Welcome to our dedicated page for Canadian Critical Minerals news (Ticker: RIINF), a resource for investors and traders seeking the latest updates and insights on Canadian Critical Minerals stock.
Canadian Critical Minerals Inc (RIINF) operates advanced mining projects focused on copper, gold, and silver extraction through innovative ore sorting technology. This page aggregates official announcements and verified news about operational developments, financial performance, and strategic initiatives at its Bull River Mine and other assets.
Investors and industry observers will find timely updates on production milestones, resource estimates, and partnership agreements. The curated news collection serves as a reliable reference for tracking the company's progress in mineral processing efficiency, infrastructure upgrades, and exploration activities.
Content highlights include earnings disclosures, technical breakthroughs in ore sorting systems, and updates on the Thierry Mine interest. All materials are sourced from authorized releases to ensure accuracy and compliance with financial reporting standards.
Bookmark this page for streamlined access to critical updates about Canadian Critical Minerals' copper production capabilities, mine development progress, and industry positioning. Check regularly for new insights into operational strategies and resource management practices.
Canadian Critical Minerals (CCMI) has updated its permit application strategy for restarting the Bull River Mine (BRM) project near Cranbrook, BC. The company is now combining two phases into a single application to simultaneously restart underground mining and milling operations. CCMI has engaged Moose Mountain Technical Services for underground mine planning (expected completion: August 2025) and ALS Metallurgical Services for humidity cell testing on tailings.
The company has been selling preconcentrated copper, gold, and silver material to New Afton under an Ore Purchase Agreement, having shipped approximately 7,900 tonnes with an additional 2,100 tonnes expected by August 2025. The remaining 170,000 tonnes of mineralized fines will provide initial mill feed for about eight months post-restart. The BRM project features over $100 million of usable infrastructure and 22,000 metres of accessible underground workings.
Canadian Critical Minerals (OTCQB: RIINF) reported revenue of USD$144,000 from the sale of stockpiled minerals at its Bull River Mine project. In April 2025, the company shipped 429 dry metric tonnes of sorted mineralized material to New Afton, containing grades of 2.87% Cu, 1.97 g/t Au, and 21.0 g/t Ag.
Operations were temporarily halted due to road restrictions imposed by British Columbia's Ministry of Transportation from March 7, 2025, until late April 2025. The company has now resumed trucking operations and plans to continue shipping both stockpiled higher-grade mineralized material and newly processed material through May 2025.
Canadian Critical Minerals (CCMI) held its annual and special meeting in Calgary on April 29, 2025, where shareholders approved all proposed matters. Key approvals included the re-election of six directors - Ian Berzins, David W. Johnston, Aaron Matlock, John Morgan, Heather Kennedy, and Chris Stewart. Shareholders also appointed Kenway Mack Slusarchuk Stewart LLP as auditors and approved the company's rolling stock option plan.
Additionally, following the lifting of road restrictions by British Columbia's Ministry of Transportation, CCMI successfully shipped 11 trucks of high-grade mineralized copper material to New Afton in late April 2025. The company plans to continue shipping both stockpiled higher-grade material and new ore-sorted material throughout May 2025.
Canadian Critical Minerals reports revenue from its Bull River Mine project near Cranbrook, BC for March 2025. The company shipped 254 dry metric tonnes of sorted copper, gold, and silver mineralized material to New Afton, generating a provisional payment of approximately USD$79,000.
Key highlights:
- Material grades: 3.14% Cu, 0.82 g/t Au, and 25.2 g/t Ag
- Limited to six truck shipments due to spring road restrictions
- Carriers restricted to 70% total weight, reducing payload to 50%
The company faced operational challenges with x-ray transmissive ore sorter sensors, resulting in lower copper grades. These issues have been resolved, though early March saw higher copper content in rejects than usual. All rejected material maintains sufficient grade for future processing once the mill receives operating permits.
Trading symbols: TSXV: CCMI | OTCQB: RIINF
Canadian Critical Minerals (CCMI) has reported revenue of USD$185,000 from its Bull River Mine project near Cranbrook, BC. The company shipped 542 dry metric tonnes of sorted mineralized material to New Afton in February 2025, containing grades of 4.71% Cu, 0.78 g/t Au and 47.8 g/t Ag.
The company expanded operations by adding a second sorting crew, though operations were briefly paused for annual maintenance in late February. While six trucks of pre-concentrated material were shipped in early March, further shipments are temporarily suspended due to spring road restrictions in southern British Columbia, which reduce payload capacity to 50%. CCMI plans to resume full shipping operations in early to mid-April 2025 once restrictions are lifted.
Canadian Critical Minerals (CCMI) has announced significant increases in mineral resources at its Bull River Mine near Cranbrook, B.C. The updated Mineral Resource Estimate shows an 11% increase in copper metal and a 17% increase in gold metal content compared to the 2021 estimate.
The total Indicated Mineral Resource now stands at 2.9Mt grading 1.58% Cu, 0.389 g/t Au, and 13.3 g/t Ag. The surface stockpile contains 173,263 tonnes of mineralized material grading 1.092% copper, 0.232 g/t gold, and 9.1 g/t silver, representing 4,172,800 lbs of copper, 1,292 ounces of gold, and 50,507 ounces of silver.
The Bull River Mine features a fully developed infrastructure with 21,000 metres of underground developments across seven levels, a 700 tonne per day conventional mill, crushing facilities, and grid power connection.
Canadian Critical Minerals Inc. (TSXV: CCMI) (OTCQB: RIINF) has reported USD$159,000 in revenue from the sale of stockpiled copper, gold and silver mineralized material from its Bull River Mine project near Cranbrook, BC.
During January 2025, the company trucked 415 dry metric tonnes of sorted mineralized material to New Afton, with impressive grades of 5.37% Cu, 0.75 g/t Au and 60.7 g/t Ag. The company noted that ore sorting throughput was negatively affected by winter conditions, which required additional time for equipment warm-up.
Despite shipping lower tonnage than planned, CEO Ian Berzins highlighted that the company "achieved some of the highest grades yet for ore sorting at the Bull River Mine." CCMI expects to send more material to New Afton in February 2025 compared to the previous two months, depending on manpower availability.
Canadian Critical Minerals (CCMI) reported revenue of USD$167,000 from its Bull River Mine project in December 2024. The company shipped 424 dry metric tonnes of sorted mineralized material to New Afton, achieving their highest grades yet through sorting operations at 5.43% Cu, 0.80 g/t Au and 59.2 g/t Ag.
While winter conditions and holiday vacations affected ore sorting throughput, the company has shipped approximately 6,255 tonnes of mineralized material to New Afton under the Ore Purchase Agreement, including 5,055 tonnes of sorted material and 1,200 tonnes of unsorted fines. Rejects from sorting grade between 0.4% Cu and 1.0% Cu, which can be processed once mill operations restart.
The company has also stockpiled about 60,000 tonnes of fine material grading at 1.39% copper, 0.29 g/t gold and 11 g/t silver.
Canadian Critical Minerals (TSXV: CCMI, OTCQB: RIINF) has completed a $100,000 flow-through financing, issuing 1,666,667 units at $0.06 per unit. Each unit includes one common share and half of one common share purchase warrant, exercisable at $0.09 per share over a two-year period. The securities have a four-month and one-day statutory hold period. No commissions were paid for this financing. The proceeds will be allocated to exploration and development activities at the Bull River Mine project near Cranbrook, B.C.