France loses its uranium meal ticket in Niger
By: Rachel Marsden
Paris has vowed to protect its interests in the country, which cut off supplies of the critical material after a coup
French President Emmanuel Macron was quick to react to a domestic conflict 
happening 6,000km away from Paris, saying that France would respond immediately 
to any violence towards French interests in the wake of a coup in the former 
French colony of Niger. What could it possibly be about uranium-rich Niger that 
has Macron so worried?
The coup’s leaders have made it clear that any outside intervention would be met 
with force. They also accused France of wanting to intervene militarily to 
reinstate the deposed president. French Foreign Affairs Minister Catherine 
Colonna rejected the suggestion, saying that “France’s only priority is the 
safety of our nationals.” Where have we seen that kind of coyness before? How 
about Libya, where a French-led ‘humanitarian’ mission to protect African 
civilians ultimately devolved into a Western-backed coup against the national 
leader?
Where would the coup leaders in Niger possibly have gotten the idea that France 
had any interest in intervening militarily in its former colony anyway? It might 
have something to do with a statement put out by the French presidential palace 
on Sunday, saying that “anyone attacking French nationals, the army, diplomats 
and interests would see France respond immediately and intractably.”
And by French interests, they especially mean one thing in particular – 
uranium. Niger is France’s top supplier of the mineral, providing 15% of the 
country’s total supply and a fifth of the European Union’s. It’s an absolutely 
critical element for powering France’s nuclear reactors. France’s energy 
independence is, ironically, dependent on Niger. It’s like the rich kid who 
drives a Ferrari provided by daddy but comes across as a self-made success at 
first glance. So it’s not hard to imagine that uranium is rather high on the 
list of those French interests that Paris insists on protecting.
The incentive for France to intervene in Niger is certainly growing since the 
junta now in charge has cut off exports of both uranium and gold to France. All 
of this comes at a really bad time for Paris, which has become even more reliant 
on its nuclear power after cutting itself off from cheap Russian gas with the 
rest of the EU to impress Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky – in the same 
way that college frat guys get hyped up and then do dumb things like jumping off 
the roof to impress girls.
Germany is already on the verge of deindustrializing because Europe’s economic 
engine can’t run on wind and Sun. Who knew? Apparently not Berlin. But at least 
France hadn’t completely bought into Berlin’s green fantasies and mothballed all 
its nuclear plants, though Macron was certainly heading in that direction.
So, Plan B after the Russian gas cutoff was to power them back up. Which France 
is now going to have to do without Niger’s uranium. But that shouldn’t be a 
problem, right? Because France has other suppliers, like Kazakhstan and 
Uzbekistan. Except, who largely controls the transport of these supplies to 
Europe? Russian state nuclear power company Rosatom. That doesn’t really leave 
Paris with much wiggle room.
“I will be clear: France is not dependent on Russia for the operation of its 
nuclear power infrastructure,” French Energy Transition Minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher 
said last year. That’s because you still had Niger. So, what now?
Lost in all of these selfish foreign interests is the will of the citizens of 
Niger. The passion that France and the West have shown for reinstating the 
former president suggests that he was adequately catering to their needs. The 
outpouring of citizens in the streets, however, suggests that he wasn’t 
adequately catering to theirs.
Colonna suggested that the situation was ripe for exploitation by Russia, but 
whose fault is that? France’s longstanding military omnipresence and 
relationships with leaders in the Sahel region of Africa have already resulted 
in being tossed out of the region, thereby creating a vacuum for new potential 
partnerships with these countries, particularly with nations that aren’t going 
to just serve as a Trojan Horse for US interests, as France tends to do.
When it comes to the conflict in Ukraine, Macron makes it all about the 
interests of the Ukrainians. But when unrest breaks out in Niger, it’s all about 
French interests. He said the quiet part out loud, for once. Maybe because 
Washington left him without talking points on an issue that’s of greater 
strategic importance to Europe than to America. It wasn’t that long ago that 
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni was undressing France on the world stage 
and exposing its colonial interests in all their glory. When she was in the 
opposition back in 2019, Meloni called the Franc of the Financial Community of 
Africa (a controversial currency used in 14 African countries, pegged to the 
euro and printed in France) the “colonial currency,” to which France “applies 
seigniorage and by virtue of which it exploits the resources of these nations.”
However Macron might try to dress up and his actions and frustrations as 
‘defending democracy’, when it comes to Africa, at this point, France is 
standing there on the world stage with its interests hanging out of its premium 
Lacoste boxers.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN