Mojave Desert rare earth mining lawsuit: permitting and project risks for engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on MINING.com
30 Second Briefing
Environmental group National Parks Conservation Association, represented by Earthjustice, is suing the US Department of the Interior and National Park Service over approval of Dateline Resources’ Colosseum rare earth and gold project inside the Mojave National Preserve’s Clark Mountain region, about 10 km from MP Materials’ Mountain Pass mine. The suit alleges NPS authorised mining without a valid plan of operations or required permits, breaching multiple federal laws and long-standing park protections. Dateline says exploration and project work will continue, but its shares fell 9.5%, cutting market capitalisation to about A$1.23 billion.
Technical Brief
- Dateline acquired Colosseum in 2021 and reinterpreted historic US government datasets to identify rare earths prospectivity.
- Geological review reported similarities to Mountain Pass-style rare earth mineralisation, but no compliant rare earth resource estimate exists yet.
- Before NPS jurisdiction, the Bureau of Land Management had authorised mining in the area, creating a legacy of prior disturbance.
- Mojave National Preserve, designated in 1994, is one of the largest US park units and hosts high-density rare plant habitats and bighorn sheep.
- Legal action targets federal agencies only, so Dateline states on-ground exploration and project evaluation activities at Colosseum will continue.
Our Take
In our database of 499 gold and rare earth keyword-matched pieces, California greenfield or restart projects near protected areas tend to face materially longer permitting timelines than brownfield expansions in the US interior, signalling elevated schedule risk for assets adjacent to Mojave National Preserve.
The Colosseum project’s proximity to MP Materials’ Mountain Pass mine in the Mojave Desert effectively concentrates rare earth and associated gold activity in a single Clark Mountain corridor, which could sharpen cumulative-impact scrutiny from the National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management compared with more dispersed US rare earth prospects.
Dateline Resources’ A$1.23 billion market capitalisation, combined with a 9.5% single-day share price drop on the Colosseum news, suggests investors are highly sensitive to US permitting and litigation risk, a pattern also seen in other US-facing rare earth names in our recent Mining coverage.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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