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Trump admin approves its first fast-tracked mining project: A uranium mine in Utah

Uranium miners in the La Sal mine on Monday, April 29, 2024. The Trump administration just approved the reopening of a uranium mine in southeastern Utah, the first under its accelerated permitting process.
Trent Nelson
/
The Salt Lake Tribune
Uranium miners in the La Sal mine on Monday, April 29, 2024. The Trump administration just approved the reopening of a uranium mine in southeastern Utah, the first under its accelerated permitting process.

The Interior Department announced it was fast-tracking permitting for a uranium mine in southeastern Utah earlier this month.

The Trump administration on Friday approved the reopening of a uranium mine in southeastern Utah, the first project approved under a new 14-day environmental review process.

“This approval marks a turning point in how we secure America’s mineral future,” said Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum in a statement. “By streamlining the review process for critical mineral projects like Velvet-Wood, we’re reducing dependence on foreign adversaries and ensuring our military, medical and energy sectors have the resources they need to thrive. This is mineral security in action.”

The Velvet-Wood mine, near Utah’s Lisbon Valley, will produce both uranium and vanadium. The former can be processed into fuel for nuclear reactors, while the latter is commonly used in steel alloys.

The announcement comes 11 days after the Interior Department ordered the Bureau of Land Management to review the mine’s environmental impacts within 14 days, as opposed to the prior timeline of months or years.

The fast-tracking follows a January executive order from President Donald Trump declaring a “national energy emergency.”

Read more at sltrib.com

This article is published through the Utah News Collaborative, a partnership of news organizations in Utah that aims to inform readers across the state.