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​Triton Uranium is considering a U.S. listing ​through a merger with a ‌special purpose acquisition company in 2026, its president Scott Evans told Reuters, as the company seeks to tap rising ⁠demand for ​nuclear fuel and bolster domestic supply.

The Canada-based company has begun development work at its Atlas Project in Uranium City, Saskatchewan, where it controls about 46,742 acres ​of mineral claims.

Triton has raised ‌nearly US$16-million in private funding, which it plans to use to advance exploration ahead of a potential public listing.

The company would consider a future stake sale to either ‌the U.S. or ​Canadian government, reflecting ‌growing policy efforts to secure supply chains for ​critical minerals, Evans said.

Interest in nuclear ⁠power has picked up as electricity demand rises, ⁠driven in part by data centers supporting artificial intelligence and ​cloud infrastructure.

Reactor developer X-Energy, backed by Amazon, recently raised about US$1.02-billion in a U.S. initial public offering, underscoring renewed investor interest in the nuclear sector.

At the same time, uranium supply remains constrained ⁠after years of underinvestment.

Reuters reported in January U.S. mine production is expanding again but is expected to reach only about 1 million pounds this year, far short of annual U.S. annual consumption of over 50 ⁠million pounds.

Triton is preparing to ​launch a 10,000-metre drill program across four priority targets, including ⁠the Dubyna Mine area, with drilling scheduled to commence in June.

Earlier ‌this year, Denison Mines Corp and NexGen Energy received approval from ​the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission to begin construction of their Wheeler River and Rook I projects, respectively, in northern Saskatchewan - the first approvals for new ​Canadian uranium mines since 2004.

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