Biden's New Grand Canyon Monument Will Hamper Clean Energy Production
The designation will prevent new uranium mines in a lucrative area.

While experts applaud nuclear power for its ability to reduce carbon emissions, the Biden administration is restricting the mining of a key input in the process.
On Tuesday, Biden announced the formal designation of the 917,618-acre Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni Grand Canyon National Monument to prevent public lands held sacred by local Native American tribes from hosting new uranium mines. New uranium mines have been prohibited in the area since 2012 due to an Obama administration moratorium that was set to expire in 2032. Biden's move has made that ban permanent.
According to a senior administration official, the area hosts 1.3 percent of the country's known uranium reserves. But this figure doesn't tell the whole story.
"Maybe if you're trying to count molecules then it's only 1.3 percent, but I'd say it's 100 percent of America's high-grade uranium deposits locked up in the monument," says Curtis Moore, senior vice president of marketing and corporate development at Energy Fuels—a uranium-mining company that owns the Pinyon Plain mine in the Grand Canyon area. "And grade typically corresponds to lower-cost, more-accessible, and lower-environmental-impact mining. For every ton of ore you pull out of the ground, there is more uranium in that ton."
By prohibiting uranium mining, the administration is looking to preserve groundwater near the Grand Canyon. "Creeks and streams [flow] into the Colorado River, supporting farms and ranches across the Southwest and bringing clean water to 40 million Americans," said Biden during a Tuesday speech in Arizona.
"The area's unique hydrology has supported Indigenous peoples and other forms of life since time immemorial and is essential in providing drinking water and supporting agricultural production and other services for millions of people across the Southwest," noted a press release from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
However, the claim that uranium mining near the Grand Canyon contaminates the water doesn't hold up to scrutiny. A 2021 study by the U.S. Geological Survey sampled 206 groundwater sites in the Grand Canyon region and found that "195 sites (95%) had maximum observed uranium concentrations less than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Maximum Contaminant Level of 30 µg/L for drinking water."
"Some uranium mines, particularly the ones that were used for nuclear weapons production, were not operated well and leave a legacy impact," explains Adam Stein, director of the Nuclear Energy Innovation program at the Breakthrough Institute. "However, modern uranium mining is very different, in both technology and regulatory requirements, from the uranium mines of the past."
A major political factor at play for Biden is the support of local Native American communities. These communities played an important role in helping Biden win Arizona during the 2020 election. "It is likely a strategic decision to focus on the Grand Canyon," Gabriel Sanchez, a fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution, told The New York Times. "Many Native Americans do not vote based on party, but on which candidates will do the most to advance the interests of Native American communities."
"I fail to see any rationale in this proposal beyond a selfish political agenda that locks away the very resources we depend on for our daily lives," said Rep. Bruce Westerman (R–Ark.), chairman of the House Committee on Natural Resources, in a statement.
Biden's authority to designate national monuments derives from the Antiquities Act of 1906, a comprehensive statute that "authorizes the President to proclaim national monuments on federal lands that contain historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric structures, or other objects of historic or scientific interest," allowing the president to regulate how the land is used. The new monument is the fifth of Biden's presidency.
"Although regulations on land use have not caused significant issues with uranium mining in the past, over time, more and more areas have been subject either to new mining bans or the use of national monuments to prevent new mining on a permanent basis," notes Stein.
The new monument will have a detrimental effect on the U.S. uranium industry, which has struggled in recent years. After experiencing a boom from the 1940s to the 1980s, domestic uranium production fell when prices dropped after the Chernobyl disaster. According to the World Nuclear Association, U.S. uranium mining production decreased from 1792 tonnes U in 2013 to 75 in 2022.
This production is essential for nuclear power. "Today, nuclear provides about 20 percent of all electricity in the United States and about 50 percent of our carbon-free electricity," notes Moore. "And that's all powered by uranium."
The possibility of the U.S. applying sanctions on Russian uranium has made the industry's need for domestic mining more urgent. When the U.S. threatened sanctions on Russia's Rosatom State Nuclear Energy Corporation in 2022, the price of uranium skyrocketed to about $60 per pound.
"The United States imports about 50 percent of our uranium in U.S. nuclear power plants from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan, and Russia has their hands on quite a bit of Kazakh uranium production," explains Moore. "As we're trying to reduce our reliance on Russia, we should be trying to develop our own domestic sources of uranium."
If the Biden administration is serious about building clean energy projects, hindering an industry that's vital to the production of nuclear power is the wrong approach.
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This is all a feature, not a bug. Biden and his people are aware of it.
They just do not care.
As much as they talk about supporting green energy, their real agenda is no energy at all. They hate humanity and want us all to die. Well, at least 90% of us. They want to return us to the Stone Age where we can live as hunter-gatherers and the carrying capacity of the planet under that scenario is about 500 million people. "Kill all humans", as Bender would say, is their real agenda. Get rid of fossil fuels, electricity, machinery, modern agriculture, carbon production, land development, all of it.
We are the carbon they want to eliminate.
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Curious why we need to allocate/protect an area larger than the entire state of Rhode Island to 'protect' the Grand Canyon? (He declared 950K acres, Rhode Island is about 760K acres - the entire state of Delaware is about 1.6M acres.)
Watermelons.
>>If the Biden administration is serious about building clean energy projects,
as the Burton C. Gray Memorial Intern (mazel!) you get a pass for not yet understanding the Brandon Administration
Never be any new nuclear plants, because...NUCLEAR!!!!!.
Proving, once again, that the more power Congress hands over to the President, the more we get fucked over.
Proving, once again, that a lot of self-proclaimed libertarians do not understand the concept of individualism or self-ownership.
Biden's uranium unearthing ban puts the Navajo on the spot.
If they fail to dam the Grand Canyon by 2032, the EPA might indict them for allowing the river to erode a truckload of uranium a day from its walls as the Colorado buzz saws through the landscape all the way from Arizona to the Rockies, tearng away fifty million tons of sediment a year.
L.A. will have the Colorado river sucked dry by then. Once Lake Mead goes empty, they'll get Congress to build a transcontinental aquaduct and pump the water from multiple points upstream starting in Moab and working up to the divide in the Rockies since gravity just isn't bringing it down to the coast fast enough and California isn't capable of actually forming a plan to enable the utilization of rainfall or getting permits approved to build any kind of desalination anywhere along the coast.
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Supreme Court upholds that the land is for sale/disposal ONLY
the soils under them, were not granted by the Constitution to the United States, !!!but were reserved to the States respectively!!!. Secondly, the new States have the same rights, sovereignty, and jurisdiction over this subject as the original States. Thirdly, the right of the United States to the public lands, and the power of Congress to make all needful rules and regulations for the sale and disposition thereof, !!!conferred no power to grant to the plaintiffs the land in controversy!!!
supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/44/212/case.html
Poverty is the goal.
Obedience is the goal. Poverty helps.
Since when is "indigenous" capitalized? Is "indigenous" like "French" and "German" now?
In this case, yes.
Somehow, what were Indians, or Native Americans, or American Indians, or North American Indians, have now become Indigenous. Even though the term indigenous has always meant the local, long-residing population. Like a species of tree that evolved someplace is indigenous. But now it has been appropriated, along with native, aboriginal, justice... heh, I better stop there. That could be a long list.
None of those are proper names, except in the deranged minds of leftists.
Once again the shuffling brain stem in the form of Joe Biden reminds us that there is no limit to the damage the leftists have planned for this nation or for the rest of the world.
A look at cities such as Seattle, Portland, San Francisco and Baltimore offer up more than enough evidence of the planned destruction of society.
Joe Burisma has no clue as to what he is saying or doing.
The Antiquities Act of 1906 is not being used as it was intended back then; simply to designate areas where prehistoric Native American ruins and artifacts could not be removed by private collectors. The Act had strayed so far from its original intent that another Act was created in 1979 to more specifically protect archaeological sites.
"Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni"
Huh?
Klaatu barada nikto!
Me no savvy transformational grammar blong saucerfella.
Translation: "Welcome to the new casino, Pale Face"
let's give it a shot and see the results of what they planned, will see what happened next. hoping biden could really give us a clean energy
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