Lahontan Gold Corp. (TSX.V: LG) (OTCQB: LGCXF) Advances Santa Fe, Walker Lane amid Tightening Gold Supply Dynamics

Disseminated on behalf of  Lahontan Gold Corp. (TSX.V: LG) (OTCQB: LGCXF) and may include paid advertising.

  • Top gold-producing countries are showing strain of widespread government, cost and environmental pressures.
  • These pressures strengthen the case for secure, transparent and infrastructure-supported gold development in the United States.
  • Existing mine infrastructure, historical production, oxide material and location in a leading U.S. gold state may give Lahontan’s Santa Fe project a different development profile.

Global gold supply is entering a more complicated era, shaped not only by geology and discovery rates but also by government policy, rising operating costs, safety enforcement, environmental oversight and growing pressure for producing countries to capture more value at home. In that setting, Lahontan Gold (TSX.V: LG) (OTCQB: LGCXF), a Canadian mineral exploration company with four gold and silver exploration properties in Nevada’s Walker Lane, is advancing the Santa Fe Mine project and related assets in one of the United States’ most established gold-producing jurisdictions.

The pressure is visible even in the world’s largest producing country. The U.S. Geological Survey noted that China, Russia, Australia, Canada and the United States were the leading gold producers in 2025, in descending order, and together accounted for 41% of estimated global output. Yet China’s own production base showed strain in early 2026. Reuters reported that China’s total gold production from domestic and imported raw materials was 136.230 metric tons in the first quarter of 2026, down 3.3% year over year, while domestic production fell 7.1% to 81.065 metric tons. The report cited the China Gold Association and noted that the decline came “as safety inspections led some smelters to suspend production for maintenance.”

That kind of decline matters because it suggests supply growth can be constrained even when gold prices are high. Safety reviews, environmental regulation, mine depletion and maintenance-related disruptions can all limit production from mature districts. For investors and operators, the result is a market in which the availability of ounces may depend less on price alone and more on whether projects are in jurisdictions with clear rules, existing infrastructure and realistic pathways to development.

At the same time, many resource-rich countries are revisiting the economics of mining in response to high gold prices. Ghana, Africa’s top gold producer, has become a clear example. Earlier this year, Reuters reported that Ghana planned to scrap long-term mining investment stability agreements and double royalties under broad mining-sector reforms. The proposed structure would raise royalties from the current 3–5% range to 9–12%, with the top rate applying if gold reaches $4,500 per ounce or higher. The reforms also include tougher local-content rules, and Reuters quoted Ghana Minerals Commission acting CEO Isaac Tandoh as saying, “Renewal is conditional, not automatic.”

The local-content trend has also continued. Ghana’s mining regulator has given international companies including Newmont, AngloGold Ashanti and Zijin until December 2026 to shift mining operations to local contractors or face sanctions. Ghana revised local ownership rules in January 2025, requiring surface mining to be undertaken by fully Ghanaian-owned firms and underground mining by companies with at least 50% Ghanaian ownership. In addition, African governments have been tightening mining rules to extract more revenue amid rising metals prices.

For mining companies, these changes may support national development goals, but they can also raise costs, complicate contracting and increase uncertainty around long-term project economics. Royalty increases, local procurement mandates and ownership requirements can change the risk profile of projects, particularly for new mines that require major upfront capital. When those rules shift after companies have already invested heavily, the investment case can become more difficult to underwrite.

Illegal mining is another growing challenge. In Latin America, illegal gold mining is spreading into new parts of Peru’s Amazon, advancing along remote rivers and into Indigenous territories. Reports note that the expansion is accelerating deforestation, contaminating rivers with mercury and exposing remote communities to violence and organized crime.  In Brazil, billions of dollars of gold were being extracted illegally from the Amazon rainforest despite enforcement efforts.

These pressures strengthen the case for secure, transparent and infrastructure-supported gold development in the United States. Nevada remains central to that story. According to the U.S. Geological Survey’s 2026 gold summary, Nevada was the leading gold-producing state, accounting for about 64% of total domestic production. That makes Nevada not just a mining district but the foundation of U.S. gold supply.

This is where Lahontan Gold’s portfolio becomes relevant. The company’s Santa Fe Mine has historic production of 359,202 ounces of gold and 702,067 ounces of silver from open-pit mining with heap-leach processing between 1988 and 1995. Lahontan also reports a National Instrument 43-101 compliant indicated mineral resource of 1.539 million gold-equivalent ounces and an inferred mineral resource of 411,000 gold-equivalent ounces, all pit constrained.

Santa Fe’s brownfield profile is important in a market where new mines can face long timelines and uncertain permitting. Lahontan’s Santa Fe project is a 28.3-square-kilometer land package that includes 307 unpatented lode mining claims, 67 unpatented mill site claims and 24 patented lode mining claims. The company also notes that past production came from open pits processed by heap leach and reported recoveries of approximately 70% for gold and approximately 30% for silver. In addition, the company’s 2026 objectives include completing an updated mineral resource estimate and preliminary economic assessment, advancing mine permitting with the objective of commencing construction in 2027, continuing work at West Santa Fe and drill testing historic heap-leach pads to evaluate residual gold and silver mineralization for potential future reprocessing.

Those attributes are especially relevant as international hurdles rise. Existing mine infrastructure, historical production, oxide material and location in a leading U.S. gold state may give Santa Fe a different development profile than greenfield projects in jurisdictions facing royalty resets, local-content changes, illegal mining exposure and supply-chain uncertainty. Lahontan still faces the normal risks associated with exploration, permitting, financing and development, but its strategy is aligned with a broader market need for reliable Western gold supply.

As gold supply becomes more difficult to expand globally, the market may place increasing value on brownfield projects in stable jurisdictions with known mineralization and established mining histories. Lahontan Gold is seeking to occupy that space through Santa Fe and its broader Walker Lane portfolio. In a world where production in major countries is being pressured by safety reviews, environmental constraints, fiscal changes and informal mining risks, Nevada-based gold development could become more strategically important, and Lahontan’s work at Santa Fe positions the company as a powerful participant in that shift.

For more information, visit the company’s website at www.LahontanGoldCorp.com.

NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates relating to LGCXF are available in the company’s newsroom at ibn.fm/LGCXF

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