A Uranium-Mining Boom Is Sweeping Through Texas

May Be Interested In:Trump’s Rift With Europe Adds Fuel to a Rally in Defense Stocks


Michaelsen thought he had won. But when the TCEQ commissioners took up the question several months later, again they rejected all of the judge’s findings.

In a 19-page order issued in September, the commission concluded that “faults within 2.5 miles of its proposed disposal wells are not sufficiently transmissive or vertically extensive to allow migration of hazardous constituents out of the injection zone.” The old nearby oil wells, the commission found, “are likely adequately plugged and will not provide a pathway for fluid movement.”

“UEC demonstrated the proposed disposal wells will prevent movement of fluids that would result in pollution” of an underground source of drinking water, said the order granting the injection disposal permits.

“I felt like it was rigged, a setup,” said Michaelsen, holding his 4-inch-thick binder of research and records from the case. “It was a canned decision.”

Another set of permit renewals remains before the Goliad mine can begin operation, and local authorities are fighting it too. In August, the Goliad County Commissioners Court passed a resolution against uranium mining in the county. The groundwater district is seeking to challenge the permits again in administrative court. And in November, the district sued TCEQ in Travis County District Court seeking to reverse the agency’s permit approvals.

Because of the lawsuit, a TCEQ spokesperson declined to answer questions about the Goliad County mine site, saying the agency doesn’t comment on pending litigation.

A final set of permits remains to be renewed before the mine can begin production. However, after years of frustrations, district leaders aren’t optimistic about their ability to influence the decision.

Only about 40 residences immediately surround the site of the Goliad mine, according to Art Dohmann, vice president of the Goliad County Groundwater Conservation District. Only they might be affected in the near term. But Dohmann, who has served on the groundwater district board for 23 years, worries that the uranium, radium, and arsenic churned up in the mining process will drift from the site as years go by.

“The groundwater moves. It’s a slow rate, but once that arsenic is liberated, it’s there forever,” Dohmann said. “In a generation, it’s going to affect the downstream areas.”

UEC did not respond to a request for comment.

Currently, the TCEQ is evaluating possibilities for expanding and incentivizing further uranium production in Texas. It’s following instruction given last year, when lawmakers with the Nuclear Caucus added an item to TCEQ’s biannual budget ordering a study of uranium resources to be produced for state lawmakers by December 2024, ahead of next year’s legislative session.

According to the budget item, “The report must include recommendations for legislative or regulatory changes and potential economic incentive programs to support the uranium mining industry in this state.”

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

India’s National Highways Record 60% Growth In Last 10 Years To Become 2nd Largest Network In World
India’s National Highways Record 60% Growth In Last 10 Years To Become 2nd Largest Network In World
Trump says he would use 'economic force' to join Canada with U.S. | CBC News
Trump says he would use ‘economic force’ to join Canada with U.S. | CBC News
iOS 18 on iPhone with green background
Do You Know Each of These 9 Hidden iOS 18.2 iPhone Features?
Someone carries out colourful plates of brunch items like french toast and eggs benedict
DUKES and Chesterfield’s serve some of the best Ottawa brunch in two very different ways
Ingenuity Mars helicopter January grounding: What happened?
Ingenuity Mars helicopter January grounding: What happened?
What Leaving the WHO Means for the U.S and the World
What Leaving the WHO Means for the U.S and the World
The News Revolution: Where the World Connects | © 2024 | Daily News