Greenvale has just put its foot on a big lump of land. It says it's highly prospective for uranium in the Northern Territory. It already has extensive known mineralisation and resources, but it believes this is just the start of the game. The exploration program is already underway and Neil Biddle and Alex Cheeseman are wasting no time in pushing the case for their project Guest Bio Neil Biddle is the Executive Chairman of Greenvale Energy Limited and joins The Hole Truth as one of the most experienced figures in Australian hard-rock exploration. A geologist and Corporate Member of the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, he has more than 35 years of professional and management experience across precious metals, base metals, iron ore and battery minerals exploration in Australia and overseas. He is best known as a founding director of Pilbara Minerals, where he oversaw the acquisition, drill-out and development of the world-class Pilgangoora lithium project, helping take the company from a small-cap shell to a multi-billion-dollar lithium producer. He was also a founder of Bardoc Gold and the founding managing director of TNG Limited, and now leads Greenvale's push to build a substantial uranium portfolio in the Northern Territory. Alex Cheeseman is the Managing Director of Greenvale Energy Limited and joins The Hole Truth to drive the company's exploration agenda on the ground. A highly experienced Australian resources executive with more than 20 years' experience, he has worked across general management, corporate finance, strategy, commercial, operational and project development roles in the mining, energy and engineering sectors. Appointed Chief Executive Officer in May 2025 and elevated to Managing Director in March 2026, he leads Greenvale's exploration programs across its uranium projects in the Northern Territory and Queensland, as well as the advancement of the Alpha Torbanite project. Produced by Resource Media The Hole Truth: Mining Investment Podcast is a product of Read Corporate. Please note that Read Corporate does not provide investment advice and investors should seek personalised advice before making any investment decisions. Links The Hole Truth LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/the-hole-truth-podcast The Hole Truth YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI4sZkSfEpPi_u7OrD7lQ-tZHbdy6EhCC&si=iOcGscff7kMSw8c7 The Hole Truth Website: https://resourcesrisingstars.com.au/the-hole-truth-podcast/ The Hole Truth Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theholetruthpodcast/ Company Website: https://greenvaleenergy.com.au/ Key Insights A District-Scale Uranium Bet in a Proven Province Greenvale has secured uranium exploration rights over roughly 2,466 square kilometres in the Pine Creek Orogen of the Northern Territory, acquired from Patronus Resources and combined with its adjoining Douglas River ground to form the new Thunderball Uranium Project. Management draws a direct geological analogy to Canada's Athabasca Basin, arguing the southwest portion of the Pine Creek region is highly prospective for unconformity-style uranium yet has been only lightly explored for the past several decades following early discoveries such as Ranger and Jabiluka. Thunderball as the Anchor Deposit and Drilling Focus The package includes the high-grade Thunderball deposit, which carries a historical inferred resource of around 829,000 tonnes at approximately 924 ppm uranium oxide for about 1.7 million pounds of contained uranium under the older JORC 2004 code. Greenvale plans to test extensions at depth and along strike with the aim of releasing an updated, JORC 2012-compliant resource. Cheeseman argues that a conventional hard-rock deposit in the order of 15 to 20 million pounds of high-grade uranium would represent a walk-up mine, framing the existing resource as a starting point rather than the prize. A 20-Kilometre Trend of Repeatable Targets Thunderball sits on the edge of the Hayes Creek fault zone, which management describes as a major mineralising plumbing system running around 20 kilometres into Greenvale's northernmost Douglas River tenement. With recent airborne radiometrics flown over the area, the company expects to define a trend hosting numerous hard-rock and paleochannel calcrete-hosted targets, including a 32-kilometre uranium-rich paleochannel that was drill-ready in 2012. The thesis rests on unconformity-style systems clustering rather than occurring in isolation, given the source granite has been shedding uranium into the system for an estimated 1.2 billion years. A Strengthening Uranium Macro Backdrop Biddle and Cheeseman argue the project is timed to a strengthening uranium cycle, noting that producers such as Cameco and Kazatomprom have signalled they are not incentivised to bring on new capacity until prices reach significantly higher levels than the current spot price. They point to rising long-term price forecasts from analysts, growing nuclear build-out in China, the United States and Europe, and Europe's reclassification of nuclear as green energy as evidence that capital is beginning to flow toward junior uranium explorers after years of underinvestment. Optionality Beyond Uranium: Oasis and Alpha Torbanite Beyond the Northern Territory, Greenvale retains its advanced, high-grade Oasis Uranium Project in Queensland — a roughly 90-square-kilometre uranium anomaly being progressed with geophysics and ground geochemistry ahead of potential drilling next year. The company is also advancing its Alpha Torbanite project, which hosts a 28-million-tonne inferred resource and is positioned to supply Australia's fully imported, roughly billion-dollar bitumen market. With test work progressing through specialist processors toward independent certification, and bitumen prices rising on Middle East supply disruption, the project adds further optionality to the investment case.