Skip to main content

When Tungsten Costs More Than Gold Used To, Miners Step Up

Newswire.ca - Mon Mar 2, 8:00AM CST

Issued on behalf of GoldHaven Resources Corp.

VANCOUVER, BC, March 2, 2026 /CNW/ -- Equity-Insider.com News Commentary -- The world has "sleepwalked" into a tungsten supply crunch, with prices surging fivefold over the past year to around $1,775 per tonne as Chinese exports plummet and global inventories run critically low[1]. Australia has committed $800 million to a strategic critical minerals reserve, the European Union is building a joint stockpile under its RESourceEU strategy, and India and Brazil recently deepened bilateral cooperation on rare earths and critical metals[2]. Companies advancing polymetallic and critical mineral assets include GoldHaven Resources (CSE: GOH) (OTCQB: GHVNF), Ivanhoe Mines (TSX: IVN), Surge Copper (TSXV: SURG), Defense Metals (TSXV: DEFN), and Stillwater Critical Minerals (TSXV: PGE).

Read more at newswire.ca

This article contains syndicated content. We have not reviewed, approved, or endorsed the content, and may receive compensation for placement of the content on this site. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
This section contains press releases and other materials from third parties (including paid content). The Globe and Mail has not reviewed this content. Please see disclaimer.