Atlantic Lithium Ltd (AIM:ALL, ASX:A11, OTCID:ALLIF) CEO Keith Muller talked with Proactive's Stephen Gunnion about the company’s early-stage exploration activities in Côte d’Ivoire and ongoing progress at its flagship Ewoyaa project in Ghana. Atlantic Lithium acquired the Côte d’Ivoire licenses in 2016, around the same time as the Ewoyaa project, but only received exploration permits in May 2024. Muller said the company has since conducted over 5,000 soil samples and fieldwork across two tenements. “So on both licences, we are seeing significant areas of anomalies,” Muller explained. “On the one licence, we are seeing an area of 6.5km by about 2.5km of lithium occurring in the soils.” He also confirmed assays had identified spodumene mineralisation with conservative lithium content. The strategy is to establish a pipeline of projects to support long-term production. “As we are depleting the reserves at Ewoyaa, we always have reserves that we can replenish,” Muller said. On funding, Muller noted that the Côte d’Ivoire licenses are 100% owned by Atlantic Lithium and that a corporate advisor has been engaged to attract minority interest. This approach is intended to fund exploration non-dilutively. He also discussed developments at Ewoyaa, with renegotiated mining lease terms expected to go before Parliament imminently. For more updates from Proactive’s interviews, give this video a like, subscribe to our channel, and turn on notifications so you don’t miss out. #AtlanticLithium #KeithMuller #Ewoyaa #LithiumExploration #CotedIvoire #Spodumene #MiningNews #BatteryMetals #CriticalMinerals #ProactiveInvestors