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Uranium at $92. Rare Earths Embargoed. And a Four-Property Explorer Trading at C$5 Million

Issued on behalf of EagleOne Metals Corporation

VANCOUVER — Baystreet.ca — China controls approximately 60% of global rare earth mining and over 90% of refining capacity. In early 2026, Beijing heightened export controls on seven strategic rare earth elements critical to defense, renewable energy, and advanced technology. The Western response was immediate: a $12 billion Project Vault strategic stockpile, a $2.7 billion DOE enrichment expansion, and a Critical Minerals Ministerial convening 54 nations to coordinate supply chain security.

The dependency is structural. The U.S. is 100% net-import reliant for 12 critical minerals and over 50% reliant for another 29. The IEA projects a 30% copper supply shortfall by 2035. Uranium approaches $92 per pound as reactor demand collides with a primary supply deficit. Every Western government is now competing for the same finite pool of non-Chinese critical mineral assets. And every junior explorer with ground in the right jurisdictions is being re-evaluated.

The junior critical minerals space reflects that re-evaluation. Appia Rare Earths & Uranium (CSE: API) (OTCQB: APAAF) is advancing some of the highest-grade rare earth intersections in North America at its Alces Lake project in Saskatchewan, targeting a maiden resource estimate in the first half of 2026. Defense Metals (TSXV: DEFN) (OTCQB: DFMTF) is pushing the Wicheeda Rare Earth Element Project in British Columbia through environmental assessment — one of Canada’s most advanced REE development assets, directly relevant to permanent magnet supply chains. NioCorp Developments (NASDAQ: NB) is building the Elk Creek Critical Minerals Project in Nebraska to produce niobium, scandium, and titanium — minerals currently imported almost entirely from geopolitically sensitive jurisdictions. And Ucore Rare Metals (TSXV: UCU) (OTCQX: UURAF) is commercializing its proprietary RapidSX separation technology in Louisiana with $18.4 million in DOD backing, while developing the Bokan heavy rare earth deposit in Alaska.

Each of these companies addresses one or two links in the critical minerals chain. But there’s a company assembling exposure across nearly the entire commodity spectrum — uranium, rare earths, gold, silver, copper — and the market hasn’t noticed yet.

EagleOne Metals Corporation (CSE: EAGL) (FSE: IJ2) recently signed a binding Letter of Intent to acquire 100% of the Poison Springs Uranium/Rare Earths Project — 206.6 acres, 35 miles south of Hanksville, Utah. A 2008 drill program returned mineralized intercepts across uranium, copper, silver, cobalt, nickel, and rare earth elements neodymium, praseodymium, and europium. The acquisition price: US$50,000. Both uranium and REEs appear on the U.S. Critical Minerals List.

Historical drilling by Cotter Corporation in nearby Hatch Canyon during 1978–1979 confirmed widespread mineralization across the broader region. EagleOne’s proposed follow-up targets sit at less than 100 metres depth, keeping drilling costs manageable. A Triassic Chinle formation target on the property adds potential for copper, vanadium, zinc, nickel, cobalt, and REEs.

Beyond Utah, the company’s 100%-owned Hébécourt Township property in Quebec’s Abitibi Greenstone Belt — a jurisdiction that has produced over 200 million ounces of gold historically — returned two priority anomalies targeting gold and copper adjacent to diorite contact zones. The neighbouring Magusi West project produced gold anomalies up to 0.156 ppm and copper anomalies up to 186 ppm across 618 soil samples. And through a non-binding LOI with Surupampa Metals, EagleOne has a path to a Peruvian copper-gold property.

Four properties. Three countries. Five commodity groups. A C$240,000 financing pending. And a market capitalization of approximately C$5 million.

The Western world is spending tens of billions to rebuild supply chains that took decades to offshore. The companies that hold the ground in the right jurisdictions are the ones that government policy is now designed to support. EagleOne Metals (CSE: EAGL) holds multi-commodity critical minerals exposure across uranium, rare earths, gold, and copper at an entry point that hasn’t yet reflected the structural transformation underway.

For more information on EagleOne Metals Corporation (CSE: EAGL) (FSE: IJ2) and its critical minerals portfolio, visit Baystreet.ca

Read this and more on EagleOne at: Baystreet.ca

Article Source: https://usanewsgroup.com/2026/03/12/exploring-the-minerals-powering-the-digital-and-energy-future/

CONTACT:

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SOURCES:

1. Critical Minerals Institute, February 2026 — https://investornews.com/market-opinion/the-critical-minerals-report-02-22-2026-the-price-floor-era-arrives-for-rare-earths-and-uranium-coppers-midstream-problem-and-graphite-trade-walls/

2. Bloomberg, Project Vault — https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-02-02/trump-launches-12-billion-minerals-stockpile-to-counter-china

3. CarbonCredits.com, Uranium Prices 2026 — https://carboncredits.com/uranium-prices-2026-supply-crunch-and-rising-demand-fuel-a-nuclear-bull-market/

4. U.S. State Department, 2026 Critical Minerals Ministerial — https://www.state.gov/releases/office-of-the-spokesperson/2026/02/2026-critical-minerals-ministerial