HR-5631-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Jeff Hurd (R-CO)
What it does
This bill would establish a geothermal ombudsman position within the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and a supporting Geothermal Permitting Task Force. The ombudsman would serve as a liaison between BLM offices and geothermal project applicants, provide dispute resolution services, and coordinate permit processing across BLM field offices for projects on federal land. The ombudsman would also have authority to temporarily reassign employees from other Interior Department bureaus to assist with geothermal authorizations and pay retention allowances to those reassigned employees.
Who benefits
Geothermal energy developers and companies seeking permits on federal land, who would gain a dedicated point of contact and dispute resolution channel. Investors in geothermal energy projects, who would benefit from reduced permitting uncertainty and delays. Western states with significant federal land and geothermal resources (e.g., Nevada, California, Idaho, Utah), whose local economies could see increased energy development activity. Electricity consumers in regions where new geothermal capacity comes online, who may benefit from added grid capacity. Federal employees reassigned to the task force, who would be eligible for retention allowances.
Who is hurt
Competing energy developers (solar, wind, oil and gas) on federal land who do not receive a comparable dedicated permitting coordinator, potentially creating an uneven permitting experience. Environmental and conservation groups concerned that streamlined permitting could reduce scrutiny of geothermal projects' impacts on federal lands, wildlife, and water resources. Other Interior Department bureaus and offices that could lose staff temporarily to the task force, potentially slowing their own operations. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of the new position, task force operations, and retention allowances, though the scale is likely modest.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that geothermal energy permitting on federal land currently takes an average of 7–10 years — far longer than comparable processes in other countries — and that this bottleneck prevents deployment of a reliable, baseload renewable energy source that operates 24/7 regardless of weather. They contend that a dedicated ombudsman and task force would cut through bureaucratic fragmentation across BLM field offices without weakening environmental review standards, accelerating domestic clean energy production and reducing dependence on fossil fuels.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a single-energy-source permitting coordinator within BLM sets a problematic precedent that could fragment the agency's review process and favor geothermal interests over other land uses, including conservation and tribal rights. They contend that the ombudsman's authority to reassign staff from other Interior bureaus could deplete resources from programs protecting public lands, wildlife, and water, and that the root cause of permitting delays — insufficient staffing and funding across BLM — requires broader solutions rather than a narrow carve-out for one energy type.