f7c
[DOCID: f:s2300enr.txt]
S.2300
One Hundred Sixth Congress
of the
United States of America
AT THE SECOND SESSION
Begun and held at the City of Washington on Monday,
the twenty-fourth day of January, two thousand
An Act
To amend the Mineral Leasing Act to increase the maximum acreage of
Federal leases for coal that may be held by an entity in any 1 State.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Coal Market Competition Act of
2000''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress finds that--
(1) Federal land contains commercial deposits of coal, the
Nation's largest deposits of coal being located on Federal land in
Utah, Colorado, Montana, and the Powder River Basin of Wyoming;
(2) coal is mined on Federal land through Federal coal leases
under the Act of February 25, 1920 (commonly known as the ``Mineral
Leasing Act'') (30 U.S.C. 181 et seq.);
(3) the sub-bituminous coal from these mines is low in sulfur,
making it the cleanest burning coal for energy production;
(4) the Mineral Leasing Act sets for each leasable mineral a
limitation on the amount of acreage of Federal leases any 1
producer may hold in any 1 State or nationally;
(5)(A) the present acreage limitation for Federal coal leases
has been in place since 1976;
(B) currently the coal lease acreage limit of 46,080 acres per
State is less than the per-State Federal lease acreage limit for
potash (96,000 acres) and oil and gas (246,080 acres);
(6) coal producers in Wyoming and Utah are operating mines on
Federal leaseholds that contain total acreage close to the coal
lease acreage ceiling;
(7) the same reasons that Congress cited in enacting increases
for State lease acreage caps applicable in the case of other
minerals--the advent of modern mine technology, changes in industry
economics, greater global competition, and the need to conserve
Federal resources--apply to coal;
(8) existing coal mines require additional lease acreage to
avoid premature closure, but those mines cannot relinquish mined-
out areas to lease new acreage because those areas are subject to
10-year reclamation plans, and the reclaimed acreage is counted
against the State and national acreage limits;
(9) to enable them to make long-term business decisions
affecting the type and amount of additional infrastructure
investments, coal producers need certainty that sufficient acreage
of leasable coal will be available for mining in the future; and
(10) to maintain the vitality of the domestic coal industry and
ensure the continued flow of valuable revenues to the Federal and
State governments and of energy to the American public from coal
production on Federal land, the Mineral Leasing Act should be
amended to increase the acreage limitation for Federal coal leases.
SEC. 3. COAL MINING ON FEDERAL LAND.
Section 27(a) of the Act of February 25, 1920 (30 U.S.C. 184(a)),
is amended--
(1) by striking ``(a)'' and all that follows through ``No
person'' and inserting ``(a) Coal Leases.--No person'';
(2) by striking ``forty-six thousand and eighty acres'' and
inserting ``75,000 acres''; and
(3) by striking ``one hundred thousand acres'' each place it
appears and inserting ``150,000 acres''.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Vice President of the United States and
President of the Senate.
0