District Provides Update on the Uranium Moratorium in Sweden

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Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - November 15, 2024) - District Metals Corp. (TSXV: DMX) (OTCQB: DMXCF) (FSE: DFPP) ("District" or the "Company") is pleased to highlight Swedish Parliament meeting records from the Committee on European Union (EU) Affairs on October 11, 2024.

These Swedish Parliament meeting records are of particular importance to District and its shareholders given the Company's 100% ownership of the Viken Energy Metals Deposit in Sweden, which is amongst the largest deposits of uranium and vanadium, based on total historic mineral resources, in the world (see January 15, 2024 news release).

We continue to monitor Swedish political developments closely and continue to believe that the Government intends to lift the uranium moratorium. The Company awaits additional guidance from the Swedish Government as to the timing and content of legislation that could reinstate uranium mining and exploration in Sweden.

Recent Comments from the Swedish Government on the Uranium Moratorium are as follows:

Swedish Parliament records from meetings of the Committee on EU Affairs on October 11, 2024 were recently posted on the Sveriges Riksdag website here:

https://www.riksdagen.se/sv/dokument-och-lagar/dokument/eu-namndens-uppteckningar/fredagen-den-11-oktober_hc0a3/

Nuclear energy and uranium mining were discussed where Honourable Romina Pourmokhtari, Minister of the Environment, re-iterated Sweden's stance on nuclear energy by stating:

"The Government will continue to work to ensure that nuclear power is highlighted as one of the low-emission technologies that needs to be accelerated in order to achieve emission reductions in line with the 1.5-degree target for global warming."

Minister Pourmokhtari further added:

"Uranium is found, but according to the previous government's amendments to the legislation, uranium must be treated as waste and large sums of money must be spent on disposing of this mineral, which we have an enormous need for, in order to buy it from elsewhere instead. This is something that this government intends to change, and I am very proud of that."

"It is simply not a very wise use of our resources - to have uranium in your soil, to lift it out of the ground, to have an ongoing mining operation but be forced to treat it as waste because there is legislation from the previous government, which decided that you have to treat the uranium as waste. I believe that this is a waste of resources and harmful to both the environment and the climate."