Kazakhstan’s Senate has approved, in two readings, a package of amendments to the Subsoil and Subsoil Use Code aimed at significantly strengthening state control over the country’s strategic uranium reserves. The reform marks one of the most substantial regulatory shifts in Kazakhstan’s uranium sector in recent years, reinforcing the dominant role of national company Kazatomprom and tightening restrictions on foreign participation.
Under the proposed amendments, if geological exploration confirms uranium mineralisation or deposits, subsoil users will be required either to return the explored area to the state or to transfer priority purchase rights for uranium to the national company. Lawmakers say the measure is designed to eliminate risks associated with “parallel activities” by different subsoil users operating on overlapping or adjoining territories.
Deputy Shakarim Buktugutov, cited by Kapital.kz, explained that the changes will limit the issuance of exploration licences in areas where uranium deposits or mineralisation have already been identified. Third parties will no longer be able to obtain licences to explore solid minerals in territories where uranium mining is already under way or where uranium occurrences have been officially confirmed.
A company that discovers uranium deposits will only be able to extend its licence if it relinquishes the area containing uranium mineralisation. The rule will not apply to operations where uranium is produced as a by-product or to existing projects operated by Kazatomprom.
The amendments also introduce stricter limits on foreign ownership. According to Deputy Chair of the Atomic Energy Agency Aset Makhambetov, foreign companies’ stakes in new uranium ventures will be capped at 25%.
Current law requires that the national company hold more than 50% in joint uranium projects, but the new amendments will raise Kazatomprom’s minimum mandatory stake to 75%, consolidating state control over future uranium production and strategic resource development.