$240M USGS facility will be built at School of Mines

U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland and members of Colorado’s congressional delegation announced the construction of a state-of-the-art facility for the United States Geological Survey on the Colorado School of Mines campus.
February 18, 2022

USGS Getting $167 Million For New Research Building In Golden

Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland helped make the official announcement on Friday at the Colorado School of Mines campus in Golden
February 18, 2022

The White House wants to transition to a green economy, which is tricky without mines

Jordy Lee manages the supply chain transparency initiative at the Colorado School of Mines. He says over the past several decades, the U.S. has essentially outsourced mining, largely because of environmental concerns.
February 8, 2022

Projects to Capture Carbon Emissions Get New Boost Despite Dismal Record

Globally, industries will have to raise carbon-capture capacity by a factor of 50 to 100 times over what is in the development pipeline to achieve what the International Energy Agency estimates is needed to reach “net-zero” carbon emissions by 2070 ....
February 7, 2022

How important is a Twin Metals mine to supply critical minerals?

"The renewable energy transition is not going to happen without the mining industry. That's just a fact,” said Jordy Lee, who manages the Supply Chain Transparency Initiative at the Colorado School of Mines.
February 4, 2022

Colorado oil and gas companies can hide some chemicals used in fracking if they claim 'trade secrets'

"These are man-made chemicals. As I always say, since nature did not make them, nature does not know how to break them," said Shubham Vyas, Associate Professor of Chemistry at the Colorado School of Mines.
February 1, 2022

Deadly Colorado blaze renews focus on underground coal fires

Such fires can be ignited by lightning, humans and even spontaneously at temperatures as low as 86 degrees Fahrenheit (30 degrees Celsius), said Jurgen Brune, a Colorado School of Mines engineering professor.
January 30, 2022

New homes in Rockrimmon highlight risk of mine subsidence, insurance availability

All mine workings eventually subside, although it can be an extremely slow process — sometimes taking centuries, said Colorado School of Mines Professor Jurgen Brune, who teaches mine engineering.
January 29, 2022
Aly Dugdale headshot

Aly Dugdale

#idigmines Giving Day Coordinator, Colorado School of Mines Foundation
303.273.3136

Why U.S. Natural Gas Is No Longer Too Dirty for France

Jordy Lee, program manager for the Supply Chain Transparency Initiative at the Payne Institute for Public Policy, and Morgan D. Bazilian, director of the Payne Institute and a professor of public policy, wrote this opinion piece.
January 25, 2022