Juan Ciscomani's Critical Mineral Bill Passes House

Juan Ciscomani's Critical Mineral Bill Passes House

"America should never have to depend on adversaries for the materials that power our economy and national defense."

Grayson Bakich
Grayson Bakich
March 4, 2026

Representative Juan Ciscomani's (R-AZ) Critical Mineral Consistency Act has passed the House of Representatives once again.

Rep. Ciscomani reintroduced the bill in May 2024, which requires parity between the Department of Energy's (DOE) definition of critical materials and the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) definition of critical minerals.

The importance of this, as he originally explained, is that the Department of Energy is eligible for more extensive energy benefits found in the USGS's list, such as clean energy tax credits and financing support, which, in turn, helps reduce American reliance on foreign imports of critical minerals and materials.

For Arizona, a major producer of copper, this means new copper-related projects will be more easily approved and streamlined.

The bill originally passed the House in November 2024, but appeared to have died in the Senate.

But with the Critical Mineral Consistency Act passing the House again, perhaps it will have a better chance of reaching the President's desk.

"America should never have to depend on adversaries for the materials that power our economy and national defense," Rep. Ciscomani said in a press release. "With today's passage of the Critical Mineral Consistency Act, we are streamlining permitting, attracting investment, and unlocking Arizona's vast mineral resources — especially copper — to strengthen our supply chains and our security."

Representative Bruce Westerman (R-AR), who chairs the House Natural Resources Committee, argued that "securing domestic critical mineral supply chains will bolster our national security, create jobs in rural communities, and unleash American innovation." "Representative Ciscomani's bill will allow both the DOI and DOE to retain crucial autonomy in creating their own lists while increasing efficiency, ensuring consistent treatment across the federal government, and improving access to federal programs under a unified list."

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Grayson Bakich

Grayson Bakich

Grayson Bakich is a Florida and Arizona legislative correspondent for The Floridian and Cactus Politics, specializing in national and state-level politics. With three years' experience covering federal Florida, and Arizona politics, they have been cited by NewsBreak, SGT Report, Lucianne.com, and Cause Action. Email: [email protected]

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