Uranium Export Price — June 5, 2026
As of June 5, 2026, Uranium is trading at Seventeen Rupees per gram across India. The 10-gram rate stands at One Hundred and Sixty Six Rupees, and 100 grams costs One Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Seven Rupees.
The Export Reference — 10-Day Series
Uranium exports: diplomacy with a price tag
The export reference stands at ₹16.57 per gram, June 5, 2026 — the benchmark every exporting nation's uranium revenue ultimately answers to. But uranium exports resemble arms-control agreements more than commodity shipping: each tonne crosses borders inside bilateral nuclear cooperation frameworks, end-use certified, safeguards-documented, priced in contracts that national statistics reveal only as blended averages.
Export arithmetic at today's reference:
- 1 tonne exported: ≈ ₹1.66 crore of revenue
- Kazakhstan's ~20,000 t/year: ≈ ₹33.1 thousand crore
- Canada's high-grade thousands of tonnes: proportionate, premium-origin
- India's exports: zero tonnes, by design
That last line anchors the Indian reading of this page: the world's export prices are, for India, always import prices in waiting.
Export Quantities at Reference
Today's Uranium rate is Seventeen Rupees per gram. At this rate, 10 grams of Uranium costs One Hundred and Sixty Six Rupees.
| Unit | Weight | Price (INR) | Price in Words |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Gram | 1.0000 g | ₹16.57 | Seventeen Rupees |
| 8 Grams | 8.0000 g | ₹132.56 | One Hundred and Thirty Three Rupees |
| 10 Grams | 10.0000 g | ₹165.70 | One Hundred and Sixty Six Rupees |
| 100 Grams | 100.0000 g | ₹1,657.00 | One Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Seven Rupees |
| 1 Kilogram | 1,000.0000 g | ₹16,570.00 | Sixteen Thousand Five Hundred and Seventy Rupees |
| 1 Ounce (oz) | 28.3495 g | ₹469.75 | Four Hundred and Seventy Rupees |
| 1 Troy Ounce | 31.1035 g | ₹515.38 | Five Hundred and Fifteen Rupees |
| 1 Metric Ton | 1,000,000.0000 g | ₹16,570,000.00 | One Crore Sixty Five Lakh Seventy Thousand Rupees |
The exporters' club and its economics
Membership is geological accident refined by policy. Kazakhstan converted steppe deposits and ISL technology into export dominance — uranium ranks among its premier foreign-exchange earners, giving Astana's production decisions the market weight OPEC ministers once enjoyed in oil. Canada exports grade (Athabasca's freakish ores), Australia exports scale from vast reserves, Namibia and Uzbekistan fill the second tier. Each exporter's realised price blends its contract book — which is why national export statistics lag and smooth the spot benchmark this page tracks daily.
Routes as price factors
Export economics acquired a routing dimension after 2022. Kazakh material historically transited Russian territory toward Western buyers; the geopolitical repricing of that route — and the trans-Caspian alternatives developed since — embeds logistics and politics into realised export values. Origin itself now prices: Western utilities' preference for non-Russian-touched supply chains created the soft premium structure assessment commentary calls "origin differentiation". Exports, like everything uranium, are geopolitics with invoices.
India's absence from the exporters' club is triple-locked: production arithmetic (domestic output trails domestic need), strategic doctrine (every kilogram serves the home programme), and the Atomic Energy Act's framing of uranium as sovereign material. No realistic scenario — even the 100 GW build-out succeeding wildly — converts India into a uranium exporter; the breeder programme aims at import independence, not export surplus.
Reading export data usefully
Exporter disclosures are the supply side's truth serum. Kazatomprom's quarterly volumes and realised prices, Canadian export statistics, Namibian production reports — together they reveal what the benchmark's level is actually doing to physical flows. Realised prices climbing toward spot signals contract books rolling onto better terms; volumes lagging guidance signals the discipline (or trouble) behind the price. All public, all quarterly, all anchored to the daily number above.
Export Reference — Daily Record
The most recent Uranium price on record (2026-06-04) is Seventeen Rupees per gram. This is up by One Rupees from the previous day's rate of ₹16.01.
| Date | Price (₹/g) | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-04 | ₹16.57 | +0.56 |
| 2026-06-03 | ₹16.01 | +0.08 |
| 2026-06-02 | ₹15.93 | +0.05 |
| 2026-06-01 | ₹15.88 | -0.03 |
| 2026-05-31 | ₹15.91 | 0.00 |
| 2026-05-30 | ₹15.91 | -0.10 |
| 2026-05-29 | ₹16.01 | -0.07 |
| 2026-05-28 | ₹16.08 | -0.29 |
| 2026-05-27 | ₹16.37 | +0.06 |
| 2026-05-26 | ₹16.31 | — |
The export lens from an importing nation
For Indian readers, export prices are the negotiating table's other side. Every rupee the benchmark adds flows eventually into the formulas India's import agreements renew against; every exporter's production decision shifts the leverage. Following Kazakh guidance or Canadian restarts here is following India's future fuel bills being drafted abroad — the practical patriotism of price-watching.
The investment translation runs parallel: the exporters' listed equities (Kazatomprom GDRs, Cameco and peers) are the vehicles through which Indian portfolios, via LRS, participate in export economics. Realised-price trends in their filings, read against this page's reference, separate the contract-book tortoises from the spot-leveraged hares.
The export reference reprices tomorrow; the diplomatic lattice holds; the drums keep crossing borders under their paperwork. This page keeps the price they cross at.
Uranium Export Price — Trade-Flow FAQ
Exporters transact around the global benchmark: ₹16.57 per gram (June 5, 2026) — ₹16,570.00/kg. National export statistics report realised contract values that orbit this reference with formula lags.
Kazakhstan dominates (roughly 40% of supply), followed by Canada, Namibia, Australia and Uzbekistan. Exports flow under bilateral nuclear cooperation agreements with safeguards documentation — never as ordinary freight.
None — by policy and arithmetic. Domestic production trails domestic need, every UCIL kilogram feeds the home fleet, and the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 frames uranium as strategic material. India sits firmly on the import side of every uranium trade ledger.
Realised export values blend term-contract formulas (negotiated years prior), spot sales and origin premiums. Kazakh export statistics, for instance, can lag spot moves by quarters — the contract book's smoothing visible in national accounts.
Only licensed producers and traders within government-to-government frameworks. Export licences, end-use certificates and IAEA safeguards wrap every shipment; the "free market" in uranium exports is a diplomatic lattice with prices attached.