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Esmeralda County secures at least $15 million to mitigate impacts of lithium mine

Esmeralda County secures at least $15 million to mitigate impacts of lithium mine

Yahoo16-04-2025

Goldfield is the county seat in Esmeralda County. (Photo: Sydney Martinez/Travel Nevada)
Esmeralda County has secured an agreement with lithium developer Ioneer that will bring the rural county at least $15 million in funding to mitigate the impacts of a massive planned mine in the least populated county in the state.
Earlier this month, the Esmeralda County Board of Commissioners approved a development agreement with Ioneer that will provide the county with at least $5 million in funding for emergency services and more than $10 million for road improvements and maintenance.
The seven year development agreement is meant to 'reasonably mitigate the land use impacts that the development' of Ioneer's 7,000 acre Rhyolite Ridge Lithium-Boron Project 'will have on the citizens of Esmeralda County.'
Esmeralda County is the least populated county in Nevada, a fact reflected by the county's infrastructure and services. The county is built to support the roughly 750 residents who live there, but if the projected 500 construction jobs it will take to build the lithium mine is accurate, that influx alone would nearly double the county's population within a couple of years.
Under the agreement, Ioneer will reimburse Esmeralda County for the cost of three sheriff's deputies and six emergency services staffers, including salary and insurance and retirement and benefit costs. Esmeralda County will also be reimbursed for three converted patrol vehicles, one fire truck, and one ambulance under the agreement.
'Ioneer's investments will make for a safer and more secure Esmeralda County,' said County Fire Chief Jeffrey Bushnell in a press release Monday. 'We're grateful for their financial support and look forward to our continued partnership for the many years that follow.'
The agreement is in the final stages of approval with the county. A signed copy of the agreement will be posted once finalized, according to county officials.
'Ioneer has embraced our entire community, welcoming our input. They have left no stone unturned in a quest for a fair and harmonious development agreement,' said Mary Jane Zakas, Esmeralda County Commissioner for District 3 in a statement.
For years, county officials have raised concerns about how the largest development project in the county in the last 22 years would require significant investments from the county to expand law enforcement, emergency services, and waste disposal. The county will also need to take on higher maintenance expenses for the wear-and-tear on roads carrying heavy machinery, a concern reiterated by county commissioners last year during the project environmental review period.
Those impacts will now be partially mitigated by the development agreement which is designed to 'promote the health, safety and general welfare' of Esmeralda County residents while ensuring the 'highest economic benefit and least fiscal cost to its citizens,' according to the agreement.
Dyer, a small town about 13 miles from the proposed lithium mine, would likely face the brunt of the impacts from the project.
State Highway 264 and other transportation routes through the town of Dryer would be used to transport hazardous materials and hundreds of diesel fuel vehicles a day to and from the mine, according to the environmental review.
Under the development agreement, Ioneer would be required to prepare and deliver an emergency response plan to the county before the company starts transporting or storing hazardous materials on the project site, including truckloads of boric acid needed to mine lithium.
Ioneer would also be required to pay up to $25,000 annually for emergency response and fire protection training as soon as the company begins delivering equipment for construction of the mine.
The increase of emergency services needed to accommodate mining operations also calls for an emergency facility to house the additional emergency workers the county plans to hire, according to the development agreement. Ioneer will be required to pay up to $900,000 for the construction of an emergency facility near the intersection of State Highway 264 and State Highway 773.
Lithium extraction requires massive amounts of water, a tough sell in a state plagued by two decades of drought. Ioneer plans to source water from Esmeralda County's Fish Lake Valley, where the groundwater supply is already over-appropriated and over-pumped. Over the past 50 years agriculture has reduced groundwater in Fish Lake Valley by up to 200 feet in some areas, drying up residential wells.
The agreement acknowledges the need for groundwater mitigation by establishing a county-administered program to help residents in the region who need domestic water wells drilled deeper or rehabilitated.
However, the program would only be funded if Esmeralda County secures grants to fund the jobs and associated costs that Ioneer would have covered under the agreement. In that scenario, Ioneer would get paid back the costs in annual payments and half that money would be set aside for the well digging program.
County officials have also raised concerns about the costs of expanding waste disposal services to accommodate the boom in workers needed to construct the mine.
The agreement addressed that concern by noting that Ioneer will reimburse the county for the cost of a garbage truck if the volume of household waste increases to the point where another is needed.
'We are dedicated to being good neighbours, providing the County with the necessary resources to ensure that our funding assists the County and services it provides in preparation for the commencement of project construction,' said Bernard Rowe the Managing Director of Ioneer in a statement Monday.
Federal land managers gave their final approval for the mine in October, after a four year federal permitting and environmental review process. Ioneer also secured a $996 million federal loan in January to fund the mine processing facilities and associated infrastructure.
However, the project was hit with a financial setback in February when South African mining company Sibanye-Stillwater pulled back plans to invest $490 million in Ioneer for a 50 percent stake in the project following cratering lithium prices.
Despite the setback, Ioneer said Rhyolite Ridge is construction ready and the company is currently focused on seeking a new equity partner to bring the project into production.
Once constructed the massive 7,000 acre project would be in operation for 23 years and remove enough lithium from Nevada's public lands to supply nearly 370,000 electric vehicles each year.
The project has also attracted fierce opposition from conservation groups opposed to the mine's encroachment on critical habitat reserved for the only known population of the endangered wildflower Tiehm's buckwheat. The flower grows on just 10 acres of lithium-boron rich soil near the Silver Peak Range in Esmeralda County.
A week after the federal government approved the mine, the Center for Biological Diversity initiated a lawsuit against the mine under the Endangered Species Act.
If constructed, the mine would create a 66 acre quarry — a deep open pit characteristic of mines and where the lithium would be extracted — and directly disturb about 191 acres of critical habitat for the Tiehm's buckwheat. In total the mine would result in the removal of more than 2,000 acres of nesting sites and foraging habitat for a number of species.

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Ioneer raises $16m to advance Rhyolite Ridge lithium project towards FID
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Ioneer has received firm commitments to raise approximately $16m through a placement of new shares aimed at advancing its Rhyolite Ridge Lithium-Boron Project in Nevada, US. The funds will be used to move the project through the strategic partnering process and towards a final investment decision (FID). The placement was met with strong support from both new and existing shareholders. The company will issue approximately 253 million new fully paid ordinary shares at an offer price of A$0.10 per share, a 13% discount to Ioneer's last close on 10 June 2025. The placement is set to provide necessary capital for project readiness, environmental and permitting expenses, and other associated costs, as well as for working capital and general corporate purposes. The new shares issued will rank equally with the existing ordinary shares of Ioneer. Canaccord Genuity acted as the lead manager and bookrunner, with Stifel Nicolaus Europe and Bridge Street Capital Partners serving as co-lead manager and co-manager, respectively. Ioneer executive chair James Calaway said: 'Rhyolite Ridge continues to demonstrate it is a world-leading lithium project, helping accelerate the electric vehicle transition and securing a cleaner future for our children and grandchildren. This placement represents another step forward towards ensuring this world-class project operates efficiently and sustainably.' In addition to the placement, Ioneer is offering a share purchase plan (SPP) to eligible shareholders, aiming to raise up to an additional $3.3m at the same price as the placement. The SPP will offer eligible shareholders the chance to increase their holdings by the maximum permitted amount of A$30,000 per application, without any brokerage, commission or transaction fees. Ioneer managing director Bernard Rowe said: 'Ioneer is pleased to announce the successful completion of the placement with strong engagement from new and existing investors, signalling market confidence [in] the Rhyolite Ridge Project despite significant headwinds in the lithium market.' This move comes after the announcement in February that South African miner Sibanye-Stillwater would exit the joint venture with Ioneer for the Rhyolite Ridge project following a significant drop in lithium prices. "Ioneer raises $16m to advance Rhyolite Ridge lithium project towards FID" was originally created and published by Mining Technology, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

‘It's not a smash-and-grab': Tiny town of Dyer, Nevada, debates lithium mine's impact
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DYER, Nevada (KLAS) — It's the biggest town in Nevada's poorest, least-populated county. But things could start to change soon in the farming community of Dyer in Fish Lake Valley. Australian mining company Ioneer is nearing construction on its Rhyolite Ridge lithium project, expected to bring 500 construction jobs and 300-350 permanent jobs later when operations begin, estimated in 2028. An agreement between Esmeralda County and Ioneer will jump-start that process, with the company funding positions for three sheriff's deputies, six emergency services staffers and a grant writer. It will pay for a new fire truck, an ambulance and other vehicles. It also provides for a $900,000 emergency services building, as well as equipment for the emergency crew. In total, it will bring $5-$7 million in benefits before the mine goes into operation. 'We're not talking about state tax abatement,' Mark Hartman told 8 News Now in an interview in early May. He has lived in the valley since 1972 and now he's growing wine grapes . 'We're talking about real improvements for the poorest county in Nevada. There are 700 people that live here. You know, 300-plus live in Fish Lake Valley. The county seat has less. Silver Peak has even fewer,' Hartman said. Rhyolite Ridge lithium deposit not like the others: Tour shows Nevada mine site A study commissioned by Ioneer estimates when the mine is producing, it will generate around $8.5 million a year in taxes for the county, more than doubling the current county budget that's around $6 million. During a tour for 8 News Now last month, Ioneer's managing director, Bernard Rowe, said the mine could operate for 100 years depending on how it's operated. In the past week, updated financials from Ioneer show that's possible, and the lithium-boron deposit is richer than previously revealed. Residents know Ioneer officials because the company has been holding community meetings for six or seven years, Rowe said. 'Over time, he has been here. He has been listening to us,' Hartman said about Rowe. 'It's not a smash-and-grab,' Hartman said. 'What he's found is a multigenerational deposit. So this is two, three times … this becomes Michigan building cars back in the day, you know, when Ford first talked about the assembly line,' Hartman said. Some residents are more skeptical. They're not happy about anything that adds traffic on the roads. Others fear that Ioneer will sell out to a partner. And water is on everybody's minds. Matt Johnson, a Fish Lake Valley farmer who runs Johnson's Feed and Farm Supply with his wife, grows alfalfa and orchard grass, and he runs some cattle on his property. 'It feels like salesmanship,' he said. 'We're already in a designated basin where we have a declining water table every year,' Johnson said. He said there are concerns that taking water for the mine could be detrimental to groundwater levels. Johnson serves as vice-chairman of the Esmeralda Conservation District, an agency that deals with wells and water management. Ioneer came into the picture long after groundwater dropped in the valley, but Rowe understands the concern. When the U.S. Bureau of Land Management asked Ioneer if it would consider doing a groundwater study as part of the approval process for the mine, the company agreed. Rowe called it a massive undertaking. The study found the water table has dropped several hundred feet over the past 50 to 60 years, Rowe said. The analysis found that the southern end of the valley is actually a separate water table, and that water moves from the south to the north. He said the study showed the water table at the northern end of the valley had only dropped 5 feet at a site where one measurement was taken, the turnoff to the mine site just north of Dyer. 'We could pump any amount of water at Rhyolite Ridge, and it wouldn't affect the valley,' Rowe said. Ioneer isn't taking any risks, and has purchased water rights in the valley that it will leverage against water use at the mine. 'Flagrant violation': Lawsuit disputes US approval of Rhyolite Ridge lithium mine in Nevada A 'pivot' is a well that is at the center of an irrigated circle that you might see in aerial views of rural Nevada farms. Ioneer has produced the water rights for six existing pivots in Fish Lake Valley. Agriculture is continuing at those sites until Ioneer determines it needs additional water, an Ioneer spokesperson said. 'Instead of irrigating six pivots down here, we will take that water, we will turn off those six pivots, and we'll take that water and use it up at the mine,' Rowe said. That would be a gradual process — not just an abrupt shutoff that could cause dust problems, he said. US agency review says Nevada lithium mine can co-exist with endangered flower Johnson acknowledged that Ioneer had every right to pump groundwater after purchasing water rights. 'It has a legal path forward,' he said. 'We had very lengthy discussions about water,' Ralph Keys, a former Esmeralda County commissioner, said. 'The county will always have the right to protest any change in water use in the basin and the county as a whole.' He noted that the water rights in the basin are fully allocated. 'The basin is closed and there are no additional water rights available,' he said. Keys helped craft the Ioneer-Esmeralda County agreement before he left the commission after three terms in 2024. 'The county depends on the agricultural industry for a large consistent tax base. Farming has been a stable industry in Esmeralda County for over 100 years. I cannot say that about mining,' Keys said. He's from a family that has been farming in Fish Lake Valley since the early 1970s. 'Hopefully, the Ioneer project will be around for 50-plus years. The boom-and-bust cycle of mining in Nevada is evident. Look at all of the old ghost towns around Nevada,' Keys said. Goldfield, the biggest city in Nevada from 1903 to 1910 (pop. 20,000) during a gold mining boom, is evidence of his concern. The Esmeralda County seat is now home to about 200 people. 'As a commissioner when Ioneer came to town I saw the need to stress the fact that we did not have the necessary EMS to support such a large mining operation,' he said. 'Public safety became the number one concern of mine.' In Dyer, the nearest hospital is 90 miles away in Bishop, California. Keys put a priority on parts of the agreement that dealt with safety. Keys and Ioneer's Chad Yeftich, vice president for corporate development and external affairs, both emphasized the importance of benefits included in the gap between now and when the mine becomes profitable. Without the agreement, Esmeralda County doesn't have the resources to provide emergency services and additional law enforcement needed as the population grows and activity picks up. Training will be needed before shipments of lithium and boric acid go on area roads. Ioneer is also footing the bill for improvements to the county road that leads to Rhyolite Ridge. Another element of the agreement surrounds the possibility that the county could find grants to help cover the costs of additional expenses related to growth and the costs associated with the mine. Ioneer is funding the cost of a grant writer. If grant money is secured, half the money would go directly to the county for needs associated with drilling deeper wells or rehabilitation of wells. Johnson said he's concerned that the agreement is completely voluntary and includes language that Ioneer can use to get out from under it. He has lived in the valley on-and-off since 1976, and views the situation as favoritism. 'I'm not 'anti-the-project' enough to go to all their meetings,' Johnson said. Concerns about water go beyond farming. In May, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed protections for the Fish Lake Valley tui chub, a small fish that lives in a spring on a private ranch in the northern end of the valley. If the tui chub is protected under the Endangered Species Act, it could complicate an already complex water picture. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Esmeralda County secures at least $15 million to mitigate impacts of lithium mine
Esmeralda County secures at least $15 million to mitigate impacts of lithium mine

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time16-04-2025

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Esmeralda County secures at least $15 million to mitigate impacts of lithium mine

Goldfield is the county seat in Esmeralda County. (Photo: Sydney Martinez/Travel Nevada) Esmeralda County has secured an agreement with lithium developer Ioneer that will bring the rural county at least $15 million in funding to mitigate the impacts of a massive planned mine in the least populated county in the state. Earlier this month, the Esmeralda County Board of Commissioners approved a development agreement with Ioneer that will provide the county with at least $5 million in funding for emergency services and more than $10 million for road improvements and maintenance. The seven year development agreement is meant to 'reasonably mitigate the land use impacts that the development' of Ioneer's 7,000 acre Rhyolite Ridge Lithium-Boron Project 'will have on the citizens of Esmeralda County.' Esmeralda County is the least populated county in Nevada, a fact reflected by the county's infrastructure and services. The county is built to support the roughly 750 residents who live there, but if the projected 500 construction jobs it will take to build the lithium mine is accurate, that influx alone would nearly double the county's population within a couple of years. Under the agreement, Ioneer will reimburse Esmeralda County for the cost of three sheriff's deputies and six emergency services staffers, including salary and insurance and retirement and benefit costs. Esmeralda County will also be reimbursed for three converted patrol vehicles, one fire truck, and one ambulance under the agreement. 'Ioneer's investments will make for a safer and more secure Esmeralda County,' said County Fire Chief Jeffrey Bushnell in a press release Monday. 'We're grateful for their financial support and look forward to our continued partnership for the many years that follow.' The agreement is in the final stages of approval with the county. A signed copy of the agreement will be posted once finalized, according to county officials. 'Ioneer has embraced our entire community, welcoming our input. They have left no stone unturned in a quest for a fair and harmonious development agreement,' said Mary Jane Zakas, Esmeralda County Commissioner for District 3 in a statement. For years, county officials have raised concerns about how the largest development project in the county in the last 22 years would require significant investments from the county to expand law enforcement, emergency services, and waste disposal. The county will also need to take on higher maintenance expenses for the wear-and-tear on roads carrying heavy machinery, a concern reiterated by county commissioners last year during the project environmental review period. Those impacts will now be partially mitigated by the development agreement which is designed to 'promote the health, safety and general welfare' of Esmeralda County residents while ensuring the 'highest economic benefit and least fiscal cost to its citizens,' according to the agreement. Dyer, a small town about 13 miles from the proposed lithium mine, would likely face the brunt of the impacts from the project. State Highway 264 and other transportation routes through the town of Dryer would be used to transport hazardous materials and hundreds of diesel fuel vehicles a day to and from the mine, according to the environmental review. Under the development agreement, Ioneer would be required to prepare and deliver an emergency response plan to the county before the company starts transporting or storing hazardous materials on the project site, including truckloads of boric acid needed to mine lithium. Ioneer would also be required to pay up to $25,000 annually for emergency response and fire protection training as soon as the company begins delivering equipment for construction of the mine. The increase of emergency services needed to accommodate mining operations also calls for an emergency facility to house the additional emergency workers the county plans to hire, according to the development agreement. Ioneer will be required to pay up to $900,000 for the construction of an emergency facility near the intersection of State Highway 264 and State Highway 773. Lithium extraction requires massive amounts of water, a tough sell in a state plagued by two decades of drought. Ioneer plans to source water from Esmeralda County's Fish Lake Valley, where the groundwater supply is already over-appropriated and over-pumped. Over the past 50 years agriculture has reduced groundwater in Fish Lake Valley by up to 200 feet in some areas, drying up residential wells. The agreement acknowledges the need for groundwater mitigation by establishing a county-administered program to help residents in the region who need domestic water wells drilled deeper or rehabilitated. However, the program would only be funded if Esmeralda County secures grants to fund the jobs and associated costs that Ioneer would have covered under the agreement. In that scenario, Ioneer would get paid back the costs in annual payments and half that money would be set aside for the well digging program. County officials have also raised concerns about the costs of expanding waste disposal services to accommodate the boom in workers needed to construct the mine. The agreement addressed that concern by noting that Ioneer will reimburse the county for the cost of a garbage truck if the volume of household waste increases to the point where another is needed. 'We are dedicated to being good neighbours, providing the County with the necessary resources to ensure that our funding assists the County and services it provides in preparation for the commencement of project construction,' said Bernard Rowe the Managing Director of Ioneer in a statement Monday. Federal land managers gave their final approval for the mine in October, after a four year federal permitting and environmental review process. Ioneer also secured a $996 million federal loan in January to fund the mine processing facilities and associated infrastructure. However, the project was hit with a financial setback in February when South African mining company Sibanye-Stillwater pulled back plans to invest $490 million in Ioneer for a 50 percent stake in the project following cratering lithium prices. Despite the setback, Ioneer said Rhyolite Ridge is construction ready and the company is currently focused on seeking a new equity partner to bring the project into production. Once constructed the massive 7,000 acre project would be in operation for 23 years and remove enough lithium from Nevada's public lands to supply nearly 370,000 electric vehicles each year. The project has also attracted fierce opposition from conservation groups opposed to the mine's encroachment on critical habitat reserved for the only known population of the endangered wildflower Tiehm's buckwheat. The flower grows on just 10 acres of lithium-boron rich soil near the Silver Peak Range in Esmeralda County. A week after the federal government approved the mine, the Center for Biological Diversity initiated a lawsuit against the mine under the Endangered Species Act. If constructed, the mine would create a 66 acre quarry — a deep open pit characteristic of mines and where the lithium would be extracted — and directly disturb about 191 acres of critical habitat for the Tiehm's buckwheat. In total the mine would result in the removal of more than 2,000 acres of nesting sites and foraging habitat for a number of species.

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