Albuquerque Journal

Sources: Biden to safeguard area near Grand Canyon from mining

- BY TIMOTHY PUKO

President Joe Biden is leaning toward designatin­g a vast area near the Grand Canyon as a national monument to safeguard it from uranium mining, according to five people familiar with the plans.

Leaders of local tribes and environmen­talists have spent years lobbying to protect areas near the park from potential uranium mining, which they say would threaten aquifers and water supplies. They have asked Washington to double the protected area around the canyon by including 1.1 million acres of public lands in a Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni Grand Canyon National Monument.

Biden is doing a tour through Arizona next week. The White House previously announced that the president would make climate change and his environmen­tal agenda a focus of his stops on the tour.

Federal officials have started telling tribal and environmen­tal groups to be available for a potential Grand Canyon announceme­nt early next week, which would fall during Biden’s travel, said four of the people, all of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an announceme­nt not yet public.

“No decisions have been made,” White House spokesman Abdullah Hasan said in an email. “But I can tell you that President Biden has conserved more land and water in his first year than any president since JFK, and his climate protection record is unmatched.”

Advocates have been lobbying for a monument designatio­n in part to honor long-standing Native American connection­s to the Grand Canyon. For the Havasupai Tribe, Baaj Nwaavjo means “where tribes roam,” and for the Hopi Tribe, I’tah Kukveni means “our ancestral footprints.” Other tribes, including the Hualapai, which means “people of the tall pines,” also have advocated the designatio­n.

“This monument will show that we are beginning to protect the lands of the world,” Dianna Sue WhiteDove Uqualla, a Havasupai Tribal Council member, said in a July statement anticipati­ng the decision and provided by a coalition of monument advocates.

They have proposed that the new monument consist of three big sections, two of them on the park’s northern border and the third to its southeast, according to maps provided by advocates. The maps show that most of the uranium claims, including six existing mines, would be in the biggest section northwest of the park, part of a remote area called the Arizona Strip known for ponderosa pine forests, grassy meadows and few tourists.

Federal officials have not yet made clear the borders they will set for the designatio­n, the people said. But two said Biden officials in recent weeks have signaled support for the proposal. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland visited the land near the Grand Canyon in May, the type of visit that often is a precursor to a presidenti­al proclamati­on.

Uranium mining interests have voiced opposition to the proposal, as have some ranchers in southern Utah who graze their cattle in the winter on public lands that are part of the proposed new monument area.

Industry officials said they will explore ways to fight the decision. They said it would lock up some of the country’s highest-grade uranium deposits at a time when such fuel would be useful to the country’s clean energy and geopolitic­al goals. Russia provides more than 20% of U.S. nuclear fuel, and Congress is actively exploring new laws to boost U.S. uranium production and enrichment in response to Moscow’s war on Ukraine.

In an email, Curtis Moore, senior vice president of marketing and corporate developmen­t for Energy Fuels – one of the few uranium miners with operations in the United States — blasted the decision as making “zero sense.”

He said it contradict­s several of the administra­tion’s stated policies, including “supporting clean energy production and punishing Russia’s aggression in Ukraine.”

Monument advocates have said only 1.3% of U.S. uranium reserves are in the Grand Canyon region.

Biden administra­tion officials have said they are trying to prioritize new domestic mining for the materials to support clean energy developmen­t. But so far, Biden has made much more progress toward his conservati­on goals.

That includes several announceme­nts just this year — often in partnershi­p with Native Americans — to advance his pledge to protect 30% of U.S. lands and waters by 2030.

The announceme­nt would help kick off an effort to promote Biden’s climate agenda, including progress from last year’s major climate-spending law, the Inflation Reduction Act. Biden is planning a three-state tour, with other stops in New Mexico and Utah, to talk about billions of dollars of investment that the law has prompted manufactur­ing companies to commit to making equipment that produces cleaner energy.

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