“Solidus Resources, LLC, is approved to construct, operate, and maintain an open-pit gold mine, three waste rock facilities, and a heap leach facility,” the agency stated.
Solidus will carry out mining activity on approximately 6,232 acres of land, of which 4,123 acres are public land managed by the BLM, with the remaining private.
“The project will employ a contractor workforce of approximately 130 employees during the initial two-year construction and approximately 250 full-time employees for the operations period. The total life of the project will be 21 years,” the BLM stated.
The study forecasts an average of more than 300,000 ounces of gold annually from the mine, over a 10-year period.
The order stated that the United States possesses vast mineral resources that can fuel prosperity, create jobs, and cut down U.S. dependence on foreign nations.
“The United States was once the world’s largest producer of lucrative minerals, but overbearing Federal regulation has eroded our Nation’s mineral production. Our national and economic security are now acutely threatened by our reliance upon hostile foreign powers’ mineral production,” the order stated.
The memo ordered federal agencies to share information with the National Energy Dominance Council, which will review pending funding applications for energy and critical mineral projects to ensure that these funds are “utilized appropriately” across the federal government.
All That Glitters
The BLM’s approval of the Spring Valley gold mine comes amid gold prices trading at historic highs, making mining of the bullion an attractive business opportunity.“All regions saw inflows last month, with North American and European investors leading the charge. During the first half, North America accounted for the bulk of inflows, recording the strongest H1 in five years,” the report stated.
“Spiking geopolitical risks amid the Israel–Iran conflict boosted investor demand for safe-haven assets and supported inflows into North American gold ETFs.”
Uncertainty regarding policies and fiscal concerns could help support demand for gold ETFs in North America over the near to medium term, the World Gold Council said.
“Earlier this year, we examined the structural shift in gold’s demand and geopolitically influenced pricing drivers fueling its rebasing higher, ultimately posing the question if $4,000 [per ounce] is in the cards,” said Natasha Kaneva, head of global commodities strategy at JP Morgan.
“To answer the question—yes, we think it is, particularly now with recession probabilities and ongoing trade and tariff risks. We remain deeply convinced of a continued structural bull case for gold and raise our price targets accordingly.”
JP Morgan has said it sees central banks continuing to remain strong buyers of gold in 2025. It has predicted that central banks will buy 900 tons of gold this year, which although lower than the 1,000-ton purchases in each of the past three years, is still substantial.







