In its latest pro-industry move, the Trump administration is now declaring that the mining of certain minerals is a matter of national security. The U.S. Department of the Interior released for public comment a draft list of 35 “critical minerals” that includes uranium, lithium, titanium, and aluminum, whose industrial applications range from batteries to fertilizer to atomic research. The stated goal is to decrease reliance on mineral imports by increasing domestic production, but this is yet another indication that the administration prioritizes the interests of the mining industry over thorough environmental reviews, protection of public lands, and public opinion. The list does not specifically state how national security status will impact mining in the United States, but a statement made the same day by the National Mining Association’s CEO reads like a roadmap: The Interior Department “should act to address the greatest threat to U.S. mineral security: the broken domestic mining permitting process.”
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Expert BlogTheo Spencer
Most people also probably aren’t aware that President Trump and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke are in the midst of an unprecedented assault on these public resources in what appears to be a vast giveaway to select group of dirty energy…
Expert BlogRhea Suh
We’ll stand up to Trump’s raid on our public lands.
Expert BlogDanielle Droitsch
Interior Department Secretary Ryan Zinke often invokes the image of a modern day Teddy Roosevelt, but TR would be appalled by the polluter-driven, anti-conservation agenda Zinke is dictating.
Expert BlogTaryn Kiekow Heimer
Letter Warns First Quantum of “Significant Financial Risk,” Calls Investment the “Antithesis of Sustainable Business Practices”