Collective Mining Announces an Expanded Drill Program Following the Closing of its C$63.4 Million Financing

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TORONTO, April 2, 2025 /CNW/ - Collective Mining Ltd. (NYSE: CNL) (TSX: CNL) ("Collective" or the "Company") is pleased to announce plans for an expanded drill program following the successful completion of its recent financing for C$63.4 million (see press release dated March 20, 2025). With a robust treasury totaling more than US$78 million, the Company is more than fully funded for an expanded 70,000 metre drill program in 2025. The revised program will now include up to ten diamond drill rigs in operation across the Guayabales and San Antonio projects and will be the largest in the history of the Company. Additionally, the Company will accelerate baseline environmental, hydrological and metallurgical studies so that permitting could begin in the future at a faster pace than originally envisioned.

Ari Sussman Executive Chairman commented: "The Apollo System, which is the most important discovery to date within the Company's Guayabales Project, has emerged as an important large-scale, bulk tonnage, and high-grade system generated from grassroots exploration. The emergence of Apollo occurs at a time when there is a dearth of new and impactful exploration discoveries within our industry. We continue to believe that Apollo is the tip of the iceberg within the Guayabales Project and that further discoveries will come with aggressive drilling and perseverance. The fact that our San Antonio Project is now potentially showing its porphyry potential is a welcome surprise. We look forward to receiving drill hole assay results across the portfolio in the near term and are excited to unlock more value in this regard."

Guayabales Drill Program Overview

Up to eight rigs will be focused on drilling the Guayabales Project for the balance of 2025 to achieve various objectives:

Apollo System: Being the Company's flagship discovery, up to seven rigs will be in operation as follows:

  • Up to three rigs will be testing the recently discovered, high-grade sub-zones with an overall goal of improving the grade of the system. To date, multiple bulk tonnage and high-grade intercepts have been reported from drilling of the first in a series of sub-zone targets including APC104-D5 which intersected 106.35 metres at 9.05 g/t AuEq within 497.35 metres at 3.01 g/t AuEq.1

  • Up to three rigs will be testing the recently discovered Ramp Zone where multiple high-grade intercepts have been previously reported, including most recently for drill hole APC105-D1, which cut 75.80 metres @ 8.01 g/t AuEq including 21.00 metres @ 24.16 g/t AuEq.1 The current operating rigs on site that are testing the Ramp Zone are at or close to their depth limit capacity so additional rigs capable of drilling up to 2,000 metres have been secured and will begin arriving in June. The Company's technical experts believe that only the top of the Ramp Zone system has been discovered and there is major potential for significant growth at deeper elevations.

  • Two smaller rigs will drill test the Apollo system from surface to a depth of 150 metres with the first rig now operating and the second rig anticipated to begin drilling in the next sixty days. The goal of this newly designed program is to expand and define the area of outcropping/shallow mineralization and test many drilling gaps within the block model as the current spacing is quite broad at up to 100 metres. Previous drilling in the shallowest portion of the Apollo system yielded numerous high-grade intercepts beginning from surface including APC-35, which intersected 86.55 metres @ 4.85 g/t AuEq (3.52 g/t Au, 16 g/t Ag, 0.12% Cu, and 0.34% WO3).1