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Resolution Minerals wins second FAST-41 designation for Idaho project

15 hours ago
By AI, Created 04:52 UTC, Jul 17, 2026, AGP -

Resolution Minerals secured FAST-41 transparency coverage for its Golden Gate Project in Idaho, giving the company two federally prioritized permitting tracks at Horse Heaven. The move could speed up development of U.S. antimony, tungsten and gold assets as Washington pushes harder on domestic critical minerals supply.

Why it matters: - The new designation adds federal permitting support for a second Resolution Minerals project, which can improve timeline visibility and agency coordination. - The FAST-41 coverage strengthens Resolution's push to develop a U.S.-based critical minerals platform tied to antimony, tungsten and gold. - The designation comes as the U.S. works to reduce reliance on overseas suppliers for minerals used in defense, advanced manufacturing and industrial applications.

What happened: - Resolution Minerals said Golden Gate Project in Idaho was added to the Federal Permitting Transparency Program on July 16, 2026. - The addition gives Resolution two FAST-41-covered development targets within its Horse Heaven Project. - The company already had FAST-41 recognition for its Antimony Ridge Project earlier this year. - Resolution said Golden Gate was added to the FAST-41 Transparency Dashboard under an executive order aimed at increasing American mineral production.

The details: - Horse Heaven includes Golden Gate and Antimony Ridge within a 15,000-acre land package. - The project area sits next to Perpetua Resources' permitted Stibnite Gold Project. - Resolution has also assembled processing infrastructure through its Johnson Creek Tungsten Mill acquisition, historical tungsten stockpiles and a fully funded Phase 2 drilling program. - Golden Gate includes a historical tungsten mine that operated intermittently from the 1950s to 1980. - Reported production grades from that mine ranged from 1.5% to 2.0% tungsten. - Under Resolution's submitted Plan of Operations, the U.S. Forest Service accepted a proposal for new access roads linking Golden Gate North and Golden Gate South. - The plan also allows up to 340 drill holes and 2,000 feet of trenching across the project. - Resolution is continuing a 13,700-meter, or 45,000-foot, drill program at Golden Gate. - The company has completed 22 holes so far. - Initial results from the first several holes are expected before the end of July. - Resolution said the designation may help it engage strategic partners and funding sources aligned with U.S. critical minerals policy. - The company also said the FAST-41 coverage supports its planned NASDAQ listing.

Between the lines: - Two FAST-41 designations in one project area is unusual and signals that Horse Heaven is being treated as strategically important. - The federal permitting path could make Resolution more competitive if investors and partners want exposure to U.S.-based critical minerals with clearer development milestones. - The asset mix suggests the company is trying to link exploration, processing and permitting into one domestic supply chain story rather than a single-mine thesis.

What's next: - Resolution will move the Golden Gate Plan of Operations through the FAST-41 process with the U.S. Forest Service. - After approval, the company plans a larger drilling campaign to expand coverage across Golden Gate North and South. - Resolution will also test whether the two mineralized zones form one contiguous system. - The company expects more assay results from the current drill program before the end of July.

The bottom line: - Resolution now has two federally prioritized permitting tracks at Horse Heaven, giving its Idaho critical minerals push more policy support and potentially faster execution.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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