HR-8797-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Nathaniel Moran (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law to allow the Army to enter into contracts or cooperative arrangements with private companies to conduct mineral extraction operations — including mining, processing, and handling of strategic or critical minerals — on land, facilities, waste streams, or byproducts controlled by Army organic industrial base facilities. Private partners would bear environmental liability and provide financial assurances. The Army would receive compensation in the form of cash, minerals, equipment, or facility improvements, and could retain and spend those funds without a separate congressional appropriation.
Who benefits
Private mining and minerals processing companies that gain access to Army-controlled land and resources. Defense contractors and manufacturers that depend on a stable domestic supply of critical minerals such as rare earth elements, lithium, titanium, and nickel. The Army, which would receive revenue and in-kind improvements for its industrial facilities. Downstream manufacturers in the defense, electric vehicle, and advanced electronics sectors that rely on these minerals. U.S. national security interests broadly, to the extent domestic mineral supply reduces dependence on foreign sources.
Who is hurt
Competing mining companies that do not win Army partnership contracts and must operate under standard federal leasing rules, including the Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired Lands, which this bill explicitly waives for Army facilities. Environmental advocacy groups and nearby communities concerned about mining activity on military land, where the bill shifts cleanup liability to private partners whose financial solvency is not guaranteed. Taxpayers who may bear residual environmental remediation costs if a private partner defaults, becomes insolvent, or if contamination migrates beyond facility boundaries. Federal agencies — such as the Bureau of Land Management — that normally oversee mineral leasing on federal lands and whose role is bypassed under this framework.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Army organic industrial base facilities sit atop or generate byproducts containing strategic minerals that are currently untapped, while the U.S. remains heavily dependent on China and other foreign nations for critical mineral supply chains essential to defense systems, electric vehicles, and advanced manufacturing. They contend that allowing private partners to extract these resources — at no direct cost to the Army and with private entities bearing environmental liability — is a low-risk way to strengthen domestic mineral supply while generating revenue that directly modernizes Army facilities without requiring new appropriations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that waiving the Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired Lands removes established federal oversight mechanisms designed to ensure fair compensation to taxpayers and proper environmental stewardship on federal property, creating a preferential pathway that bypasses competitive public leasing. They contend that shifting environmental liability to private partners provides only paper protection — if a contractor goes bankrupt after causing contamination, the financial assurance mechanisms may prove inadequate, leaving the Army and ultimately taxpayers responsible for cleanup costs on active military installations.