Albuquerque Journal

Tech to study fed mineral deposits in NM

Land Office wants to know commercial value for proposed early education permanent fund

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

New Mexico Tech is about to play a big role in a proposed new fund for early childhood education in the state.

The Socorro university, under an agreement signed with the State Land Office this month, will assess the commercial potential of untapped subsurface mineral deposits held by the federal government in New Mexico.

The Land Office believes those deposits could generate new funds for early childhood education, but it wants Tech to analyze their commercial worth before it stakes any legal claims and seeks a federal transfer.

The results, to be delivered in March, will be used to support the office’s efforts to get legislativ­e approval for a new Early Childhood Education Land Grant Permanent Fund.

Under the memorandum of understand­ing, the university will identify the most promising sites statewide and evaluate their revenue-generating capacity, said Patrick Padilla, Land Office assistant commission­er of mineral resources.

“There’s a lot of overhead associated with managing that land, so we want to make sure we’re not taking on an undue burden,” he said. “We want to make sure it’s economical­ly feasible, and not just a lot of unproducti­ve land that we end up managing through this initiative.”

Land Commission­er Aubrey Dunn proposed legislativ­e approval of a bill in August creating the permanent fund and using income generated for early childhood education.

Congress would first have to approve the mineral rights transfer, which the Land Office is still discussing with the state’s congressio­nal delegation. But Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M., is expected to push it forward at the federal level, said Dunn spokeswoma­n Emily Strickler.

The Land Office says about 6.6 million

acres of unleased federal subsurface deposits could be tapped around the state, potentiall­y generating about $210 million a year for the fund. That estimate is based on revenue generated from the 13 million subsurface acres the state currently manages in New Mexico, about 20 percent of which is in production, Padilla said.

Dunn’s office will pay about $47,000 for the Tech study.

“It will give us a broad-stroke overview of the good areas, the bad areas, and why,” Padilla said.

Tech’s Petroleum Recovery Research Center and the state Bureau of Geology and Mineral resources will work together, said Martha Cather, geologist and principal investigat­or on the project.

Those entities will comb through existing surveys and studies to pinpoint the most likely places for commercial deposits within the targeted acreage, Cather said. That includes potential for everything from oil and gas, helium, and precious minerals to potash, copper and industrial metals like gypsum and limestone.

“It’s a high-level evaluation that won’t look at specific land parcels,” Cather said. “There’s no field work involved. It’s strictly a synthesis of existing research at this point.”

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