Allied Critical Metals Inc. (ACM:CSE; ACMIF:OTCQB; 0VJ0:FSE) announced additional economic and technical detail from the recently released initial Preliminary Economic Assessment for its 100% owned Borralha Tungsten Project in northern Portugal. The company stated that previously announced project economics remain unchanged.
According to the disclosure, the project has an after-tax net present value at an 8% discount rate of CA$473.4 million (US$346.6 million) and an internal rate of return of 48.8% at a tungsten price of CA$1,365 per mtu (US$1,000 per mtu) WO3. The company reported a payback period of approximately 2.2 years from the commencement of commercial production, corresponding to approximately 4.2 years from the start of construction under the same price case.
The Borralha PEA outlines an underground tungsten development project with an estimated initial capital cost of approximately CA$124.2 million (US$91 million). The company reported sustaining capital of approximately US$87 million and total life-of-mine capital of approximately US$178 million. The project design incorporates underground mine development, construction of a processing plant, and associated site infrastructure.
Average annual revenue over the initial mine life at US$1,000 per mtu WO3 was estimated at approximately CA$252.52 million (US$184.89 million). The same scenario projected average annual EBITDA of approximately CA$142.18 million (US$104.10 million) and average annual free cash flow of approximately CA$96.28 million (US$70.49 million). Life-of-mine revenue under this scenario was estimated at CA$2.78 billion (US$2.03 billion) with life-of-mine free cash flow of CA$1.06 billion (US$775.43 million).
The PEA evaluated three pricing scenarios. Under the base case of CA$962 per mtu (US$704 per mtu) WO3, the project recorded an after-tax NPV of CA$182.7 million (US$134.0 million) with an IRR of 27.2% and a payback period of 3.8 years from the start of construction. Under the high case of CA$2,049 per mtu (US$1,500 per mtu) WO3, the after-tax NPV was CA$963.8 million (US$706.4 million) with an IRR of 78.4% and a payback period of 1.2 years from the start of construction.
Roy Bonnell, CEO and Director of Allied Critical Metals, stated in a company news release, "Following the release of our initial Borralha PEA, we received strong investor interest in additional project-level detail. This supplementary disclosure highlights the Project's capital efficiency, strong annual cash generation, and well-developed infrastructure platform. Importantly, the underlying economics of the PEA remain unchanged, while the additional payback presentation provides another useful reference point for investors evaluating project returns and the strong leverage Borralha has to tungsten prices."
The initial PEA mine plan assumes life of mine average production of approximately 1,708 tonnes of WO3 per year, a processing rate of approximately 1.4 million tonnes per year of mineralized material, and an average mill feed grade of approximately 0.20% WO3. Operating costs were reported at approximately US$59.3 per tonne processed.
Infrastructure planning for the Borralha Project includes a connection to hydroelectric grid power through a planned 60-kilovolt overhead line approximately 6.5 kilometers long linking the Borralha substation to the SE Frades substation. The design also includes water supply sourced from local groundwater and surface water, water recycling within the processing flowsheet, and three retention basins for operational storage and environmental control. Surface infrastructure has been designed with a centralized layout including the process plant, paste backfill facility, workshops, administrative buildings, and support infrastructure adjacent to the orebody.
The initial mineral resource estimate referenced in the PEA is based on the 2025 mineral resource estimate for the Santa Helena Breccia. According to the estimate, measured and indicated resources total 13.0 million tonnes grading 0.21% WO3, with inferred resources of 7.7 million tonnes grading 0.18% WO3.
Allied also reported that a fully funded 20,000-meter drill program is underway, targeting resource expansion, conversion of existing resources, and potential extension of the mine life beyond the initial 11 year production plan.
Tight Supply and Export Controls Reshape the Global Tungsten Market
Tungsten market conditions drew increasing attention in early 2026 as analysts pointed to tightening supply and rising prices. According to a February 23 report from BMO Global Commodities Research cited by Mining.com, the world had "sleepwalked" into a tungsten crunch caused by declining ore grades, environmental restrictions, and a lack of new mining investment. The analysts stated that global inventories were critically low and another supply deficit was expected in 2026.
The report noted that tungsten remained essential across heavy industry. BMO wrote that tungsten carbide, valued for its hardness and density, was widely used in machine parts, drill bits, and hard-facing materials, making the metal "a key enabler of manufacturing, mining and defence." The analysts also highlighted the market's concentration, stating that China accounted for roughly 75% of global supply and that production had stagnated amid tightening environmental controls and export restrictions.
A separate February 23 analysis by Sunlight Xiang described tungsten as a critical industrial material with unique physical properties. The report stated that tungsten had "the highest melting point of any metal at 3,422°C and a density of 19.3 g/cm³," and that it played an important role in applications ranging from manufacturing equipment to semiconductor components and military systems.
Price movements reflected these supply pressures. The February 23 BMO analysis noted that ammonium paratungstate prices had broken out from a long-term average of about US$300 per tonne in 2025 to around US$1,775 per tonne by early 2026, according to Fastmarkets data. The analysts wrote that "the cure for high prices is high prices," adding that sustained higher prices would likely be required to encourage new mine development.
Supply dynamics were also shaped by policy decisions in China. According to a March 12 report published by boerse global.de, China implemented tighter export quotas for tungsten at the end of 2025, contributing to a sharp rise in prices. The report stated that tungsten prices had advanced by more than 160% over the past year, while BMO Capital Markets noted that Chinese tungsten exports had "temporarily ground to a complete halt" as the market adjusted to the new restrictions.
Important Disclosures:
- Allied Critical Metals Inc. has a consulting relationship with Street Smart an affiliate of Streetwise Reports. Street Smart Clients pay a monthly consulting fee between US$8,000 and US$20,000.
- As of the date of this article, officers, contractors, shareholders, and/or employees of Streetwise Reports LLC (including members of their household) own securities of Allied Critical Metals Inc.
- James Guttman wrote this article for Streetwise Reports LLC and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an employee.
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