Marin Independent Journal

Western Democrats to push industry changes

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, MONT. >> House Democrats from some Western states are preparing to push for changes to a longstandi­ng law that governs mining for copper, gold and other hardrock minerals on U.S.-owned lands, including making companies pay royalties on what they extract.

A report published Monday by the Government Accountabi­lity Office shows that the U.S. stands out among some other countries such as Australia, Canada and

Chile that collect royalties on minerals.

The U.S. does not collect royalties on those minerals in most cases. House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Raul Grijalva said the mining industry should pay at least as much as oil and gas companies, which typically pay royalties of 12.5% on the value of resources extracted from federal lands.

The Arizona Democrat said he also wants to change how companies acquire land for mining, so that more thorough environmen­tal reviews can be done and some areas shielded from developmen­t.

“It’s not about stopping mining. It’s about mining being done where it should be done,” Grijalva said.

The panel’s energy subcommitt­ee, chaired by California Democrat Rep. Alan Lowenthal, is holding a Tuesday oversight hearing on the legacy of mining in western states, where many mining companies went bankrupt decades ago and left behind environmen­tal cleanups that taxpayers are funding.

Environmen­tal laws have changed in recent decades to make it harder for companies to simply walk away from contaminat­ion with no consequenc­es.

But efforts to significan­tly change the government’s mining law — which dates to 1872 — have failed.

There are about 750 hardrock mines on federal lands. That figure doesn’t include more than 70 coal mines whose owners must pay federal royalties.

Under the current law, companies and individual­s can gain exclusive rights over public minerals by “staking” a claim, which consists of driving a wooden or metal stake into the ground over a mineral deposit.

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