HR-5929-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 602.
Sponsored by Andy Barr (R-KY)
What it does
This bill would automatically classify certain Defense Department-funded critical mineral projects — such as mining feasibility studies, mine waste reclamation, and facility modernization — as "covered projects" under the federal permitting streamlining framework established by the FAST Act. This would make those projects eligible for coordinated, time-limited federal permitting review and require them to be listed on the federal Permitting Dashboard, a public tracking tool. Project sponsors could opt out of this treatment if they choose.
Who benefits
Domestic critical mineral mining companies and their investors, who would face a faster and more coordinated federal permitting process. The Department of Defense and defense contractors, who depend on reliable domestic supplies of strategic materials like lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements. Workers in mining, processing, and related industries who could see expanded domestic production. Electric vehicle and battery manufacturers that rely on domestically sourced minerals. Communities near mining operations that could see economic activity. Allies and trading partners who benefit from a more resilient U.S. supply chain.
Who is hurt
Environmental advocacy groups and communities near proposed mining sites, who may have less time and fewer procedural opportunities to raise concerns during permitting. Competing foreign mineral suppliers — particularly in China, which currently dominates global rare earth processing — who could lose market share. Federal agency staff who may face tighter review timelines. Landowners and Indigenous communities near mining projects who could see accelerated approvals with less review of environmental or cultural impacts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. currently imports the vast majority of many critical minerals — including over 80% of rare earth elements — from geopolitical rivals, creating serious national security vulnerabilities. They contend that the existing federal permitting process, which can take 7–10 years for a new mine, is a primary barrier to domestic production, and that applying the FAST Act's proven coordination framework to Defense-backed mineral projects would reduce redundancy without eliminating environmental review. The bill's opt-out provision, they argue, ensures project sponsors retain flexibility.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that fast-tracking permitting for mining projects — even under a national security rationale — risks shortcutting environmental and community review processes that exist to prevent lasting harm to land, water, and Indigenous territories. They contend that the FAST Act framework was designed for infrastructure like highways and pipelines, not extractive industries with distinct environmental footprints, and that applying it broadly to Defense Production Act actions could normalize permitting shortcuts for a wide range of future projects beyond the bill's stated scope.