White Mountain Titanium Corporation provided a progress update on current activities at its Cerro Blanco Project, related corporate matters, and commentary on the paints and pigments industry. Cerro Blanco Project: Set against a backdrop of expectations for firmer prices for pigments and TiO2 feedstocks and stubbornly difficult equity markets for junior exploration and development companies, the Company has continued to advance the Cerro Blanco Project to final feasibility as quickly as funds allow. The Company's two principal aims are to secure approval for the Environmental Impact Study (EIS), which was submitted to the Chilean environmental authorities in February 2013, and to conclude detailed design engineering and a definitive, final engineering feasibility study.

Geology - White Mountain geological staff are continuing to search for additional rutile prospects in the region. Based on the Company's discovery of 5 new prospects at Cerro Blanco and 1 new regional prospect within the past year, the Company believes that other targets can be identified using proprietary regional investigation techniques. Personnel are prioritizing targets with good access, the potential to host large volumes of rutile mineralization and exhibit high TiO2 grades at or near surface.

Any resources identified through this regional exploration or through further work conducted at Cerro Blanco or La Martina, would be in addition to the recently reported NI 43-101 resource statement compiled by Behre Dolbear. Further developments in this regard will be reported in due course. The Cerro Blanco Project final feasibility will include a desalination plant to supply industrial quality process water to the mining and rutile processing plant.

The desalination plant, based on conventional reverse osmosis technology, will be sited some 5km from the coast. White Mountain's technical personnel believe that the output of the desalination plant will exceed the industrial water requirements of the Cerro Blanco Project. Discussions are underway with several companies in the region who have expressed a desire to purchase water from the Company.

Should these discussions have a positive outcome, the desalination plant could be operated as a stand-alone facility, producing industrial water both for third-party sale and the Cerro Blanco Project within as little as 12months of the EIS approval being granted. In effect the desalination plant could become a separate profit centre within the rutile recovery process.