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Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC) Q3 2026 Earnings Report, Transcript and Summary

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Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC)

Q3 2026 Earnings Call· Tue, Jun 9, 2026

$11.13

+4.75%

Uranium Energy Corp. Q3 2026 Earnings Call Key Takeaways

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Uranium Energy Corp. Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Uranium Energy Corp's Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Note this event is being recorded. Would now like to turn the conference over to Amir Adnani, Uranium Energy Corp's founder and CEO. Please go ahead.

Amir Adnani

Management

Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. A presentation accompanying today's call is available on our website. Some of the commentaries today will include forward-looking statements. And I would encourage everyone to review the cautionary language on Slide 2 of the presentation. With that, let's begin with highlights from the quarter. This quarter was marked by several defining milestones along the continued execution of our long-term strategy, to become America's first and only vertically integrated uranium company. From mining and processing through refining and conversion. We are also pleased to provide an update on our critical mineral portfolio. The commencement of production at Burke Hollow is a significant achievement for UEC. And an important milestone for domestic uranium production in the United States. It is the largest greenfield ISR uranium project to come into production in more than a decade. It has been incredible to see our team develop the project from a grassroots discovery in 2012 to production in 2026. Let that sink in for a moment. It took 14 years to bring a new uranium mine online. That timeline highlights the scarcity and strategic value of fully permitted and operating uranium mines, not only in the United States, but globally. It also underscores a significant competitive advantage for UEC. Which today controls 10 permitted uranium projects in the US. We are very proud of our team's efforts and accomplishments over the past 14 years to advance Burke Hollow. In addition, I would like to thank our landowner and stakeholders for their support. Building on the scale of our asset base, we are now operating 2 of our 3 US hub and spoke ISR production platforms. We control the largest uranium resource base in the United States, which provides the foundation for decades of staged production growth. Our strong balance sheet and inventory position with no debt provides us with the opportunity to pursue our 100% unhedged strategy selling opportunistically and capturing industry leading realized pricing. Generating meaningful returns for shareholders. Through our wholly owned subsidiary, United States Uranium Refining and Conversion Corp, We have created maximum alignment with the renewed bipartisan focus on energy independence national security in the US. This opportunity positions UEC as the only American vertically integrated nuclear fuel supplier from mining through conversion as nuclear power expands and fuel sourcing shifts back onshore. With policy momentum building, and long term uranium supply gaps growing, we are strategically placed at the convergence of market demand and government priorities. With that overview, let's turn to operational highlights. In the third quarter, our focus remained on expanding production capacity while maintaining a low cost production profile. As I highlighted, commencing production at Burke Hollow was a significant achievement Burke Hollow is an important part of UEC's growth strategy, allowing us to initiate production at our second hub and spoke platform anchored by the Hobson Central Processing Plant. At Christensen Ranch, we received regulatory approval for expanded production adding an additional 3 header houses at the end of March. With these approvals now in hand, we anticipate increased production rates in the fourth fiscal quarter. We have an additional 5 header houses under construction and 1 additional header house has been completed and is on standby for regulatory approval. During the quarter, 32 thousand pounds of uranium concentrate were produced at a total cost per pound of $54.61. Including a cash cost per pound of $46.69 Cost per pound did increase during the quarter. But we view this as a temporary and largely a timing related event. Regulatory approvals delayed production from new header houses. While costs associated with bringing those production areas online were incurred before the associated uranium production was fully reflected in quarterly volumes. Given the sensitivity of unit costs to production rates during this stage of the ramp up, together with higher state taxes, these factors increased cost per pound during the quarter. As production rates increase from the newly commissioned header houses, we expect cost per pound to improve. Since commissioning, UEC's total cost per pound remains a leader in the domestic industry, at $39.30 including a cash cost per pound of $32.4 across 276 thousand pounds produced. At Ludeman, our next planned ISR uranium operation in Wyoming we completed a 240-hole delineation drilling program at Sweetwater our third hub-and-spoke production platform anchored by the Sweetwater mill. We completed a 200-hole delineation drilling program in the first 2 planned wellfields at Rough Rider our development stage, conventional asset located in the Athabasca Basin in Northern Saskatchewan core drilling is over 80% complete to support our planned prefeasibility study. A key component of our long-term strategy is the United States Uranium Refining and Conversion Corp or URNC, Uranium conversion remains an acute bottleneck in the Western nuclear fuel cycle with insufficient commercial UF6 capacity outside Russia and China. At the same time, a critical gap in the US nuclear fuel cycle is the lack of a vertically integrated domestic supplier spanning mining, processing, refining and conversion. That gap underscores the importance of UEC's initiative with URNC. During the quarter, we made important strides to advance the project. We achieved our first US nuclear regulatory commission licensing milestone through receipt of a docket number. Further, ongoing discussions with the US Department of Energy regarding strategic nuclear fuel cycle infrastructure led us to add additional candidate locations to ensure coordination and alignment with federal priorities for restoring domestic uranium conversion capacity strengthening America's nuclear fuel supply chain. We have now developed the final shortlist of candidate locations. Finally, we are excited to spotlight a recent update for 1 of our critical mineral projects, Alto Parana in Paraguay. Recent completed independent report determined that the project represents a globally significant critical minerals platform with the potential to materially contribute to the security and diversification of US supply chains titanium and vanadium. UEC's critical minerals portfolio, which includes the West Bear cobalt nickel project in Canada, has been assembled through timely acquisitions over the last decade and represents additional embedded value that we will look to unlock for shareholders through ongoing initiatives. This strategy and component of our business aligns with the urgent need for reestablishing critical mineral supplies in support of national and economic security. Now turning to our financial position. We finished the quarter with $794 million in liquid assets, including $488 million in cash along with uranium inventory and equities and importantly, no debt. As of 04/30/2026, we held 1.4 million pounds of U3O8, valued at approximately $127 million at current market prices. Excluding the additional approximately 277 thousand pounds of precipitated uranium and dried and drummed U3O8 held at the Irigaray Central Processing Plant. UEC's balance sheet combined with our unique unhedged strategy provides the flexibility to be selective in the execution of sales, as demonstrated in the third quarter where we preserved our inventory. As many are familiar, our operational platform is built around scalable hub-and-spoke ISR operations in Wyoming and South Texas. Supported by longer term development projects at Sweetwater and Rough Rider. Starting in Wyoming, through our ongoing construction campaigns, we continue to scale production at Christensen Ranch which operates as the first spoke to the Irigaray CPP. As of 04/30/2026, total cumulative production from Christensen Ranch since restart was approximately 277 thousand pounds of precipitated uranium and dried and drummed U3O8 at the Irigaray CPP at a total cost per pound of $39.30, including a cash cost per pound of $32.40. The company continued to develop new production areas at Christensen Ranch during the quarter. Turning to Ludeman, UECE's next planned ISR operation. The previously announced 240-hole delineation drilling program was completed, This work will assist well field pattern design currently underway. Engineering of the satellite ion exchange plant progressed with the plant layout and pad design largely finalized and fabrication of the ion exchange vessels ahead of schedule We continue to advance the remainder of the mechanical equipment specifications, which allows the company to begin the procurement process for longer lead time equipment. Turning to South Texas, we commenced production at the Burke Hollow project on 04/08/2026, in order to initiate the uranium recovery process oxygen and carbon dioxide were injected into the well field and will provide initial feed to the ion exchange plant. The satellite ion exchange plant was commissioned and well field development continues in Phase 1A. Now that it is online, we expect to see production from Burke Hollow accounted for in the fiscal fourth quarter of 26. Looking further ahead towards our development stage assets, Sweetwater is earmarked to be a major future production center and we are working expeditiously towards this operation as both a conventional mill and a central plant for processing ISR production. Further, a 200-hole delineation drilling program in the first 2 planned well fields at Sweetwater commenced in March and was completed in early May. A second 200-hole delineation drilling program is scheduled to begin in July 2026, where the third ISR well field at Sweetwater is planned. Finally, the ion exchange vessels for the Sweetwater ISR Circuit Are Under Construction. In Saskatchewan, Canada, we continued advancing the Rough Rider project 1 of the highest grade undeveloped uranium projects in the world. More than 80% of the planned 35 thousand-meter drilling program has now been completed. In support of the upcoming pre-feasibility study. Turning to URNC. In addition to the progress we have made on siting, we continue to accelerate engineering work led by Fluor, have advanced into a new phase. With a significant expansion of engineering and technical resources supporting facility design, siding, licensing, and development. Through this process, we have been engaging with the US Department of Energy to align with key national priorities regarding restoring nuclear fuel cycle sovereignty. As a result, additional candidate locations were added to ensure coordination and alignment with such priorities. Last but not least, Alto Parana, our project in Paraguay. As mentioned, a recently completed independent report concluded that the project represents a globally significant critical mineral platform with the potential to materially contribute to this security and diversification of US supply chains for titanium and vanadium. The project's unique strategic fit being located in a US aligned partner country, its access to clean low cost power, and its ability to integrate into US and allied downstream processing supply chains. We view the project as notable because it addresses structural vulnerabilities in US critical minerals policy. It demonstrates our long standing approach to identifying, acquiring and developing assets that align with U. S. National security, advanced manufacturing, and resilient critical mineral supply chains. Finally, the broader policy backdrop remains robust. On 04/23/2026, the US Department of Energy, through its office of nuclear energy, and the Defense Production Act Nuclear Fuel Cycle Consortium. Launched the nuclear dominance 3x33 campaign to secure The United States nuclear fuel supply chain and support future reactor deployment. The campaign is structured around 3 core objectives to be achieved by 2033, including catalyzing a secure and cost competitive domestic nuclear fuel supply chain accelerating advanced reactor deployment and finally leveraging the DPA framework to align workforce development financing innovation and industry collaboration in support of the nuclear buildout. Against that backdrop, let me briefly summarize the progress we made during the quarter. First, we successfully brought online the largest greenfield ISR project in the US in over a decade, Burke Hollow's progression from discovery in 2012 to production in 2026 serves as a reminder that uranium production capacity cannot simply be created overnight. Reinforcing the important strategic value of UEC's operating assets and portfolio of permitted uranium projects, Second, we have expanded capacity enabling increased production rates as we move towards the end of the fiscal year. Lastly, we have advanced URNC to a final shortlist of candidate locations and are moving toward the next phase of engineering siting and licensing activities. All of this was accomplished while maintaining 1 of the strongest balance sheets in the sector, with significant liquidity and no debt. With the largest uranium resource base in the United States, growing production infrastructure, and a clear pathway towards expanding our role across the nuclear fuel cycle. We believe UEC is well positioned for the next phase of growth in the uranium market. Our strategic critical mineral portfolio provides for adjacent opportunities supported by similar policy priorities. Before we open the line for questions, I would like to note that I am joined today by Josephine Man, our Chief Financial Officer Scott Melby, our Executive Vice President; and Brent D. Berg, our Senior Vice President of U. S. Operations. With that, operator, please open the line for questions.

Operator

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. Please press [Operator Instructions]. Also, please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up. Re-queue to ask additional questions. Our first question comes from Brian Lee with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Brian Lee

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Guess I had a couple here. First on the cost side, Amir, be curious. I know you said it is going to normalize a bit here into the fiscal year and beyond and the lower volumes in fiscal Q3 and the taxes obviously pushed costs up in the quarter. Can you maybe quantify a little bit sort of what that normalization is going to look like over the next quarter or 2? Are you back into the $30s as quickly as fiscal Q4? Is that going to take a couple of quarters? And then maybe give us some of the moving pieces beyond volume. Are there other cost drivers beyond just higher production volumes?

Amir Adnani

Management

Hi, Brian. Thank you for the question. And as you have seen in the press release and the in the remarks earlier that I made, we did highlight sort of the key drivers here and really to expand on it and your question. As you know, a large portion of our operating costs are fixed. So again, when production volumes are temporarily lowered due to the timing of these well field approvals, unit costs are impacted. We would definitely sort of draw attention to the total cost per pound over the course of the 276 thousand pounds produced which comes in, as you know, within a cash cost per pound of roughly $32.40. This remains industry-competitive and a leading number in the domestic industry. In The US. As we mentioned in the press release and the material, Brian, we do expect that the trend on production going into fiscal Q4 and beyond, is higher. So again, in an environment where this is, the biggest, sensitivity for us, and the economies of scale do matter. I definitely think that, we should be improving on the numbers that you saw in this quarter. Me just pause and hand it over to our CFO, Josephine Man, for just any additional color or commentary on that.

Josephine Man

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

Thanks, Amir. Hey, this is Josephine. Yes, I think Amir is correct. As we are expecting to increase our production in the coming quarters, definitely we will see the total cost per pound and cash cost per pound to be to be comparatively lower than this quarter. As well, Amir mentioned that a big portion of our operating costs are fixed. So when the production volumes are temporarily low this quarter, it definitely drives the total cost per pound increase as compared to our Q2. But with the new well fields in Christensen Ranch and Burke Hollow coming to production in the fourth quarter this fiscal year. We are expecting to have lower cost per pound in the coming quarters. Back to you, Amir.

Amir Adnani

Management

Thank you, Josephine. Brian, did you have a follow-up on that?

Brian Lee

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

No, that is helpful. Maybe just as we think about those production volumes, with the 3 header houses on in Christensen Ranch and Burke Hollow, producing in Q4. Sort of what is the step function? It seems like there should be a step function increase in volumes. Is it pretty linear where we can kind of take the header houses and Chris Ranch and look at the volume from Q3 and sort of triple that? Or what is sort of the ramp up cadence, if you will, at least in the near term? And then maybe last question, if I could squeeze it in. Just thoughts around URNC and the timing of key milestones as we think about the second half of the calendar year here? Thank you.

Amir Adnani

Management

Hey, Brian. Thank you, Brian. And you certainly squeezed a lot in there, but okay, we will unpack all of that. We have been really ramping up when it comes to our construction capability and campaigns to build additional header houses, which is basically production capacity. And yes, there is a linear relationship there. Again, for context, if we step back this is after our industry really collectively was dormant for about 15 years and the last couple of years, we are coming back into this area and this time of incredible progress and activity. I am going to hand it to Brent Berg to speak a bit about the growth we have had year over year in terms of our personnel workforce capacity and the ability to keep expanding and constructing this production capability. Brent, over to you.

Brent D. Berg

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

Hey, Brian. Just operate. Oh, there you go. Go ahead. You were muted, Brent, but just start from the start. again. Okay. Very good. Brian, I was just saying that a year ago, we had 103 employees in Wyoming and Texas. Today, we have grown our operations team to 185 personnel. So in 2025, the UEC team was heavily dependent on external contractors for construction and continued mine development. Today, much of that work is being done in house by our own team. We continue to build a team that can rapidly deploy the other projects. In UEC's portfolio. And maybe just 1 other note with respect to production and normalizing. So during the quarter, the bulk of that production came from Wellfields 8 and 10 with 8 active header houses. And production predominantly came from new wells that were installed in 2025 with header houses 10.7 and 10.8. Accounting for the bulk of the production. During the fiscal quarter. Of course, we started up Wellfield 11 3 new header houses at the end of the quarter, and it is we really will not see that production until this fourth quarter, but anticipate that to move up substantially. Thank you. Back to you, Amir.

Amir Adnani

Management

Okay. And Brian, I think you were asking about URNC and you know, specifically as we mentioned in the release, we are really ramping up into the next phase here of engineering works citing permitting with an expansion of the of the engineering team. And the work that is being provided by Fluor as well. Our own team increased in size and scope over this period. Siding work has been coordinated as we mentioned in the press release with some of the initiatives that are taking place at the Department of Energy. Making sure we have maximum alignment there. We have always believed that the project and the and really the need to build a new conversion facility was and had and has maximum alignment with priorities in The US right now around creating a more resilient nuclear fuel cycle and to really repatriate the nuclear fuel cycle with the Russian ban kicking in by the end of 2027. Really, that is around the corner. The current key bottleneck in our mind and the market really remains a shortage of sufficient domestic conversion. So that work is advancing and really has kicked into the next gear from a standpoint of the engineering, siting and licensing as we mentioned. Thank you, Brian.

Operator

Operator

And the next question comes from Heiko Ihle with H. C. Wainwright. Please go ahead.

Heiko Ihle

Analyst · H. C. Wainwright. Please go ahead

Hi Amir and team. Thanks for taking my questions. I just want to point out the stock's still up 68% year-over-year. So something's going right. That said, how much in this quarter would you say was a continuation of regulatory delays that was seen in the last quarter? I mean, looks like you are working past all of that. But maybe just give a bit of color with snow, you know, almost mid-June. Some color on the current quarter and maybe even the remainder of calendar 2026?

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Heiko, and I appreciate the context that your question provides.

Amir Adnani

Management

And if we step back and if you have been following the company, you know that we talked about these regulatory delays extensively in our last quarter, And so really, this is a continuation of that. And it is a continuation of a broader theme of, industry growing pains that we are experiencing just as the industry and ourselves are ramping up. Brent spoke about the fact that the sheer size of our workforce has gone from just over 100 people to almost 200 people year over year. Imagine that kind of growth. Well, the regulators are going through similar type of staffing and other bandwidth capacity that they need to have. And so these regulatory delays that we experienced, impacted lower production in this quarter were discussed and really described in the last quarter, and we are making good progress Those approvals did come in except that they came in near the end of this quarter. And so, hence, it was a delay, but these are delays that have been resolved. And so that is important to highlight as well. So things are progressing, and that is why it gives us the confidence as well to be able to speak to a better outlook and improve the numbers going into the fourth fiscal year of for the company and beyond that. So for sure, I think to your point, if we step back there should be no surprises here. But at the same time, you look at even the numbers for this quarter from production cost point of view, you zoom out and look at it over the 276 thousand pounds produced. Company is still delivering on the lowest cost production in The United States and in the domestic industry. So we have got a lot of capacity in front of us coming online. The additional header houses at Christensen Ranch, the construction that is going to be taking place at Ludeman, that will be our 3rd ISR operation in Wyoming. Not to mention Burke Hollow that did start operations this quarter and will be contributing to production moving forward very proud of the work at Burke Hollow. As you know, that is a project that is 14 years in the making. I talked about it earlier in my remarks. And so cannot lose sight of all the construction development and deliverables that we have as well.

Heiko Ihle

Analyst · H. C. Wainwright. Please go ahead

Fair enough. Completely different thing. Let's talk about your equity book a little bit. I mean, this obviously has been creating a decent amount of volatility over the past few quarters. Is there a way to more normalize going forward, just for stability and more predictability for the analyst community?

Amir Adnani

Management

Yes, that is a fair question, Heiko. And as you know, our know our equity book is strategically positioned in some names that we have exposure to in the sector. It does cause this quarterly mark to market volatility This quarter, as you also know, given some weakness and kind of flat movement we saw in the uranium prices, we selected to continue to maintain our inventory position, so there were no sales this quarter. Again, that was intentional, and that is a function of our unhedged strategy. But moving forward as we achieve more of a regular quarterly cadence of sales and reporting around that equity book, I think, can probably move towards more of a on an adjusted basis where we can maybe pull that out and not have it, you know, impact the reported numbers. And, Josephine, if you wanna comment on that as well, but, I think that is part of the progression of where hopefully heading. Josephine, if you if you wanna add to that.

Josephine Man

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

Yes. Thanks, Amir, and hi, Heiko. I think that is right. The volatility in the market creates a little bit of know, unknown to our income statements as you can see in our quarterly results, you know, about $19 million was attributed to that change in fair market. Value of our equity securities. So moving forward, you know, the reconciliation of disclosure of adjusted EBITDA, I think would help the community and our stakeholders to understand our results of operations better. Back to you, Amir.

Amir Adnani

Management

Alright. Thank you. Thank you, Heiko.

Operator

Operator

Thank And the next question comes from Alexander Pearce with BMO. Please go ahead.

Alexander Pearce

Analyst · BMO. Please go ahead

Thanks. Good morning, all. So Amir, well, this may be a question for Brent. But just building on question we had before about production in the quarter. If you took the delayed new header houses aside from it, production was down quarter on quarter. So maybe you can just talk about what you are seeing in the older header houses and was this a function of tie ins or flow rates or what the first part of the question. Thanks

Amir Adnani

Management

Hi, Alexander. Yeah. Thank you for that and good to have you on the call. I will hand it over to Brent here shortly. But definitely I would say again most of what you would normally see, Alexander, in terms of an operation like this with really multiple header houses would be able to manage some of the near term natural decline curves that are gonna be inevitable in some of the producing well fields. With much fewer numbers online right now there is bound to be some greater volatility in kind of the quarter over quarter numbers. But certainly, as that bandwidth increases in terms of number of wells, fields, and header houses, we should be able to smooth the numbers out. And better manage that natural decline curve that exists in institute recovery. I will hand it over to Brent now.

Operator

Operator

Go ahead, Brent.

Brent D. Berg

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

Yes. Thanks, Amir. Alexander, maybe just a little color on that. So the production at Christensen Ranch came predominantly from Wellfields 8 and 10 with 8 active header houses operating. And that production came predominantly from new wells that were installed in 2025. So header houses 10.7 and 10.8 accounted for over 50% of that production in the fiscal Q3. And 87% of overall production came from new wellfield patterns that we installed in the same year. So, know, with that, we have really focused our production ramp up with ongoing mine development, and that development has continued in both Wellfield 12 and 10 expansion. Where we have 5 header houses under construction. 2 of those in Wellfield 10 are nearing completion. With another 2 under construction. And 1 header house in Wellfield 12 is nearing completion of construction. So in total, 4 header houses are planned in Wellfield 12 for future production. The monitor wells have been completed. The pump test is planned. With respect to well installation, all drilling is completed for header house 12.1. And in that well field 10 extension, drilling at Header House is 10.9, 10.10 and 10.11 is complete and drilling started for Header house 10.12. So we have been really focused on development and you know, of course, you know, collaboration with our regulators is important. But, you know, really, I think the best way we can assure that new production comes online quickly is by steadily advancing new infrastructure on the ground. Amir, back to you.

Amir Adnani

Management

Alright. Thank you, Brent. Alexander, back to you.

Alexander Pearce

Analyst · BMO. Please go ahead

Okay. Thanks for that. Maybe a second part of the question then. Obviously, you have mentioned the new well fields coming on with the new regulatory approvals. But have you seen any streamlining of the process for getting the regulatory approval so that going forward, maybe you can manage better and avoid some of the delays that you saw for this round?

Operator

Operator

Go ahead, Brent.

Brent D. Berg

Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead

Yeah. I would say that state regulatory agencies have demonstrated a very high level of collaboration and are actively working to address some of those longer lead time challenges that naturally arise during periods of increased industry activity. UEC, of course, has remained active and has an ongoing dialogue with the agencies. Continuing to advance well field development in parallel. And you know, I would say this coordinated approach allows us to progress and maintain on both regulatory and operational fronts. Timing for the reviews ultimately rests with the agencies themselves. You know, However, you know, we I can confirm that the infrastructure development related activities continue to move forward. We will certainly provide more updates as key operational milestones are achieved. I would say the regulator, like us, when we restarted operations is, of course, growing and responding to increased regulatory submissions that come across their desks. And you know, we are seeing some progress and some improvement Back to you, Amir.

Amir Adnani

Management

Right. Alexander.

Operator

Operator

The next question comes from Justin Chan with SCP Resource Finance. Please go ahead.

Justin Chan

Analyst · SCP Resource Finance. Please go ahead

it is SCP, but I will forgive you for that. I was probably I probably bumbled there. For taking the questions, Amir and team. Hi. Maybe just to follow-up on Alexander's question on maybe first to clarify, I guess you would have 5 header houses now producing at Christensen Ranch, like, 5 plus or 2 plus 3. And then maybe just as a bigger kind of my main question on this direction is what level of header houses and maybe rollouts per month do you think you would need to get to that 1 million or 2 million pounds a year level given, you know, some of the wells will be declining? You will need new ones to come on. I guess, what do you see as steady state in that regard?

Amir Adnani

Management

Hey, Justin. Thanks for the question. And there is no doubt, and this is what you are building on, that there is a linear relationship between this construction activity, building new header houses and well fields, and the increase in production that we are expecting and building out. We are right now, as you know, reporting and kind of providing updates on this activity in our quarterly reports and by the time I think you see us report to fiscal year end where we have had a chance to bring several more of the header houses online and see them actually in operation. There will be a better ability to kind of forecast and see the contribution from each header house towards a segment of production. Bottom line is that not every header house is the same size or created equal. So while there is a linear relationship, I think some of that ability to kinda just extrapolate that forward might not be as simple as kind of, you know, this many header houses to get to that end result. And as you know, you know, we are really looking to get to those, higher production outputs. We have the largest resource base in the US. We have got 12 million pounds of combined license capacity. But to really increase production, we need to be able to continue to deliver on some new projects and new header houses, all of which is moving forward and advancing, Burke Hollow being a notable 1. And so we will have more information on all of that. But Brent, if you wanna just comment on that too additionally for Justin's question.

Brent D. Berg

Analyst · SCP Resource Finance. Please go ahead

Yeah. Absolutely. Hi, Justin. As you noted, we had 2 header houses constructed and installed in 2025. Those are header houses in 10 expansion 7 and 8. Of course, we recently added 3 into production. In well field 11. So that is 11.1, 11.3, and 11.4. And we have got 5 under construction now. The other thing I would note, Justin, is, you know, we have significantly, increased our drilling capacity to install wells that, of course, the drive production as well. And, you know, we have got a 3-fold increase from what we started the operation at Christensen Ranch to today. So we are really ramping up our construction capacity and you know, zeroing in on increasing our production profile as we move forward. Amir, back to you.

Amir Adnani

Management

Alright. Thank you for that. Thank you, Justin.

Operator

Operator

And the next question comes from Joseph Reagor with ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead

Hey, Amir and team. Thanks for taking the questions. Lot of what I wanted to ask was already touched on, but just kind of a few things left. I guess, you guys did a job of explaining why production declines over time. But as you look back at Christensen Ranch's performance, today compared to what was let's say, you know, the model ahead of time, you know, has it performed in line with expectations slightly better, slightly worse? Obviously, the you know, regulatory stuff's out of your control. But how is the mine performing compared to the model?

Amir Adnani

Management

Hey, Joe. I mean, thank you for that. And, you know, we could not be any more clear about the performance. I mean, the ultimate performance of any mine is the cost and the and the output and the efficiencies there. And for a project that on this call in particular, we have spent, a lot of airtime, given to regulatory delays that are outside of our control. We can lose sight of the fact that we are 277 thousand pounds in a across really a modest number of header houses, and we have industry leading production costs. that is really a testament to the efficiency of the operation, the quality of our team, and the work that is being done to really deliver these industry leading numbers. So I would argue, and I think you would you and I have talked about this that the cost numbers out of Christensen Ranch, in fact, have come in better than expected and better than expectations that folks said in terms of how the project can do. So no doubt that as we continue to expand the project, our confidence is built on the foundation that this could be a very efficient low cost operation And it really is about making sure we can install and construct and build additional output and capacity which Hatterhouses afford and provide. So certainly something that we are very pleased about. This is a project that is a brownfield and historically has prior to our restart, had 6, 7 years of prior operating history as well. So it is it is certainly a notable project along the way. As you know, we have had not just refurbishments, but upgrades and all types of work done that we have reported in prior quarters. So we have come a long way in a very short period of time, and it is really only been about 15, 16 months since production started. And as I mentioned in the last quarter, most of this low cost production so far has been carried up I would say, 6, almost 70% of the load has been carried by 2 header houses. that is quite remarkable. So certainly gives us the confidence to continue to invest and you have seen that in our numbers that we had increased investment in Christensen Ranch this past quarter. Really driven by the additional construction work that we are doing and are completing and have underway.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead

Yeah. Just to have you say it. I know that is the sense I got. Then the other item you know, it is mentioned in the release that you are working on the PFS for Rough Rider. what is the timing goal for you guys to have that PFS, like, have the summary released?

Amir Adnani

Management

Joe, that is a great question, and we are as you as you noticed in the release, did not did not list an end time on that, and that is mainly because we are only almost done with the conversion drilling. 80% done. We need that work to be completed. We need to make sure that you know, all the steps with respect to getting our chemical assay results back, on that drilling is in hand. And the work can be completed with the third party technical and engineering firms that are onboard and available. If I had to sort of estimate at this point what we are looking at, Joe, I would say we are estimating towards the end of the calendar year to have that PFS ready. But that is an estimate at this point and but something that we are you know, definitely working towards and hopefully we will have it by then.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead

Okay. I will turn it over. Thanks, Amir.

Amir Adnani

Management

Thank you, Joe.

Operator

Operator

And the next question comes from Kristian Koschany with National Bank Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Kristian Koschany

Analyst · National Bank Capital Markets. Please go ahead

Hi, Amir and all. Hi, Kristian. Thanks for taking my question. Calling on behalf of Mohamed. Just going back to the UR and C timing that we were talking about earlier, I just wanted to confirm that the conversion study should now be expected in 2027?

Amir Adnani

Management

Hey, yes, Kristian, thanks for that question. It should be a 2027 event between now and then We will have further updates along the way as we are progressing on the work including, again, whether it is on-site, whether it is any of our discussions with strategic partners and/or US government and or even potential utility offtake discussions that we are having So there will be updates along the way. But in with respect to the work that will culminate in supporting what would ultimately be a class for cost study, which is what the next phase of study on this will be. It will be a first half of calendar 2027 event.

Kristian Koschany

Analyst · National Bank Capital Markets. Please go ahead

Brent. Thanks very much. And then I was wondering if you folks could provide us with some more color on the change in ad valorem taxes or production based royalties in Wyoming for modeling? Purposes?

Amir Adnani

Management

Yeah. I am gonna hand it over to our CFO, Josephine to provide some color on that. Go ahead, Josephine.

Josephine Man

Analyst · National Bank Capital Markets. Please go ahead

Yeah. Thanks, Amir. Thanks for the question. Yeah. So this is a normal and routine process with the, Wyoming Department of Revenue. So they have been very fair to the uranium industry during the previous ups and downs in the commodity cycle. We see that the state of Wyoming taxes levies 2 separate tax on the mineral production in the states. So it is a severance tax and the ad valorem tax. The severance tax is imposed on at the state level, while the ad valorem tax is imposed on the county level. So right now, we see that there is a increase in, the industry factors that the Department of Revenue used to capture the value of the uranium production to calculate both taxes. So in this quarter, we saw there is an increase that in this industry factors And the increase was for a 4-year cycle. So this new industry factors is applied prospectively from 2026 to 2020. So we will see a steady industry factor that will be applied to our uranium production in the next couple of years. Back to you, Amir.

Amir Adnani

Management

Okay. Thank you, Josephine, and thank you, Christian.

Operator

Operator

This concludes our question and answer session. Would like to turn the conference back over to Amir Adnani for any closing remarks.

Amir Adnani

Management

Yes, thank you. And thank you all for joining the call and we look forward to any follow on communications that we might have with you in the coming days. And look forward to the quarter ahead. Thank you all and have a good rest of your day.

Operator

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.