Local Government Can Contribute to Clean Energy and National Security Needs

This article was first published on Colorado Politics. Read the original piece here.

The Pressure Is Rising: Energy and Mineral Demands Are Surging

Colorado and the nation face increasing energy demands and critical mineral supply needs. These pressures are amplified by population growth, energy-intensive AI, a shrinking energy supply portfolio, and geopolitical challenges that have fundamentally altered historical supply chains. In Colorado specifically, approximately a quarter our electric energy is supplied by coal.[1] However, public policy decisions will result in this supply largely going offline over the next five years as a result of premature coal fleet retirements. The already significant gap left by these retirements has been made even more challenging by the rise of AI technology which is expected to increase energy consumption by 6.7%-12% by 2028, according to a Department of Energy Report.[2] At the same time, critical minerals supply chains for advanced technologies used in defense applications, renewable energy, and EV batteries have become constrained by China which has a near 90% monopoly on the critical minerals market.

Photo of Colorado Mountains

Colorado’s Clean Energy Goals Depend on Nuclear and Domestic Minerals

It's becoming increasingly apparent that our energy portfolio must include carbon-free nuclear energy, and that our minerals supplies must be sourced domestically with the highest environmental standards, rather than from unreliable adversarial nations with little to no environmental protections. In 2024, federal legislation was enacted banning the import of Russian Uranium and the current Administration took decisive action issuing executive orders earlier this year to better coordinate the review process for domestic minerals projects. The USGS also designated uranium as a critical mineral and in May of last year Coloradans of both parties came together to enact legislation defining nuclear energy as a clean energy source for municipal financing purposes and to count towards Colorado’s statutory carbon emissions reduction goals.

Colorado Has the Resources—But Local Policy Could Block Progress

Colorado is well positioned to play a leading role in sustainably sourced critical minerals production and has some of the nation’s richest reserves of uranium, the supply source for nuclear energy, and vanadium used in high strength alloys. However, our ability to meet these supply needs is directly challenged by new county regulatory proposals that would conflict with existing requirements already administered by the Colorado Division of Reclamation, Mining, and Safety (DRMS), the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM), and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Specifically, San Miguel County on Colorado’s West Slope has been promoting a regulatory framework that would establish the nation’s first county-level comprehensive mining and reclamation program. This is problematic for a number of reasons, beginning with the fact that under Colorado Law, DRMS has the exclusive authority to regulate mining and reclamation in the State. Similarly, BLM regulates mining operations on Federal Public Lands, and the DOE administers specific uranium leases under its authority. These regulatory entities have decades of experience and highly qualified staff to ensure that Colorado’s mining and reclamation operations are among the safest and most environmentally sound anywhere in the world.

Duplicative Regulations Threaten Jobs, Investment, and Sustainability

San Miguel County’s “purposely duplicative” proposal would complicate program administration, allow for a county-level veto of state and federally granted permits, and interfere with vested mineral rights, all without any added measure of environmental protection. Instead, the county proposal would drive away investment in sustainably sourced minerals and eliminate good paying jobs in the County’s West End, which widely supports new mining operations. A recent report by the Common Sense Institute found that up to 170 permanent, good paying jobs could be generated in the near future as a result of new mining activity in the area.[3] Finalizing the County’s proposal would severely jeopardize this potential economic activity in rural Colorado communities.

CMA’s Call: Work With Regulators, Not Against Them

The Colorado Mining Association has engaged with the County for almost a year in five Board of County Commissioners hearings and submitted detailed comments regarding industry concerns and how to address them. Most recently, CMA urged the County to work collaboratively with DRMS, BLM, and DOE to make full use of the wide range of communication and coordination tools already available to ensure that county concerns are heard and addressed in state and federal permits. DRMS, BLM, and DOE have signaled their willingness to work with the County in this effort, rather than see the County move forward with a program that is inconsistent with state and federal law.

CMA remains hopeful that the County will consider working collaboratively with state and federal regulators to ensure that the regulatory entities can continue implementation of Colorado’s world-class mining and reclamation standards without needless duplication and conflict that would impede clean energy development, national security supply chains, rural jobs, and county budgets.


[1] Colorado State Energy Profile, U.S. Energy Information Administration, July 17, 2025

[2] 2024 United States Data Center Energy Usage Report, Berkely Energy Lab, Energy Analysis & Environmental Impacts Division, December 2024, pg 6

[3] Executive Action & Extraction: Economic Impacts of the Mineral E.O. in the West, Common Sense Institute, May 2025, pg. 11

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