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Integral Metals’ First Move Put It on the Map. Its Next Could One Day Help Power the Space Race

The Behind-the-Scenes Supply Chain Move That Could Accelerate Starlink’s Next Expansion Phase

Sweeping Government Action: The U.S. Department of Defense Takes a Rare $150 Million Direct Investment in Atlantic Alumina to Secure a Critical U.S. Gallium Source.1

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OTC: ITGLF

CSE: INTG

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A confluence of events has created a historic moment in the space economy. And it’s already driving significant moves in a small group of stocks.

We’re talking gains of over 1,700% in some of the biggest winners, like AST SpaceMobile (ASTS), a company few people had heard of that is now valued near $30 billion after its stunning run, and it’s far from the only one.

A new space race is underway and companies like Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) are exploring for the metals caught up in the supply-chain bottlenecks this mega-growth industry is creating.

At the center of it all is Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

Some analysts believe a SpaceX IPO could be the biggest in history at well over $1 TRILLION according to the Financial Times.2

But the bigger near-term catalyst may be even more important.

Because regulators have cleared SpaceX to dramatically expand Starlink’s satellite network.3

The approval is already accelerating the next wave of launches, hardware demand, and space-based infrastructure.4

And that’s where the real problem begins. Because when space infrastructure scales, demand doesn’t rise evenly.

chart source: Graphic News5

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It often moves through the bottlenecks first.

One of the most critical bottlenecks today is a strategic material the U.S. does not fully control. It’s a metal China has already shown it can restrict with little notice.

A recent White House meeting, discussed below, included one of the world’s best known mine developers who has been making major strategic moves in this area.6

Around the same time, Washington announced a $12 billion critical minerals investment and stockpile program aimed at strengthening supply chain security.7

Against that backdrop, early-stage exploration companies such as Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) may be positioned to benefit if its exploration efforts are successful and development activity in this segment continues to expand.

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“ The space economy could be worth $1.8 trillion by 2035 — almost twice the rate of global GDP growth — fueled by expanded communications, navigation and data services.”

– World Economic Forum8

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The New Space Race and America’s $1 TRILLION Plan To Win It

The space race is going to a new level this year and many investors completely missed the signal.

Buried in the headlines was a major move by the U.S. government.

They put together a $150 million funding package to help build a processing plant for a metal most people have never even heard of.

The reason? 

Gallium. 

Bloomberg describes gallium as “a critical mineral used in satellite systems and military radar.”9

Because it plays a major role in advanced electronics that need to work in extreme conditions.

It’s used in high-performance semiconductors like gallium arsenide (GaAs) and gallium nitride (GaN).

These materials are virtually the only ones that can handle the high power and high frequency of highly advanced communication systems.

That makes them a strong fit for RF communications, including systems used in satellites, defense, radar, and secure networks.

In other words, as Starlink and the many other satellite systems expands and space-based communications grow, demand for this kind of hardware can rise fast.

And rising fast they are.

The amount of hardware being sent to space has exploded: 

(Chart Source: Our World In Data)10

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It’s no coincidence that gallium demand is expected to grow right along with it:

But there is a problem.  While gallium demand is surging, gallium supply is already tight.

And China controls roughly 96% of global gallium production.11

And China has already shown it can tighten the screws overnight.

That’s exactly why the U.S. is moving now.  That $150 million U.S. investment went into a company called ATALCO.

ATALCO operates an aluminum facility located between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, Louisiana.  The stated goal of the investment is to “establish the country’s first and only large-scale gallium production circuit.”

It is a direct response to China’s dominance and the growing risk that key space and defense materials could become bottlenecks overnight.

But this is just one move inside a much bigger growth market for gallium, driven by the exploding space industry and a surge in next-generation electronics.

That is where Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) comes in, with potential gallium exploration and development upside as this trend accelerates.

And if the space race keeps speeding up, that positioning could matter more than most investors realize.

And the upside grows from here. The U.S. government is stepping in with direct, large-scale action to accelerate the entire trend.12

Chart Source: Business Research Company13

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Washington Supercharges Critical Minerals With $12 BILLION Stockpile Move

A major new move out of Washington just added fuel to the critical minerals story and put essential minerals like gallium squarely in the spotlight.

In February 2026, the White House rolled out a $12 billion critical minerals stockpile program known as Project Vault.14

The objective is direct. Lock in domestic access to the materials that power defense systems, semiconductors, aerospace hardware, and advanced communications. 

Bloomberg compared the effort to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.15

And they even called out gallium by name, writing, “The effort is akin to the nation’s existing emergency oil stockpile. But instead of crude, its focus would be minerals, such as gallium…”16

Senior manufacturing leaders and top mining executives stood alongside the administration for the announcement.17

That level of visibility signals that critical minerals are now a front-line industrial priority. 

Markets reacted quickly, with several rare earth and critical mineral stocks moving higher as investors priced in stronger long-term demand and the potential for further government support.18

When federal policy directly impacts the market, it tends to raise the floor under strategic materials and the companies positioned around them.

For early-stage explorers like Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG), this type of policy backed demand support adds strength to its focus on exploring for gallium.

This isn’t just a major investment theme anymore, it’s a national priority backed by historic levels of government capital.

Mining industry veterans already see how big this opportunity could be. 

Nothing shows it more clearly than a mining visionary heading to the White House to take part while this story is still in its early stages.

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Mining Heavyweights Step Into the White House Spotlight

Another signal just hit that critical minerals have moved into the top tier of U.S. priorities.

Robert Friedland recently appeared at the White House alongside President Trump during a minerals stockpile and supply chain security announcement.19

Friedland is widely viewed as a modern mining legend. He helped drive Voisey’s Bay, one of North America’s most important nickel discoveries, and he is behind TWO of the largest and most significant copper discoveries of the 21st century, Oyu Tolgoi and Kamoa-Kakula.

That kind of White House invitation is not symbolic.

His presence at a federal minerals security event sends a clear message. Washington is not just talking about critical metals. 

It’s actively coordinating with industry operators and project builders.

President Donald Trump listens to Ivanhoe Mines Founder Robert Friedland during an announcement on American Critical Minerals Strategic Reserve, Monday, February 2, 2026 in the Oval Office of the White House.

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This marks a shift from policy discussion to policy execution.

When experienced mine developers are brought into the conversation at the highest level, it suggests to us that the government is focused on real projects, real deposits, and real domestic supply growth.

Investor markets tend to recognize these moments later than policy insiders do.

And for emerging companies positioned around strategic metals, including Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG), this kind of top-down engagement strengthens the broader sector backdrop.

It reinforces that bottleneck minerals tied to defense, electronics, and space infrastructure are now a national focus, not a niche theme.

When Washington and mining heavyweights stand on the same stage, the supply chain story usually enters a new phase of urgency and capital support.

And the timing is critical because of what is coming fast in the space sector.

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Space Race Breakout In 2026

Timing is the key in all of this.

This has been building for years. But now the potential space boom and critical metals plays tied to bottlenecks like gallium are starting to pay off in a big way.

Space stocks like Planet Labs, EchoStar, Viaset, AST and Rocket Lab are on absolute fire.

Investors are piling into the sector like nothing we’ve seen before.

Those are huge moves on their own.

And that’s before you even get to the real eye-poppers.

To us this isn’t a slow trend. It’s a blazing run. And 2026 may be the year it goes truly stratospheric.

Why?

Because the biggest force in the space economy is about to step into its next chapter.

And it could be early-stage companies exploring for a stake in all this like Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) in prime position.

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Starlink Expansion and a Potential SpaceX IPO Drive the 2026 Rally

SpaceX didn’t just launch Starlink into orbit in 2019. It built an entire global communications network that now rivals old-line satellite infrastructure.26

That buildout has become one of the core growth engines of the space economy. And many see SpaceX positioning for an ultimate IPO at an eye-popping valuation. If that happens, it could be the largest financial story of the year.

But that’s only part of it.

The bigger near-term catalyst is the U.S. government approval for a rapid expansion of Starlink’s satellite network, literally doubling the number of constellations permitted in orbit.27

That approval doesn’t just add satellites. It adds capacity. And capacity means more hardware. More launches. More infrastructure. More demand for the materials that make all of it possible.

That’s where a ripple effect starts.

The biggest gains in a major structural shift rarely go to the biggest names on day one. They go to the companies in the supply chain, the ones providing the materials, the components, the guts of the buildout.

And as the space economy scales, demand for certain advanced metals, like the gallium we talked about earlier, is poised to rise sharply.

That is why exploration-stage companies like Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) are beginning to attract attention along with this wave.

This isn’t just hype. The U.S. government is actively clearing a path forward and putting capital into critical supply infrastructure.

And when federal dollars and private sector momentum hit at the same time, that is exactly when early investors can see outsized moves.

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How U.S. Government Is Driving Huge Winners

The U.S. government is no longer on the sidelines.  It is moving in critical minerals with real money.

And when Washington moves, markets pay attention to companies like Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG).

We have already seen this play out.

Take MP Materials.

The U.S. Department of Defense became the largest shareholder in this major U.S. rare earth producer.28

That was one of the first big government equity stakes to secure domestic rare earth supply.

And the stock reacted.  It moved hard.29

Then there is NioCorp.

This company is one of the more direct “U.S. critical minerals” plays because its Elk Creek Project targets metals Washington now calls strategically important.30

Its subsidiary got up to $10 million from the Department of Defense under the Defense Production Act to support development of a domestic scandium supply chain tied to the project.

Washington stepped in.  And the stock kept going.

Then a few months ago, something unexpected happened.

The U.S. government made a shock investment in a small project deep in the mountains of Alaska.31

It grabbed headlines. And it grabbed Wall Street’s attention.

And it did not stop there.

Trilogy Metals.

The U.S. government bought a 10% stake in this Canada-based miner that holds major critical minerals assets in Alaska’s Ambler district.32

The Ambler Road Project is a proposed industrial road that would unlock access to huge deposits of copper, cobalt, gallium, germanium and more. When the government moved in, the stock surged nearly 400% virtually overnight.33

This is an example of what happens when Washington identifies a bottleneck in supply and chooses to act. Now comes the biggest move yet.

In January, the U.S. government agreed to take a $150 million equity stake in Atlantic Alumina Company.34

That company will help build the United States’ first large-scale domestic gallium production facility and expand alumina output.

Gallium is a critical mineral used in aerospace, defense, semiconductors and other advanced tech.

This investment is part of a broader strategy to reduce reliance on foreign supply chains, especially China’s dominance in these markets.

The Pentagon’s equity is being paired with private capital to scale production and secure strategic materials for U.S. industry and national security.

And this one move may be the biggest catalyst so far.

Because it has kicked off a race that now sits at the heart of the space boom.

A race where materials matter.

A race where supply chains can make or break the next wave of winners.

And in the middle of all of it could be Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG), potentially positioning itself to be right in the center of this historic shift.

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“China’s dominance in gallium supply underscores a critical bottleneck for advanced RF and semiconductor applications.”

– The Financial Times35

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Why Gallium Is Essential (And Why China Lit the Fuse in 2024)

Here’s the moment most investors missed.

China made its first major gallium export restrictions in 2023 and then “effectively banned exports of gallium” in 2024 according to Investing News.36

And that wasn’t a random trade headline.  It was a warning shot.

Because gallium isn’t just another industrial metal. It’s a high-performance technology metal that sits inside systems the modern world can’t function without.

Gallium is used in advanced semiconductor materials like GaN (gallium nitride) and GaAs (gallium arsenide).

These materials matter because they can operate at higher power, higher frequency, higher heat, and in more extreme conditions.

That’s exactly what next-gen communications and defense systems demand. Especially in space.

Because satellites, radar, RF systems, and secure networks don’t get to “restart” when conditions get tough.

They need reliability.  And that’s what gallium-based semiconductors are built for.

So when China restricted gallium…

It didn’t just tighten supply.

It reminded the world that the most important bottlenecks aren’t always oil…

Or lithium…

Or rare earths…

Sometimes it’s a quiet metal like gallium that suddenly becomes the pressure point for trillion-dollar industries.

And now the U.S. is responding in the only way it can. By securing domestic supply before the next wave hits full force.

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The KAP Property: Integral Metals’ Next Gallium Move

Integral Metals isn’t just riding a macro trend. It’s bringing leverage to it.

Because one of the company’s most important assets could end up being its KAP Property.

And this is where the story gets interesting for gallium investors.

KAP gives Integral Metals potential exposure, if its exploration efforts bear fruit, to the kind of mineral potential the market tends to re-rate fast when supply becomes strategic.

Especially when you’re talking about a metal like gallium…

A metal that is not mined like gold or copper…

But is typically recovered as a byproduct, meaning supply is harder to scale quickly.

That’s the key.  When demand spikes, the industry can’t just “turn on” new gallium production overnight.

So the value shifts toward the companies positioned early, with ground that can matter in a tightening market.

And KAP is not starting from scratch. The company has been tightening targets with high-resolution soil sampling across the Main Showing, collecting 2,021 samples.

From there, updated geological modelling has helped refine drill placement and define high-priority zones.

Integral has now moved into drilling focused on the Main Showing area, designed to test extensions along strike and at depth.

Early intersections have confirmed sphalerite-bearing horizons, and the next phases are designed to integrate results into a 3D model, expand geophysics and soil sampling across the broader property, and scale drilling toward larger target validation. 

KAP is part of Integral Metals’ push to align itself with exactly that kind of setup.

Not just exploration for the sake of exploration…

But exploration aimed at the metals now being pulled into the center of the global technology arms race.

And as gallium becomes more tied to the future of satellites, defense electronics, secure communications, and next-gen infrastructure…

Properties with exposure to credible gallium upside can start to look less like optionality…

And more like strategic inventory.

That’s why KAP could end up being one of Integral Metals’ most important chess pieces as the gallium squeeze accelerates.

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Six Reasons Investors Are Watching Integral Metals

1. Gallium Demand Is Accelerating Fast

Gallium is becoming a cornerstone material for next-generation technology. It is used in gallium nitride (GaN) and gallium arsenide (GaAs) semiconductors that power AI data centers, satellites, advanced radar systems, and high-performance communications infrastructure. As AI computing, defense electronics, and space systems scale globally, demand for gallium is expected to rise sharply.

2. China’s Export Restrictions Exposed a Fragile Supply Chain

China controls the vast majority of the world’s refined gallium production. When export restrictions were introduced, it revealed just how dependent global industries are on a single supplier. Because gallium is typically produced as a by-product of aluminum and zinc refining, supply cannot easily ramp up when shortages appear.

3. Governments Are Now Treating Gallium as Strategic

Gallium has rapidly moved onto government critical-minerals lists across North America and Europe. Policymakers are increasingly prioritizing domestic supply chains for materials essential to semiconductors, defense electronics, and communications infrastructure. As government attention increases, exploration and development projects tied to these materials often receive heightened investor interest.

4. A North American Supply Race Is Emerging

With supply chain vulnerabilities exposed, Western governments and private capital are accelerating efforts to secure alternative sources of critical minerals. Billions of dollars are being directed toward exploration, refining, and processing capacity in North America and allied jurisdictions.

5. Bottleneck Materials Often Create the Biggest Market Moves

History shows that the largest gains in resource markets often come from materials that sit at critical choke points in supply chains. Gallium plays a unique role in advanced electronics and semiconductor technology, placing it directly inside some of the fastest-growing industries in the world.

6. Integral Metals Is Positioning Early

Integral Metals is pursuing exploration for gallium and other critical metals at its KAP Project, positioning the company within a supply chain that is rapidly gaining strategic importance. Early-stage exposure to emerging supply bottlenecks can attract increasing attention as demand grows and global supply pressures intensify.

Do your due diligence and consider adding
Integral Metals Corp. (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) to your speculative portfolio

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CSE: INTG

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Conclusion

The space race is not slowing down, it’s accelerating into a new phase.

It’s far more than just rockets, launches, or headlines. It’s about advanced electronics and supply chains.

It’s about the materials inside the electronics, the communications hardware, and the systems that make space-based infrastructure possible.

Gallium is one of those materials.

China’s export restrictions in 2024 were the moment the world got a clear warning. This metal is strategic, supply is fragile, and scaling production is not easy.

That is why the U.S. is now pushing to secure domestic supply and why investor attention is starting to move down the chain.

Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG) is positioning itself in the right place at the right time.

With exposure through exploration assets like the KAP Property and a leadership team built to execute and operate in public markets, the company offers the potential for exposure to one of the most important emerging bottlenecks of the decade.

If gallium becomes the next major supply squeeze in the technology and space boom, early movers could matter more than anyone expects.

Talk to your broker today about Integral Metals (OTC: ITGLF | CSE: INTG)

For a discussion of the Company’s QA/QC and data verification processes and procedures, please see its most recently-filed technical report, a copy of which may be obtained under the Company’s profile at www.sedarplus.ca.

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Forward-Looking Statements – Please Read Carefully. 

This article contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws. All statements that are not historical facts, including without limitation, statements regarding future estimates, plans, programs, forecasts, projections, objectives, assumptions, expectations or beliefs of future performance, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements in this material include that the market for rare earth metals will continue to grow substantially; that the market for rare earth metals will continue to grow substantially; that the demand for critical minerals will continue to grow substantially; that geopolitical trends will continue to incent the creation of secure supply chains; that political mandates in Canada, United States, Germany and elsewhere will continue to accelerate the market growth of critical minerals and related technologies; that Integral Metals Corp. (the “Company”) could become a world-leading company of the future; that the Company can successfully explore and develop its properties; that the Company can commercialize its properties and technologies, if developed, on a global scale; that management’s previous experience will allow the Company to achieve commercial success and implement its business plans; that the Company can generate revenues through implementation of its business models and/or obtain sufficient financing to continue its operations. These forward-looking statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking information. Risks that could change or prevent these statements from coming to fruition include that the markets for critical minerals fail to grow as expected due to alternative technologies or otherwise; that the demand for critical minerals does not increase as anticipated due to various reasons; that the critical minerals market may not grow as expected due to competing technologies and resources; that political mandates in Canada, United States, Germany and elsewhere may result in market reductions for critical minerals and related technologies; that the Company may fail to achieve success for various reasons; that the Company’s properties may fail to have positive exploration results and the Company’s business model may be unsuccessful; that the Company’s mineral properties contain no economic minerals deposits; that the Company may be unable to utilize any favorable geographic location or other factors to achieve success; that management’s previous experience may not result in future success; that the Company may ultimately fail to successfully implement its business plans, raise capital or generate any significant revenues. The forward-looking information contained herein is given as of the date hereof and we assume no responsibility to update or revise such information to reflect new events or circumstances, except as required by law. 

 

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References