Brought to you by BULLS N’ BEARS
Murray Ward
June 18, 2026 — 4:45pm
By almost any measure, Forrestania Resources’ transformation from a small-cap explorer into a major emerging gold producer with a sprawling multi-hub footprint across Western Australia’s premier mining belts in barely three years represents an extraordinary evolution.
Now it has its foot on almost 1.7 million gold ounces in resources and a soon-to-be-refurbished 3.2 million tonnes-per-annum processing plant under its belt. With first gold on the horizon and ore already moving, the company appears to have positioned itself at the pointy end of one of the more compelling growth stories on the ASX.
When the company initially listed on the Australian Securities Exchange in 2021, its mandate was straightforward: explore highly prospective but under-drilled gold and lithium tenements in the Eastern Goldfields, Southern Cross and Forrestania regions.
However, with gold prices strengthening and lithium losing momentum in 2023, Forrestania redirected its exploration budget towards shallow, near-surface gold opportunities around historic mining districts, adopting a lower-risk pathway to resource growth.
By mid-2025, the steady accumulation of near-surface gold ounces had reached an inflection point. Under the guidance of veteran mining executive and newly appointed chairman, David Geraghty, management made the decision to transition away from a pure exploration model and shift towards a consolidation strategy through aggressive corporate mergers and acquisitions.
Forrestania soon began locking up surrounding tenure in the Forrestania, Southern Cross and Coolgardie districts, building the scale necessary to underpin a future commercial mining operation.
The first major consolidation breakthrough came in October 2025, when Forrestania launched a $58.9 million all-scrip takeover of fellow West Australian explorer Kula Gold.
After securing majority control and moving to compulsory acquisition, the transaction delivered a treasure trove of prospective ground in the Southern Cross and Eastern Goldfields. Most importantly, though, it handed Forrestania an 80 per cent stake in the historic, high-grade Mt Palmer gold project near Marvel Loch, which hosts a resource of 6.95 million tonnes at 1.33 grams per tonne (g/t) gold for 297,500 ounces.
The company then immediately moved to consolidate its footprint by executing a $24 million all-scrip deal with privateer, Newcam Minerals, for a grab bag of assets, including the remaining 20 per cent minority stake in the high-grade Mt Palmer gold project.
Wrapped into the same deal, Forrestania also picked up the Aurumin Johnson Range and Aurumin Mt Dimer entities, adding more than 100,000 ounces to the inventory and some highly prospective exploration acreage across the Marda-Diemals Belt, immediately north of Southern Cross.
With these critical satellite ore sources secured, the ultimate game-changing breakthrough arrived in November 2025 with the strategic acquisition of the Lake Johnston processing plant and infrastructure package from ASX-listed Maritana Minerals, formerly Horizon Minerals.
Backed by a heavily supported $34 million capital raising, the $35 million transaction fundamentally changed the company’s economic landscape overnight.
Instead of the company having to spend hundreds of millions of dollars and endure years of regulatory and environmental permitting delays to build a milling facility from scratch, Forrestania secured an outright, 100 per cent-owned shortcut pathway to commercial production.
The extensive infrastructure package included a processing facility, a fully operational accommodation camp, heavy-vehicle workshops, modern assay laboratories, established power grids and long-life operating licences.
Although the plant historically operated as a 1.5 million tonne per annum (Mtpa) nickel concentrator, it held larger-scale potential. Forrestania quickly appointed engineers to upgrade the idle brownfield facility into a dedicated 3.2Mtpa gold carbon-in-leach (CIL) processing hub, combining the existing crushing circuit and three installed ball mills with a new CIL circuit. The plant is slated for commissioning in November.
Since the hungry mill will require an enormous volume of ore to keep running at peak economic efficiency, the company intends to use the facility as a regional toll-treating and ore-blending nexus.
It will process Forrestania’s own rapidly growing internal resources whilst simultaneously acting as an open-access facility to treat ore from third-party mining companies operating throughout the infrastructure-starved Forrestania and Southern Cross greenstone belts.
The historic, near-surface high gold grades at the recently acquired Mt Palmer project make it a critical satellite ore source, designed to be blended with other lower-grade regional feed to optimise mill economics and recoveries.
Following Forrestania’s infrastructure breakthrough, the March quarter of 2026 has become a relentless exercise in expanding its boundaries further north into the Eastern Goldfields. It has executed a string of strategic acquisitions to build a highly flexible secondary operating hub around Coolgardie, while anchoring broader regional growth across the Yilgarn and Lake Johnston belts.
The company initially acquired the MacPhersons Reward project from Beacon Minerals, securing granted mining leases and approved, shovel-ready mining operations just 2.5 kilometres south of the historic Coolgardie townsite.
It then completed the Jaurdi Hills acquisition to expand its existing Bonnie Vale project area, which sits 30 kilometres northwest of Coolgardie in a premium mineralised corridor directly adjacent to Evolution Mining’s world-class 7.2-million-ounce Mungari gold mine.
To add further processing versatility, Forrestania purchased the Gibraltar project, inheriting granted mining leases and an active, operating vat-leach facility situated 30 kilometres southwest of Coolgardie, providing it with immediate, localised development and processing options.
That was followed closely by the acquisition of Mantis Resources, which allowed it to lock up vital exploration licences in the Lake Johnston Greenstone Belt, roughly 180 kilometres south of the main Coolgardie hub, ensuring long-term, local exploration upside in immediate proximity to the Lake Johnston plant.
The corporate crescendo arrived in June via a massive $93.5 million off-market scrip takeover of Zenith Minerals, a savvy transaction that drove Forrestania’s global resource inventory past the coveted 1.5-million-ounce milestone.
The Zenith merger brought the substantial 675,000-ounce Consolidated Dulcie gold project near Marvel Loch, 30 kilometres south of Southern Cross, into the portfolio. The move effectively cemented Forrestania’s position as a district-scale powerhouse across one of Western Australia’s premier mining provinces.
In an effort to be ready for plant commissioning, the company has already entered into a formal, binding ore sale agreement with Westgold Resources, taking immediate delivery of an initial 150,000 tonnes of its ore for processing.
Additionally, heavily laden ore trucks are now rolling across the Western Australian landscape, delivering the very first gold ore from its 54,625-ounce British Hill satellite deposit directly onto the primary stockpiles at Lake Johnston.
In a smart move, instead of the trucks returning empty from the plant, the company has started its own commercial haulage operations, partnering with the Shire of Dundas to backload road base to upgrade the regional Hyden–Norseman road network.
Following recent resource upgrades across its exploration assets and the integration of the Zenith portfolio, Forrestania’s pro forma global resource base has now burgeoned to an impressive 1.68 million ounces of gold.
This significant resource gives the company true district-scale size, providing a long-term economic baseline that should easily sustain its grand ambitions.
With commissioning of the revamped Lake Johnston processing plant targeted for November and first gold expected shortly thereafter, Forrestania is rapidly approaching the moment that will define the success of its ambitious growth strategy. Few junior explorers have assembled a 1.68-million-ounce resource base, secured a fully owned 3.2Mtpa processing hub and established multiple production centres in such a short timeframe.
Whether the company ultimately emerges as a significant Australian gold producer remains to be seen, but its rise has already become a textbook example of how disciplined exploration, smart acquisitions and bold infrastructure investment can accelerate the journey from explorer to producer. With ore already moving, a growing resource inventory and the keys to its own processing plant firmly in hand, Forrestania appears well placed for its next chapter.
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