US Govt backs Dateline mining rights at Californian gold play
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Murray Ward
Dateline Resources has received a major shot in the arm for its flagship Colosseum gold project in California, with the United States Department of Justice, or “DOJ”, throwing its weight behind the company in a federal court stoush.
The market gave the update a resounding thumbs-up, pushing the company’s shares up 41 per cent to 19 cents on heavy early trading volumes.
The DOJ has filed a motion arguing that the company’s existing Plan of Operations for the mine remains valid and that no new plan is required to authorise its activities.
The submission was made in response to legal proceedings initiated by the non-governmental National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA), which challenged the April 2025 recognition of Dateline’s “Valid Existing Rights” at the mine by the US Department of the Interior and the National Park Service.
‘The NCPA has not submitted any evidence that asserts that the “Valid Existing Rights” have been terminated.’
Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi
The company says the DOJ’s position is that the NPCA is unlikely to succeed and that the government’s 2025 correspondence merely confirmed the plan’s existing legal status, rather than constituting a new approval.
The DOJ’s backing appears to be a significant de-risking event for Dateline as it moves to resurrect the past-producing mine.
Dateline Resources managing director Stephen Baghdadi said: “The Department of Justice’s submissions closely reflect the position Dateline has maintained throughout these proceedings. The DOJ submission clearly notes the repeated language employed in correspondence by the various Government agencies over time that “Valid Existing Rights” are still in place.”
The timing could not be better, coming just months after the company tabled a bankable feasibility study (BFS) for Colosseum that outlined some seriously robust economics. The study is underpinned by a JORC-compliant mineral resource of 27.1 million tonnes grading 1.26 grams per tonne gold for 1.1 million ounces.
The BFS, released in May, projected a high-margin gold operation with a pre-tax net present value of US$785 million (A$1.13 billion) and a pre-tax internal rate of return of 49.5 per cent. Whilst those numbers were based on a gold price of US$4200 (A$6050) per ounce, the study’s high margins suggest the project could remain profitable even at more conservative gold prices.
Adding further weight to the mine’s robust metrics and likely restart, Dateline’s non-executive chairman, Mark Johnson, recently tipped in an eye-catching A$1.95 million by exercising a swag of listed options, lifting his personal stake in the company to a hefty 15.3 per cent.
However, Colosseum is shaping up to be much more than just a gold play. The project also sits just 10 kilometres north of the giant Mountain Pass rare earths mine – the only scaled rare earths mining and processing operation in North America.
Dateline says it is focused on a dual-commodity prize and has already kicked off drill testing at Colosseum for valuable magnet-heavy rare earths such as dysprosium and terbium.
The company has also been busy consolidating its other Californian landholding at its Music Valley heavy rare earths project and has acquired the Argos strontium project, 100 kilometres from Colosseum, reportedly the largest deposit of its kind in the United States.
With the US Government now publicly backing its right to operate at Colosseum, a solid BFS in its back pocket and its chairman putting serious skin in the game, Dateline’s path to production in California suddenly looks to be a whole lot clearer.
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