Turning Extraction Subsidies (EG GMA 1872) into Recovery Deposits

For more than 150 years, the General Mining Act of 1872 has allowed mining companies to extract valuable minerals—including gold, copper, and lithium—from public lands without paying fair-market royalties to the American public. Economists and conservation organizations often describe this as a hidden subsidy: an opportunity cost where billions of dollars that could have been collected from extractive industries instead go uncharged. If even a fraction of those unrealized royalties were captured today, they could serve as a dedicated revenue stream to address the environmental externalities of modern consumption—particularly the challenge of managing end-of-life electronics, solar panels, batteries, and other high-value waste streams.

Above, the AI feed. Below, the AI response.

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