SME on 2026 reset of US mining’s global role: policy and skills lens for engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on MINING.com
30 Second Briefing
US mining enters 2026 under a suite of Trump executive orders (EO 14213, 14220, 14241, 14261 and 14272) directing agencies to cut permitting delays, open federal land and expand domestic processing, with impacts expected on exploration timelines and investor confidence in critical minerals. SME consultant Debra W. Struhsacker warns that more than 30 years of restrictive legislation and land-use limits mean recovery will be gradual, with litigation over NEPA reviews and the fate of the SPEED Act (HR 4776) key to real permitting gains. She flags severe rare earths dependence on China and a looming skills gap, noting only 14 US mining schools and urging passage of the Mining Schools Act of 2025 and renewed federal mineral research funding.
Technical Brief
- Federal agencies are rewriting NEPA guidance and adding mining schemes to FAST-41 dashboards to formalise accelerated permitting tracks.
- Litigation risk remains high, with NEPA challenges expected to cluster around new, truncated review baselines.
- Rare earth separation is flagged as both capital-intensive and slow, with weak domestic offtake limiting bankability.
Our Take
With BMI/Fitch expecting most battery metals and critical minerals prices to edge higher in 2026, any US permitting or NEPA reforms tied to HR 4776 would directly affect whether domestic projects can capture that upside versus continued reliance on supply from China, Africa and Latin America.
Our Policy coverage shows only a handful of pieces linking mining education to supply‑security debates, so SME’s focus on the Mining Schools Act of 2025 and the 14 remaining US mining schools signals that workforce capacity is becoming a bottleneck alongside permitting for copper, cobalt and rare earths projects.
The Ambler Road project in Alaska sits at the intersection of over 30 years of land‑use constraints and new executive orders (such as 14213 and 14272), suggesting that how it is treated in 2025–26 will be read by copper and specialty minerals developers as a precedent for large greenfield access corridors on federal and Native‑adjacent lands.
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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