Residents of a community outside of Cañon City, Colorado, were surprised to learn that an Australian mining company will begin drilling for uranium in view of their front yards this spring. In November 2023, Global Uranium and Enrichment received a permit from the Colorado Division of Reclamation, Mining and Safety to prospect for uranium. A prospecting permit allows the company to search for minerals in order to estimate how much of the mineral exists and to create a plan to extract it. A company must then apply for a development permit, which involves a more thorough public notice and comment process, before extracting any minerals.
After the prospecting permit was issued, a nearby homeowner filed an appeal with the Colorado Mined Land Reclamation Board, making the case that Global Uranium and Enrichment already has information about how much uranium is present in the area and therefore should have been required to apply for a development permit rather than a prospecting permit. The company argued that it couldn't rely on old data collected by other companies in order to secure a development permit or financing for the project. Last week, after a four-day hearing, the Mined Land Reclamation Board rejected the homeowner's appeal, clearing the way for the company to move forward with its exploration plan. That plan involves operating 24/7 for 60 days to drill as many as 20 holes, each requiring a 6,400-square-foot drill pad and reaching 700 feet deep, including through underground aquifers.
Global Uranium and Enrichment is not the only mining company looking to ramp up uranium production as prices rise. Colorado-based Energy Fuels recently resumed operations at three uranium mines in Arizona and Utah. One of these, the Pinyon Plain Mine, is inside the recently-designated Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni-Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument. Pinyon Plain Mine was one of the sites highlighted in the Center for Western Priorities' Backyard Problems report, which examined the impacts of historical and present-day extractive activities on Western communities and landscapes.
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