EnviroGold Global will host a live investor webinar on January 27, 2026 at 2:30 p.m. Eastern Time to present its strategy for commercializing the NVRO Process™. Management will detail the Company’s path to revenue and earnings, the planned technology build-out, and key strategic partnerships. The presentation will cover the scale of the above-ground metals opportunity, economics of tailings recovery, and alignment with critical-minerals policy in the United States and allied jurisdictions. A question-and-answer session will follow, with participants invited to submit questions in advance. A replay will be made available on the Company’s website and YouTube channel. EnviroGold’s approach leverages existing, permitted tailings facilities to deliver metals without new mining permits, shortening project timelines and reducing environmental impact. With laboratory recoveries of up to 99.55% for gold and 98.96% for silver, the Company is positioned to support U.S. critical-minerals mandates that recognize secondary recovery as essential to supply-chain security. By offering a capital-light, licensing-led business model, EnviroGold expects to accelerate site selection and licensing discussions across North America, Europe and Australia, where tailings inventories exceed hundreds of millions of tonnes and regulatory frameworks favor recycling and reprocessing. Recent laboratory work under the 2025 Optimization Program has demonstrated that pre-concentrating metal-bearing sulfides before leaching can unlock lower-grade tailings previously excluded from economic consideration. In customer testing, the NVRO Process™ processed 125 tonnes per hour of solids feed and produced 16.8 tonnes per hour of smelter-grade concentrate, representing a 7.4× concentration upgrade. The pre-concentration step reduces overall throughput volume, lowers capital intensity and opens the opportunity to recover precious and critical metals from deposits with total recoverable sulfide values below the historical screening threshold of approximately US$350 per tonne.