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GAO-23-106542 1 (2023-09-25)

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Why   This Matters


Key  Takeaways


Through  treaties, statutes, and historical relations, the U.S. has undertaken a
unique trust responsibility to protect and support federally recognized Tribes.'
Congress  has enacted several laws to maintain, strengthen, and protect the
Navajo Nation's leasing power over its tribal lands.2 In 2000, Congress passed
the Navajo Nation Trust Land Leasing Act of 2000 (Trust Leasing Act). This act
authorizes the Navajo Nation to lease its tribal lands for certain terms and
purposes-such   as agricultural and business-without obtaining approval from
the Department  of the Interior, if the leases are issued under tribal regulations
approved  by Interior.3
However,  the Trust Leasing Act excluded, from the authority granted to the
Navajo Nation, leases for the exploration, development, or extraction of mineral
resources. To address concerns that this and other restrictions limited Tribes'
ability to tap into the economic potential of resources on their lands, Congress
enacted the Indian Tribal Energy Development and Self-Determination Act
Amendments   of 2017 (Tribal Energy Act).4 The Tribal Energy Act authorizes the
Navajo Nation to lease its tribal lands for mineral resource purposes and issue
agricultural and business leases for longer terms without obtaining Interior's
approval, provided the leases are issued under Interior-approved tribal
regulations.5 The Tribal Energy Act also includes a provision for us to review
progress made  in carrying out the Navajo Nation's expanded leasing authority
provided for in the act. This report describes the progress.


*   The Trust Leasing Act and the Tribal Energy Act do not require the Navajo
    Nation to assume the expanded  leasing authority, and the laws do not specify
    a deadline by which the Nation must act to take on the authority.


   Interior's role is to review any tribal leasing regulations it receives from the
    Navajo Nation and approve those regulations if they meet the statutory
    requirements. At the Navajo Nation's request, Interior can provide technical
    assistance to the Nation during this process, according to Interior officials.
  To  assume  the expanded  leasing authority provided for in the Tribal Energy
   Act, the Navajo Nation must first develop tribal regulations governing mineral
   leasing and providing for longer-term business and agricultural leases and
   then submit those regulations to Interior for approval, according to Interior
   officials.
  As  of September 2023, the Navajo Nation had not developed regulations for
    Interior's review or approval or taken other steps to assume the expanded
    leasing authority, according to the Navajo Nation officials. These officials told
    us this was in part, because of limited tribal capacity-such as limited funding
    and staffing-and concerns regarding access to Interior's databases, which
    contains data the Nation believes it would need to manage mineral leases.


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GAO-23-106542 Tribal Lands

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