Katy, Texas — February 24, 2026 — Michael D. Campbell, P.G., P.H., President and CEO of the I2M Corporation (I2M), announced today that the company is advancing its uranium initiatives to meet the growing demand expected from the American nuclear power resurgence. Backed by veterans of the earlier uranium exploration and mining era, and with an experienced technical team, I2M is positioning itself to deliver new domestic uranium supplies through modern in-situ recovery (ISR) methods.
“We are pursuing multiple funding strategies to advance our most promising projects,” said Campbell. “Our goal is to bring at least one ISR project into production as soon as possible with a realistic timeline given the benefits of ISR compared to conventional surface or underground mining.”
Formed in 2024 and based in Katy, Texas, I2M brings together senior members of the I2M Consulting Group to focus on ISR uranium projects in Texas and Alaska.
Expanding Uranium Prospects in Texas
Henry M. Wise, P.G., Vice President of Operations, reported that I2M has developed twelve pipeline projects across Texas, all identified as drill-ready exploration targets.
“One project has already demonstrated significant potential,” Wise noted. “Our recent investigations indicate uranium resources of at least 10 million pounds in the general area, based on drilling conducted during the early 1980s and on recent investigations that extend earlier estimates of uranium resources.”
A Team Rooted in Experience
I2M’s leadership and advisors represent decades of uranium, geoscience, and environmental expertise (here). The team includes professionals who formerly served with the CONOCO mining group in Sydney, Australia and in Casper, Wyoming, and with Teton Exploration (Div. United Nuclear Corp.), and in south Texas, with the U.S. Steel’s Uranium Group, and Cambridge Royalty Company, as well as veterans from ExxonMobil, DuPont, and the DOE’s WIPP project. Technical advisors bring further depth from decades with the U.S. Geological Survey, academia, and enCore Energy.
Having witnessed the uranium boom of the 1970s–1980s and the subsequent downturns following Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, I2M’s professionals redirected their expertise into the environmental industry — conducting hydrogeological investigations and remediation projects across the U.S. That dual background now underpins I2M’s environmentally responsible approach to uranium recovery projects.
Safe, Proven In-Situ Recovery
Unlike traditional mining, ISR operations recover uranium from roll-front deposits through solution extraction from porous sandstone formations — a process closely related to groundwater remediation. As Campbell explained, “It’s not blasting or hauling ore; it’s fluid circulation that dissolves and removes uranium from the naturally contaminated host sands within favorable aquifer systems using well-controlled ‘pump-and-treat’ methods.” The company’s management team of licensed geologists, hydrogeologists, and engineers ensures both technical rigor and environmental stewardship from exploration through production ending with remediation and sign-off by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ).
Commitment to Public Transparency
I2M continues to engage the public through research, presentations, and educational outreach. The company maintains an extensive online knowledge base of almost 15,000 geoscience records, highlighting, among other topics, uranium and nuclear power’s role in meeting future energy demand. Recent reports, articles, and presentations are available on the company’s website, e.g.:
- U.S. Uranium Miners Ready to Support Nuclear Power (here)
- Dispelling Myths on In-Situ Uranium Recovery (here)
- In-situ Uranium Recovery in Texas and Beyond: Myth vs. Fact (here)
- Perspectives on Uranium for Nuclear Power: Uranium Exploration & In-Situ Recovery Projects in Texas (here)
- I2M Web Portal – Uranium and Nuclear Power (here)
Outlook
“If all goes as planned,” Campbell concluded, “we’ll begin drilling soon to verify historical data from the 1980s leading to formal permitting, and with lease acquisitions and exploration drilling across our priority Texas pipeline projects. Our aim is to begin start-up construction as soon as all permits are approved, with initial production thereafter. Over time, we expect several additional projects from our pipeline to follow, potentially adding 40 to 50 million pounds of uranium to future U.S. supplies.”
Contact:
I2M Corporation
Katy, Texas
mdc@i2mcorporation.com
February 24, 2026
A more detailed version of the Press Release (here).








