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Kelowna-based Fission facing security review of sale to Australian company

National security concerns prompt Ottawa to review uranium deal with Australian mining firm
patterson-lake-south-mine-fission-uranium
Patterson Lake South uranium property—a proposed high-grade uranium mine and mill in Saskatchewan.

The Supreme Court of British Columbia has approved the sale of a Kelowna mining company, but now the federal government has stepped in and delayed it further.

Fission Uranium Corp. last week obtained a final order from the Supreme Court that approved the sale of Fission to Australian mining giant Paladin. One of Fission’s investors, a Chinese company called CGN Mining Company Limited, recently took Fission to court to block the sale, but that attempt failed.

However, earlier this month Fission received a notice from the Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry ordering a national security review of the sale. Fission said in a press release it is working with the ministry on the security review, but it also noted there is a chance it will not obtain Investment Canada Act clearance.

Fission fully owns the Patterson Lake South uranium property—a proposed high-grade uranium mine and mill in Saskatchewan. Paladin, meanwhile, is a uranium producer with a 75% ownership of the Langer Heinrich Mine in Namibia.