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Fusion Fuel Green Highlights Potential Multi-Mineral Royalty Upside at Jaguar Uranium’s Berlin Project as Initial Rare Earth Assessment Announced
Planned acquisition of controlling interest in Royal Uranium expected to provide Fusion Fuel with 1.0% NSR royalty exposure to a potentially district-scale proj

About this update from Jaguar Uranium Corp.
[{"type":"text","content":" Planned acquisition of controlling interest in Royal Uranium expected to provide Fusion Fuel with 1.0% NSR royalty exposure to a potentially district-scale project in Colombia in connection with Jaguar’s announced initial assessment program for rare earth elements in addition to uranium at the project Dublin, Ireland, April 09, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fusion Fuel Green PLC (NASDAQ: HTOO) (“Fusion Fuel” or the “Company”), a leading provider of full-service energy engineering, advisory, and utility solutions, today highlighted potential multi-mineral royalty income tied to the 1.0% net smelter return (\"NSR\") royalty held by Royal Uranium Inc. (\"Royal Uranium\") on the Berlin Project in Caldas, Colombia. Through Fusion Fuel's previously announced planned acquisition of a controlling interest in Royal Uranium, the Company expects to gain capital-efficient royalty exposure to potential future production from the Berlin Project. Jaguar Uranium Corp. (NYSE American: JAGU) (\"Jaguar\") has announced the commencement of its initial rare earth element (\"REE\") assessment program at the Berlin Project, which Jaguar noted has historically reported uranium mineralization. Jaguar has stated that the project also hosts associated REEs, including vanadium, phosphate, nickel, molybdenum, rhenium, yttrium, neodymium, and others, potentially expanding the project’s relevance within the global critical minerals supply chain. As announced by Jaguar, the Berlin Project is a potentially district-scale polymetallic asset in Caldas, Colombia, with historically reported uranium mineralization and associated rare earth elements. The Berlin Project covers approximately 9,053 hectares, with a substantial portion of the more than 20,000 meters of previously drilled, mineralized core believed to remain preserved, which Jaguar plans to selectively re-sample and assay for REE content. Jaguar announced that its initial program is expected to focus on re-sampling available historic core, potentially allowing Jaguar to advance early-stage REE characterization without near-term new drilling. Jaguar has also indicated that its work will include multi-element geological modeling, and that REE potential of certain elements, including vanadium, nickel, phosphate, molybdenum, rhenium, and zinc, may, if ultimately demonstrated, have the potential to be evaluat...