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    NI 43-101 and online disclosure: policy takeaways for project teams

    February 14, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    NI 43-101 and online disclosure: policy takeaways for project teams

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    NI 43-101’s standardised technical reports and qualified person requirements stabilised disclosure after Bre-X, but Erik Groves, corporate strategy and in-house counsel at Morgan Companies, argues they now mask chronic diluters whose projects never advance despite repeated financings and high G&A. With Canadian National Policy 51-201 still warning against “sporadic” online rumour correction on chat rooms and bulletin boards, legal advice often keeps issuers off X, YouTube and Reddit while retail investors crowdsource geology and drill-interval analysis. Groves calls for a defined safe harbour allowing video documentation of fieldwork, plain-language geological reasoning and public misinformation correction, without pre-releasing material results or implying unsupported resources.

    Technical Brief

    • Uniform report templates, boilerplate risk factors and similar slide-deck structures make weak and strong issuers visually indistinguishable to non-specialists.
    • Chronic diluters are characterised by repeated equity raises, flat or declining metreage, and persistently high G&A relative to field spend.
    • Rebranding or optioning the same ground to new vehicles is flagged as a recurring pattern within compliant-but-stagnant issuers.
    • Dense 43-101 reports are described as effectively unread by most retail investors, shifting attention to secondary commentary channels.
    • Experienced institutions rely on private technical networks and long-term behavioural patterns, creating an information asymmetry versus retail holders.
    • Risk focus has shifted from catastrophic assay fabrication to slow value destruction via dilution and non-progression, which NI 43-101 does not directly regulate.

    Our Take

    Within the 140 Policy stories in our database, Canada-focused pieces around disclosure standards like NI 43-101 are disproportionately linked to market-sensitive commodities such as gold, copper and uranium, underscoring how any tightening or reinterpretation of these rules can quickly affect project valuations and financing windows.

    The overlap of this op-ed’s commodity set (coal, copper, gold, uranium and broader critical minerals) with recent MINING.COM power-ranking coverage suggests that the projects most exposed to disclosure and guidance risk are also those attracting the bulk of current investor attention, particularly in North American jurisdictions.

    Because the United States features heavily in related policy and security-zone coverage for copper and critical minerals, any Canadian evolution of NI 43-101-style standards is likely to be watched by US regulators and exchanges as a reference point for harmonising expectations on technical reporting across the border.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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