounds and need monitoring and regularly 
inspecting. 
 However, the uranium industry keeps looking at any cost for 
new opportunities and threatens to commence mining in other locations. And this 
in the Vysocina (Czech Highlands) as well as in South Bohemia. The Environment 
Minister of Ceske Budejovice recently declined the request of the firm TIMEX ZDICE, 
who wished to construct investigation facilities for the exploration of uranium 
deposits in the Strakonice area in the communities of Mecichov, Hlupin, Bratronice, 
Nahosin and Doubravice. According to previously carried-out explorations there 
are underground estimated reserves of uranium in the order of 1824 tonnes. Local 
authorities in the localities of Tasov, Horni Veznice and Jamne na Vysocine have 
not decided in regard to similar requests to construct exploration bases. According 
to initial investigations from the 20th century, in Brzkov there is 1 600 tonnes 
of uranium and near We will oppose a re-instigation of mining. 
 
Edvard Sequens, Calla