Reclaiming the Future: Strategic Mineral Recovery from Legacy Mine Waste in the American West

The United States is at a strategic crossroads. With demand for rare earth elements (REEs) and other critical minerals at an all-time high—driven by clean energy, electric vehicles, and defense technologies—our current dependence on foreign supplies poses a serious national security and economic risk. Simultaneously, hundreds of thousands of abandoned hard rock mines litter the American West, creating environmental hazards and economic dead zones.

This paper proposes a bipartisan path forward: reclaim and repurpose legacy mine waste sites for strategic mineral recovery. Advances in mineral processing and materials science make it economically feasible to extract REEs, precious metals, and strategic materials from historic tailings and waste rock. Doing so not only secures domestic supply chains and revitalizes rural economies, but also accelerates environmental remediation in some of our nation’s most scarred landscapes.

The opportunity is transformative: we can turn waste into wealth, pollution into progress, and dependency into sovereignty.

Background


There are an estimated 240,000 to 500,000 abandoned or inactive mine sites in the western United States. These sites, many created during the 19th and 20th centuries, were mined for gold, silver, copper, and other metals. At the time, elements like lithium, cobalt, and rare earths were not economically valuable—and thus were discarded in tailings piles and waste dumps.

Today, these materials are among the most critical inputs for high-tech manufacturing, defense applications, and clean energy systems. With China currently controlling more than 80% of the global REE supply chain, the U.S. must act decisively to secure alternative sources.

Economic and Technical Feasibility


Recent pilot studies and academic research indicate that extracting strategic minerals from legacy mine waste is both technically viable and economically promising. Technologies such as bioleaching, hydrometallurgy, and AI-powered mineral characterization can identify and recover valuable materials that were once overlooked.

According to conservative estimates, even small-scale recovery operations can yield $1–3 million in materials per site. Multiplied across tens of thousands of sites, this could translate to hundreds of billions of dollars in potential domestic mineral value.

Strategic and Environmental Benefits


1. National Security: Reducing dependence on foreign adversaries for critical materials is a strategic imperative. Reclaiming domestic mineral sources enhances supply chain resilience.

2. Economic Development: Revitalizing rural and tribal communities around abandoned mine sites with new jobs in reclamation, recovery, and research.

3. Environmental Remediation: Many of these sites are environmental liabilities. Remediating them while extracting value reduces cleanup costs and aligns economic and ecological goals.

Policy Recommendations


• Launch a federal Mine Waste Reclamation and Strategic Recovery Act (MWRSRA) to provide grants, tax incentives, and permitting fast-tracks for qualified reclamation projects.

• Direct the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and Department of Energy (DOE) to map, prioritize, and assess mineral potential in legacy mine sites.

• Create public-private partnerships to pilot scalable recovery efforts using modern techniques.

• Prioritize rural and tribal economic development zones for first-phase implementation.

• Frame this as a bipartisan opportunity to strengthen America’s autonomy while restoring its lands.

Conclusion

Reclaiming strategic minerals from the ghosts of our industrial past isn’t just good policy—it’s visionary. This is the rare moment where environmental restoration, economic renewal, and national security align. It’s time to act boldly and let the American West rise again—not as a symbol of extractive decline, but as the foundation for a resilient, sovereign future.

Evermost Assists Lake Forest Park With Affordable Housing Options.

As a part of a consultant team creating the Town Center Design Guidelines, Evermost assisted the City of Lake Forest Park with options for inclusionary housing and multifamily tax exemption (MFTE) affordable units. Our duties included informational presentations to Planning Commission and City Council, ordinance review, and policy advice. This represented yet another collaboration with our valued partner Otak.

Evermost Team Awarded NPS Socioeconomics Contract

4/1/2020 – Evermost, as a part of a team with Otak, Inc., has been awarded a contract by the National Park Service to conduct planning and socioeconomic work. This $40 million, 5-year master services agreement will result in task orders related to a wide variety of tasks. According to federal regulations, 43% of the contract must be directed to registered small business subcontractors, like Evermost. This marks our fourth collaboration with Otak on planning projects.

Evermost Team Takes On Housing Action Plan

1/29/2020 – Evermost, partnering with ECONorthwest and Broadview Planning, has been awarded the South King County Housing Action Plan. This $100,000 project seeks to provide regional data and analysis for the six cities of Auburn, Burien, Kent, Renton, Tukwila, and Federal Way. Evermost is responsible for policy analysis and a strategic planning framework, leveraging our significant municipal planning experience.

Evermost Team Awarded Transportation Plan

11/2/2019 – Evermost, in partnership with Otak and Fehr & Peers, has been awarded a $125,000 contract to develop a new multimodal transportation master plan for the City of Sandpoint, Idaho. Evermost will be responsible for outreach tasks, strategic planning, and capital improvement budgeting. Evermost is excited to leverage our extensive mountain resort community experience in this jewel in the Idaho Panhandle. This will be our second collaboration with Otak, and our first formal teaming with Fehr & Peers.