Title 30 › Chapter CHAPTER 3A— - LEASES AND PROSPECTING PERMITS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VII— - SODIUM › § 262
If a permit holder proves to the Secretary of the Interior that they found valuable deposits of the listed minerals inside their permit area and the land is mainly valuable for those deposits, they can get a lease for part or all of that land. The leased land must be taken in compact survey blocks; if the area has no survey, the permit holder must pay for one under the Secretary’s rules. The lease must require a royalty of at least 2% of the quantity or gross value of sodium compounds and related products at the point they are shipped to market. The lessee must pay rent in advance: $0.25 per acre for the first calendar year (or fraction), $0.50 per acre for each of the second through fifth years, and $1.00 per acre per year after that. Rent for a year is credited against that year’s royalties. Land known to contain these deposits but not under a permit can be leased by the Secretary by public notice, competitive bidding, or other methods in areas up to 2,560 acres. Leases run 20 years and the lessee has first right to renew for 10-year terms under reasonable conditions set by the Secretary. Mining and selling sodium under potassium leases, and recovering potassium as a byproduct from sodium leases, are allowed. The Secretary may also change rental and royalty terms on existing sodium leases if a lessee asks, to match the rules above.
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Mineral Lands and Mining — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
30 U.S.C. § 262
Title 30 — Mineral Lands and Mining
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73