Enhancing Geothermal Production on Federal Lands Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
This bill amends the Geothermal Steam Act to speed exploration and leasing on federal lands. It defines a geothermal exploration project to include drilling temperature-gradient, monitoring, calibration, or other exploratory wells by a geothermal leaseholder when the casing, surface-disturbance, 180-day completion, and three-year restoration limits are met. It also defines covered activities such as geotechnical investigations, off-road travel in existing rights-of-way, and construction, maintenance, realignment, or repair of existing access roads.
Those exploration projects and covered activities are not treated as major federal actions under NEPA. Leaseholders must give the Secretary at least 30 days' notice before exploration drilling. The bill also requires Interior, in consultation with Energy, to designate geothermal leasing priority areas on covered federal land within three years, review the designations at least every five years, prepare or supplement programmatic environmental impact statements, consult state, Tribal, local, transmission, and developer stakeholders, and avoid delaying permits or lease sales while a supplement is unfinished.
Who Benefits and How
Geothermal leaseholders benefit because qualifying exploration projects avoid full NEPA major-federal-action review. Geothermal developers benefit from priority-area designations and limits on repeated NEPA analysis for lease sales. BLM geothermal permitting offices benefit from clearer statutory rules for exploration projects, access-road activities, and priority areas. Electric utilities seeking geothermal power benefit if federal lease sales and exploration move faster. Transmission infrastructure owners benefit from consultation when priority areas are designated.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Interior land managers must designate priority areas, review them every five years, prepare programmatic environmental documents, and process notices. BLM environmental review staff must apply the NEPA exclusions and determine whether substantial new circumstances require additional analysis. State governments, Tribal governments, and local governments must participate in consultations to protect land-use interests. Conservation groups bear a monitoring burden because some exploration and access-road work will move with less NEPA process. Public-land users near geothermal projects may face faster project activity.
Key Provisions
- Defines geothermal exploration projects by well type, casing size, surface disturbance, completion time, and restoration requirements.
- Provides that qualifying geothermal exploration projects and covered activities are not major federal actions under NEPA.
- Requires leaseholders to give the Secretary 30 days' notice before exploration drilling.
- Requires Interior to designate geothermal leasing priority areas within three years.
- Requires five-year review of covered land and existing priority-area designations.
- Bars Interior from delaying permits or lease sales because a programmatic environmental supplement is unfinished.
- Limits additional NEPA analysis for priority-area lease sales when a programmatic environmental document remains valid.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Excludes qualifying geothermal exploration projects and covered access-road or geotechnical activities from NEPA major-federal-action treatment, requires 30-day notice before exploration drilling, directs Interior to designate geothermal leasing priority areas within three years, and limits additional NEPA analysis for lease sales covered by programmatic environmental documents.
Key Policy Areas
Geothermal Energy, Public Lands, Permitting, Environment
Primary Purpose
Excludes qualifying geothermal exploration projects and covered access-road or geotechnical activities from NEPA major-federal-action treatment, requires 30-day notice before exploration drilling, directs Interior to designate geothermal leasing priority areas within three years, and limits additional NEPA analysis for lease sales covered by programmatic environmental documents.
Policy Domains
House resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Geothermal leaseholders
- Geothermal developers
- BLM geothermal permitting offices
- Electric utilities seeking geothermal power
- Transmission infrastructure owners
Identified Costs
- Interior land managers
- BLM environmental review staff
- State governments
- Tribal governments
- Local governments
- Conservation groups
- Public-land users near geothermal projects
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
ReportedOrdered to be Reported in the Nature of a Substitute …
Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held
Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources Discharged
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Referred to the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources.
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Mr. Fulcher introduced the following bill; which was referred to …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Geothermal energy companies, Geothermal energy developers, Geothermal exploration companies
Bureau of Land Management, Environmental review agencies, Secretary of the Interior
Bureau of Land Management faces effects in multiple directions
Environmental advocacy groups, Environmental conservation organizations
Energy transmission infrastructure operators, Energy transmission operators
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "blm"
- → Bureau of Land Management
- "energy"
- → Department of Energy
- "interior"
- → Department of the Interior
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology