Disseminated on behalf of Nevada Organic Phosphate Inc. (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF) and may include paid advertising.
- The company is advancing an uncommon sedimentary phosphate project in northeast Nevada aimed at supplying direct-application organic fertilizer to U.S. agriculture markets.
- NOP’s unprocessed direct-application phosphate does not have to compete with the conventional chemical agricultural input industry, and has no large scale competition in North America.
- The project’s phosphate is intended for direct field application without chemical processing, potentially reducing capital requirements compared with conventional phosphate operations.
- Phosphate has now been added to the U.S. critical minerals list, increasing strategic attention on domestic fertilizer supply chains.
- The company says drilling at its Murdock Mountain target zone has confirmed consistent phosphate mineralization across its initial six-hole campaign, with assays returning grades averaging 10.93% P2O5.
- Management believes the broader strike system could extend more than kilometres across multiple lease application areas controlled through federal permitting processes.
- Nevada Organic Phosphate plans an expanded 2026 drilling campaign while pursuing additional permits with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.
Nevada Organic Phosphate (CSE: NOP) (OTCQB: NOPFF), a Canadian-based leader in organic sedimentary phosphate exploration, is positioning itself around a segment of the fertilizer market that has gained increasing attention from both agricultural producers and policymakers: domestically sourced phosphate suitable for organic and regenerative farming applications. The company is focused on the Murdock Mountain phosphate target zone in Elko County, Nevada, where it is advancing what management believes could become a large-scale source of direct-application sedimentary phosphate.
The company’s investment narrative differs from that of traditional phosphate producers. Conventional phosphate fertilizer production generally involves large-scale beneficiation and chemical processing to produce phosphoric acid and downstream fertilizers such as monoammonium phosphate (“MAP”) and diammonium phosphate (“DAP”). Nevada Organic Phosphate instead aims to supply raw phosphate rock that can be ground and applied directly to agricultural fields.
During a recent presentation at the Emerging Growth Conference, CEO Robin Dow described the project as a sedimentary phosphate system formed along the edge of an ancient inland sea that once covered parts of the western United States. According to the company, the geological setting may have contributed to relatively low contaminant levels compared with some conventional phosphate districts (https://nnw.fm/CTlvd).
Management says the company’s initial drilling campaign at Murdock Mountain produced six drill holes over approximately 1.5 kilometres of strike length. Assay work reportedly confirmed phosphate mineralization and indicated low levels of contaminants often associated with phosphate deposits, including cadmium and uranium. The company also said the upper portions of the phosphate horizon returned average grades near 11% P2O5 over roughly 4.4 metres, while one hole encountered a deeper interval grading approximately 17.5% P2O5 over 4 metres.
Rather than framing the opportunity around conventional mining economics alone, Nevada Organic Phosphate is emphasizing the potential role of direct-application phosphate in regenerative agriculture. The company argues that untreated phosphate rock can break down gradually in soil, allowing nutrient release over longer periods while avoiding some of the runoff issues associated with highly soluble phosphate fertilizers.
That positioning comes as American agriculture faces growing scrutiny over nutrient runoff into lakes and waterways. Conventional phosphate production also generates phosphogypsum waste, a byproduct that can contain radioactive elements and has become an environmental management issue in several U.S. states.
Nevada Organic Phosphate contends its planned operation would avoid many of those issues because the material would not undergo chemical upgrading. The proposed processing flow is comparatively simple: mine the rock, grind it, bag it and ship it directly to customers. The company believes this could significantly reduce capital expenditures relative to conventional phosphate projects that require beneficiation plants and acid-processing infrastructure.
Location may also work in the project’s favor. The Murdock Mountain area sits near existing transportation infrastructure, including Union Pacific rail access near the town of Montello, Nevada. Management says mined material could eventually be trucked a few kilometres to a grinding and bagging facility before rail shipment to agricultural markets across the United States.
The company’s broader exploration footprint has expanded beyond its initial lease permit area. Nevada Organic Phosphate has filed additional federal permit applications that it says could extend the potential phosphate-bearing strike length to over 26 kilometres. Across those target areas, the company estimates an exploration target mineral inventory (“ETMI”) ranging from 200 million to 220 million tonnes of phosphate-bearing material, although substantial drilling and technical work remain necessary before any formal resource classification could be established under Canadian disclosure standards.
For the initial six-kilometre target area, the company has outlined an exploration target ranging from 10 million to 46 million tonnes grading between 3% and 15%. Management attributes the wide range to the early-stage nature of exploration work and the need for further drilling to confirm continuity and thickness.
The permitting process will likely remain an important factor in the project’s timeline. Because phosphate falls under a federal leasing framework rather than standard mineral claims, the company must work through the Bureau of Land Management’s environmental and exploration approval processes. Nevada Organic Phosphate received approval for its first drill permit in late 2025 after completing environmental assessments and now plans to pursue approvals for additional permit areas.
The company believes its relatively small corporate overhead could help preserve capital during the exploration phase. Dow stated during the conference presentation that management and directors are compensated primarily through equity incentives, with direct monthly overhead estimated at roughly C$15,000 excluding exploration expenditures.
Nevada Organic Phosphate also enters the market at a time when fertilizer supply chains remain strategically important. Global phosphate markets experienced significant disruption following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, while U.S. policymakers have increased focus on domestic critical mineral supply. Phosphate’s addition to the U.S. critical minerals list may improve visibility for domestic projects capable of supporting agricultural inputs.
Over the coming months, Nevada Organic Phosphate expects to continue drilling at Murdock Mountain while advancing permit applications across its broader Nevada land package.
For more information, visit the company’s website at www.NevadaPhosphate.com.
NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates relating to NOP are available in the company’s newsroom at https://nnw.fm/NOP
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