| Aldebaran PEA for the Altar Project Reports 48 Year Mine Life, After Tax NPV (8%) of US$2 Billion, and 20.5% IRR 
 globenewswire.com
 
 October 30, 2025 07:00 ET                                 | Source:                                Aldebaran Resources Inc.
 
 VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Oct.  30, 2025  (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aldebaran Resources Inc. (“Aldebaran” or the “Company”) (TSX-V: ALDE, OTCQX: ADBRF) is  pleased to announce the results of a Preliminary Economic Assessment  (“PEA”), prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101  standards, for the Altar copper-gold project located in San Juan,  Argentina. The base case scenario utilizes a 60,000 tonnes per day  (“tpd”) concentrator, processing mineralized material from both open pit  and underground sources. The results of the PEA are reported on a 100%  basis, while Aldebaran owns an 80% interest in the project, with the  remaining 20% held by Sibanye-Stillwater Ltd.
 
 All dollar amounts referenced herein are in US dollars unless otherwise noted.
 
 HIGHLIGHTS
 
 Long life operation with significant production:
 
 
 Robust economics with leverage to commodity prices:48-year mine life, including 3 years of constructionFirst 20 years1: Average annual production of 121,445 tonnes copper equivalent2 (“CuEq”)      108,579 tonnes copper (“Cu”), 43,199 ounces of gold (“Au”), and 570,217 ounces of silver (“Ag”)
First 30 years1: Average annual production of 116,294 tonnes CuEq      105,897 tonnes Cu, 33,866 ounces of Au, and 557,239 ounces of Ag
LOM: Average annual production of 101,413 tonnes CuEq      92,891 tonnes Cu, 27,020 ounces of Au, and 525,192 ounces of Ag
 
 
 Attractive capital intensity:Using  base-case metal prices of $4.35/lb Cu, $2,500/oz Au, and $27/oz Ag, the  project has an after-tax NPV (8%) of $2.0 billion, an IRR of 20.5% and a  payback period of 4 yearsTotal LOM  gross revenue of $44.7 billion (before TC/RCs, payabilities and  transport) and total LOM free cash flow of $10.7 billionUsing  spot prices of $5.00/lb Cu, $3,963/oz Au, and $47/oz Ag, the project  has an after-tax NPV (8%) of $3.34 billion and an IRR of 28.0%4
 
 
 Competitive cost profile:Initial capex for the project is $1.59 billion      Upfront capital is minimized by taking a staged approach to the tailings storage facility and underground construction
Capital intensity of $15,713/t of average annual CuEq metal produced3NPV @ 8% / Initial Capex ratio of 1.27x
 
 
 Combined Open Pit and Underground Operation:Cash Costs (C1) of $1.71/lb payable Cu for the first 20 years1, $1.87/lb payable Cu for the first 30 years1, and $2.02/lb payable Cu for the LOMAll in Sustaining Costs (“AISC”) of $2.25/lb payable Cu for the first 20 years1, $2.42/lb payable Cu for the first 30 years1, and $2.59/lb payable Cu for the LOM
 
 
 John Black, Chief Executive Officer of Aldebaran, commented: “This  PEA confirms that the Altar project has the potential to become a  long-life, high-quality copper operation capable of generating  substantial production and cash flow. Our objective was to define a mine  plan that delivers a minimum of 100,000 tonnes of CuEq per year, while  maintaining a compact operational footprint and a disciplined approach  to capital. The results of this study clearly achieve those objectives  and demonstrate that Altar is a technically and economically robust  project. This PEA represents a major milestone for the Company and  provides the foundation for our upcoming application for inclusion under  Argentina’s RIGI investment framework. With the political environment  in Argentina shifting toward pro-business and pro-development  policies—as underscored by the recent mid-term election results—the  timing for advancing a project of Altar’s scale could not be better. The  country is positioning itself to emerge as a significant copper  producer at a time when global demand for the metal continues to rise. In addition to the base case concentrator scenario, our collaboration with Nuton, a Rio Tinto venture, demonstrates Nuton® Technology as a potentially viable processing alternative at Altar. Utilizing Nuton®  Technology, life-of-mine capital expenditure and operating costs were  reduced, leading to higher life-of-mine free cash flow. When you combine  the economic results with the ESG benefits of Nuton’s sulphide leaching  technology, the Nuton case is quite compelling and warrants further  evaluation. The next 12 to 18 months will be transformative for  the Company, with multiple key catalysts—including a resource update,  completion of the PFS, and the proposed Centauri Minerals  spin-out—positioning us to unlock significant value for our  shareholders.”Production from the open pit pays back the initial capital, while development of the underground is ongoingUnderground  mining pulls forward better grade mineralization earlier in the mine  life, to increase production and generate cash flow~80%  of the resources (by tonnage) in the mine plan are categorized as  Measured and Indicated, with the remaining ~20% categorized as Inferred
 
 Kevin B. Heather, Chief Geological Officer of Aldebaran, commented: “The  PEA represents a significant milestone for the Altar project. In  addition to achieving the goals John stated above, we were also focused  on maximizing NPV and IRR, hence we elected to move forward with a mine  plan that included a combination of open-pit and underground block  caving. The block cave, commencing production after the open pit pays  back the initial capital, allows us to pull forward higher-grade  material in the mine plan and to maintain constant CuEq production  numbers, while keeping throughput at 60,000 tpd. Moreover, it keeps the  overall footprint of the operation smaller, which is a key consideration  for development projects. Our approach to capital expenditures was to  stage capital outlays where possible, to ensure initial capital  expenditures were kept manageable. Where possible, capital was paid out  of cash flow to present a more prudent and attractive development  opportunity. We will now begin to shift our focus to the PFS, which will  be the next step in de-risking the Altar project. To that end, our  2025/2026 field program is now underway, with most of the work focused  on collecting the additional data necessary for the upcoming PFS. This  includes additional infill drilling, geotechnical drilling, lab-based  geotechnical stress and strain test work, Acid Based Accounting (ABA)  test work, environmental monitoring, water wells, water balance studies,  community engagement, and more. While this work is ongoing, we will  also be exploring several opportunities that we have identified that  could potentially unlock additional value from the Altar Project.”
 
 PEA Overview
 
 When available, readers are encouraged to read the PEA in the Company’s technical report (“Technical Report”) prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects (“43-101”)  in its entirety, including all qualifications, assumptions and  exclusions that relate to the PEA and mineral resource model. The  Technical Report is intended to be read as a whole, and sections should  not be read or relied upon out of context.
 
 The  PEA envisions a combination of open-pit and underground mining, followed  by processing via a conventional copper flotation circuit having a  nameplate processing capacity of 60,000 tonnes per day. This results in a  mine life of 48 years with an average annual production of 102,742 CuEq  tonnes for LOM, 116,539 tonnes CuEq for the first 30 years, and 121,748  CuEq tonnes for the first 20 years. Table 1 presents key operating and  financial highlights from the PEA, using base study case assumptions of  $4.35/lb Cu, $2,500/oz Au and $27/oz Ag. Figure 1 displays annual CuEq  production for the LOM, while Figure 2 displays projected cash flows.
 
 
 
 
 | Table 1. PEA Summary |  | Metric | Unit | Base Case |  | Mine Life (including construction) | Years | 48 |  |  | After Tax NPV - 8% | M USD | 2,009 |  |  | IRR (after tax) | % | 20.5% |  |  | Payback | Years | 4 |  |  | Averal annual production (LOM) | tonnes CuEq | 101,413 |  |  | Averal annual production (LOM) | M lbs CuEq | 224 |  |  | Averal annual production (years 1-30) | tonnes CuEq | 116,294 |  |  | Averal annual production (years 1-30) | M lbs CuEq | 256 |  |  | Averal annual production (years 1-20) | tonnes CuEq | 121,445 |  |  | Averal annual production (years 1-20) | M lbs CuEq | 268 |  |  | LOM Gross Revenue5 | M USD | 44,738 |  |  | LOM Free Cash Flow | M USD | 10,632 |  |  | Initial capital | M USD | 1,593 |  |  | Capital Intensity | USD/tonne CuEq | 15,713 |  |  | NPV/Initial Capex | Ratio | 1.27 |  |  | Construction Period | Years | 3 |  |  | LOM capital | M USD | 5,651 |  |  | C1 Cash Costs (LOM) | USD/lb Cu Payable | 2.02 |  |  | C1 Cash Costs (years 1-30) | USD/lb Cu Payable | 1.87 |  |  | C1 Cash Costs (years 1-20) | USD/lb Cu Payable | 1.71 |  |  | AISC (LOM) | USD/lb Cu Payable | 2.59 |  |  | AISC (years 1-30) | USD/lb Cu Payable | 2.42 |  |  | AISC (years 1-20) | USD/lb Cu Payable | 2.25 |  |  | Throughput | tonnes per day | 60,000 |  |  | LOM Cu Recovery | % | 87.76% |  |  | LOM Au Recovery | % | 57.00% |  |  | LOM Ag Recovery | % | 50.00% |  |  | LOM Open pit strip ratio | waste/mineralized | 1.53 |  |  | LOM Open pit mineralized tonnes mined | M tonnes | 223 |  |  | LOM Open pit Cu grade | % | 0.44% |  |  | LOM Open pit Au grade | g/t | 0.07 |  |  | LOM Open pit Ag grade | g/t | 1.18 |  |  | LOM Block cave mineralized tonnes mined | M tonnes | 768 |  |  | LOM Block cave Cu grade | % | 0.50% |  |  | LOM Block cave Au grade | g/t | 0.07 |  |  | LOM Block cave Ag grade | g/t | 1.61 |  |  | LOM Recovered Cu | M lbs | 9,420 |  |  | LOM Recovered Au | M Oz's | 1.24 |  |  | LOM Recovered Ag | M Oz's | 24.16 |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
 
 
 Figure 1 – LOM CuEq Production and C1 Cash Costs
 
 
 
  
 
 
 Figure 2 – Project Cash Flows
 
 
 
  
 
 Mineral Resource Estimate
 
 On  November 25, 2024, the Company announced an updated mineral resource  estimate (“MRE”) for the Altar project (see Table 2). The PEA is based  on the MRE; however, the PEA production profile is based on a subset of  the MRE, utilizing different metal prices, operating costs, and mining  methods.
 
 
 
 
 | Table 2. 2024 Altar Resource Estimate - $13.99 NSR Cut-off (0.24% CuEq) |  |  | Average Grade | Contained Metal |  | Material Type
 | Category | Tonnes (000's)
 | Cu (%)
 | Au (g/t)
 | Ag (g/t)
 | Mo (ppm)
 | As (ppm)
 | Cu (M lbs)
 | Au (M Ozs)
 | Ag (M Ozs)
 |  | Supergene 
 | Measured | 121,884 | 0.55 | 0.08 | 1.07 | 21 | 289 | 1,475 | 0.3 | 4.2 |  | Indicated | 80,007 | 0.36 | 0.06 | 0.93 | 19 | 123 | 639 | 0.2 | 2.4 |  | Total M&I | 201,891 | 0.47 | 0.07 | 1.01 | 20 | 223 | 2,114 | 0.5 | 6.6 |  | Inferred | 24,850 | 0.46 | 0.07 | 1.01 | 19 | 213 | 251 | 0.1 | 0.8 |  | Mixed 
 | Measured | 109,510 | 0.38 | 0.07 | 1.22 | 23 | 192 | 913 | 0.2 | 4.3 |  | Indicated | 19,208 | 0.32 | 0.06 | 1.11 | 23 | 139 | 136 | 0.0 | 0.7 |  | Total M&I | 128,718 | 0.37 | 0.07 | 1.20 | 23 | 184 | 1,049 | 0.3 | 5.0 |  | Inferred | 1,386 | 0.29 | 0.07 | 1.00 | 13 | 111 | 9 | 0.0 | 0.0 |  | Hypogene 
 | Measured | 549,385 | 0.41 | 0.10 | 0.98 | 20 | 120 | 4,966 | 1.7 | 17.3 |  | Indicated | 1,517,339 | 0.42 | 0.05 | 1.33 | 54 | 114 | 13,882 | 2.6 | 64.9 |  | Total M&I | 2,066,724 | 0.41 | 0.07 | 1.24 | 45 | 116 | 18,848 | 4.3 | 82.2 |  | Inferred | 1,189,513 | 0.37 | 0.04 | 1.26 | 46 | 96 | 9,572 | 1.6 | 48.2 |  | Total 
 | Measured | 780,779 | 0.43 | 0.09 | 1.03 | 21 | 156 | 7,354 | 2.3 | 25.8 |  | Indicated | 1,616,554 | 0.41 | 0.05 | 1.31 | 52 | 115 | 14,657 | 2.8 | 68.0 |  | Total M&I | 2,397,333 | 0.42 | 0.07 | 1.22 | 42 | 128 | 22,011 | 5.1 | 93.8 |  | Inferred | 1,215,749 | 0.37 | 0.04 | 1.25 | 45 | 98 | 9,832 | 1.7 | 49.0 |  | Notes:
 
 Copper Contribution:The Altar mineral resource was updated during 2024.All mineral resources are contained in pit geometries.Mineral resources for Altar are based on metal prices of $3.75/lb copper, $1,800/oz gold, $23.00/oz silver.There are no mineral reserves at Altar at this time.Cut-off  grades are based on calculations of net smelter return (NSR) assuming  the processing by flotation to produce a copper concentrate and smelting  of that concentrate.The Altar NSR is defined as:
 
 Gold Contribution:      Float recoverable copper grade x 22.0462x(3.75-TCRC) less 1% smelter deductFloatation recoverable copper grade = (copper grade – 0.01) *0.92
 
 Silver Contribution:      (Gold grade in ppm x 0.55 /31.1035) x (1800-4.00) less 1 gram smelter deduct
       (Silver grade in ppm x 0.50/31.1035) x (23.00 -0.30) less 30 grams smelter deduct
 Arsenic  grades vary by block in the model and smelter terms, including arsenic  penalties, vary by block. Average smelter terms, including arsenic  penalties for the 2024 Altar Mineral Resource, is approximately $0.71/lb  copper.The  equivalent copper cutoff grade of 0.24% CuEq was calculated based on the  economics discussed in these footnotes and differs from the calculation  of CuEq discussed elsewhere in this press release. The equivalent  copper cut-off grade calculation is approximate due to the complexities  of arsenic penalty calculations by block.Tables may not balance exactly due to rounding.The  Qualified Persons for the mineral resources are John Marek RM-SME, and  Jacob Richey PE, of Independent Mining Consultants, Inc.
 |  |  | 
 
 Mining
 
 The  proposed mining method is divided into open-pit mining for the  near-surface part of the deposit and underground caving for the deeper  parts. The open pit will use well-known truck and shovel operations with  12.5-m bench intervals. Haul trucks will be used for hauling  mineralized material to the crushing plant and long-term stockpile  facilities. Waste rock will be hauled to the closest waste rock storage  facility. Underground operations will handle material in bulk using well  established block caving methods. Open-pit mining will occur during the  first 9 years of operation (in the Altar Central area), while  underground development is underway. The mining profile for the project  can be seen in Figure 3.
 
 Open pit mining operations will use a smaller-scale equipment fleet that includes 8 m3  hydraulic excavators and 100t capacity SANY haul trucks to allow for  narrower bench phases and haul roads, steeper pit slopes, which will  facilitate getting into the better-grade, highest-margin mineralization  sooner. Underground block cave mining will occur in three areas: Altar  East, Altar United, and Altar Central (beneath the open pit). Each  underground cave is divided into two lifts, an upper and lower, which  will be sequenced as follows: Altar East Upper, Altar United Upper,  Altar Central Upper, Altar East Lower, Altar United Lower and Altar  Central Lower. Underground access to the block caving mining areas will  be through a portal and conveyor drift from the south of the proposed  pit (twin declines). To develop the first block cave lift at Altar East,  two 3000 m declines are required plus associated development beneath  the cave lift.
 
 Figure 3. Mining profile for the LOM
 
 
 
  
 
 Processing
 
 Extensive  metallurgical test work has demonstrated that the contained copper and  gold can be effectively recovered in a traditional flotation  concentrator that would produce a single gold-bearing copper concentrate  using industry-accepted technologies. The flowsheet includes primary  crushing followed by grinding in a SAG (semi-autogenous grinding)  mill/ball mill grinding circuit, rougher flotation, regrinding of the  rougher concentrate and three stages of cleaner flotation. The  concentrator would be constructed with a capacity to process 60,000 tpd  and operated on a 365 day/year, 24 hour/day schedule. A simplified  process flowsheet can be seen in Figure 4. LOM average recoveries for  Cu, Au and Ag are 87.76%, 57% and 50% respectively. The grade of the  concentrate produced is 26% for the LOM. Arsenic in the concentrate is  expected to range from 0.5% to 2.2%. Aldebaran hired the CRU Group, a  global leader in commodity research and market analysis, to complete a  study analyzing the placement of arsenic-bearing concentrates into the  marketplace, which showed that blending capacity for arsenic-bearing  copper concentrates worldwide has increased materially in recent years,  and penalties paid for arsenic-bearing concentrates have decreased  substantially. The PEA utilizes CRU’s view on arsenic penalties.
 
 Figure 4. Processing Circuit
 
 
 
  
 
 Capital and Operating Costs
 
 The  capital cost estimate prepared for the PEA includes an installation  cost associated with the site infrastructure, open pit mine and  concentrator plant, a growth capital associated with the installation of  the block caving underground mining operation, and the sustaining  capital associated with the production plan. The LOM summary of capital  is presented in Table 3, while the capital profile for the LOM is  presented in Figure 5.
 
 
 
 
 | Table 3. Altar Capital Cost Summary |  | Type | Unit | Cost |  | Initial Open Pit Capex | M USD | 350 |  |  | Initial Processing Capex | M USD | 579 |  |  | Initial Infrastructure Capex | M USD | 665 |  |  | Total Initial Capex | M USD | 1,593 |  |  | Growth UG Capex | M USD | 227 |  |  | Total Initial + Growth Capex | M USD | 1,821 |  |  | Sustaining Capital | M USD | 3,830 |  |  | Total LOM Capital | M USD | 5,651 |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
 
 
 Figure 5. Capital Profile for the LOM
 
 
 
  
 
 Operating  costs were estimated for the open pit mining operation, block caving  mining operation, the concentrator processing operation, and G&A. A  summary of the estimated operating costs is presented in Table 4. The  buildup of LOM C1 cash costs and AISC can be found in Tables 5 and 6,  while operating costs by year can be found in Figure 6.
 
 
 
 
 | Table 4. Altar Operating Cost Summary |  | Type | Unit | Cost |  | Open Pit Mining Cost | $/t mined | 2.35 |  | Block Cave Mining Cost | $/t mined | 8.42 |  | Processing Cost | $t milled | 6.93 |  | G&A Cost | $t milled | 1.38 |  | Total Operating Cost | M USD | 15,690 |  |  |  |  | 
 
 
 | Table 5. Altar C1 Cash Costs |  | Item | Unit | M USD | USD/ lb Cu Payable |  | Open Pit Mining Cost | M USD | 1,208 |  | 0.13 |  | Block Cave Mining Cost | M USD | 6,523 |  | 0.72 |  | Processing Cost | M USD | 6,866 |  | 0.76 |  | G&A Cost | M USD | 1,388 |  | 0.15 |  | As Penalty | M USD | 288 |  | 0.03 |  | Treatment Charges (TC) | M USD | 1,150 |  | 0.13 |  | Cu Refining Charges (RC) | M USD | 634 |  | 0.07 |  | Freight Charges (FC) | M USD | 2,257 |  | 0.25 |  | Less: Au By-Product Credits | M USD | -1,798 |  | -0.20 |  | Less: Ag By-Product Credits | M USD | -221 |  | -0.02 |  | C1 Cost | $US/lb Payable Cu | 18,296 |  | 2.02 |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
 
 
 | Table 6. Altar AISC |  | Item | Unit | M USD | USD/ lb Cu Payable |  | Open Pit Mining Cost | M USD | 1,208 |  | 0.13 |  | Block Cave Mining Cost | M USD | 6,523 |  | 0.72 |  | Processing Cost | M USD | 6,866 |  | 0.76 |  | G&A Cost | M USD | 1,388 |  | 0.15 |  | As Penalty | M USD | 288 |  | 0.03 |  | Treatment Charges (TC) | M USD | 1,150 |  | 0.13 |  | Cu Refining Charges (RC) | M USD | 634 |  | 0.07 |  | Freight Charges (FC) | M USD | 2,257 |  | 0.25 |  | Less: Au By-Product Credits | M USD | -1,798 |  | -0.20 |  | Less: Ag By-Product Credits | M USD | -221 |  | -0.02 |  | San Juan Mine Mouth Tax | M USD | 972 |  | 0.11 |  | Total Royalties | M USD | 393 |  | 0.04 |  | Total Sustaining Capex | M USD | 3,830 |  | 0.42 |  | AISC | $US/lb Payable Cu | 23,492 |  | 2.59 |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
 
 
 Figure 6. Operating Cost by Year
 
 
 
  
 Infrastructure
 
 The  Altar project includes on-site infrastructure such as earthworks  development, crushing and process plant facilities as well as ancillary  buildings such as camp, warehouses and workshops, on-site roads, water  management systems, and site electrical power facilities.
 
 Off-site  infrastructure includes a site access road, plant roads, water supply,  power supply (power transmission line), two waste rock storage areas,  the tailings storage facility, and surface water management structures.
 
 Water  use for the project assumes use of surface runoff water, pit dewatering  wells, water supply wells within 25 km from the concentrator, with  additional water supplied from surface sources.
 
 Nuton, a Rio Tinto venture, Scenario
 
 On  November 7, 2024, Aldebaran announced that it had entered an agreement  with Nuton Holdings ltd. (“Nuton”), whereby Aldebaran would grant Nuton  the option to acquire a 20% stake in the Altar project (see Company  press release dated November 7, 2024). As part of that agreement,  Aldebaran agreed to include a case in the PEA (“Nuton Case”) utilizing  the Nuton® Technology, a suite of proprietary sulphide  leaching technologies, as a potential alternative to the base case  concentrator scenario reported above (“Base Case”). Nuton®  Technology provides the potential to leach both primary and secondary  sulphides, providing an alternative processing option for the Altar  project. In addition, the Nuton Case provides significant other  benefits, such as eliminating the need for a tailings dam, providing a  smaller environmental footprint, lower overall energy consumption and  lower water consumption than conventional sulphide mineralization  treatment processes. Moreover, producing copper cathode on site would  eliminate downstream treatment and refining costs, deleterious elements’  penalties, simplify logistics and would provide a finished product at  site saleable to the market.
 
 As a result of the work completed in the Phase 1 Nuton®  Technology test work program (see Company press release dated November  7, 2024, for details), Nuton has estimated ultimate copper extraction  and copper recovery after a 450-day leach cycle for each material type  at Altar. The results of this analysis estimate copper extraction from  hypogene, mixed and supergene material at 86%, 88% and 91%,  respectively. Nuton applies a discount factor of 92% to allow for  inherent inefficiencies in the scale up to a commercial heap leach and  has, therefore, estimated copper recoveries from hypogene, mixed and  supergene material at 79%, 81% and 84%, respectively.
 
 The  Nuton Case in the PEA utilizes the same mine plan as the Base Case, due  to the use of an overall elevated cutoff grade for both cases; however,  it utilizes Nuton® Technology, a bio-leach heap leaching  process targeting the leaching of primary and secondary copper sulfide  minerals and has been designed to process 60,000 tpd, matching the Base  Case throughput. Material will be crushed and processed using a  conventional lined heap leach pad and combined with a standard SX/EW  facility will produce saleable copper cathode onsite. Aldebaran  currently does not have a commercial agreement with Nuton to deploy  Nuton® Technology at Altar and there is no guarantee an  agreement will come to fruition. For comparative purposes, the Nuton  Case does not include project costs associated with licensing and Nuton® Technology services at the Altar Project.
 
 To  demonstrate the Nuton Case, the variance percentage relative to the  Base Case is included here for selected key production and financial  metrics. The results of the Nuton Case can be found in Table 7.  Measurable contributors to capital spend include a Tailings Storage  Facility (TSF) for the Base Case and a Heap Leach Pad (HLP) for the  Nuton Case. The Nuton case shows higher initial capital requirements due  to the need for more infrastructure from the start-up (e.g. full-sized  ponds) compared to a TSF. However, LOM capex in the Nuton Case is lower,  as TSF requires higher sustaining capex to reach final capacity.  Additionally, at this time, precious metals such as gold and silver  cannot be recovered with Nuton® Technology, whereas they are  recovered in the Base Case. Timing of capital and revenue from copper  equivalent reduces the NPV for the Nuton Case, but lower total capital  and lower operating C1 and AISC costs allow for a higher Free Cash Flow  in the Nuton Case.
 
 
 
  
 
 Opportunities
 
 Several opportunities to potentially unlock additional value remain to be evaluated, including:
 
 
 Next StepsInstallation  of a molybdenum circuit in the later years of the mine when  higher-grade molybdenum is encountered in the lower block cavesAdditional metallurgy to potentially improve copper recoveriesCombined concentrator and Nuton® Technology scenarioProcessing of concentrate on-site rather than shipping to a smelterFiltered tailings storageProducing a pyrite concentrate from the pyrite-rich waste rock, that could be used in the Nuton CaseUpsizing the daily production rate and copper output with better metal prices
 
 
 Study NotesThe 2025/2026 field season is underway, with four drill rigs currently being mobilized to siteAdditional infill drilling to convert inferred resources to the measured and indicated categoriesPreparation to apply for inclusion under Argentina’s RIGI benefitsProduce  an updated mineral resource estimate based on the infill drilling  completed in 2024-2025 and the to-be-completed 2025-2026 infill drilling  (resource conversion)Geotechnical drilling within the PEA open pit and underground block cavesGeotechnical drilling within the PEA tailings storage facilityLab-based geotechnical stress and strain test workAcid Based Accounting (ABA) test workDrilling additional water wells and conducting additional pump tests for water balance studiesContinue environmental monitoring studies
 
 Aldebaran retained SRK Consulting Inc. as lead consultants, with Knight Piesold as a subcontractor.
 
 The  PEA is preliminary in nature, as it includes Inferred Mineral Resources  that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic  considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized  as Mineral Reserves, and there is no certainty that the PEA will be  realized. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves and do not  have demonstrated economic viability.
 
 Webinar
 
 For more context, please join the Company in a live event on Friday, October 31 at 11:00 am EST / 8:00 am PDT.
 Click here to register: globenewswire.com.
 
 Qualified Person
 
 The  scientific and technical data contained in this news release has been  reviewed and approved by Dr. Kevin B. Heather, B.Sc. (Hons), M.Sc, Ph.D,  FAusIMM, FGS, Chief Geological Officer and director of Aldebaran, who  serves as the qualified person (QP) under the definitions of National  Instrument 43-101.
 
 Notes
 
 
 ON BEHALF OF THE ALDEBARAN BOARDAssumes  commercial production begins in year 1 after 3 years of construction.  20- and 30-year averages calculated starting in year 1.CuEq  calculated in the PEA study using $4.35/lb Cu, $2,500/oz Au and $27/oz  Ag and is reported utilizing recoveries of 87.76% for Cu, 57% for Au,  and 50% for AgCapital intensity calculated as initial capex divided by LOM average annual CuEq production.LME  copper price, gold and silver price as of market close on October 27,  2025. The NPV calculation using spot prices was not part of the PEA  report and was calculated by Aldebaran using the financial model  provided by SRK.Before TC/RCs, payabilities and transport.
 
 (signed) “John Black”
 
 John Black
 Chief Executive Officer and Director
 Tel: +1 (604) 685-6800
 Email: info@aldebaranresources.com
 
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 For further information, please consult our website at  www.aldebaranresources.com or contact:
 
 Ben Cherrington
 Manager, Investor Relations
 Phone: +1 347 394-2728 or +44 7538 244 208
 Email: ben.cherrington@aldebaranresources.com
 
 About Aldebaran Resources Inc.
 
 Aldebaran  is a mineral exploration company that was spun out of Regulus Resources  Inc. in 2018 and has the same core management team. Aldebaran holds an  80% interest in the Altar copper-gold project in San Juan Province,  Argentina. The Altar project hosts multiple porphyry copper-gold  deposits with potential for additional discoveries. Altar forms part of a  cluster of world-class porphyry copper deposits which includes Los  Pelambres (Antofagasta Minerals), El Pachón (Glencore), and Los Azules  (McEwen Copper). In November 2024 the Company announced an updated  mineral resource estimate for Altar, prepared by Independent Mining  Consultants Inc. and based on the drilling completed up to and including  the 2023-24 field season (independent technical report prepared by  Independent Mining Consultants Inc., Tucson, Arizona, titled "Technical  Report, Estimated Mineral Resources, Altar Project, San Juan Province,  Argentina", dated December 31, 2024 - see news release dated November  25, 2024).
 
 Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor  its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of  the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or  accuracy of this release.
 
 Forward-Looking Statements
 
 This  news release contains "forward-looking information" or "forward-looking  statements" within the meaning of Canadian and United States securities  legislation. All statements included herein, other than statements of  historical fact, including, without limitation, statements relating to  the Altar project as a profitable project for the Company, the scale,  throughput, resources, projected production and projected profitability  of the Altar project, timeline for the completion of a mineral resource  update, a pre-feasibility study, and the proposed spin-out of Centauri  Minerals, projected gold prices and other assumptions, projected  economics, including NPV, IRR, cash costs, AISC and payback period, are  forward-looking. Generally, the forward-looking information and forward  looking statements can be identified by the use of forward looking  terminology such as "plans", "expects" or "does not expect", "is  expected", "budget", "scheduled", "estimates", "forecasts", "intends",  "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", "will continue" or "believes",  or variations of such words and phrases or state that certain actions,  events or results "may", "could", "would", "might" or "will be taken",  "occur" or "be achieved". The material factors or assumptions used to  develop forward looking information or statements are disclosed  throughout this news release.
 
 Forward looking  information and forward looking statements, while based on management's  best estimates and assumptions, are subject to known and unknown risks,  uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, level  of activity, performance or achievements of Aldebaran to be materially  different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking  information or forward looking statements. Although Aldebaran has  attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results  to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking information  and forward-looking statements, there may be other factors that cause  results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. There can be no  assurance that such information or statements will prove to be  accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially  from those anticipated in such information or statements. The Company  has and continues to disclose in its Management's Discussion and  Analysis and other publicly filed documents, changes to material factors  or assumptions underlying the forward-looking information and  forward-looking statements and to the validity of the information, in  the period the changes occur. The forward-looking statements and  forward-looking information are made as of the date hereof and Aldebaran  disclaims any obligation to update any such factors or to publicly  announce the result of any revisions to any of the forward-looking  statements or forward-looking information contained herein to reflect  future results. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on  forward-looking statements and information.
 
 Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
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