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Anfield Energy
Corey Dias leads Anfield Energy, a US uranium developer controlling one of three licensed conventional mills in the country alongside ISR assets in...
Anfield Energy
Anfield Energy operates as a resource company targeting near-term uranium production in the United States. Its portfolio is anchored by the Shootaring Canyon mill in Utah, one of only three licensed conventional uranium mills in the country, and the Charlie Project in Wyoming's Pumpkin Buttes district. The firm also holds the West Slope and Slick Rock vanadium-uranium properties in Colorado, alongside a larger Wyoming ISR land package acquired through its merger with Uranium One Americas in 2022 (per the firm, 2023). Anfield's strategy centers on restarting production at Shootaring Canyon, which has a licensed capacity of 750 tons per day, while advancing ISR resources in Wyoming to establish a hub-and-spoke operational model. The company holds a measured and indicated uranium resource base spanning its combined assets. A preliminary economic assessment in 2023 targeted a steady-state production profile fed by multiple satellite deposits, highlighting the interdependence of the mill and the Wyoming mineral holdings (per the firm's technical reports, 2023). The firm's primary commodity exposure is uranium, though vanadium provides secondary revenue potential tied to steel-hardening and grid-scale battery demand. The company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange following a 2023 share consolidation and name change from Anfield Resources, a restructuring designed to align its capital structure with a developing production timeline. Corey Dias, appointed CEO in 2018, previously held senior roles at Uranium One and Rio Tinto — operators that extracted from the same Wyoming basins where Anfield now holds ground (public record). The firm's 2024 technical report updated resource estimates at Charlie and outlined a phased development plan contingent on long-term offtake agreements rather than spot-market sales. Anfield's structural differentiator lies in its physical mill ownership at a time when US uranium milling capacity has contracted to a near-single-point failure. The Shootaring Canyon facility, on care and maintenance since the early 1980s, represents a type of infrastructure that cannot be replicated without a decade-long permitting process, giving the firm an asymmetric position in any sustained uranium contracting cycle led by domestic utilities.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
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AUM
Undisclosed
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Principals
Corey Dias
Chief Executive Officer
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Anfield Energy?
Corey Dias serves as Chief Executive Officer and leads the company's strategic direction, including capital allocation and offtake negotiations. He joined Anfield in 2018 after holding technical and operational roles at Uranium One and Rio Tinto, where he worked directly on Wyoming ISR assets. The board includes mining finance and regulatory specialists who approve major development expenditures.
What is Anfield Energy's production strategy?
Anfield is pursuing a hub-and-spoke model: reactivate the Shootaring Canyon mill in Utah as a central processing facility and feed it with uranium ore from satellite conventional and ISR projects in Wyoming and Colorado. The firm is targeting long-term utility offtake contracts rather than the spot market. A 2023 preliminary economic assessment outlined a phased restart scenario with production rates dependent on mill throughput and wellfield development.
Which uranium assets does Anfield Energy control?
The flagship is the Shootaring Canyon mill in Garfield County, Utah, one of three fully licensed conventional uranium mills in the United States. Uranium mineral holdings include the Charlie Project in the Pumpkin Buttes district of Wyoming, the West Slope vanadium-uranium properties in Colorado, the Slick Rock project, and an ISR land package in the Powder River Basin and Great Divide Basin acquired through the 2022 Uranium One Americas transaction.
Is Anfield Energy a junior explorer or a near-term producer?
Anfield positions itself as a near-term production company rather than a grassroots explorer. Its assets are brownfield sites in historied uranium districts with established resource estimates and existing permits. The firm's timeline to production hinges on mill reactivation capex and securing offtake, not on discovery drilling. Published technical reports indicate measured and indicated resources across a portfolio intended to supply the Shootaring mill.
How is Anfield Energy structured as a public vehicle?
Anfield trades on the TSX Venture Exchange under the ticker AEC following a 2023 share consolidation and name change from Anfield Resources Inc. The restructuring was executed to attract institutional investors and position the company for larger capital raises consistent with a development-stage enterprise.
What exposure does Anfield have to vanadium?
Several of Anfield's Colorado properties, including West Slope and Slick Rock, host vanadium mineralization alongside uranium. While uranium is the primary economic driver, vanadium offers a secondary revenue stream tied to steel alloying and emerging vanadium redox flow battery demand. The Shootaring Canyon mill's circuit can theoretically produce both commodities.
What is Anfield's known posture on offtake contracting?
The firm has stated publicly that it will pursue long-term contracts with US utilities as the foundation of its revenue model, mirroring the precedent set by other domestic producers who signed multi-year deals at floor-and-ceiling pricing structures in the 2023–2024 cycle. Anfield has indicated an intent to reserve a portion of mill capacity for spot sales once base contracts are in place.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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