Microsoft Word 10.0.2627;UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                  SCHEDULE 14A

                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant [X]       Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]
                           
         Check the appropriate box:

[X]   Preliminary Proxy Statement

[ ]   Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted 
      by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))

[ ]   Definitive Proxy Statement

[ ]   Definitive Additional Materials

[ ]   Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss.240.14a-12

                          Altair Nanotechnologies Inc.
                -----------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)


  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)


     Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.


[ ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

     (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

         _______________________________________________________________________
                                        

     (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:  
                
         _______________________________________________________________________
        
     (3) Per unit  price  or  other  underlying  value of  transaction  computed
         pursuant to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (set forth  the amount on which the
         filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
                                     
         _______________________________________________________________________

     (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
                                                       
         _______________________________________________________________________
  
     (5) Total fee paid:
                                                                   
         _______________________________________________________________________


[ ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting  fee was paid
     previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

         (1) Amount Previously Paid:
                                                           
             ___________________________________________________________________

         (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
                                                       
             ___________________________________________________________________

         (3) Filing Party:

             ___________________________________________________________________

         (4) Date Filed:
                                                       
             ___________________________________________________________________

                                       


                          ALTAIR NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC.
                                 204 Edison Way
                               Reno, Nevada 89502
                                     U.S.A.

                         MANAGEMENT INFORMATION CIRCULAR
                               AND PROXY STATEMENT


Solicitation of Proxies
-----------------------

         THIS   MANAGEMENT   INFORMATION   CIRCULAR  AND  PROXY  STATEMENT  (THE
"INFORMATION  CIRCULAR") IS FURNISHED IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOLICITATION BY THE
MANAGEMENT OF ALTAIR  NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC. (THE "CORPORATION") OF PROXIES TO BE
USED AT THE ANNUAL AND SPECIAL  MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS OF THE CORPORATION TO BE
HELD AT THE TIME AND PLACE AND FOR THE PURPOSES SET FORTH IN THE ENCLOSED NOTICE
OF MEETING (THE  "MEETING").  This Information  Circular,  the notice of Meeting
attached hereto, and the accompanying form of proxy and the Annual Report of the
Corporation  for the year ended  December 31, 2004 are first being mailed to the
shareholders  of the Corporation on or about April 22, 2005. It is expected that
the  solicitation  will be primarily by mail,  but proxies may also be solicited
personally,  by  email,  by  facsimile  or  by  telephone  by  officers  of  the
Corporation   without  additional   compensation   therefor.   If  one  or  more
shareholders  files a proxy  statement or solicits  proxies in opposition to the
recommendations  of the Board of Directors,  the  Corporation may engage outside
solicitors to assist with its  solicitation  of proxies.  Details  regarding any
such engagement will be set forth in a supplement to this Information Statement.

         The cost of  solicitation  by management  will be borne directly by the
Corporation.   Arrangements   will  be  made  with  brokerage  firms  and  other
custodians,   nominees  and  fiduciaries  for  the  forwarding  of  solicitation
materials  to the  beneficial  owners of the  Common  Shares of the  Corporation
("Common Shares") held by such persons,  and the Corporation will reimburse such
brokerage  firms,  custodians,  nominees  and  fiduciaries  for  the  reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses incurred by them in connection therewith.

Appointment and Revocation of Proxies
-------------------------------------

         The persons  named in the enclosed  form of proxy are  officers  and/or
directors  of the  Corporation.  A  SHAREHOLDER  DESIRING TO APPOINT  SOME OTHER
PERSON TO  REPRESENT  HIM AT THE  MEETING  MAY DO SO either  by  inserting  such
person's name in the blank space provided in that form of proxy or by completing
another proper form of proxy and, in either case, depositing the completed proxy
at the office of the transfer agent indicated on the enclosed envelope not later
than 48 hours (excluding  Saturdays and holidays) before the time of holding the
Meeting,  or delivered to the chairman on the day of the Meeting or  adjournment
thereof.

         A  proxy  given  pursuant  to  this  solicitation  may  be  revoked  by
instrument in writing, including another proxy bearing a later date, executed by
the shareholder or by his attorney  authorized in writing,  and deposited either
at the Corporation's principal office located at 204 Edison Way, Reno, Nevada at
any time up to and  including  the last  business day  preceding  the day of the
Meeting,  or any adjournment  thereof, at which the proxy is to be used, or with
the chairman of such Meeting on the day of the Meeting, or adjournment  thereof,
or in any other manner permitted by law.


Voting of Proxies
-----------------

         UNLESS OTHERWISE  INDICATED ON THE FORM OF PROXY, SHARES REPRESENTED BY
PROPERLY EXECUTED PROXIES IN FAVOR OF PERSONS  DESIGNATED IN THE PRINTED PORTION
OF THE ENCLOSED FORM OF PROXY WILL BE VOTED (I) TO ELECT MANAGEMENT'S [________]
NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR,  (II) TO RATIFY THE  APPOINTMENT OF DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
AS THE  CORPORATION'S  INDEPENDENT  AUDITORS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER
31, 2005, (III) TO APPROVE THE ALTAIR  NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC 2005 STOCK INCENTIVE
PLAN,  AND (IV) TO RATIFY  THE  AMENDMENT  TO THE BYLAWS  INCREASING  THE QUORUM
REQUIREMENT  FOR  SHAREHOLDER  MEETINGS.  IF SO  INDICATED ON THE FORM OF PROXY,
SHARES  REPRESENTED BY PROPERLY EXECUTED PROXIES IN FAVOR OF PERSONS  DESIGNATED
IN THE  PRINTED  PORTION OF THE  ENCLOSED  FORM OF PROXY WILL BE  WITHHELD  FROM
VOTING  WITH  RESPECT  TO,  OR VOTED  AGAINST,  ANY OR ALL OF THE  FOUR  MATTERS
IDENTIFIED  IN THE  PRECEDING  SENTENCE.  The  enclosed  form of  proxy  confers
discretionary   authority  upon  the  persons  named  therein  with  respect  to
amendments  or variations  to matters  identified  in the notice of Meeting,  or
other  matters  which may  properly  come  before  the  Meeting.  At the time of
printing this Information  Circular,  management of the Corporation  knows of no
such amendments, variations or other matters to come before the Meeting.

Voting Securities
-----------------

         The  authorized  capital of the  Corporation  consists of an  unlimited
number of Common Shares.  As of March 17, 2005, the  Corporation  had issued and
outstanding 58,785,289 Common Shares.

         The  Corporation  shall make a list of all persons  who are  registered
holders of Common Shares on April 18, 2005 (the "Record Date") and the number of
Common  Shares  registered  in the  name  of each  person  on  that  date.  Each
shareholder is entitled to one vote for each Common Share registered in his name
as it  appears  on the list  except  to the  extent  that such  shareholder  has
transferred  any of his shares after the Record Date and the transferee of those
shares produces  properly endorsed share  certificates or otherwise  establishes
that he owns the shares and demands, not later than ten days before the Meeting,
that his name be included in the list.  In such case the  transferee is entitled
to vote those shares at the Meeting in lieu of the transferor.

         One-third of the outstanding Common Shares entitled to vote,
represented in person or by properly executed proxy, is required for a quorum at
the Meeting. Abstentions and broker non-votes, which are indications by a broker
that it does not have discretionary authority to vote on a particular matter,
will be counted as "represented" for the purpose of determining the presence or
absence of a quorum.

         Under the Canada Business  Corporations Act (the "CBCA"), once a quorum
is  established,  in  connection  with the  election  of  directors,  the [____]
nominees  receiving  the highest  number of votes will be  elected.  In order to
approve each of the proposals in respect of the  ratification of the appointment
of  independent  auditors,  the  approval  of the stock  incentive  plan and the
approval of the bylaw amendment,  the votes cast in favour of such proposal must
exceed the votes cast against.  Abstentions  and broker  non-votes will not have
the  effect  of  being  considered  as votes  cast  against  any of the  matters
considered at the Meeting.


                                       2


Exchange Rate Information
-------------------------

         The following exchange rates represent the noon buying rate in New York
City for cable transfers in Canadian  dollars (CDN. $), as certified for customs
purposes by the  Federal  Reserve  Bank of New York.  The  following  table sets
forth,  for each of the years  indicated,  the period  end  exchange  rate,  the
average  rate (i.e.  the average of the  exchange  rates on the last day of each
month during the period), and the high and low exchange rates of the U.S. Dollar
(U.S. $) in exchange for the Canadian  Dollar (CDN.  $) for the years  indicated
below, based on the noon buying rates.



                 ======================================================================================
                                            For the Year Ended December 31,
                 ======================================================================================
                                                                                    
                                         2004          2003          2002          2001           2000
                 --------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- --------------
                 ======================================================================================
                         (Each U.S. Dollar Purchases the Following Number of Canadian dollars)
                 ======================================================================================
                 High                  1.3970        1.5750        1.6128        1.6023         1.5600
                 --------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- --------------
                 Low                   1.1775        1.2923        1.5108        1.4933         1.4350
                 --------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- --------------
                 Average               1.2984        1.3916        1.5702        1.5519         1.4871
                 --------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- --------------
                 Year End              1.2034        1.2923        1.5800        1.5925         1.4995
                 --------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- --------------


                     PROPOSAL NO. 1 -- ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         The Articles of Continuance of the Corporation (the "Articles") provide
that the board of directors of the  Corporation  (the  "Board") may consist of a
minimum of three and a maximum of nine directors,  to be elected annually.  Each
director  will hold office until the next annual  meeting or until his successor
is duly  elected  unless his office is earlier  vacated in  accordance  with the
by-laws  of the  Corporation.  Pursuant  to the  Articles,  the  Board  has been
empowered to set the size of the Board,  subject to any limitations set forth in
the  Articles of the CBCA.  The  Articles  provide  that the Board may,  between
meetings of shareholders, appoint one or more additional directors, but only if,
after such appointment,  the total number of directors would not be greater than
one and one-third times the number of directors required to have been elected at
the last annual meeting of shareholders.

[identity of nominees to be inserted when determined by nominating committee]


                                       3



         Set forth below is a description of each of the directors, nominees and
executive officers of the Corporation, including their principal occupations for
the past five years:

         IF ANY OF THE  NOMINEES  IS FOR ANY  REASON  UNAVAILABLE  TO SERVE AS A
DIRECTOR,  PROXIES IN FAVOR OF MANAGEMENT  WILL BE VOTED FOR ANOTHER  NOMINEE IN
THEIR  DISCRETION  UNLESS THE  SHAREHOLDER  HAS  SPECIFIED IN THE PROXY THAT HIS
SHAERS ARE TO BE WITHHELD FROM VOTING IN THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS.

Directors

         Alan J.  Gotcher,  55, was appointed as Chief  Executive  Officer and a
director of the  Corporation  in August 2004 and was also appointed as President
of the  Corporation  in March 2005.  Prior to joining  Altair,  Dr.  Gotcher was
Chairman and CEO of InDelible  Technologies,  Inc., a development  stage company
that  provides  secure  logistics  through  covert bar code marking  systems and
invisible bar code reading  technologies  from January 2000 to August 2004. From
2000 through 2003, Dr.  Gotcher was  co-managing  partner of IdeaSpring,  LLC, a
private investment  company,  and from 2000 through August 2004, Dr. Gotcher was
President and CEO of A Gotcher & Co., Inc., a consulting firm. Prior to founding
InDelible, Dr. Gotcher spent fourteen years with Avery Dennison, where he served
as Senior Vice  president,  Manufacturing  &  Technology,  and Chief  Technology
Officer.  During his tenure,  Dr.  Gotcher led  Avery's  teams that  created and
commercialized  the Duracell On-Cell tester battery label and pressure sensitive
battery labels and the United States Postal Service's self-stick stamp products.
Prior to joining Avery  Dennison,  Dr.  Gotcher was  Laboratory  Director,  U.S.
Corporate Research and Development,  with Raychem  Corporation where he lead the
business  development  teams that  created,  developed  and  commercialized  the
conductive polymer- based PolySwitch(R) over-current protection device business.

         Jon N. Bengtson,  61, has been a director of the Corporation since July
2003 and was appointed  Chairman of the Board in June 2004. He currently  serves
as the Chairman of the Board of The Sands Regent Hotel Casino and is chairman of
the board of Radica Games Limited.  Mr. Bengtson began his career with Harrah's,
where he served for nine years in various management  positions,  including vice
president  of  management  information  systems.  He joined  International  Game
Technology in 1980 as vice president,  chief financial  officer and director and
was  subsequently  promoted to vice president of marketing in 1982. Mr. Bengtson
joined  The  Sands  Regent  Hotel  Casino in June  1984 and  served  in  various
positions,  including  vice  president  of  finance  and  administration,  chief
financial  officer,  treasurer and director,  senior vice president and director
and executive  vice  president and chief  operating  officer and director  until
December 1993. In January 1994 he joined Radica Games Limited as vice president,
chief financial officer and was appointed  president and chief executive officer
of  Radica  USA in  December  1994 and was  appointed  chairman  of the board in
January  1996.  Mr.  Bengtson  was a founder  and  chief  financial  officer  of
ShareGate,  Inc., a venture  funded  telecommunications  equipment  company from
March 1996 until  October  2001.  Mr.  Bengtson  is also the  founder  and chief
financial  officer  for Pinyon  Technology,  a start-up  technology  corporation
developing wireless antenna networking  technology.  He holds a bachelors degree
in Business  Administration and a Master of Business  Administration degree from
the University of Nevada, Reno.

         James I.  Golla,  72,  has been a  director  of the  Corporation  since
February  1994. He also currently  serves as a director of Assure Energy,  Inc.,
Radiant Energy Corp. and Galantas Gold Corp. Mr. Golla was a journalist with the
Globe and Mail,  Canada's  national  newspaper,  from 1954 until his  retirement
early in 1997.

         George E.  Hartman,  56, was elected a director of the  Corporation  in
March 1997.  From 1995 until 1998,  Mr.  Hartman served as President of Planvest
Pacific  Financial  Corp.  ("Planvest  Pacific"),  a  Vancouver-based  financial
planning firm with U.S. $1 billion of assets under management.  Mr. Hartman also

                                       4


served on the board of  directors  of  Planvest  Capital  Corp.,  the  parent of
Planvest Pacific. From 1998 until 2000, Mr. Hartman was Senior Vice President of
Financial  Concept Group until the firm's sale to Assante  Corporation,  a North
American financial services industry consolidator. At that time, he became Chief
Executive  Officer of PlanPlus Inc.,  Canada's  oldest firm  specializing in the
development  and  distribution  of wealth  management  software to the financial
services  industry.  Mr.  Hartman  also  continues  as  President  of  Hartman &
Corporation,  Inc., a firm he founded in 1991 which provides consulting services
to the financial services industry.  Since April 2004, Mr. Hartman has worked as
a consultant with The Covenant Group, a management  consulting firm. Mr. Hartman
is the author of Risk is a Four-Letter  Word--The Asset  Allocation  Approach to
Investing,  a Canadian  best-seller  published in 1992, and is the author of its
sequel, Risk is STILL a Four Letter Word, released in 2000.

         David  S.  King,  55,  has been a  director  of the  Corporation  since
February  2004.  In October  2000,  he founded  and has since been the  managing
partner  of  Advanced  Technology  Group LLC,  which  works  with  research  and
development  enterprises  to accelerate  their  commercialization  of innovative
technologies.  Dr. King was employed by the National  Institute of Standards and
Technology from 1976 through 2000. He began his career as a research  chemist in
the Physics  Laboratory  where he developed a research  program aimed at a basic
understanding  of energy flow and  chemical  reactivity  in high energy  density
materials,  in bimolecular  collisions and small molecular clusters and at metal
interfaces.  From 1994 to 1999 Dr.  King was a Program  Manager in the  Advanced
Technology Program,  where he recommended and implemented  long-range technology
investment strategies;  served as technical or business evaluator for over 1,000
research and development  proposals,  formally  evaluated  corporate  technology
development and commercialization  strategies; and served as program manager for
approximately 25 innovative,  industry-led  research and development projects in
areas of chemistry, physics and biotechnology. From 1999 to 2000, he was Science
Advisor, Physics Laboratory, and then Science Advisor in the Office of the Under
Secretary of Commerce for  Technology.  He then founded the Advanced  Technology
Group LLC in October  2000,  for which he  continues  to work.  Dr. King holds a
Bachelor of Arts degree in Chemistry,  a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Chemical
Physics and an Executive Masters of Science and Engineering in the Management of
Technology, all from the University of Pennsylvania.

         Christopher E. Jones,  58, was appointed a director of the  Corporation
effective  May 1, 2004.  Since 1998,  Mr.  Jones has been the Vice  President of
Manufacturing  and  Engineering  at  Behr  Process  Corporation,   where  he  is
responsible for the  construction and operations of all coating plant operations
for the larger DIY architectural coatings corporation in North America. Prior to
joining Behr Process,  Mr. Jones was the  President of Kronos  Louisiana and the
Vice President of Manufacturing of Kronos  International.  Kronos was the fourth
largest  producer of titanium dioxide in the world. Mr. Jones earned a Bachelors
of  Arts  degree  in   Chemistry   from  Oakland   University   and  a  Ph.D  in
Organo-Metallic   Chemistry  from  Michigan   State   University  and  completed
postdoctoral  work at University of Leeds,  England and University of Alberta in
Edmonton, Canada.

         Michel  Bazinet M.D.,  49, was appointed a director of the  Corporation
effective July 9, 2004.  Since January 2003, Dr. Bazinet has been Chairman & CEO
of privately  held Replicor,  Inc.,  which develops new antiviral and anticancer
therapies.  Prior to his  involvement  with  Replicor,  from  1996 to 2000,  Dr.
Bazinet  was the  founder and medical  director  of  Mediconsult,  a  healthcare
knowledge company. Mediconsult completed its initial public offering in 1999 and
was  ultimately   acquired  by  The  Cybear  Group  in  2000.  Dr.  Bazinet,   a
board-certified  urologist,  received  his MD  from  Sherbrooke  University.  He
completed his residency at McGill University,  Montreal, and has been a research
fellow at Memorial  Sloan-Kettering  Cancer  Center,  New York. Dr.  Bazinet,  a
former assistant professor of both urology and oncology at McGill University, is
also an accomplished speaker, medical industry author and consultant.

                                      5

         Rudi E. Moerck, 58, served as Vice President of Business Development of
the Corporation  from January 2002 until April 2002,  served as President of the
Corporation  from  April 2002  until  March  2005 and has been a director  since
December 2003. Since March 2005, Mr. Moerck has been working as a consultant for
Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, CA. Prior to joining the Corporation, in April
1997, Dr. Moerck founded www.Smrtdoc.com,  a consulting services provider to the
pharmaceutical,  virtual pharmaceutical and fine chemical industries. Dr. Moerck
also held key senior management  positions,  including Senior Vice President and
General  Manager as well as Senior Vice  President of Sales and  Marketing  with
Catalytica  Pharmaceuticals between June 1998 and January 2002. Prior to joining
Catalytica  Pharmaceuticals,  Dr.  Moerck  held the  position  of  President  of
Salsbury Chemicals, a subsidiary of Cambrex Corporation, from 1996-1997 and held
the position of President of the  Pharmaceuticals  and Fine  Chemicals  Group of
Cambrex from 1997-1998.  Degussa  Corporation and Degussa AG employed Dr. Moerck
for  13  years   during  which  he  held   various   positions   of   increasing
responsibility,  which included the  successful  green field launch of Degussa's
hydrogen  peroxide  business in North America.  Dr. Moerck  obtained a bachelors
degree in Biology/Chemistry from Florida Southern College,  Lakeland, Florida in
1969 and a Ph.D. in Organic  Chemistry  from  University of Florida in 1975, and
completed  Postdoctoral  Fellowships at Ohio State  University  between 1975 and
1979.

Executive Officers
------------------

         The executive  officers of the Corporation are Alan J. Gotcher,  Edward
H. Dickinson, Douglas K. Ellsworth and Roy Graham. Certain information regarding
Dr.  Gotcher is set forth  above under  "Election  of  Directors  -  Directors."
Certain information regarding Messrs. Dickinson, Ellsworth and Graham follows.

         Edward H. Dickinson,  58, was appointed Chief Financial  Officer of the
Corporation  in March  2000,  and was  appointed  Secretary  in June  2001.  Mr.
Dickinson had previously  served as Director of Finance of the Corporation since
August  1996.  From 1994 to 1996,  Mr.  Dickinson  was  employed by the Southern
California  Edison  Company as a  negotiator  of  non-utility  power  generation
contracts.  Mr.  Dickinson was Vice  President and Director of Geolectric  Power
Company during 1993 and 1994, and from 1987 through 1992, he was the Director of
Finance  and  Administration  for OESI  Power  Corporation.  Prior to 1987,  Mr.
Dickinson held various accounting and program management positions in the United
States  Department  of  Energy.  Mr.  Dickinson,   who  is  a  certified  public
accountant,  obtained  a masters  degree in  Accounting  from  California  State
University, Northridge in 1978.

         Douglas   K.   Ellsworth,   51,   was   appointed   President,   Altair
Nanomaterials,  Inc.,  the operating  subsidiary  through which the  Corporation
conducts its nanotechnology  business, in June 2003 and Senior Vice President of
the  Corporation  in March 2004.  Mr.  Ellsworth  previously  held various other
positions with Altair Nanomaterials,  Inc. Prior to joining the Corporation, Mr.
Elsworth  was the  Manager,  Technical  Support  for BHP  Minerals'  Center  for
Minerals  Technology in Reno, Nevada from 1984 through 1999. Mr. Ellsworth began
work at BHP in 1984 as the chief chemist.  Mr. Ellsworth worked as a chemist and
manager at Skyline Labs in Colorado and Alaska in 1975-1979 and as a chemist for
Utah  International,  Inc.'s  Minerals  Laboratory in Sunnyvale  California from
1979-1984.  Mr. Ellsworth received his B.S. degree in chemistry and geology from
the State University of New York College, Oneonta.

         Roy Graham,  54, was appointed Senior Vice President of the Corporation
in January  2005.  Mr.  Graham was the  President  and CEO of  modeMD,  Inc.,  a
developer  of wireless  application  software  and  systems  for the  healthcare
industry,  from May 2002 through  December  2004.  From January 2000 until April
2002, Mr. Graham served as managing  partner of Incline  Consulting,  L.L.C.,  a
business   consulting   firm.  He  has  also  held  senior  vice  president  and
director-level sales and marketing roles with Wyse Technology, Tandem Computers,
and Digital  Equipment  Corporation.  Mr. Graham  received a Bachelor of Science
degree with honors from Sussex University in the United Kingdom.
                                       6


Key Employees
-------------

         Bruce J.  Sabacky,  54, was  appointed  Vice  President of Research and
Engineering for Altair  Nanomaterials,  Inc., the operating  subsidiary  through
which the Corporation conducts its nanotechnology business, in October 2003. Dr.
Sabacky  joined  Altair  Nanomaterials,  Inc.  in January  2001 as  Director  of
Research  and  Engineering.  Prior  to  that,  he was  the  Manager  of  Process
Development at BHP's Center for Minerals  Technology from 1996 to 2001, where he
was  instrumental in developing the  nanostructured  materials  technology.  Dr.
Sabacky was the Technical Superintendent for Minera Escondida Ltda. from 1993 to
1996 and was a Principal  Process  Engineer with BHP from 1991 to 1993. Prior to
that,  he held senior  engineering  positions in the minerals and  metallurgical
industries.  Dr. Sabacky obtained Bachelors and Masters degrees in Metallurgical
Engineering  from the South Dakota School of Mines and  Technology and a Ph.D in
Materials Science & Mineral Engineering with minors in Chemical  Engineering and
Mechanical Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley.

Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management
--------------------------------------------------------------

         Set forth below is information with respect to beneficial  ownership of
Common Shares as of March 18, 2005 by the Corporation's Chief Executive Officer,
the  Corporation's  former  Chief  Executive  Officer,  by the three  additional
persons  serving as  executive  officers  as of  December  31,  2004 whose total
compensation  for  2004  exceeded  $100,000,  and the  most  highly  compensated
non-executive employee (collectively,  the "named executive officers"),  by each
of the  directors of the  Corporation,  by persons known to the  Corporation  to
beneficially  own more  than 5% of the  outstanding  Common  Shares,  and by all
current  officers and directors of the Corporation as a group.  Unless otherwise
indicated,  each of the  shareholders  named in the  table has sole  voting  and
investment  power with respect to the Common Shares  identified as  beneficially
owned. The Corporation is not aware of any arrangements,  the operation of which
may at a subsequent date result in a change in control of the Corporation.


------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
 Title of Class      Name and Address of Beneficial Owner     Amount and Nature of     Percentage of
                                                              Beneficial Ownership
                                                                       (1)               Class (2)
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
                                                                                  
Common             Alan J. Gotcher (Chief Executive                282,240(3)                *
                   Officer and Director)
                   930 Tahoe Blvd., #802-216
                   Incline Village, Nevada 89451
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------

Common             Rudi E. Moerck (Former President and                500                   *
                   Director)
                   900 So. Meadows Pkwy., #3611
                   Reno, Nevada 89521
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             Douglas K. Ellsworth (Senior Vice               112,533(4)                *
                   President)
                   4310 Wild Eagle Terrace
                   Reno, Nevada 89511
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             Edward H. Dickinson (Chief Financial            397,700(5)                *
                   Officer and Secretary)
                   659 Caughlin Glen
                   Reno, Nevada 89509
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------

                                      7




------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
 Title of Class      Name and Address of Beneficial Owner     Amount and Nature of     Percentage of
                                                              Beneficial Ownership
                                                                       (1)               Class (2)
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
                                                                                  
Common             Bruce J. Sabacky (Employee)                      5,000(13)                *
                   8555 Council Lane
                   Reno, Nevada 89511
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             Jon N. Bengtson (Director)                       50,000(6)                *
                   2370 Solari Drive
                   Reno, Nevada 89509
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             James I. Golla (Director)                        80,000(7)                *
                   829 Terlin Boulevard
                   Mississauga, Ontario L5H 1T1
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             George Hartman (Director)                        35,800(8)                *
                   136 Colborne
                   Fenelon Falls, ON K0M 1N0
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             David S. King (Director)                         60,000(9)                *
                   123 Tenth St. SE
                   Washington, D.C. 20003
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             Christopher Jones (Director)                    50,000(10)                *
                   1140 Cuchara Drive
                   Del Mar, California 92014
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             Michel Bazinet (Director)                            0                    *
                   343 Brookfield Avenue
                   Mount-Royal, Quebec H3P 2A7
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             William   P.   Long   (Chief   Executive          722,700               1.2%
                   Officer and director until May 1, 2004)
                   57 Sunset Rim
                   Cody, Wyoming  82414
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             Louis Schnur (5% Shareholder)                  5,249,851(11)            8.9%
                   6941 South Western Avenue
                   Chicago, ILL  60636
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------
Common             All Directors and Officers as a Group          1,073,77312)             1.8%
                   (11 persons)
------------------ ----------------------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------

* Represents less than 1% of the outstanding Common Shares.

(1)      Includes all Common Shares issuable pursuant to the exercise of options
         and warrants that are  exercisable  within 60 days of March 18,,  2005.
         Does not  include  any Common  Shares  subject to options  that are not
         exercisable within 60 days of March 18, 2005 or subject to options that
         vest only upon the  occurrence of events,  such as a rise in the market
         price of the Common Shares, outside of the control of the optionee.
(2)      Based on  58,785,289  Common Shares  outstanding  as of March 18, 2005.
         Common Shares  underlying  options,  warrants or other  convertible  or
         exercisable securities are, to the extent exercisable within 60 days of
         March 18, 2005,  deemed to be  outstanding  for purposes of calculating
         the percentage  ownership of the owner of such convertible  securities,
         but not for  purposes  of  calculating  any other  person's  percentage
         ownership.
                                      8


(3)      Includes  250,000  Common  Shares  subject  to  options  granted to Mr.
         Gotcher  pursuant to the 1998 Plan.  Includes 2,140 Common Shares owned
         by his wife and 500  Common  Shares  owned by his adult  stepson,  with
         respect to which Mr. Gotcher disclaims beneficial ownership.
(4)      Includes  107,200  Common  Shares  subject  to  options  granted to Mr.
         Ellsworth pursuant to the 1998 Plan.
(5)      Includes  150,000  Common  Shares  subject  to  options  granted to Mr.
         Dickinson  pursuant to the 1996 Plan and 241,200  Common Shares subject
         to options granted to Mr. Dickinson pursuant to the 1998 Plan.
(6)      Includes  50,000  Common  Shares  subject  to  options  granted  to Mr.
         Bengtson pursuant to the 1998 Plan.
(7)      Includes  10,000 Common Shares subject to options  granted to Mr. Golla
         pursuant to the 1996 Plan and 50,000 Common  Shares  subject to options
         granted to Mr. Golla pursuant to the 1998 Plan.
(8)      Includes 35,000 Common Shares subject to options granted to Mr. Hartman
         pursuant to the 1998 Plan.
(9)      Includes  50,000 Common Shares  subject to options  granted to Mr. King
         pursuant to the 1996 Plan.
(10)     Includes  50,000 Common Shares subject to options  granted to Mr. Jones
         pursuant to the 1996 Plan.
(11)     Based solely on Schedule  13D dated April 7, 2004 filed by Mr.  Schnur.
         Such Schedule 13D indicates  that  3,116,022 of such shares are subject
         to presently  exercisable  warrants to purchase Common Shares. All such
         warrants have been exercised.  The Corporation believes that Mr. Schnur
         has sold a substantial portion of his holdings of Common Shares and has
         asked Mr. Schnur to update his Schedule 13D.
(12)     Includes  260,000 Common Shares subject to options  granted to officers
         and  directors  pursuant  to the 1996 Plan and  738,400  Common  Shares
         subject to options  granted to officers and  directors  pursuant to the
         1998 Plan.
(13)     Includes 5,000 Common Shares subject to options  granted to Mr. Sabacky
         pursuant to the 1998 Plan.

Executive Compensation
----------------------

(a)      Compensation of Officers

         The  following  table,  presented in  accordance  with  Regulation  14A
promulgated under the United States Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
(the "Exchange Act"),  sets forth all compensation for services  rendered in all
capacities to the  Corporation and its  subsidiaries  for the fiscal years ended
December  31,  2004,  December  31, 2003 and December 31, 2002 in respect of the
named executive officers.
                                       9



======================================================================================================================
                                                           Summary Compensation Table

------------------- -------- ------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ----------------
Name and Title      Fiscal           Annual Compensation                Long Term Compensation
                    Year
                    Ended
                    Dec.
                      31,
------------------- -------- ------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ----------------
-                                                                  Restricted  Securities                            
                                                                   Shares or   Securities 
                                                                   Restricted     Under
                                                   Other Annual    Share         Options    LTIP         All Other
                              Salary   Bonus       Compensation      Units       Granted    Payouts    Compensation
                             (U.S.$)   (U.S. $)       (U.S.$)         (#)          (#)      (U.S.$)      (U.S. $)
------------------- -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
                                                                                 
Alan J. Gotcher,     2004     100,481     Nil           Nil           Nil        350,000      Nil           Nil
Chief Executive     -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
Officer and          2003      Nil        Nil           Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil       
Director            -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
                     2002      Nil        Nil           Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil       
======================================================================================================================
Rudi E Moerck,       2004     146,538     Nil           Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil
Former President    -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
and Director         2003     110,000   50,000          Nil           Nil        50,000       Nil           Nil       
------------------- -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
                     2002      84,500     Nil           Nil           Nil        300,000      Nil           Nil       
======================================================================================================================
Douglas K.           2004     122,343   18,750          Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil
Ellsworth, Sr.      -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ---------------- 
Vice President       2003     105,774   40,000          Nil           Nil        110,000      Nil           Nil        
------------------- -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ---------------- 
                     2002      92,653     Nil           Nil           Nil        10,000       Nil           Nil        
======================================================================================================================
Edward H.            2004     112,500   17,250          Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil
Dickinson, Chief    -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ---------------- 
Financial Officer    2003      85,000   25,000          Nil           Nil        110,000      Nil           Nil        
------------------- -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ---------------- 
                     2002      85,000     Nil           Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil        
======================================================================================================================
Bruce J. Sabacky,    2004    113,481    12,938          Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil           Nil
Vice President of   -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ---------------- 
Altair               2003      99,463   13,215          Nil           Nil        110000       Nil           Nil        
Nanomaterials,      -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ---------------- 
Inc.                 2002      98,502     Nil           Nil           Nil         10000       Nil           Nil        
====================================================================================================================== 
William P. Long      2004     167,369   50,880          Nil           Nil          Nil        Nil        29,000 (2)
(Chief Executive    -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
Officer Until May    2003     109,440   60,000          Nil           Nil        110,000      Nil           Nil       
1, 2004)            -------- --------- ---------- ---------------- ----------- ------------ --------- ----------------
                     2002     100,320    9,120          Nil           Nil        100,000      Nil       117,694 (3)   
 ======================================================================================================================

(1)      Represents  bonus earned during  indicated  fiscal year. 
(2)      Represents value of company automobile given to employee.
(3)      This amount includes  $116,000  representing the value, as of the issue
         date,  of 200,000  Common Shares issued to Dr. Long in December 2002 in
         connection  with the  termination  of certain  terms of his  employment
         agreement.  It also includes $1,694  representing the value of personal
         use of a company-owned automobile.

                                       10

(b)      Option Grants in 2004

         The following table provides details with respect to stock options,  if
any, granted to the named executive  officers during the year ended December 31,
2004:


-------------------- ------------ ---------- ------------- ---------- -------------- ------------- ------------------------
                                                                      Market Value                                         
                                              % of Total                   of                       Potential Realizable
                                               Options                 Securities                  Value at Assumed Rates
                                              Granted to   Exercise    Underlying                      of Share Price
                      Securities              Employees    Price       Options on                     Appreciation for
                        Under                     in       per         the Date of                       Option Term
                       options    Grant       Financial    Share          Grant       Expiration            (US$)
       Name            Granted      Date         Year        (US$)        (US$)          Date              5% 10%
-------------------- ------------ ---------- ------------- ---------- -------------- ------------- ------------------------
                                                                                      
Alan J. Gotcher        50,000     05/18/04       3.0%        2.09         2.08         8/31/05      28,233       62,993
(Chief Executive
Officer and
Director)(1)
-------------------- ------------ ---------- ------------- ---------- -------------- ------------- ---------- -------------
Alan J. Gotcher        300,000    08/16/04      18.0%        1.02         1.02         8/16/14      84,542      186,816
(Chief Executive
Officer and
Director)
-------------------- ------------ ---------- ------------- ---------- -------------- ------------- ---------- -------------


(1)      Mr.  Gotcher was serving as an  independent  consultant,  and not as an
         officer or director, when the option was granted.

(c)      Aggregated Option Exercises and Year-end Option Values

         The following table provides information regarding options held by the
named executive officers as at December 31, 2004 and options exercised by them
during the year ended December 31, 2004:


------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ----------------------------- ------------------------------
                               Securities                                                                      
                               Acquired     Aggregate       Number of Securities          Value of Unexercised
                                   on         Value        Underlying Unexercised        In-the-Money Options at
                                Exercise    Realized    Options at December 31, 2004        December 31, 2004
                               ----------- ------------ ----------------------------- ------------------------------
                                                        Exercisable   Unexercisable   Exercisable   Unexercisable
            Name                  (#)          ($)          (#)            (#)            ($)             ($)
------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ------------- ----------------
                                                                                          
Alan J. Gotcher, Chief            Nil          Nil        150,000        200,000        200,000         338,000
Executive Officer and
Director
------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ------------- ----------------
Rudi E. Moerck, Former            Nil          Nil        300,000         50,000        478,000         85,500
President and Director
------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ------------- ----------------
Douglas K. Ellsworth, Sr.         Nil          Nil        125,000          Nil          202,550           N/A
Vice President
------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ------------- ----------------
Edward H. Dickinson, Chief        Nil          Nil        384,700          Nil          253,850           N/A
Financial Officer
------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ------------- ----------------
Bruce J. Sabacky, Vice           25,000      62,500        30,000          Nil           48,700           N/A
President of Altair
Nanomaterials, Inc.
------------------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ------------- ----------------

                                       11


 (d)     Compensation of Directors

         The  Corporation  pays  all  directors  who  are not  employees  of the
Corporation  a fee of $3,000 per  quarter.  In addition,  directors  who are not
employees and provide service in the following  positions  receive the following
additional fees:

         Position                                    Additional Compensation
         ------------------                          -----------------------
         Chairman of the Board                       $3,000 per quarter 
         Executive Committee Member                  $2,000 per quarter 
         Audit or Compensation Committee Chair       $1,000 per quarter 
         Audit or Compensation Committee Member      $1,000 per quarter 
         Other Committee Chair or Member             Determined upon formation 
                                                     of committee

         In  addition,  directors  are entitled to receive  compensation  to the
extent  that they  provide  services to the  Corporation  at rates that would be
charged by such directors for such services to arm's length parties.  No amounts
were paid Dr. Gotcher and Dr. Moerck in 2004 in their capacities as directors.

         Directors of the Corporation and its  subsidiaries are also entitled to
participate  in the 1996 Plan and the 1998 Plan.  During 2004,  the  Corporation
granted  options to  purchase  75,000  Common  Shares to Mr. King and options to
purchase 75,000 Common Shares to Mr. Jones under the 1996 Plan. During 2004, the
Corporation  granted  options to purchase  75,000 Common Shares to Mr.  Hartman,
options to purchase  75,000  Common  Shares to Mr. Golla and options to purchase
75,000 Common Shares to Mr. Bazinet under the 1998 Plan.

(e)      Employment Contracts

         The  Corporation  has entered into  employment  agreements with Alan J.
Gotcher, Douglas K. Ellsworth, Edward H. Dickinson and Bruce J. Sabacky.

         Dr. Gotcher's employment agreement commenced on August 16, 2004 with an
initial term of two years with an option for the  Corporation  to extend for one
additional  year.  His annual salary is $275,000 per year, and he is eligible to
receive  an  annual  bonus  equal  to up to  one-half  of his base  salary  upon
achievement of performance  measures  mutually  agreed to by Dr. Gotcher and the
Board.  In connection  with his  employment  agreement,  Dr. Gotcher was granted
300,000  options to purchase  the Common  Shares as  reflected  above in "Option
Grants in 2004".  If Dr.  Gotcher's  employment is terminated by the Corporation
without cause, he is entitled to receive his regular salary for a period of nine
months from the date of  termination.  His employment  agreement also contains a
covenant not to compete for 12 months following termination of employment.

         Mr.  Ellsworth's  employment  agreement  commenced on November 10, 2004
with a term of 18 months.  His annual  salary is  $125,000.  If Mr.  Ellsworth's
employment is terminated by the  Corporation  without  cause,  he is entitled to
receive  his  regular  salary  for a  period  of nine  months  from  the date of
termination.  His  employment  agreement also contains a covenant not to compete
clause for 12 months following termination of employment.

         Mr.  Dickinson's  employment  agreement  commenced on November 10, 2004
with a term of 18 months.  His annual  salary is  $115,000.  If Mr.  Dickinson's
employment is terminated by the  Corporation  without  cause,  he is entitled to
receive  his  regular  salary  for a  period  of nine  months  from  the date of
termination.  His  employment  agreement also contains a covenant not to compete
clause for 12 months following termination of employment.

                                       12

         Dr. Sabacky's  employment agreement commenced on November 10, 2004 with
a term of 18 months. His annual salary is $110,000.  If Dr. Sabacky's employment
is terminated by the  Corporation  without cause,  he is entitled to receive his
regular  salary for a period of nine  months from the date of  termination.  His
employment  agreement  also  contains  a covenant  not to compete  clause for 12
months following termination of employment.

(f)      Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

         The  Corporation  established a Compensation  Committee on November 10,
2003 to administer its executive  compensation program. In April 2004, the Board
replaced the Compensation  Committee with a Compensation,  Corporate  Governance
and Nominations  Committee (the "Compensation and Nominating  Committee") of the
Board.  The  Compensation  and Nominating  Committee  consists of George Hartman
(Chair),  James Golla and David King, each of whom is independent under Nasdaq's
listing standards applicable to such committee.  If elected by the shareholders,
Messrs.  Hartman,  Golla and King are  expected  to be members of the  Committee
during 2005.

         In addition to evaluating  and approving  employment  contracts for key
employees  throughout the year, the Board, the Compensation  Committee (prior to
April 2004) and the Compensation and Nominating  Committee  formally  considered
compensation  issues 12 times during the 2004 fiscal year in connection with the
authorization of grants of options to purchase Common Shares.

(g)      Compensation Committee Report

         Notwithstanding  anything  to  the  contrary  set  forth  in any of the
Corporation's  previous filings under the United States  Securities Act of 1933,
as amended (the  "Securities  Act"),  or the Exchange Act, that  incorporates by
reference,   in  whole  or  in  part,  subsequent  filings  including,   without
limitation,  this  Information  Circular and Proxy  Statement,  the Compensation
Committee  Report and the Performance  Graph set forth below shall not be deemed
to be incorporated by reference into any such filings.

[to be added in definitive proxy]

         The foregoing is submitted by the Compensation and Nominating
Committee:

         George Hartman, Chair
         James Golla
         David King

 (h)     Performance Graph

         The following chart compares the total  cumulative  shareholder  return
over the five-year  period ended December 31, 2004 for U.S. $100 invested in the
Common Shares with the total return of all shares traded on the NASDAQ  National
Market and NASDAQ  SmallCap  Market (the "NASDAQ Index") and the total return of
shares  included in the Standard & Poor's  Specialty  Chemicals  Index (the "S&P
Specialty  Chemicals  Index").  All data assumes  reinvestment  of dividends and
other distributions.

[LINE-GRAPH  REPRESENTATION  "CUMULATIVE  VALUE OF $100  INVESTMENT"  - 12/31/99
THROUGH 12/312/04 - OMITTED]


                                          12/31/99     12/31/00     12/31/01      12/31/02     12/31/03     12/31/04
                                         --------     --------     --------      --------     --------     --------
                                                                                               
Altair Nanotechnologies Inc.                  100           38           35            13           66           68
Nasdaq Index                                  100           60           48            33           49           54
S&P Specialty Chemicals Index                 100           87           81            47           55           63

                                       13


 Audit Committee and Audit Committee Report
 ------------------------------------------

Audit Committee(1)

         The Audit Committee  operates  pursuant to a written charter adopted by
the Board.  In April 2004,  the Board  amended and  restated  the charter of the
Audit  Committee  ("Committee"),  a copy of which  may be  found  on the  Altair
Nanotechnologies  Inc.  website,  http://www.altairnano.com  under  the  heading
"Investor  Relations."  A copy may also be obtained  free of charge by mailing a
request in writing to: Secretary,  Altair  Nanotechnologies Inc. 204 Edison Way,
Reno, Nevada 89502.

         The Committee is comprised  solely of non-employee  directors,  each of
whom has been determined by the Board to be independent  under the  requirements
of the NASDAQ  listing  standards.  The Committee was comprised of Jon Bengtson,
George Hartman and James Golla during the period January 2004 through April 2004
and was comprised of Jon Bengtson,  George Hartman and Christopher  Jones during
the period May 2004 through December 2004. If elected by the  shareholders,  Jon
Bengtson, George Hartman and Christopher Jones are expected to be members of the
Committee  during 2005. The Committee met four times via conference  call during
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004.

         The Board has  determined in its business  judgment that each member of
the Committee  satisfies the requirements with respect to financial literacy set
forth in NASD Rule  4350(d)(2)(A)(iv);  and the Board  has  determined  than Jon
Bengtson,  the Chair of the Committee,  is an "audit committee financial expert"
as such term is defined in Item 401(h) of Regulation S-K promulgated by the SEC,
is independent under Item 7(d)(3)(iv) of Schedule 14A under the Exchange Act and
is, as a result of his past  employment  experience  in finance  or  accounting,
requisite   professional   certification   in  accounting  or  other  comparable
experience or background, sophisticated with respect to financial matters.

         The Committee's  responsibility is to assist the Board in its oversight
of the (a) quality and integrity of the Corporation's financial reports, (b) the
independence and qualifications of the Corporation's independent auditor and (c)
the  compliance  by the  Corporation  with  legal and  regulatory  requirements.
Management  of the  Corporation  has the  responsibility  for the  Corporation's
financial  statements as well as the Corporation's  financial reporting process,
principles and internal  controls.  The Corporation's  independent  auditors are
responsible for performing an audit of the  Corporation's  financial  statements
and expressing an opinion as to the conformity of such financial statements with
generally accepted accounting principles.

Audit Committee Report

         This section is not  "soliciting  material," is not deemed "filed" with
the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  and is not  to be  incorporated  by
reference in any filing of the  Corporation  under the Securities Act of 1933 or
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, each as amended,  regardless of date or any
other general incorporation language in such filing.

         In this  context,  the Committee has reviewed and discussed the audited
financial  statements of the  Corporation  as of and for the year ended December
31,  2004 with  management  and the  independent  auditors.  The  Committee  has
discussed with the independent  auditors the matters required to be discussed by
Statement on auditing Standards No. 61 (Communication with Audit Committees), as
currently  in effect.  In  addition,  the  Committee  has  received  the written
disclosures   and  the  letter  from  the  independent   auditors   required  by
Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 (Independence Discussions with Audit
Committees),  as currently in effect,  and it has discussed with the independent
auditors their independence from the Corporation.

                                       14


         The Committee has also  considered  whether the  independent  auditor's
provision  of  non-audit   services  to  the   Corporation  is  compatible  with
maintaining the auditors' independence.

         The  members of the  Committee  are not  engaged in the  accounting  or
auditing  profession  and,  consequently,  are not experts in matters  involving
auditing or accounting including in respect of auditor independence. As such, it
is not the duty of the Committee to plan or conduct  audits or to determine that
the  Corporation's   financial   statements  fairly  present  the  Corporation's
financial position and results of operation and are in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles and applicable laws and regulations.  Each member
of the  Committee  is entitled  to rely on (i) the  integrity  of those  persons
within  the  Corporation  and of the  professionals  and  experts  (such  as the
independent  auditor) from which the Committee  receives  information,  (ii) the
accuracy of the  financial  and other  information  provided to the Committee by
such persons,  professionals  or experts absent actual knowledge to the contrary
and (iii)  representations  made by management or the independent auditors as to
any information technology services of the type described in Rule 2-01(c)(4)(ii)
of  Regulation  S-X and other non audit  services  provided  by the  independent
auditor to the Corporation.

         Based on the reports and  discussions  described  above,  the Committee
recommended  to the Board that the audited  financial  statements be included in
the  Corporation's  Annual  Report on form 10-K for the year ended  December 31,
2004, for filing with the SEC.

AUDIT COMMITTEE

Jon Bengtson
George Hartman
Christopher Jones

_________, 2005

         -----------------------------

 Meetings of Directors and Attendance at Shareholders Meetings
 -------------------------------------------------------------

         During the fiscal  year ended  December  31,  2004,  the Board held two
meetings in person and five via  conference  call.  All  directors  attended the
in-person  meeting and all directors  participated in all conference  calls with
the exception of Mr. Hartman,  who was absent one conference  call. In addition,
the  Board  considered  and  acted on  various  matters  throughout  the year by
executing eight consent resolutions.

         The  Corporation  does not have a policy with respect to the attendance
of shareholder meetings by directors. All members of the Board attended the June
2004 shareholders meeting.

Nominating Committee
--------------------

         The purpose of the  Compensation  and  Nominating  Committee  is (i) to
discharge  the  Board's   responsibilities   relating  to  compensation  of  the
Corporation's  executives  and,  if  needed,  to  produce  an  annual  report on
executive  compensation for inclusion in the Corporation's  proxy statement,  in
accordance  with the rules and  regulations  of the SEC and (ii) to recommend to
the Board the slate of director nominees for election to the Corporation's Board
of Directors, individuals to fill vacancies occurring between annual meetings of
stockholders,  and  individuals  for  nomination  as  members  of  the  standing
committees of the Board and (iii) to develop and recommend to the Board a set of
corporate governance principles applicable to the Corporation.

                                       15

         In identifying nominees for directors,  the Compensation and Nominating
Committee takes into consideration  such factors as it deems appropriate.  These
factors may include judgment,  skill, diversity,  experience with businesses and
other  organizations  of comparable  size,  relationship  of work experience and
education to the current and proposed lines of business of the Corporation,  the
interplay  of the  candidate's  experience  with the  experience  of other Board
members,  and the extent to which the candidate would be a desirable addition to
the Board and any  committees of the Board and the extent to which the candidate
satisfies  any  objective  requirements  (such  as  residence,  independence  or
expertise requirements)  applicable to the Board or any committees of the Board.
The  Compensation and Nominating  Committee  considers  candidates  submitted by
shareholders  in accordance with the policies set forth in the most recent proxy
statement delivered to shareholders and may, but is not be required to, consider
candidates proposed by management.

         The Compensation  and Nominating  Committee met 13 times during 2004 in
person or by telephone. The members of the Compensation and Nominating Committee
are  George  Hartman  (Chair),  James  Golla  and David  King,  each of whom are
independent under Nasdaq's listing standards.  The charter governing  operations
of the  Compensation  and Nominating  Committee was adopted in April 2004 and is
available at our website at www.altairnano.com under "Investor Relations."

Shareholder  Suggestions  for  Nominees  and  Communications  with the  Board of
Directors

         The  Board   will   consider   director   candidates   recommended   by
shareholders.  Such  recommendations  should  include  the name,  age,  address,
telephone   number,   principal   occupation  or   employment,   background  and
qualifications of the nominee and the name, address, telephone number and number
of Common Shares owned of the shareholder  making the  recommendation and should
be sent to the  Secretary  of the  Corporation  at the  address  first set forth
above.  Candidates submitted by shareholders in accordance with the policies set
forth  in  the  most  recent  proxy  statement  delivered  to  shareholders  are
considered under the same standards as nominees recommended by other persons.

         Shareholders  may send  communications  to the  Board  or to  specified
individual  directors by mailing  such  communications  to the  Secretary of the
Corporation  at the  address  of the  Corporation  first  set  forth  above  and
indicating that such  communications  are for the Board or specified  individual
directors, as appropriate.  All communications received by mail are forwarded to
the  directors to which they are  addressed  unless the  communications  contain
information substantially similar to that forwarded by the same shareholder,  or
an associated shareholder, within the past 90 days.

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance
-------------------------------------------------------

         Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires the  Corporation's  officers
and directors to file reports  concerning  their ownership of Common Shares with
the SEC and to furnish the Corporation with copies of such reports. Based solely
upon  the  Corporation's  review  of the  reports  required  by  Section  16 and
amendments thereto furnished to the Corporation,  the Corporation  believes that
all reports  required to be filed  pursuant to Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act
during 2004, were filed with the SEC on a timely basis except as follows:  (a) a
Form 3 for Christopher Jones, a Director,  was due on May 11, 2004 but was filed
on May 12, 2004; (b) a Form 3 for Douglas Tullio,  a Vice President,  was due on
January  19,  2004,  but was filed on January 20,  2004;  (c) a Form 3 for David
King, a Director,  was due on February 26, 2004 but was filed on March 29, 2004;
(d) a Form 4 for James Golla, a Director, was due on July 11, 2004 but was filed
on July 16, 2004; (e) a Form 4 for George Hartman,  a Director,  was due on July
11, 2004 but was filed on July 16, 2004;  (f) a Form 4 for Alan  Gotcher,  Chief
Executive Officer,  was due on August 18, 2004 but was filed on August 19, 2004;
(g) a Form 4 for Edward Dickinson, Chief Financial Officer, was due on September
9,  2004 but was  filed  on  September  14,  2004;  and (h) a Form 4 for  Edward
Dickinson,  Chief Financial Officer,  was due on September 5, 2004 but was filed
on September 14, 2004.
                                       16

Code of Ethics and Code of Conduct
----------------------------------

         The  Corporation  has adopted the Code of Ethics for Senior  Executive,
Financial Officers and Members of the Management  Executive Committee (the "Code
of Ethics"),  which  constitutes  a code of ethics that applies to the principal
executive officer,  principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or
controller,  or persons performing similar functions,  as defined in Item 406 of
Regulation  S-K under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934.  We have posted the
Code of Ethics on our website at www.altairnano.com under "Investor Relations."

         The  Corporation has adopted the Altair  Nanotechnologies  Inc. Code of
Conduct (the "Code of Conduct"),  which constitutes a code of conduct applicable
to all officers, directors and employees that complies with Nasdaq Rule 4350(n).
We have  posted the Code of Conduct on our website at  www.altairnano.com  under
"Investor Relations."

Certain Relationships and Related Transactions
----------------------------------------------

         On December 31,  2003,  we entered  into a  consulting  agreement  with
Advanced  Technology Group LLC ("ATG"),  whose managing partner is David King, a
director of the  Corporation.  The  agreement  stipulates  that ATG will furnish
consulting  services in reviewing  potential  federal  grant  opportunities  and
providing proposal  development  assistance on selected programs for a period of
one year. Under the terms of the agreement,  ATG is paid on a contingency  basis
at a rate of 6%of the first $1,000,000 in grant monies secured from applications
prepared  in any  calendar  year  plus  3.5%  of  any  cumulative  amounts  over
$1,000,000. ATG also agreed to provide consulting services at a rate of $200 per
hour upon request of the  Corporation.  In October  2004,  we paid ATG $6,000 in
fees in  connection  with  securing a $100,000  grant from the National  Science
Foundation for development of nano-structured  electrodes for use in lithium ion
ultra-capacitors.  Also,  in  October  2004,  we paid  ATG  $4,500  in fees  for
consulting work in connection with product marketing.

         On or about June 5, 2004,  the  Corporation  entered  into a settlement
agreement  with Toyota on Western,  Inc. and its owner,  Louis Schnur,  who were
significant  shareholders  of  the  Corporation.   Pursuant  to  the  settlement
agreement,  we agreed to transfer to Mr. Schnur  100,000  Common  Shares,  amend
certain early  termination  provisions of a warrant,  to register the re-sale of
certain Common Shares and release Mr. Schnur from all claims.  In exchange,  Mr.
Schnur and Toyota and Western agreed to release the Corporation  from all claims
and to cease certain  solicitation and communication  activities for a period of
one year.

         Effective  May 1,  2004,  the  Corporation  entered  into a  separation
agreement  with William P. Long,  wherein Dr. Long  resigned as Chief  Executive
Officer  of the  Corporation  and  resigned  all his  other  positions  with the
Corporation and its subsidiaries except for his position as President of Mineral
Recovery Systems,  Inc., a subsidiary of the Corporation.  Dr. Long's employment
in that capacity  continued  until  December 31, 2004 at an  annualized  rate of
$175,000,  his salary in effect prior to entering the separation agreement.  Dr.
Long was also  granted an  extension,  until  2007,  of the  expiration  date of
200,000 options that would have otherwise  expired in 2004 and 2005. In addition
to  an  agreement  to  provide  consulting  services  to  the  Corporation,  the
separation  agreement included a 12-month  noncompetition,  nonsolicitation  and
nondisparagement covenant as well as a release of claims.

         On March 10, 2005, the  Corporation  granted 26,500 options to purchase
Common Shares to Edward  Dickinson,  27,200 options to purchase Common Shares to
Douglas Ellsworth and 25,000 options to purchase Common Shares to Bruce Sabacky.

         The  Corporation  has entered into  employment  agreements with Alan J.
Gotcher, Douglas K. Ellsworth, Edward H. Dickinson and Bruce J. Sabacky, each of
which are described under "Employment Contracts" above.

                                       17


Vote Required

         In connection with the election of directors,  the [________]  nominees
receiving the highest number of votes will be elected.

         PROPOSAL NO. 2 -- RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF
                         INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

         Ratification  of the  appointment by the Board of Deloitte & Touche LLP
as the  independent  public  accountants for the Corporation for the fiscal year
ending  December  31,  2005,  and  authorization  of  the  Board  to  set  their
remuneration, is to be voted upon at the Meeting.  Representatives of Deloitte &
Touche LLP are not expected to be present at the Meeting.

Audit Fees.  During the fiscal  years  ended  December  31,  2003 and 2004,  the
aggregate  fees billed by  Deloitte & Touche for the audit of the  Corporation's
financial statements for such fiscal years, for the reviews of the Corporation's
interim financial  statements and for the review of SEC registration  statements
were $93,533 and $103,047, respectively.

Audit-Related  Fees.  During the fiscal years ended  December 31, 2003 and 2004,
Deloitte  & Touche did not bill  the  Corporation  for  assurance  and  related
services  related  to the  performance  of the audit or review  beyond  the fees
disclosed under "Audit Fees" above.

Tax Fees.  During  the  fiscal  years  ended  December  31,  2003 and 2004,  the
Corporation did not pay to Deloitte & Touche any fees for tax compliance, advice
and planning.

All Other Fees.  During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2003, the Corporation
did not pay  Deloitte  & Touche any other fees not  reported  above.  During the
fiscal year ended  December 31, 2004,  the  Corporation  paid  Deloitte & Touche
$118,903 of consulting fees in connection with the  implementation  requirements
of  Section  404 of the  Sarbanes - Oxley Act and  $1,288 in  connection  with a
review of the Corporation's accounting policies for overhead costs.

Audit  Committee  Pre-Approval  Policy.  The Audit  Committee  pre-approves  the
services provided to the Corporation by Deloitte & Touche in connection with the
audit of the  Corporation's  annual  financial  statements,  the  review  of the
Corporation's   quarterly   financial   statements  and  tax   preparation   and
consultation.  Management is not permitted to engage Deloitte & Touche for other
audit or permitted  non-audit services without the case-by-case  pre-approval of
the Audit Committee..  The Audit Committee approved all the services provided to
the Corporation by Deloitte & Touche described above.

Vote Required and Recommendation of the Board of Directors
----------------------------------------------------------

         The  affirmative  vote of a majority of the votes cast on this proposal
shall constitute ratification of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP.

         The Board  recommends a vote FOR  ratification  of the  appointment  of
Deloitte & Touche LLP as  independent  public  accountants  for the fiscal  year
ending  December  31, 2005 and  authorization  of the board of  directors to set
their remuneration.


PROPOSAL NO. 3 - APPROVAL OF ALTAIR  NANOTECHNOLOGIES  INC. 2005 STOCK INCENTIVE
PLAN

         In ________, 2005, the Board approved, subject to shareholder approval,
the Altair  Nanotechnologies  Inc. 2005 Stock  Incentive Plan (the "2005 Plan"),
pursuant to which the Board (or  subcommittee  thereof)  will be  authorized  to
grant options and other  incentive  awards with respect to an aggregate of three

                                       18


million  Common  Shares.  If the 2005  Plan is  approved  by  shareholders,  the
authority of the Corporation to grant options with respect to the 834,500 Common
Shares available under the 1996 Plan and the 1998 Plan shall cease.  Under rules
governing  the  Corporation's   listing  on  the  Nasdaq  SmallCap  Market,  the
Corporation  is required to seek  shareholder  approval for the 2005 Plan.  Such
approval  is also  required  in order  for the  Corporation  to be able to grant
incentive stock options under the 2005 Plan.

         The Board of the  Corporation  believes that the  availability of stock
options and other incentives is an important factor in the Corporation's ability
to attract and retain  qualified  employees and to provide an incentive for them
to exert their best efforts on behalf of the  Corporation.  The Corporation has,
and may  periodically  continue to, use stock options and other incentive awards
to compensate consultants that provide services to the Corporation.

Description of the 2005 Stock Incentive Plan

         The following  summary of the 2005 Plan is qualified in its entirety by
reference to the full text of the 2005 Plan , a copy of which is available  from
the Corporation upon request.

Shares Reserved for Issuance Under the 2005 Plan. The Corporation has reserved a
total of three  million  Common  Shares for  issuance  under the 2005 Plan.  The
number  and kind of  shares  available  for  grants  under the 2005 Plan will be
adjusted proportionately by the Board if the number of outstanding Common Shares
is hereafter increased or decreased or changed into or exchanged for a different
number or kind of shares or other securities of the Corporation by reason of any
stock split, combination of shares, dividend payable in shares, recapitalization
or reclassification.  As of March 17, 2005, the closing sale price of the Common
Shares, as reported by the Nasdaq SmallCap Market, was $4.20 per share.

Types of Awards. The 2005 Plan authorizes the Board to grant incentive stock
options, non-incentive stock options, stock bonuses, restricted stock and
performance-based awards.

Eligibility.  Grants under the 2005 Plan may, at the discretion of the Board, be
awarded  to  directors,   officers  and  employees  and   non-employee   agents,
consultants,  advisers and  independent  contractors  of the  Corporation or any
parent  or  subsidiary  of the  Corporation.  The  Corporation  currently  has 8
directors,   27  employees  and  officers,   and  an  indeterminable  number  of
consultants  and advisers who could be eligible to receive grants under the 2005
Plan.

Administration. The Board administers the 2005 Plan. Subject to the terms of the
2005 Plan, the Board may from time to time adopt and amend rules and regulations
relating  to the  administration  of the 2005  Plan,  advance  the  lapse of any
waiting  period,  accelerate any exercise date,  waive or modify any restriction
applicable  to shares  (except those  restrictions  imposed by law) and make all
other determinations in the judgment of the Board necessary or desirable for the
administration  of the 2005 Plan.  The Board may  delegate to a committee of the
Board any or all  authority for  administration  of the 2005 Plan other than the
right to amend or terminate the 2005 Plan.

Amendment and Termination of the 2005 Plan. The Board may amend the 2005 Plan at
any time in any respect, subject to any legal or regulatory restriction.  Except
for  changes  in  outstanding  options  in  connection  with  changes in capital
structure and Significant Transactions (as defined blow), no change in an option
already granted may be made without the consent of the holder of the option. The
2005 Plan will  terminate  when all shares  reserved for issuance under the 2005
Plan have been  issued and all  restrictions  on such shares have lapsed or when
earlier terminated by the Board.

                                       19


Description of Stock Options

         Options Terms.  With respect to each option grant, the Board determines
the number of shares subject to the option,  the exercise price, the term of the
option and the time or times at which the option may be  exercised.  At the time
of the grant of an option or at any time thereafter,  the Board may provide that
an  optionee  who   exercised  an  option  to  purchase   Common   Shares  shall
automatically  receive a new option to purchase  additional  shares equal to the
number of shares  surrendered  and may specify the terms and  conditions of such
new options.

         Exercise  of  Options.   Except  as  described  under  "Termination  of
Employment,  Disability or Death" below or as determined by the Board, an option
may not be exercised unless, when exercised,  the optionee is an employee of, or
is providing  service to, the  Corporation or any subsidiary of the  Corporation
and has been  continuously  so employed or providing  service since the date the
option was  granted.  Absence on leave  approved by the  Corporation,  parent or
subsidiary or on account of illness or disability is not deemed a termination or
interruption  of  employment  or  service  for this  purpose.  Unless  otherwise
determined by the Board,  vesting of options continues during a medical,  family
or military leave of absence,  whether paid or unpaid, and vesting of options is
suspended during any other unpaid leave of absence.

         When  exercising  an option,  the optionee  must pay the full  purchase
price in cash or check  unless the Board  determines  otherwise.  Subject to the
approval of the Board,  which may be withheld for any or no reason,  an optionee
may pay for all or some of the  shares  with  Common  Shares of the  Corporation
valued  at fair  market  value,  restricted  stock,  performance  units or other
contingent  awards  denominated  in  either  stock  or cash or  other  forms  of
consideration.  The 2005 Plan  permits the Board to accept  promissory  notes as
consideration  for stock  options;  however  promissory  notes are generally not
sufficient consideration for the issuance of Common Shares under the CBCA.

         Termination  of  Employment,  Disability  or  Death.  Unless  otherwise
determined by the Board at any time, if an optionee  ceases to be employed by or
to  provide  service  to  the  Corporation,  any  parent  or  subsidiary  of the
Corporation  for any reason other than death or total  disability,  the optionee
may  exercise  any  option  then held at any time  prior to the  earlier  of its
expiration  date or 30 days following the  termination  date, but only if and to
the extent the option was exercisable as of the termination date. Any portion of
an option not exercisable at the date of termination lapses.

         Unless otherwise determined by the Board, if the optionee's  employment
or service terminates because of total disability, the optionee may exercise any
option then held at any time prior to the earlier of its  expiration  date or 12
months  after the date of  termination,  but only to the  extent  the option was
exercisable on the date of termination.

         Unless otherwise  determined by the Board, if an optionee dies while in
the  employment  of or providing  services to the  Corporation  or any parent or
subsidiary  of the  Corporation,  the option then held may be  exercised  by the
optionee's  legal heirs at any time prior to the earlier of its expiration  date
or 12 months  after the date of death,  but only if and to the extent the option
was exercisable as of the date of death.

         Non-Transferability  of Options.  Unless  otherwise  determined  by the
Board at any time, each stock option granted under the 2005 Plan by its terms is
nonassignable  and  nontransferable  by an optionee,  either  voluntarily  or by
operation of law, other than by will or the laws of descent or distribution upon
the death of an  optionee.  An option may be  exercised  only by an optionee or,
after death, by a successor or representative of an optionee.

                                       20


         Merger,  Reorganization,  Dissolution, Stock Split or Similar Event. In
the event of a merger, consolidation,  plan of exchange, acquisition of property
or stock, split-up, split-off, spin-off,  reorganization or liquidation to which
the  Corporation is a party or any sale,  lease,  exchange or other transfer (in
one transaction or a series of related  transactions)  of all, or  substantially
all,  of  the  assets  of  the  Corporation,  or the  transfer  by  one or  more
shareholders,  in one transfer or several related  transfers,  of 50% of more of
the Common Shares outstanding on the date of such transfer (or the first of such
related  transfers) to persons,  other than wholly-owned  subsidiaries or family
trusts,  who were not  shareholders of the  Corporation  prior to the first such
transfer  (each,  a  "Significant  Transaction"),  the Board shall,  in its sole
discretion  and to the extent  possible  under the structure of the  Significant
Transaction,  select one of the following  alternatives for treating outstanding
options under the 2005 Plan:

         o    Outstanding  options  shall  remain in effect in  accordance  with
              their terms;

         o    Outstanding  options  shall be converted  into options to purchase
              stock  in  one  or  more  of  the   corporations,   including  the
              Corporation,  that are the surviving or acquiring  corporations in
              the Significant  Transaction (with the amount,  type of securities
              subject thereto and exercise price of the converted  options being
              determined by the Board taking into account the relative values of
              the companies involved in the Significant Transaction)

         o    The  Board  shall  provide a period  at least 10 days  before  the
              completion of the Significant Transaction during which outstanding
              options may be exercised to the extent then exercisable,  and upon
              the  expiration  of that period,  all  unexercised  options  shall
              immediately  terminate.  (The Board may,  in its sole  discretion,
              accelerate  the   exercisability  of  options  so  that  they  are
              exercisable in full during that period.)

In the event of the dissolution of the  Corporation,  options will be treated as
provided in the immediately preceding paragraph.

Stock Bonuses and Restricted Stock.

         The Board may award Common  Shares under the 2005 Plan as stock bonuses
or as restricted  stock.  Shares  awarded as a bonus or as restricted  stock are
subject to the  terms,  conditions  and  restrictions  determined  by the Board,
including restrictions  concerning  transferability and forfeiture of the shares
awarded. The Board may require the recipient to sign an agreement as a condition
of the award, which agreement shall contain any terms, conditions, restrictions,
representations   and  warranties   required  by  the  Board.  The  certificates
representing the shares shall bear any legends required by the Board.

Performance-based Awards.

         Under the 2005  Plan,  the Board  may grant  performance-based  awards.
These awards are intended to qualify as qualified performance-based compensation
under Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code (the "Code") and  regulations
thereunder.  Performance-based  awards shall be denominated at the time of grant
either in Common Shares or in dollar  amounts.  Performance-based  awards may be
granted in whole or in part if the Corporation  achieves written objective goals
established by the Board over a designated  period of time.  Payment of an award
earned may be in cash or stock or both as determined  by the Board.  In addition
to the requirement  that  participants  satisfy certain  performance  goals, the
Board may impose  additional  restrictions to payment under a  performance-based
award.

                                       21


         No participant may receive in any fiscal year  stock-based  performance
awards under which the aggregate  amount  payable  under the awards  exceeds the
equivalent of 500,000 Common Shares or cash-based performance awards under which
the aggregate amount payable exceeds $1,000,000.

United States Federal Income Tax Consequences

         The following is a general  discussion of certain United States federal
income tax  consequences  of stock  options  granted  under the 2005  Plan.  The
discussion  does not  describe  any tax  consequences  under the tax laws of any
state,   locality  or  foreign   jurisdiction  and  does  not  include  any  tax
consequences  associated with any awards other than stock options.  Furthermore,
the  discussion  is based on the  provisions  of the Internal  Revenue Code (the
"Code") and  regulations,  rulings and judicial  decisions  thereunder as of the
date hereof,  and such authorities may be repealed or modified  retroactively so
as to result in federal income tax  consequences  different from those discussed
below. The discussion  below does not discuss all federal tax consequences  that
may be relevant to a particular grantee, and is not intended as tax advice. Each
grantee should consult his or her individual tax adviser.

Options

         Incentive  Options.  No  income  is  recognized  by the  grantee  of an
incentive  stock option upon the grant or timely exercise of the incentive stock
option. Exercise of an incentive stock option may, however, give rise to taxable
ordinary  income to the  optionee  if the  optionee  subsequently  engages  in a
"disqualifying  disposition,"  as  described  below.  Additionally,  the  spread
between the  fair-market  value of shares obtained upon exercise of an incentive
stock option and the exercise  price  normally is an adjustment  to  alternative
minimum  taxable  income and may result in the  optionee  having to pay  federal
alternative minimum tax for the year of exercise.

         A sale,  exchange  or  disposition  by an  optionee  of  Common  Shares
acquired  through the exercise of an  incentive  stock option more than one year
after the transfer of the shares to such  optionee and more than two years after
the date of grant of the  incentive  stock option will result in any  difference
between the net sale proceeds and the exercise  price being treated as long-term
capital gain (or loss) to the optionee.  If such a sale, exchange or disposition
(including  inter vivos  gifts)  takes place  within two years after the date of
grant of the incentive stock option or within one year from the date of exercise
of the incentive stock option, such sale or exchange will generally constitute a
"disqualifying disposition" of the Common Shares.

         A disqualifying disposition will have the following results: any excess
of (i) the lesser of (a) the fair market  value of one Common  Share at the time
of  exercise  of the  incentive  stock  option or (b) the amount  realized  on a
disqualifying  disposition  of the Common  Shares  through  sale;  less (ii) the
exercise price,  will be ordinary income to the optionee,  subject to applicable
tax reporting  requirements.  Any further gain generally will qualify as capital
gain,  and will be long-term  capital gain if the holding period for such Common
Shares is more than one year from the date of exercise.

         Non-Incentive  Options.  Provided  that the exercise  price is not less
than the fair  market  value of the  underlying  stock on the date of grant,  no
income is  recognized by the grantee of a  non-incentive  stock option until the
non-incentive  option  is  exercised.  When the  non-incentive  stock  option is
exercised,  the  optionee  recognizes  ordinary  compensation  income,  and  the
Corporation  generally  becomes entitled to a deduction,  in the amount by which
the fair market value of the shares subject to the non-incentive stock option at
the time of exercise  exceeds the exercise price.  With respect to non-incentive
options exercised by certain executive officers, the Corporation's deduction can

                                       22


in certain  circumstances be limited by the $1,000,000 cap on deductibility  set
forth in Section 162(m) of the Code. The  Corporation is required to withhold on
all amounts  treated as ordinary  income to optionees  who are  employees of the
Corporation or an affiliate of the corporation. Upon the sale of shares acquired
by exercise of a stock option,  the optionee  generally will  recognize  capital
gain or loss measured by the  difference  between the sale proceeds and the fair
market  value of the shares on the date of  exercise.  That gain or loss will be
long-term if shares have been held for more than one year.

Canadian Income Taxation

         If an optionee is a resident of the United States and not a resident of
Canada,  and if the  optionee has not been  employed in Canada,  (i) neither the
receipt nor the  exercise of a stock  option will give rise to federal  Canadian
income tax liability and (ii) the sale of the underlying Common Shares generally
will not be subject to federal  Canadian  income tax unless (a) the optionee and
the  optionee's  affiliates  owned,  at any time in the five year period  before
sale, 25% or more of the outstanding  Common Shares, or (b) if the Common Shares
are used in carrying on a business in Canada.

Restrictions on Transferability of Shares

         The Corporation is not obligated to cause to be issued or delivered any
certificates evidencing Common Shares pursuant to the 2005 Plan unless and until
the Corporation is advised by its counsel that the issuance and delivery of such
certificates  is in compliance  with all applicable  laws and regulations of any
governmental  authority and the requirements of any securities exchange on which
Common Shares are traded.  The  Corporation  may require,  as a condition of the
issuance and delivery of certificates  evidencing  Common Shares pursuant to the
2005 Plan, that the recipient of such shares make such covenants, agreements and
representations,   and  that  such   certificates   bear  such  legends  as  the
Corporation, in its sole discretion, deems necessary or desirable.

Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans

         In addition to the existing  1996 Plan and 1998 Plan,  the  Corporation
has an Employee Stock Purchase Plan ("ESPP") which allows  employees to purchase
common shares through payroll deductions when, as and if determined by our board
of directors.  The ESPP,  which is a  broadly-based  plan open to all employees,
other than  executive  officers,  has not been  approved  by  shareholders.  The
following  table sets forth  certain  information  with respect to  compensation
plans under which equity  securities are authorized for issuance at December 31,
2004 (without giving effect to the approval of the 2005 Plan):

                                       23




        ---------------------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
                                                                                      Number of securities
                                                Number of                             remaining available
                                            securities to be                          for future issuance
                                               issued upon       Weighted-average         under equity
                                               exercise of       exercise price of     compensation plans
                                               outstanding          outstanding      (excluding securities
                                            options, warrants    options, warrants    reflected in column
                                               and rights           and rights                (a))
                  Plan Category                    (a)                  (b)                   (c)
        ---------------------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
                                                                                          
        Equity compensation  plans              3,293,700              $2.28              1,048,000(1)
        approved by security holders
        ---------------------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
        Equity   compensation  plans  not
        approved by security holders              None                  N/A                 348,552
        ---------------------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -----------------------
                      Total                     3,293,700              $2.28               1,396,552
        ---------------------------------- -------------------- -------------------- -----------------------


(1) During the period  January 1, 2005 through March 18, 2005,  the  Corporation
granted to employees 213,500 options to purchase Common Shares.

If the 2005 Plan is approved by  shareholders,  the authority of the Corporation
to grant options with respect to the 834,500 Common Shares  currently  available
under the 1996 Plan and the 1998 Plan shall cease.

New Plan Benefits

         No awards have been granted under the 2005 Plan. The Corporation is
unable to determine the amount of awards that may be granted in the future to
its officers, directors or affiliates, inasmuch as grants of awards are subject
to the discretion of the Board.

Vote Required for Approval and Recommendation by the Board

         The Board recommends a vote FOR approval of the 2005 Plan. The proposal
to approve the 2005 Plan must be approved by the holders of at least a majority
of the votes cast at the Meeting. Abstentions and broker nonvotes are counted
for purposes of determining whether a quorum exists at the Meeting but are not
counted and have no effect on the results of the vote.

         PROPOSAL NO. 4 - APPROVAL OF BYLAW AMENDMENT TO INCREASE QUORUM
                      REQUIREMENT FOR SHAREHOLDER MEETINGS

The Proposed Bylaw Amendment.

         Prior  to  September  30,  2004,  Section  14  of  the  bylaws  of  the
Corporation (the "Bylaws")  provided that a quorum would be present at a meeting
of the shareholders if two shareholders were present,  in person or by proxy, at
the  shareholders  meeting.  On September 30, 2004,  the Board approved an Bylaw
amendment to the Bylaws (the "Bylaw Amendment") replacing the quorum requirement
in Section 14 of the Bylaws with the following:

         A quorum of shareholders  for the transaction of business is present at
         a meeting of  shareholders if not less than 33 ? of the shares entitled
         to vote at the meeting are present in person or represented by proxy.

                                       24



The Bylaw  Amendment  does not affect any other  provisions  of the Bylaws.  The
Bylaw Amendment was effective when adopted, and applies to the Meeting; however,
under the CBCA, the Corporation is required to seek ratification of shareholders
of any amendment to the Bylaws at the next  shareholders  meeting.  If the Bylaw
Amendment is not approved by the  shareholders at the Meeting,  it will cease to
be effective.

Purpose and Effect of Bylaw Amendment.

         The  purpose  of  the  Bylaw   Amendment  is  to  increase  the  quorum
requirement  for  shareholders  meetings  from two  shareholders  to a number of
shareholders  holding 33 ? of the shares  entitled  to vote at the  shareholders
meeting. The Board approved the Bylaw Amendment, and is recommending approval of
the Bylaw Amendment to the shareholders of the  Corporation,  in order to comply
with rules governing its listing on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market.

         Prior to September 30, 2004, the  Corporation  relied upon an exemption
from the  requirements of Nasdaq Stock Market Rule 4350(f).  Nasdaq Stock Market
Rule 4350(f) requires that each issuer have a minimum quorum requirement for its
shareholders  meetings of at least 33?% of the outstanding  shares of its voting
stock. Altair requested, and relied upon, the exemption from Nasdaq Stock Market
Rule  4350(f)  prior to  September  30, 2004 on the basis that a greater  quorum
requirement would be contrary to generally accepted business practices in Canada
and under the CBCA.  In light of changes  in rules and  policies  governing  the
NASDAQ SmallCap Market,  the Corporation  became concerned in 2004 that it would
cease to qualify for the exemption it had previously  received from Nasdaq Stock
Market Rule 4350(f). In anticipation of that possibility, the Board approved the
Bylaw Amendment in order to bring the quorum requirement set forth in the Bylaws
into compliance with Nasdaq Stock Market Rule 4350(f).

Vote Required for Approval and Recommendation by the Board

         The Board recommends a vote FOR the proposed Bylaw Amendment. The Bylaw
Amendment  must be  approved  by the holders of at least a majority of the votes
cast at the Annual  Meeting.  Abstentions  and broker  nonvotes  are counted for
purposes of  determining  whether a quorum exists at the Annual  Meeting but are
not counted in connection with, and have no effect on the results, of the vote.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

Proposals of Shareholders
-------------------------

         Pursuant  to rules  adopted  by the SEC,  if a  shareholder  intends to
propose  any  matter  for a  vote  at the  Meeting  but  failed  to  notify  the
Corporation of such intention prior to [45 days prior to mailing],  then a proxy
solicited  by the Board may be voted on such  matter  in the  discretion  of the
proxy holder, without discussion of the matter in the proxy statement soliciting
such proxy and without  such matter  appearing  as a separate  item on the proxy
card.

         In  order  to be  included  in the  proxy  statement  and form of proxy
relating to the Corporation's annual meeting of shareholders to be held in 2006,
proposals  which  shareholders  intend to present at such annual meeting must be
received by the corporate  secretary of the  Corporation,  at the  Corporation's
principal  business  office,  204 Edison Way, Reno,  Nevada 89502, no later than
[anniversary of 120 days prior to mailing].  If a shareholder intends to propose
any matter for a vote at the Corporation's  annual meeting of shareholders to be
held in the 2006  calendar  year,  but fails to notify the  Corporation  of such
intention  prior to  [anniversary  of 45 days  prior to  mailing],  then a proxy
solicited  by the Board may be voted on such  matter  in the  discretion  of the
proxy holder, without discussion of the matter in the proxy statement soliciting
such proxy and without  such matter  appearing  as a separate  item on the proxy
card.

                                       25



Undertakings
------------

         Unless  the  Corporation  has  received  contrary   instructions,   the
Corporation  intends to deliver only one copy of this  Information  Circular and
one copy of the Annual  Report for the year ended  December 31, 2004 to multiple
shareholders  sharing  the same  address.  Upon  written  or oral  request,  the
Corporation will provide,  without charge,  an additional copy of such documents
to each shareholder at a shared address to which a single copy of such documents
was delivered. Shareholders at shared addresses that are receiving a single copy
of such  documents but wish to receive  multiple  copies,  and  shareholders  at
shared  addresses that are receiving  multiple copies of such documents but wish
to receive a single copy,  should  contact  Edward  Dickinson,  Chief  Financial
Officer,  at 204 Edison Way, Reno,  Nevada,  89502,  U.S.A., or at the following
telephone number: (775) 858-3750.

         Upon written or oral request,  the  Corporation  will provide,  without
charge,  to each  person to whom a copy of this  Information  Circular  has been
delivered,  a copy of the Corporation's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended  December 31, 2004 filed with the SEC (other than the  exhibits  except as
expressly  requested).  Requests should be directed to Edward  Dickinson,  Chief
Financial  Officer,  at 204 Edison Way, Reno, Nevada,  89502,  U.S.A., or at the
following telephone number: (775) 858-3750.

                                * * * * * * * * *

         The  contents  and  sending  of this  Information  Circular  have  been
approved by the directors of the Corporation.

         DATED as of the __th day of April, 2005.

                          ALTAIR NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC.

                          /s/ Alan J. Gotcher
                         ------------------------------------------
                         Alan J. Gotcher, Chief Executive Officer



                                       26


                                      PROXY
                          Altair Nanotechnologies Inc.
                   Annual and Special Meeting Of Shareholders

                                       on
                                  May 26, 2005

              This Proxy Is Solicited By The Board of Directors Of
                          Altair Nanotechnologies Inc.

         The  undersigned  shareholder  of  Altair  Nanotechnologies  Inc.  (the
"Corporation") hereby nominates, constitutes and appoints Alan J. Gotcher, Chief
Executive  Officer  and  director,  or  failing  him,  Edward  Dickinson,  Chief
Financial Officer,  or instead of any of them,  ___________________________,  as
nominee  of the  undersigned  to  attend  and  vote  for  and on  behalf  of the
undersigned at the annual and special meeting of shareholders of the Corporation
(the  "Meeting") to be held on the 26th day of May, 2005 and at any  adjournment
or  adjournments  thereof,  to the same extent and with the same power as if the
undersigned  were personally  present at the said meeting or such adjournment or
adjournments  thereof,  and without  limiting the generality of the power hereby
conferred, the nominees are specifically directed to vote the shares represented
by this proxy as indicated below.
         The shares  represented by this proxy will be voted and, where a choice
is  specified,  will be voted as directed.  Where no choice is  specified,  this
proxy will  confer  discretionary  authority  and will be voted in favour of all
nominees  of the  Board of  Directors,  in  favour  of the  ratification  of the
appointment  of  auditors,  in favour of the 2005  Stock  Incentive  Plan and in
favour of the proposed bylaw amendment.
         This proxy also confers  discretionary  authority to vote in respect of
any amendments or variations to the matters identified in the Notice of Meeting,
matters  incident to the conduct of the Meeting and any other  matter  which may
properly come before the Meeting about which the Corporation did not have notice
as of the date the definitive  Information  Circular and Proxy  Statement of the
Corporation  was filed  with the SEC and in such  manner as such  nominee in his
judgement may determine.
         A  shareholder  has the right to appoint a person to attend and act for
him and on his behalf at the Meeting  other than the persons  designated in this
form of proxy. Such right may be exercised by filling the name of such person in
the blank space provided and striking out the names of management's nominees, or
by completing  another proper form of proxy and, in either case,  depositing the
proxy as instructed below.
         To be valid,  this proxy must be received by the transfer  agent at 120
Adelaide Street West, Suite 420, Toronto, Ontario M5H 4C3, Canada not later than
48 hours  (excluding  Saturdays  and  holidays)  before the time of holding  the
Meeting or adjournment  thereof,  or delivered to the chairman on the day of the
Meeting or adjournment thereof.
         The nominees are directed to vote the shares  represented by this proxy
as follows:

         (1)  ELECTION OF DIRECTORS, each to serve until the next annual meeting
              of  shareholders  of the  Corporation  and until their  respective
              successor  shall have been duly elected and shall  qualify: 
              [ ] FOR all  nominees  listed  below  (except as marked to the
                  contrary).
              [ ] WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all nominees listed below.
              [ ] (INSTRUCTION:  To  withhold  authority  to  vote  for  any
                  individual nominee,  strike a line through the nominee's name
                  in the list below.)

                       [to be added in definitive filing]

                               [See Reverse Side]

                                       


(2)      Proposal to ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as
         independent auditors of the Corporation for the fiscal year ending
         December 31, 2005 and to authorize the board of directors to fix their
         remuneration.
         [ ] FOR         [ ] AGAINST          [ ] WITHHOLD


(3)      Proposal to approve the Altair Nanotechnologies Inc. 2005 Stock
         Incentive Plan. [ ] FOR         [ ] AGAINST          [ ] WITHHOLD


(4)      Proposal  to  approve  the  Bylaw   Amendment   increasing  the  quorum
         requirement for  shareholders  meeting from two shareholders to 33 1/3%
         of the shares entitled to vote at the meeting.

         [ ] FOR         [ ] AGAINST          [ ] WITHHOLD


(5)      At the  nominee's  discretion  upon any  amendments  or  variations  to
         matters specified in the notice of the Meeting, matters incident to the
         conduct of the Meeting, and upon any other matters as may properly come
         before  the  Meeting  or  any  adjournments  thereof  about  which  the
         Corporation  did not have  notice as of the date45 days before the date
         on which the Corporation first mailed proxy materials to shareholders.


THE  SHARES  REPRESENTED  BY THIS  PROXY  WILL BE VOTED IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH THE
INSTRUCTIONS  GIVEN  ON ANY  VOTE OR  BALLOT  CALLED  AT THE  MEETING.  UNLESS A
SPECIFIC  INSTRUCTION  IS  INDICATED,  SAID SHARES WILL BE VOTED IN FAVOR OF ALL
NOMINEES  OF THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTOR,  AND IN  FAVOUR  OF  RATIFICATION  OF THE
APPOINTMENT  OF  AUDITORS,  THE  APPROVAL OF THE 2005 STOCK  INCENTIVE  PLAN AND
APPROVAL  OF  THE  BYLAW   AMENDMENT,   ALL  OF  WHICH  ARE  SET  FORTH  IN  THE
ACCORPORATIONING CIRCULAR, RECEIPT OF WHICH IS HEREBY ACKNOWLEDGED.

This proxy revokes and supersedes all proxies of earlier date.

DATED this ____ day of ________________ , 2005.

PRINT NAME: _______________________________

SIGNATURE: ________________________________

NOTES:

(1)      This  proxy  must be signed by the  shareholder  or his  attorney  duly
         authorized in writing,  or if the shareholder is a corporation,  by the
         proper officers or directors under its corporate seal, or by an officer
         or attorney thereof duly authorized.  
(2)      A person  appointed as nominee to represent a shareholder need not be a
         shareholder of the Corporation.
(3)      If not  dated,  this  proxy is  deemed to bear the date on which it was
         mailed on behalf of the management of the Corporation.
(4)      Each  shareholder  who is unable to attend the Meeting is  respectfully
         requested  to date and sign this form of proxy and  return it using the
         self-addressed envelope provided.





                          ALTAIR NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC.

              NOTICE OF ANNUAL AND SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

            NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an annual and special meeting (the
"Meeting") of the shareholders of Altair Nanotechnologies Inc. (the
"Corporation") will be held at the Reno Hilton, 2500 E. 2nd Street, Reno, Nevada
89502, Thursday, the 26th day of May 2005, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the
morning (Pacific time) for the following purposes:

(1)      To receive the audited financial  statements of the Corporation for the
         twelve months ended December 31, 2004,  together with the report of the
         auditors thereon;

(2)      To elect directors;

(3)      To ratify the appointment of the appoint  auditors and to authorize the
         directors to fix their remuneration;

(4)      To  consider   and  vote  upon  the  proposal  to  approve  the  Altair
         Nanotechnologies Inc. 2005 Stock Incentive Plan.

(5)      To consider  and vote upon the  proposal  to approve a bylaw  amendment
         increasing the quorum  requirement  for  shareholders  meeting from two
         shareholders to 33 ? of the shares entitled to vote at the meeting.

(6)      To transact such further or other  business as may properly come before
         the Meeting or any adjournment or adjournments thereof.

            This notice is accompanied by a form of proxy, a copy of the
Circular, the annual report to shareholders of the Corporation containing the
audited consolidated financial statements of the Corporation for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2004, and a supplemental mailing list form.

         Shareholders who are unable to attend the Meeting in person are
requested to complete, date, sign and return the enclosed form of proxy so that
as large a representation as possible may be had at the Meeting.

         DATED at Toronto, Ontario as of the ____ day of May, 2005.


                                           BY:  ORDER OF THE BOARD

                                           (Sgd.)  Alan J. Gotcher
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Chief Executive Officer