The Driller
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • NEWS
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • EQUIPMENT
  • SAFETY
  • VIDEOS
  • EDUCATION
  • SOURCEBOOK
  • EVENTS
  • SUBMIT
  • ABOUT
  • SIGN UP
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • NEWS
  • Water
  • Geothermal
  • Construction
  • Environmental
  • Mining
  • All Industry News
  • EQUIPMENT
  • Rigs & Heavy Equipment
  • Consumables
  • Pumps
  • Featured Products
  • VIDEOS
  • Newscast
  • Drill Talks
  • Ask Brock
  • Emerging Drillers
  • EDUCATION
  • Drilling Business Insights
  • Reference Desk
  • Sponsored Insights
  • EVENTS
  • Conferences & Demo Days
  • Newscast LIVE
  • SUBMIT
  • Drillers @Work
  • ABOUT
  • Contact
  • Advertise
The Driller
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
The Driller
  • NEWS
    • Water
    • Geothermal
    • Construction
    • Environmental
    • Mining
    • All Industry News
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • EQUIPMENT
    • Rigs & Heavy Equipment
    • Consumables
    • Pumps
    • Featured Products
  • SAFETY
  • VIDEOS
    • Newscast
    • Drill Talks
    • Ask Brock
    • Emerging Drillers
  • EDUCATION
    • Drilling Business Insights
    • Reference Desk
    • Sponsored Insights
  • SOURCEBOOK
  • EVENTS
    • Conferences & Demo Days
    • Newscast LIVE
  • SUBMIT
    • Drillers @Work
  • ABOUT
    • Contact
    • Advertise
  • SIGN UP
MarketsSafetyDrilling Industry NewsMining & Mineral Exploration Drilling

EPA Launches Historic $183M Uranium Cleanup of Navajo Nation

First-ever complete removal of uranium mine waste marks turning point in decades-long environmental justice fight

By Austin Keating
Uranium

The Department of Energy utilizes trains to transport uranium mining tailings.

Source: The U.S. Department of Energy

January 21, 2025

As a child herding her grandmother's sheep, Teracita Keyanna unknowingly wandered onto land contaminated with radioactive waste near her home on the Navajo Nation. For decades, her community has lived in the shadow of three abandoned uranium mines, their toxic legacy seeping into the soil, water, and lives of local residents.

"I feel like our community has finally had a win," says Keyanna, a member of the Red Water Pond Road Community Association, which has spent nearly two decades advocating for waste removal. "It'll help the community heal."

That win came on January 7, 2025, when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced an unprecedented decision: for the first time, uranium mine waste will be completely removed from Navajo Nation land, marking a historic shift in the federal government's approach to cleaning up the toxic remnants of the atomic age.

The $183 million cleanup operation, set to begin in early 2025, represents an unprecedented shift in environmental remediation strategy. Unlike previous "cap-in-place" approaches that simply covered contaminated sites, this plan calls for the complete removal of over one million cubic yards of radioactive waste from Navajo land.

The waste rocks from the Quivira mines site, located in the Churchrock community near Gallup, New Mexico, will be carefully hauled to a specially designed hazardous waste treatment facility, according to EPA's action memorandum. This marks the first time such a comprehensive removal approach has been attempted on Navajo land.

The project targets three distinct areas of the Quivira Mines site near Gallup, New Mexico:

  • Church Rock-1 (CR-1): The largest section, spanning 42 acres and containing 929,000 cubic yards of waste
  • Church Rock-1 East (CR-1E): A 10.5-acre site holding 50,400 cubic yards
  • Kerr McGee Ponds: Nine acres containing 14,300 cubic yards

All waste will be transported to a newly created disposal repository at the Red Rocks Landfill property east of Thoreau, New Mexico. The New Mexico Environment Department will oversee the facility's construction, operation, and critically, its monitoring "in perpetuity" - a level of long-term environmental protection unprecedented in previous cleanup efforts.

Cold War Legacy: How Uranium Mining Devastated Navajo Communities

The Quivira Mines site tells just one chapter in a much larger story of uranium extraction on Navajo land. Between 1944 and 1986, mining companies extracted approximately 30 million tons of uranium ore from tribal territories, primarily to fuel America's nuclear weapons program during the Cold War. When the uranium market collapsed in the 1980s, companies abandoned their operations, leaving behind a toxic legacy that continues to impact Diné communities today.

The EPA's decision to move uranium waste off-site represents a landmark shift in federal policy, setting a potential precedent for future cleanup operations. This move aligns with long-standing calls from the Navajo Nation for the comprehensive removal of uranium waste, rather than merely capping it in place.

Community leaders view this as a crucial step toward addressing the hundreds of abandoned mines that have contaminated their land for decades. The decision signals a potential shift in how similar sites might be handled in the future.

Environmental Justice Victory: EPA's New Approach to Tribal Land Cleanup

The EPA's decision to move uranium waste off-site represents a landmark shift in federal policy, setting a potential precedent for future cleanup operations. This move aligns with long-standing calls from the Navajo Nation for the comprehensive removal of uranium waste, rather than merely capping it in place.

"This solution is a compromise that will get radioactive waste in this area off of the Navajo Nation as soon as possible," said Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren, acknowledging that while it may not fulfill all community wishes, it represents crucial progress.

James Kenney, Secretary for the New Mexico Environment Department, emphasized the collaborative nature of the effort: "In partnership, federal, sovereign, and state governments can make a difference in the health outcomes for residents of the Navajo Nation and New Mexicans."

While the Quivira Mines cleanup marks a pivotal moment, the broader challenge remains daunting. With over 1,200 abandoned uranium mines still posing environmental and health risks across the Navajo Nation, this project serves as a crucial test case for future remediation efforts.

This article was originally posted on www.remediation-technology.com.
KEYWORDS: EPA remediation

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Austin Keating is the editor of Remediation Technology, a BNP Media publication launched in Sept. 2022. Austin is from Mattoon, IL, and graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a degree in journalism. Following graduation in 2016, he worked as a science writer and videographer for the university’s supercomputing center. In 2018, Austin obtained a master’s degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, where he was the campus correspondent for Planet Forward and a Comer scholar. He then served as an award-winning field editor for America's oldest continuously published magazine, Prairie Farmer, before joining BNP in 2021, becoming editor of SNIPS Magazine and the now discontinued Point of Beginning Magazine.

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
to unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • geotechnical drilling rig

    6 Onsite Phrases Environmental Drillers Hate

    Here are six phrases that highlight common frustrations...
    Markets
    By: Jeff Garby
  • Wayne Nash

    Pipe Stuck? Common Causes and Solutions for Drillers

    If you have drilled for any length of time, sooner or...
    Water
    By: Wayne Nash
  • submersible pumps, water well pumps

    Selecting and Sizing Submersible Pump Cable

    This article helps pump installers and servicers decide...
    Opinions
    By: Bob Pelikan
You must login or register in order to post a comment.

Report Abusive Comment

Subscribe For Free!
  • eNewsletters
  • Online Registration
  • Subscription Customer Service
  • Manage My Preferences

The Driller Newscast - The Big, Not-So-Beautiful Bill: How to Lose Clean Energy and Alienate the Planet

The Driller Newscast - The Big, Not-So-Beautiful Bill: How to Lose Clean Energy and Alienate the Planet

The Driller Newscast: 21st Century Drillers | Part 1 DEMAND

The Driller Newscast: 21st Century Drillers | Part 1 DEMAND

The Driller Newscast, Episode 147: Global Geothermal Collaboration at NY-GEO 2025

The Driller Newscast, Episode 147: Global Geothermal Collaboration at NY-GEO 2025

The Driller Newscast: New York Geo Talks 2025 Conference with Hands-on Driller Education

The Driller Newscast: New York Geo Talks 2025 Conference with Hands-on Driller Education

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the The Driller audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of The Driller or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • demo of a DM450 drilling rig during a customer factory visit
    Sponsored byGeoprobe

    Built for You: Smarter Drill Rigs, Stronger Support, Bigger Opportunities

Popular Stories

demo of a DM450 drilling rig during a customer factory visit

Built for You: Smarter Drill Rigs, Stronger Support, Bigger Opportunities

AI and Drought Concerns

AI’s Growing Thirst for Water and Power

A bison grazing at Yellowstone

Over One Thousand National Park Sites Open for Mining

The Driller Classifieds

COMPRESSORS

EAST WEST MACHINERY & DRILLING IS BUYING AND SELLING AIR COMPRESSORS, AIR BOOSTERS, AIR ENDS & PARTS
Company: East West Machinery

DRILL RIGS

LOOKING FOR LATE MODEL TOPHEADS & DRILLTECH D25'S
Company: Spikes’s Rig Sales

DRILL RIG PARTS

MEETING DRILLERS NEEDS AROUND THE WORLD
Company: East West Machinery

ELEVATORS

SEMCO INC. PIPE ELEVATORS
Company: Semco Inc.

GROUTERS

GROUTING EQUIPMENT - GROUT PUMPS & GROUT HOSE REELS
Company: Geo-Loop Inc.

PUMP HOISTS

SEMCO INC. - BASIC PUMP HOISTS
Company: Semco Inc.

WELL PACKERS

LANSAS PRODUCTS - INFLATABLE WELL PACKERS
Company: Vanderlans Lansas Products

WELL SCREENS

WELL SCREENS & SLOTTED PIPE
Company: Alloy Screen Works

Products

Water Quality Engineering: Physical / Chemical Treatment Processes

Water Quality Engineering: Physical / Chemical Treatment Processes

By carefully explaining both the underlying theory and the underlying mathematics, this text enables readers to fully grasp the fundamentals of physical and chemical treatment processes for water and wastewater.

See More Products

Subscribe to The Driller Newscast

Related Articles

  • Texas

    Abandoned Oil Wells in West Texas Come Back to Life

    See More
  • Cherokee climate change youth survey.jpg

    Cherokee Nation Launches Youth Climate Change and Environmental Protection Task Force Survey

    See More
  • USGS Launches New Web Site for Nation's Water Data

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • 1119819962.jpg

    Stantec's Water Treatment: Principles and Design, Updated, 3rd Edition

  • M:\General Shared\__AEC Store Katie Z\AEC Store\Images\ND\new site\in-too-deep.gif

    In Too Deep: BP and the Drilling Race That Took it Down

  • fundamentals.jpg

    Fundamentals of Sustainable Drilling Engineering

See More Products
×

Dig deeper into the drilling and water supply industry!

Build your knowledge with The Driller, covering the people, equipment and technologies across drilling markets.

SIGN UP NOW
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Directories
    • Store
    • Want More
    • Classifieds
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eNewsletters
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2025. All Rights Reserved BNP Media.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing

The Driller
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
The Driller
  • NEWS
    • Water
    • Geothermal
    • Construction
    • Environmental
    • Mining
    • All Industry News
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • EQUIPMENT
    • Rigs & Heavy Equipment
    • Consumables
    • Pumps
    • Featured Products
  • SAFETY
  • VIDEOS
    • Newscast
    • Drill Talks
    • Ask Brock
    • Emerging Drillers
  • EDUCATION
    • Drilling Business Insights
    • Reference Desk
    • Sponsored Insights
  • SOURCEBOOK
  • EVENTS
    • Conferences & Demo Days
    • Newscast LIVE
  • SUBMIT
    • Drillers @Work
  • ABOUT
    • Contact
    • Advertise
  • SIGN UP