Monday, August 25, 2025

Alligator Alcatraz must close, but the fight isn’t over

A GULAG IS STILL A GULAG, BY ANY OTHER NAME 


Miacel Spotted Elk
Mon 25 August 2025
 Grist




The Miccosukee Tribe makes its home in the Everglades, where a tribal village sits only a few miles from the federal immigration detention center called Alligator Alcatraz. Residents have for weeks lived with vehicles coming and going around the clock, stadium lights illuminating the once-dark nighttime sky, and the facility restricting access to the game they rely upon for food.

That is no longer the case.

A federal judge has ordered the U.S. government to stop sending detainees to the facility and begin dismantling it within 60 days. In making her ruling, Judge Kathleen Williams sided with the tribe and environmentalists who argued that state and federal officials violated a federal law that requires an environmental review before proceeding with any federal construction project. The judge’s order also prohibits further construction at the site.

The judge granted the preliminary injunction sought by the tribe and a coalition of environmental organizations. Although the litigation will continue — Florida, which is managing the center on behalf of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, plans to appeal — tribal leaders hailed the decision and vowed to continue fighting to protect their land.

“We felt good. I felt good personally, but I know that this is only the first step in the legal process,” said Pete Osceola Jr., a long-term tribal lawmaker. “I believe that my tribe is willing to go the distance to preserve our rights and our culture.”

In her 82-page ruling, the judge posed a question that goes to the heart of the case: Why build a detention center in the middle of the Everglades and so close to a tribal community?

Williams recognized that, in addition to failing to conduct an environmental review, the U.S. government did not consult the Miccosukee ahead of the center’s construction. Such consultations are often legally required for any federal projects on historic sites, including on or near tribal land. In making the ruling, Williams cited Hualapai Indian Tribe v. Haaland, in which the tribe challenged a federal plan to extract lithium from a Bureau of Land Management site near a hot spring the tribe considers sacred. In that case, a judge ruled that the agency failed to consider alternatives before permitting the project and halted it.

The Everglades have served as a refuge and home to the Miccosukee since the Seminole Wars of the 19th century. The site of the detention center, built on Big Cypress National Reserve about 50 miles from Miami, also has particular significance to environmentalists. Alligator Alcatraz was built atop a former airfield that was built in the late 1960s successfully halted by environmentalists like Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, who founded Friends of the Everglades. That organization, along with Earthjustice and the Center for Biological Diversity, sought the injunction alongside the tribe.

“Our well being is intertwined, and that’s why Congress created the National Environmental Policy Act and other landmark environmental laws to safeguard the health and welfare of people by requiring the government to carefully and publicly consider the impacts of its actions on our land, water, air and biodiversity,” Elise Bennett, Florida director at the Center for Biological Diversity, said during a press conference on Friday.

The judge seemed to have felt the same way, ruling that the detention center poses a risk to the environment and to the water supply that the Miccosukee and others rely upon. “The project creates irreparable harm in the form of habitat loss and increased mortality to endangered species in the area,” she wrote.

Williams’ ruling is a setback for the detention center, the first state-run facility built to house detainees for ICE, and could impact any attempt to open others like it. The case brought by the Miccosukee and the environmentalists “kind of set a precedent for this being a way to halt environmental harms from these immigrant detention centers,” said Michelle Lynn Edwards, a sociologist and professor at Texas State University. “I mean, this is not the only one.”

Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” signed into law last month, earmarks approximately $45 billion for new immigrant detention centers, and the Washington Post reports that several are in planning stages across the country. Many are located in states with large tribal populations, including Minnesota, Oklahoma, and Colorado.

Edwards studies the link between federal environmental reviews and historically marginalized groups when federal agencies undertake projects, such as tribes, and can see environmental law being used to challenge future ICE detention sites. ”If these lawsuits are successful, then I do think that that would be something that would be used in other locations as well,” she said.

Osceola agrees, and the Miccosukee consider this a land and an Indigenous rights issue. “Any court decision involving Native tribes is a precedent,” he said. Osceola believes the case has the momentum to go before the Supreme Court eventually, and recent steps taken by the defendants support this. Florida has already filed an appeal. “This is not going to deter us,” Governor Ron DeSantis told reporters after the ruling. “We’re going to continue working on the deportations, advancing that mission.”

In a separate case challenging the legality of Alligator Alcatraz, legal groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union sued the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and DeSantis, alleging that it restricted migrants’ access to legal counsel. The agency has also rejected allegations that the facility is unsanitary and crowded.

Although Williams’ ruling is a setback for Alligator Alcatraz and the federal government, Osceola doesn’t think it should be considered a total victory. The issue at the center of the case — the government’s disregard for tribal sovereignty — remains. “As a native, as a Miccasukee, it’s a daily issue,” he said. “And I just want to make sure that people don’t forget these issues are not dead yet.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Alligator Alcatraz must close, but the fight isn’t over on Aug 25, 2025.


Alligator Alcatraz could be shut down. Ron DeSantis has a backup plan

Oliver O'Connell
Sat 23 August 2025 
THE INDEPENDENT


Alligator Alcatraz could be shut down. Ron DeSantis has a backup plan

Florida’s controversial 3,000-bed “Alligator Alcatraz” immigrant detention center could be shut down as soon as this fall after a wave of legal challenges.

But the state’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis has a backup plan, and Donald Trump’s administration claims that a federal judge’s order to temporarily shut down parts of the facility — which could become permanent — will not halt the president’s aggressive anti-immigration agenda.

Immigrants are expected to be detained at other facilities in the state instead.

On Thursday, a federal judge ruled that no more detainees can be sent to the facility, which was built in a matter of days deep in the Everglades on an airstrip. The state can continue to detain immigrants who are currently imprisoned there until they are deported, according to the judge.

There was widespread outrage over the very notion of the facility when it was announced, with state and federal officials officially naming the detention camp after the notorious California prison, due to the threatening wildlife that surrounds it, which the Trump administration touted as a deterrent to people escaping.

Migrants are confined to cages with bunk beds, enduring Florida’s sweltering summer heat, pests and rationed meals. A separate federal lawsuit accuses the facility of blocking detainees from legal counsel and forcing people into “overcrowded, unsanitary, and harsh conditions” with inadequate food and “excessive use of force” from guards that sent at least one man to a hospital.

Members of Congress and state lawmakers who visited were stunned by the conditions they witnessed, and they demanded its immediate closure.

A preliminary injunction was issued this week in a federal lawsuit brought by environmental groups and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida.

Judge Kathleen Williams' ruling on Thursday follows serious concerns from the Miccosukee Tribe, a Native American community whose reservation lies within miles of the facility, about the development's impact on their land and the environmentally sensitive Everglades.

“The project creates irreparable harm in the form of habitat loss and increased mortality to endangered species in the area,” Judge Williams said in the order. The further installation of any lighting, fencing, paving, tents, or buildings is forbidden, and “all generators, gas, sewage, and other waste and waste receptacles that were installed to support this project” must be removed in 60 days.


President Donald Trump flew down to open the Alligator Alcatraz deportation facility. Now it may close (Reuters)

While the injunction is only temporary until a court can make a final decision in the case, the state and federal governments have appealed the decision and requested that the judge rule on enforcement while their appeal is pending, asking that she make a decision by Monday at 5 p.m.

Meanwhile, a third federal lawsuit against the facility — filed by immigrants’ rights advocates including the American Civil Liberties Union — challenges Florida’s authority to detain people there.

The suit targets the state’s use of what it describes as the “expansive and unlawful use” of the federal 287(g) program, which allows local and state law enforcement agencies to enforce federal immigration law.

Responding to Judge Williams’ decision, Governor DeSantis said on Friday that it was “not unexpected,” and the state would “respond accordingly.”

“We’re not going to be deterred,” DeSantis said. “We are totally in the right on this,” he added, referring to the president’s mass deportation program that Americans largely oppose.

Florida’s plan, it appears, is to double down on state-run detention centers and a second 2,000-capacity facility, dubbed “Deportation Depot,” at a shuttered state prison that closed in 2021 due to staff shortages.

That prison — located within a rural stretch of the state between Tallahassee and Jacksonville — will operate inside Baker Correctional Institution, joining a new wave of state-run detention centers as ICE looks to build capacity to detain more immigrants in similar facilities across the country.


Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, pictured at the opening of the Alligator Alcatraz facility, says he will not be deterred from the state's plans for mass deportations (AFP via Getty Images)

“The reason for this is not to just house people indefinitely. We want to process, stage, and then return illegal aliens to their home country. That is the name of the game,” DeSantis said at a press conference announcing the detention center last week.

Speaking to NewsNation on Saturday, border czar Tom Homan said that “they’re not going to stop us doing what we’re doing.”

“We’ll follow the judge’s order, and we’ll litigate and we’ll appeal it,” he said. “But [the] bottom line is, we’re going to continue to arrest public safety threats and national security threats every day across this country.”

Homan said that ICE would simply adapt.

“If we have to send them to another facility. That’s what we’re going to do,” he said. “That’s why the president has asked for 100,000 beds in the Big, Beautiful Bill. So, we’re going to build 100,000 beds, so we’re not going to have a lack of bed space.”


White House border czar Tom Homan says ‘radical judges’ may slow his mission but ‘they’re not going to stop us’ (AP)

The Independent reported earlier this month that ICE has inked nearly 800 federal 287(g) program agreements covering 40 states, funded by $45 billion in new funding to expand ICE capacity.

In Indiana, officials announced plans earlier this month to expand the Miami Correctional Centre, located 70 miles north of Indianapolis. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem stated that the facility will have the capacity to detain approximately 1,000 immigrants. Officials have already dubbed this new detention centre the "Speedway Slammer".

Separately, the Trump administration is reportedly in talks with Louisiana officials to detain immigrants at the infamous Angola prison. This facility, the largest maximum-security prison in the country, was built on a former plantation owned by a slaveholder. The Wall Street Journal reported that Angola, which currently holds around 4,300 people, mostly convicted of violent crimes, could house 450 immigrants as early as next month.



‘Alligator Alcatraz’ may be shut down before Halloween. Florida already has a backup plan

Alaa Elassar,
 CNN
Sat 23 August 2025 


David Mourer visits the entrance to "Alligator Alcatraz" at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport on July 12, 2025, in Ochopee, Florida. - Joe Raedle/Getty Images


Nearly two months after the hasty and controversial birth of “Alligator Alcatraz,” a federal judge has slammed the brakes on the operation, ruling that no more detainees can be sent to the remote migrant detention camp deep in the marshy wetlands of the Everglades.

Built in just a matter of days, the facility garnered sharp criticism for its treatment of migrants who have been confined in cages amid sweltering heat, bug infestations and meager meals, prompting members of Congress and state representatives that witnessed the conditions to demand its immediate closure.

US District Judge Kathleen Williams on Thursday issued a preliminary injunction in a federal lawsuit filed by environmental groups and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida. The Miccosukee Tribe, a Native American tribe whose reservation lies within miles of the facility, raised serious concerns about the impact the facility will have on their land and the environmentally sensitive area, including the plants and animals that inhabit the Everglades.

“The project creates irreparable harm in the form of habitat loss and increased mortality to endangered species in the area,” Williams said in the order.

A preliminary injunction is a temporary order put in place until a court can make a final decision in a case. The federal and state governments are attempting to appeal the judge’s order, according to court filings.

The state has requested the court temporarily halt enforcement of the federal judge’s order while the appeal is heard, arguing “the public interest will suffer irreparable injury” due to the preliminary injunction, including disruption of law enforcement response and financial losses. The state requested the judge rule on their request by Monday at 5 p.m.

“We got news last night that we had a judge try to upset the apple cart with respect to our deportation and detainee processing center down in South Florida at ‘Alligator Alcatraz.’ I just wanted to say this was not something that was unexpected,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said at a news conference Friday. “We knew that this would be something that will likely happen and we will respond accordingly.”

“We’re not going to be deterred,” DeSantis said. “We are totally in the right on this.”


Work progresses on a new migrant detention facility dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz," at Dade-Collier Training and Transition facility in the Florida Everglades on July 4. - Rebecca Blackwell/AP

DeSantis is doubling down on immigrant detention centers in his state – including the announcement of a new immigration detention facility he dubbed “Deportation Depot,” which can hold as many as 2,000 detainees.

For now, the installation of any additional industrial style lighting is prohibited, as is any paving, filling, excavating, fencing, or erecting any additional building or tents at “Alligator Alcatraz.” The order also mandates no detainees beyond those currently housed at the facility can be moved there.

Lighting, fencing and “all generators, gas, sewage, and other waste and waste receptacles that were installed to support this project” and added to Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport must also be removed within 60 days of the order, Williams said, effectively shutting the facility that’s become a centerpiece of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown – which Americans largely oppose.

“Alligator Alcatraz remains operational, and we will not stop in our mission to detain, deport, and deliver for the American people,” Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier said in a social media post Friday.

Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin condemned Williams’ ruling as an attempt to derail the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown efforts.

“This ruling from an activist judge ignores the fact that this land has already been developed for a decade,” McLaughlin said. “It is another attempt to prevent the President from fulfilling the American people’s mandate to remove the worst of the worst including gang members, murderers, pedophiles, terrorists, and rapists from our country.”

Williams was nominated by former President Barack Obama.

In June she found Uthmeier, who has championed “Alligator Alcatraz,” in civil contempt of court after he appeared to publicly defy her order to pause a new state immigration law making it a crime to enter Florida illegally.

DeSantis also called Williams an “activist judge” at his briefing Friday.

“This is a judge that was not going to give us a fair shake. This was preordained, very much an activist judge that is trying to do policy from the bench,” the governor said.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava called the ruling a victory for freedom, local communities and the environment.


People take part in a boat tour in Everglades National Park in Florida on May 6, 2024. - Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Getty Images

“Most importantly it is a victory for the families who have endured unimaginable hardship because of what happens at this facility,” Cava said. “The people who have been held here, the detainees have faced conditions that have shocked our community, our nation and in fact, the world, conditions that have betrayed the very values that define America.”

Around 400 people are still detained at “Alligator Alcatraz,” the mayor said, adding that she doesn’t know the exact number since she hasn’t been permitted to enter the facility.

The outcome of the state’s appeal and whether the facility will be permanently closed remain uncertain.

“We can’t predict exactly what will happen. They have appealed other rulings by Judge Williams that have not been sustained,” Cava said. “In this case, it’s on environmental basis and hopefully, higher courts will sustain her ruling.”

Legal expert Michael Romano, director of the Three Strikes Project at Stanford Law School, says what happens next hinges on the outcome of the appeal

“A preliminary injunction is just that – it’s preliminary. They usually stand up, but let’s say the appeal fails,” Romano told CNN. “It’s not the end of the story. They would then go for what’s called a permanent injunction, and they’ll appeal that. So it’s going to drag on for a while.”

It remains to be seen whether the DeSantis administration will fall in line with the injunction’s demands, including halting new detainee arrivals and tearing down the mandated infrastructure as ordered by Williams, or if they’ll resist.

“If you defy a court order, you can be held in contempt, and I think there have been a number of circumstances within the new (Trump) administration where they have tested the court’s willingness to impose a contempt order,” Romano said.

“The administration definitely tests limits, but they don’t always go over them,” he added. “I think it’s safe to predict that they will test the limits of this court if they can’t get the decision reversed.”
‘Inhumane’ facility serves as model for other immigration detention centers

Members of Congress and state representatives who were given a limited tour last month to inspect conditions described the facility as “inhumane,” with detainees “packed into cages, wall-to-wall humans, 32 detainees per cage,” Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who represents Florida’s 25th Congressional District, said at the time.

Each cage contained three small toilets with attached sinks, which detainees use for drinking water and brushing their teeth.

Lawmakers were concerned about reports of unhygienic conditions due to toilets not working and “feces being spread everywhere,” but were denied access from viewing units where migrants are currently detained and were not permitted to view the medical facilities, Rep. Maxwell Alejandro Frost, who was also on the tour, said.

Despite criticism and reports of harsh conditions, “Alligator Alcatraz” is serving as a model for other states to establish similar facilities, including the “Deportation Depot” in northern Florida, as well as additional immigration detention centers in Indiana and Nebraska.

DeSantis’ “Deportation Depot” will be located within the Baker Correctional Institution, a temporarily closed state prison about 45 miles west of Jacksonville near the Osceola National Forest.

“The reason of this is not to just house people indefinitely. We want to process, stage and then return illegal aliens to their home country,” DeSantis said last week.

The facility will likely be ready soon, Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie said.

In Bunker Hill, Indiana, the Miami Correctional Facility is offering 1,000 unused beds to ICE for detaining migrants. The Department of Homeland Security has nicknamed the facility the “Speedway Slammer,” according to a DHS news release.

In Nebraska, Republican Gov. Jim Pillen announced on August 19 that ICE is establishing a detention center in McCook, a city with a population of around 7,000. The Department of Homeland Security has dubbed the facility the “Cornhusker Clink.”
Ruling points to environmental concerns and impact on Indigenous lands

Cava said it was “painful” to watch state leaders dismiss the community’s concerns and the potential environmental impact on both the land and the people living nearby, “particularly the tribe whose sacred lands are being violated.”

The migrant detention center is surrounded by Everglades National Park, Big Cypress National Preserve and the tribal lands of the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida, a plaintiff in the case.

Everglades National Park is an environmentally critical subtropical wetland, home to threatened species and one of the world’s largest mangrove ecosystems. It also provides essential services to South Florida, including drinking water for more than 8 million Floridians and protection from hurricanes and floods, according to the National Wildlife Federation.


Holey Land Francis S. Taylor Wildlife Management Area in the Everglades, Florida. - Jeff Greenberg/Getty Images

“Every Florida governor, every Florida senator, and countless local and national political figures, including presidents, have publicly pledged their unequivocal support for the restoration, conservation, and protection of the Everglades,” Williams said in the order. “This Order does nothing more than uphold the basic requirements of legislation designed to fulfill those promises.”

Williams said the facility has not been compliant with its obligations under the National Environmental Policy Act. NEPA, signed by President Richard Nixon, is considered one of the foundational environmental laws formed at the beginning of the modern environmental movement.

Prior to the construction of the facility, the defendants were required, under NEPA, to conduct an environmental assessment, or issue an environmental impact statement, a government document that outlines the impact of a proposed project on its surrounding environment, but they did neither.

“The EIS or EA must precede any ‘major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment,’” Williams wrote in her ruling. “Under the statutory language, the Defendants cannot put the cart before the horse — they cannot construct a facility and, then only in response to litigation such as the instant case, decide to fulfill their legal obligations.”

According to the ruling and testimony from the Miccosukee Tribe, runoff and wastewater discharge from “Alligator Alcatraz” pose a threat to the water supply in the Miccosukee Reserved Area, home to 80% of tribe members located just a few miles downstream from the facility.

The court also reviewed plans and photos showing that operation of the facility has so far involved paving approximately 800,000 square feet of land and the installation of industrial lighting impacting the night sky at least 20 to 30 miles away.

Increased lighting from the project will push animals out of the area, Director of Water Resources Amy Castaneda and Fish and Wildlife Department Director Dr. Marcel Bozas said during testimony, according to the ruling.

The artificial lighting also reduces the endangered panther habitat “by 2,000 acres, as studies suggest panthers are unlikely to come within 500 meters of a large artificial light source,” Williams writes in the ruling.

Bozas also pointed to the facility’s interruption of the tribe’s traditions of hunting, fishing, and collection of ceremonial and medicinal plants around the site, specifically on off-road trails with trailheads on the detention facility’s fence line, which Williams has ordered to be removed so the tribe has access to the trailheads again.

“This is not our first fight for our land and rights,” Talbert Cypress, the chairman of the tribe, said in a news release. “We will always stand up for our culture, our sovereignty, and for the Everglades.”

CNN’s Devon Sayers and Isabel Rosales contributed to this report.





















World Nuclear News

Key phase completed of impact assessment for Ontario Bruce C project


The planning phase of the federal integrated Impact Assessment process for Bruce Power’s planned Bruce C project has been completed, with the next phase to be the development of the Impact Statement.
 

Public consultation is a key part of the impact assessment process (Image: Bruce Power)

There are five stages to the Impact Assessment process. The planning phase "defines the scope of the project and provides opportunities for Indigenous people and the public to identify area of interests for the project and contribute to planning the assessment".

It also involved establishing a baseline of existing socio-economic, health and environmental data.

The next stage was started on 19 August when the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada, in collaboration with the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, issued the formal Notice of Commencement of Impact Assessment under the country’s Impact Assessment Act.

In the Impact Statement phase, Bruce Power said it will: document existing conditions; include Indigenous knowledge and community knowledge where provided; assess potential positive and negative effects of the project; identify ways to mitigate possible negative effects and enhance the beneficial effects of the proposed project; understand cumulative impacts through Cumulative Effects Assessment; and continue to engage with Indigenous Nations and Communities, municipalities and the public.

It added that it would "leverage the requirements identified in the Tailored Impact Statement Guidelines and conduct the assessment to evaluate the potential environmental, health, social, and economic effects of the Bruce C Project, as well as impact to Indigenous rights".

The federal government announced CAD50 million (USD36 million) of funding in February last year to support pre-development work to study the feasibility of building 4800 MWe of new generating capacity at the Bruce site in Ontario.

The multi-year federal impact assessment process including Indigenous and public engagement, environmental and socioeconomic studies, and permitting activities provides a planning tool to evaluate the potential for the Bruce C project. Although no decision has yet been made to advance a new build, it is seen as an important step to support future electricity planning and allow faster execution should a decision to proceed be made.

Weina Chong, Bruce Power Director of Regulatory Affairs, Bruce C, said: "The Bruce C Project represents a generational opportunity to support Ontario's clean energy future. By leveraging the existing Bruce Power site, we aim to provide a high-value option for expanding nuclear capacity in a way that is safe, sustainable, and aligned with Ontario's Integrated Energy plan, Energy for Generations."

Bruce Power previously applied for a licence to prepare for construction of up to four new reactors - totalling up to 4000 MWe - in 2007, but withdrew its application in 2009 as the company focused on the refurbishment of the existing eight Bruce A and B units. Those refurbishment projects are generating 22,000 direct and indirect jobs, and CAD3-4 billion in GDP in Ontario and CAD8-11 billion in Canada.

With nuclear currently responsible for 50% of Ontario's total generation and hydro contributing 24%, Ontario already has one of the cleanest grids in the world and the Energy for Generations plan published in June sees nuclear power - including required new capacity - "continuing to serve as the backbone of the province's electricity system providing the 24/7 baseload power the province's economy requires" as demand continues to rise.

Lianjiang unit 1 auxiliary building topped off


The main structure has been completed on the auxiliary plant for Lianjiang nuclear power plant unit 1 on 20 August, China Nuclear Energy Association has said.
 
(Image: CNEA)

The construction of the first two 1250 MWe CAP1000 reactors - the Chinese version of the Westinghouse AP1000 - at the Lianjiang site was approved by China's State Council in September 2022. Excavation works for the units began in the same month, with the pouring of first concrete for the foundation of unit 1 starting in September 2023 and that of unit 2 in April last year. Unit 1's reactor vessel was installed in February and the unit is expected to be completed and put into operation in 2028.

Shanghai Nuclear Engineering Design and Research Institute - a subsidiary of State Power Investment Corp (SPIC) - said it established a dedicated topping out team for the ancillary building, “fully leveraging the advantages of integrated construction and installation to ensure the smooth topping-out of the main structure of the powerhouse. This provided important practical experience for the subsequent construction of nuclear power units and laid a solid foundation for the safe and high-quality construction of the Lianjiang nuclear power project”.

Once all six CAP1000 units planned at the site are completed, the annual power generation will be about 70.2 TWh, which will reduce standard coal consumption by more than 20 million tonnes, and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by more than 52 million tonnes, sulphur dioxide by about 171,000 tonnes and nitrogen oxides by about 149,000 tonnes.

Kazatomprom to lower uranium production in 2026


The national atomic company of Kazakhstan has announced plans for a roughly 10% cut in its uranium production in 2026, saying it does not view the current supply-demand balance and existing uncovered demand as sufficient to incentivise a return to its 100% levels at this time.
 

(Image: Kazatomprom)

"As the world's largest producer and seller of natural uranium, Kazatomprom fully recognises the critical role the Company has in supporting the global energy transition. We remain committed to delivering long-term value to all stakeholders," Kazatomprom CEO Meirzhan Yussupov said, as the company announced its consolidated financial results for the first half of 2025.

"Kazatomprom is currently undertaking a large-scale exploration in Kazakhstan, which is a top priority for replenishing its resource base and maintaining its leading position as a global nuclear fuel supplier.

“Despite the volatility in the spot uranium market and the broader capital markets, some of which may be due to uncertainty brought by the tariff wars, uranium long-term price has remained stable at 80 US dollars per pound proving that fundamentals remain strong. However, the Company does not view the current market developments to be sufficient to return to the Company’s initial 100% levels at this time, which are now being decreased by roughly 8 million pounds, cutting about 5% of the world’s primary supply."

Kazatomprom's nominal production level (on a 100% basis) is expected to fall from 32,777 tU (around 85 million pounds U3O8) as laid out under previous Subsoil Use Agreements, to 29,697 tU. Most of the 3,000 tU reduction is attributable to production adjustments at JV Budenovskoye, the company said. Subsoil use contracts are agreements with the Kazakh government covering the production of uranium by in-situ leach methods.

The company said it "expects to exercise its downflex opportunity within the acceptable 20% deviation under the updated 2026 Subsoil Use production levels". Actual 2026 production guidance has still to be finalised, and will be provided within the 2026 operational guidance disclosure, it added.

In previous years, uncertainties in sulphuric acid supply - a key reagent in the in-situ leach process used to mine uranium in Kazakhstan - has impacted production plans, but Kazatomprom said sulphuric acid supplies for 2026 are estimated to be stable. (In-situ leach mining is also referred to as in-situ recovery).

A "robust inventory position and a disciplined sales strategy" mean that all delivery obligations will be met in full while retaining flexibility to respond quickly to market developments, the company said. It also said that Kazakhstan's plans to build nuclear power plants, which could create a substantial domestic demand in the future, were worth highlighting.

"With each plant requiring around 400 tonnes (1.04 Mlbs) of uranium annually, over the entire operational lifetime [of three plants], this may translate to a cumulative demand of 72 thousand tonnes (187.2 Mlbs). A portion of the Company’s production could be therefore allocated to national needs over time," it said.

Kazatomprom's production for the first six months of 2025 was 12,242 tU (on a 100% basis), a 13% year-on-year increase. Its whole-year production guidance for 2025 remains unchanged, at 25,000-26,500 tU (100% basis).

Final assembly under way for Akkuyu 4’s reactor vessel


Fabrication of the control assembly for the reactor vessel has begun for the fourth unit at the Akkuyu nuclear power plant in Turkey. Rosatom said it will be the 250th nuclear reactor manufactured in Russia.
 

(Image: Rosatom)

Maxim Zhidkov, the head of the Atommash plant, said engineers will "ensure that every component and element of the reactor is precisely positioned to a thousandth of a millimetre. This work verifies the reactor's operational readiness for at least six decades. It also streamlines installation at the NPP site. A successful test build stands as a testament to the excellence of Russian design and production standards".

The Atommash plant is also currently working on the reactor vessel for the second unit at the El Dabaa nuclear power plant in Egypt as well as 17 steam generators for nuclear power plants in Russia, Turkey, Egypt and India.

Igor Kotov, head of Rosatom's Mechanical Engineering division, said: "Our products have powered hundreds of nuclear plants in Russia and around the globe, bringing warmth and illumination to millions. They have also driven the creation of nuclear icebreakers ... no less ambitious projects lie ahead. Among them are the launch of the world's first IV Generation energy complex in Seversk ... and the development of a line of floating nuclear power plants."

Background

Akkuyu, in the southern Mersin province, is Turkey's first nuclear power plant. Rosatom is building four VVER-1200 reactors, under a so-called BOO (build-own-operate) model. According to the terms of the 2010 Intergovernmental Agreement between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Turkey, the commissioning of the first power unit of the nuclear power plant must take place within seven years from receipt of all permits for the construction of the unit.

The licence for the construction of the first unit was issued in 2018, with construction work beginning that year. Nuclear fuel was delivered to the site in April 2023. Turkey's Nuclear Regulatory Agency issued permission for the first unit to be commissioned in December 2023, and in February 2024 it was announced that the reactor compartment had been prepared for controlled assembly of the reactor - and the generator stator had also been installed in its pre-design position.

The aim is for unit 1 to begin supplying Turkey's energy system in the next year. When the 4800 MWe plant is completed, it is expected to meet about 10% of Turkey's electricity needs, with the aim that all four units will be operational by the end of 2028. First concrete for unit 4 was poured in August 2023.

Vattenfall to select between BWRX-300 and Rolls-Royce SMR

Sweden's Vattenfall says it has decided to choose small modular reactors for new nuclear capacity, with a shortlist of two: GE Vernova Hitachi's BWRX-300 and the Rolls-Royce SMR.
 

The existing Ringhals plant (Image: Vattenall)

The aim is to have new nuclear capacity up and running on the Värö Peninsula, where the Ringhals nuclear power plant is located, in the early 2030s. Vattenfall says the project will be for 1.5 GW capacity - so either five BWRX-300s or three of the 500 MW Rolls-Royce SMRs.

Over the past year the two companies' small modular reactors have been assessed, as well as an alternative option of larger-scale nuclear power units from either - according to reports in June 2024 - Westinghouse, EDF or Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power (who were reported to have withdrawn in December).

Desirée Comstedt, Vice President and Head of New Nuclear at Vattenfall, said: "We have conducted a very thorough evaluation of the suppliers and reactors. It is very gratifying that we now can, after a process that began with 75 potential suppliers, go from four to two. Building a series of smaller units brings clear cost advantages; they require less space, need significantly fewer personnel, and leads to more manageable logistics. This also increases the ability during the construction phase to find, house, and transport staff, reducing the risk of increased costs."

The company said that both shortlisted SMRs have "proven technology and simplified designs that have integrated learnings from previous nuclear projects worldwide". And they both use fuel for which Vattenall has established supply chains.

Vattenfall says an application to the government for state risk-sharing is to be submitted and a final supplier selected. It said it was "already looking at the next step to build an additional 1000 MW where Ringhals 1 and 2 are currently located. Final investment decisions will be made later in the process".

The evaluation looked at technology, site and logistics and commercial aspects. Vattenfall said that the SMR designs were simplified and incorporated learnings from previous nuclear power projects around the world. It also said that none of the four reactors evaluated had been built in Europe yet and "would therefore need to be adapted to Swedish conditions to varying degrees" and would involve learning costs so it was "positive that an SMR entails a lower investment cost" and building a fleet allowed lessons to be learned from each one's construction.

"The evaluation also showed that the selected suppliers offer a relatively lower cost of electricity," Vattenfall said.

It also noted that the development of both the selected technologies was progressing in projects elsewhere, with Ontario Power Generation having taken a Final Investment Decision to build the first of a fleet of BWRX-300s, and the Czech Republic and the UK both choosing Rolls-Royce SMR for their SMR projects.

Preparations will continue for submitting permitting applications and during the autumn Vattenfall said it would continue to develop collaboration with member companies of Industrikraft, a consortium of 17 Swedish industrial companies. Several have shown an interest in making a joint investment with Vattenfall, the company said.

Sweden's six nuclear power reactors provide about 40% of its electricity. In 1980, the government decided to phase out nuclear power, but in June 2010 parliament voted to repeal this policy. The country's 1997 energy policy allowed ten reactors to operate longer than envisaged by the 1980 phase-out policy, but also resulted in the premature closure of the two-unit Barsebäck plant. In 2015, decisions were made to close four older reactors by 2020.

The change of policy to allow new nuclear capacity followed the arrival of a centre-right coalition government in 2022.

BWXT launches advanced nuclear fuel subsidiary


BWXT Advanced Fuels, LLC will be dedicated to the commercialisation of advanced nuclear fuel, such as TRISO, and will pursue partnerships to deliver commercial nuclear fuel for advanced nuclear reactors.

TRISO fuel particles (Image: BWXT)

"BWXT Advanced Fuels focuses on ensuring the availability of BWXT-manufactured nuclear fuel on a commercial scale by leveraging its more than 20 years of experience manufacturing TRISO fuel at its Lynchburg facility," BWX Technologies (BWXT) said.

TRISO - short for tri-structural isotropic - fuel comprises spherical kernels of enriched uranium fuel surrounded by layers of carbon and silicon carbide, giving a containment for fission products which is stable up to very high temperatures, and is the preferred fuel in several advanced reactor designs currently under development.

"Given the significant investments, expertise and ready-to-manufacture capabilities in advanced nuclear fuels, BWXT is leaning in to lead fuel supply for multiple advanced reactor developers," Joe Miller, BWXT president for Government Operations, said.

The company has recently completed the designing and manufacturing of TRISO fuel for the US Department of Defense Strategic Capabilities Office's Pele programme to develop, prototype and demonstrate transportable 1.5 MW gas-cooled reactors.

BWXT Advanced Fuels is led by Senior Director Josh Parker, who said the new company is already working to deliver the fuel for the first advanced reactors "as well as optimising the TRISO manufacturing process for the future to ensure that we can successfully drive down costs to meet the demand of industry and energy end-users".

BWXT said it is manufacturing TRISO on a commercial scale "and will be prepared ahead of the ramp in new product deliveries to meet customer demand". The company's TRISO optimisation programme is located at the BWXT Innovation Campus in Lynchburg, Virginia, and It is exploring opportunities to expand its TRISO production capability through the establishment of a new greenfield fabrication facility to meet the demand of the growing advanced reactor market.

 

Podcast Interviews: Amentum's Andy White, plus GLE's Nima Ashkeboussi


Andy White talks about the huge range of work Amentum is doing in the UK and internationally, from pre-project planning to decommissioning. We also hear from Nima Ashkeboussi about Global Laser Enrichment's technology and growth plans.

Topics covered by White, senior vice president of Energy and Environment International at Amentum, include:

* The change of attitudes which means that the future decommissioning process is included in the planning stages for new nuclear (and how that should reduce the number of 'surprises' when decommissioning plants)

* The company's work on new nuclear in the UK at Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C and SMRs and operations in Poland, France, the Czech Republic as well as Norway and the Netherlands

* The benefits of bringing in technology, skills and people from other sectors (and countries) to help with what looks like being a forthcoming rapid expansion of new nuclear. 

* Plus Amentum's nuclear fusion work, including at ITER, and the general outlook for nuclear, and how financing and regulation can help industry meet the demand for new capacity

Also in this episode: Claire Maden's conversation with Nima Ashkeboussi, vice president government relations and communications at Global Laser Enrichment (GLE), earlier this year at the World Nuclear Fuel Cycle conference in Canada.

In it he talks about the company's laser enrichment technology, explaining how it works and the big plans the company has - including 30-years' worth of work relating to the US Department of Energy's 200,000+ tonnes of depleted uranium. GLE's plan is to re-enrich this, so cleaning up a stranded asset and in the process providing a new source of fresh fuel.

GLE began a large-scale enrichment demonstration programme in May, and the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission accepted for review the company's licensing application for a new facility to be built at Paducah, Kentucky earlier this month.

You can listen and subscribe on all major podcast platforms:

World Nuclear News podcast homepage
Apple
Spotify
Amazon Music

Episode credit:  Presenter Alex Hunt. Co-produced and mixed by Pixelkisser Production

Cover Picture: Courtesy of Amentum


Maple Syrup Harvest 2025 Promises a Sweet Season for Ontario Producers

Ontario’s maple syrup producers are predicting one of the sweetest seasons in recent memory, thanks to ideal winter temperatures and increased global demand for pure Canadian syrup.
Maple Syrup Harvest 2025 Promises a Sweet Season for Ontario Producers

 2025-08-10

 By Michael Tremblay

The aroma of boiling sap will soon fill sugar shacks across Ontario as maple syrup producers prepare for what they expect to be a bumper season. After months of careful weather monitoring, farmers say the combination of cold nights and mild days this winter has created ideal conditions for sap flow, a critical factor in determining syrup yield and quality.

“This year’s freeze-thaw cycles have been textbook perfect,” said Peter Lawson, a third-generation syrup producer near Lanark. “When you have consistent nights below zero and days that rise just above, the trees respond beautifully. We’re expecting both a high volume and exceptional flavor.” Lawson, like many small-scale producers, has already stocked up on wood for boiling and bottles for packaging in anticipation of a busy spring.

Ontario’s maple syrup industry is not only a cultural tradition but also an important economic driver. According to the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers’ Association, the province produces more than 1.5 million liters annually, much of which is exported to markets in Europe and Asia. This year, global demand is expected to rise as consumers seek natural, sustainably produced sweeteners.

At Fortune Farms in Almonte, the tapping has already begun, with staff working in shifts to collect sap from more than 4,000 trees. “We’re aiming for an early start to maximize the run,” said owner Alison Ferguson. “The earlier you get going, the more days you can collect before the weather turns warm for good.” The farm also welcomes visitors, offering guided tours and tastings during peak season.

While the industry outlook is positive, challenges remain. Climate change has made sap seasons less predictable in recent years, with sudden temperature spikes sometimes cutting production short. Producers are adapting by diversifying their tree stands, investing in vacuum tubing systems, and experimenting with hybrid boiling techniques to improve efficiency.

Local tourism boards are also seizing the moment, promoting maple-themed events such as pancake breakfasts, artisan markets, and heritage demonstrations. In Perth, the annual Maple Festival is scheduled to return in full scale for the first time since the pandemic, with organizers expecting record attendance. “People want to reconnect with traditions,” said festival coordinator Rachel Moore. “Maple season is part of our identity.”

For many producers, the work is as much about legacy as it is about profit. “This is something my grandparents did, my parents did, and now I do,” Lawson said. “Every bottle we sell is a piece of Ontario’s history — and this year, it’s going to taste especially sweet.”

BC

After years of losses, fruit growers in the Okanagan celebrate bountiful harvest

Heat domes and winter cold snaps have contributed to crop failure, with B.C. farmers not turning a profit since 2017

CBC
Sun, August 24, 2025 


Customers grab fresh cherries at Paynter's Fruit Market in West Kelowna. 
(Curtis Allen - image credit)

Vince Kuipers' grandparents emigrated from Holland to Kelowna in 1921 when they started orcharding, eventually passing the knowledge down to his parents.

Today, Kuipers owns a fruit-picking family business, Kuipers Fruit Family Farm in Kelowna, that has had a rough few years with extreme weather events killing crops in the Okanagan.

"I grew up in the orchard," he said, noting that orcharding has been his full-time job since 2015.

He is among many fruit growers in the area who are celebrating their first bountiful harvest in several years, thanks to all the right growing conditions this year.

WATCH | Okanagan fruit growers celebrate big harvest after years of losses:

As for this year's harvest, he says that "this year is the best year I would say so far."

He says that last year "was very disappointing," with a mild winter contributing to crops failing. The past few years have been the worst crop failure in his lifetime, he says.

Jennay Oliver, who owns and operates Paynter's Fruit Market in the Okanagan, says that this year's weather "was perfect. It was mild. It wasn't extreme, and we had crops on everything."

Heat domes and winter cold snaps have contributed to crop failure, with B.C. farmers not turning a profit since 2017, according to Statistics Canada.


Peaches from Kuipers Family Fruit Farm in Kelowna, B.C. (Curtis Allen)

"It's pretty easy to want to quit when you have these couple of bad seasons in a row, I think this season has kind of pulled everybody back together," Oliver said.

Despite the harvest, farmers and scientists say that this type of year is rare and are preparing for future hardships with Okanagan crops.
Climate change

Agriculture Canada researcher Kirsten Hannam is looking into innovative ways to protect orchards from a changing climate.

One example is using retractable shutters to protect trees from hail or intense sunlight.


Kirsten Hannam tests retractable shutters to gauge their effect on mitigating damage to trees from hail or intense sunlight. (Cravo Equipment Ltd.)

She says that climate adaptability and resilience are incredibly important to include in future studies about climate change and orchards.

Kuipers says that he is not overly concerned about climate change.

"You have good years and bad years. You can mitigate against that the best you can, but I try to have a positive outlook on it."


A drone shot of Vince Kupiers' orchards in Kelowna, B.C. (Curtis Allen)

"I'm not overly concerned, but at the same time, you just gotta be prepared that if there is another cold spell, it can be disappointing," he said.

Hannam says that fruit growers are reaching out to researchers to ask different questions about how they can make their orchards more resilient to extreme weather.

"We have such a great relationship with the farmers who work in the valley. We have lots of communication with them, which really benefits our research," she said.

Oliver says that fruit growers she has spoken to are encouraged following this year's harvest.

BC

Site C able to produce more power than forecast, leading to demand for more benefits

CBC
Sat, August 23, 2025 


The Site C dam as seen from outside Fort St. John in August 2025. The $16-billion megaproject can generate more power at peak capacity than previously forecast, leading to calls for more money to local communities affected by the project.
 (Matt Preprost/CBC - image credit)More

Communities in northeast B.C. say the province and B.C. Hydro need to deliver more benefits from the Site C dam now that the $16-billion megaproject is able to produce more electricity than first projected.

The newly commissioned dam will be able to generate up to 1,230 megawatts at peak capacity, about 130 megawatts more than the 1,100 originally approved in 2014.

That's enough to power roughly 52,000 more homes than initial estimates, or more than half the expected energy needs of the proposed Cedar LNG project in Kitimat.

"If the benefit of Site C, in terms of its ability to produce revenue, is increased, then the impact to us and the recognition of that impact should also be incorporated," said Hudson's Hope Mayor Travous Quibell.

The increase was discovered as B.C. Hydro tested Site C's six massive turbines, built in Brazil and brought online over the past year on the Peace River outside Fort St. John. The last unit went into operation in August, months ahead of schedule, while provincial regulators quietly amended Site C's environmental certification this spring to recognize its higher output.


Hudson's Hope Mayor Travous Quibell, left, and Leonard Hiebert, chair of the Peace River Regional District. They believe communities in the region should receive increased payments from B.C. Hydro now that Site C is capable of generating more power. ((PRRD/District of Hudson's Hope))More

"As you get into the commissioning process, you find out what you've actually got," said B.C. Hydro spokesperson Greg Alexis. "It doesn't mean Site C is going to be generating at that maximum capacity all the time.

"Rather, what it does is give us the ability to put more electricity on our system at the times we need it most, which is typically those coldest, darkest days of the year."

Calls for more benefits

Site C first began generating power in October 2024 and is now fully operational after decades of delays, lawsuits, and cost overruns.

It's the largest public infrastructure project in B.C. history, supplying about eight per cent of the province's electricity. B.C. Hydro says it will meet growing demand from housing, population growth, and industrial projects.

Elected leaders in the Peace region argue that increased generating capacity at Site C should bring a greater share of benefits back to local communities.


The 83-kilometre reservoir for the Site C dam is seen in August 2025. Fifty-five square kilometres of farmland are now submerged by the reservoir. (B.C. Hydro)

That push was formalized in March, when Quibell introduced a unanimous motion at a meeting of the Peace River Regional District (PRRD), calling on B.C.'s Environmental Assessment Office to require increased benefit payments as a condition for amending Site C's certification.

"This is simply a nod to the fact that the environmental assessment process captures not just environmental impacts, but also socioeconomic ones," said Quibell.

The PRRD signed an agreement with B.C. Hydro in 2013 to receive $2.4 million a year until 2094, indexed to inflation, once the dam was operational. The money is split among its seven member municipalities and four unincorporated rural areas based on population and project impacts.

In the first full year, the PRRD will receive roughly $500,000. The two largest communities in the region, Fort St. John and Dawson Creek, will receive about $830,000 and $312,000, respectively.

"It's a big benefit. It's guaranteed money coming in for the next 70 years," said PRRD board chair Leonard Hiebert. "With that money coming in, we can look at not having to increase taxes for certain services."

Hiebert says the regional district plans to use its share of benefits for priorities like solid waste, parks, and connectivity.

However, the dam has brought permanent losses, including 55 square kilometres of farmland now flooded by the reservoir, while communities have faced other challenges, Hiebert said.

In Hudson's Hope, there have been ongoing issues and uncertainty with drinking water related to dam construction. And questions linger over the future of the massive work camp that still houses a few hundred workers.

"It is positive that they are producing more than projected, but there are all the impacts in construction that we've been through," Hiebert said. "That little extra money that we would get with that increased power… [would] come back into the region to help our residents as a whole."


Questions linger over the fate of a massive work camp for Site C workers, seen here earlier this year. (CBC News)

Hydro, province reject requests

But both B.C. Hydro and the EAO have rejected the PRRD's request.

The utility says it has implemented more than $100 million in mitigation measures and community benefits to date, including a $20-million agricultural trust fund and more than $1 million for non-profits.

In a letter to the regional district, the EAO said legally binding conditions on the project do not require financial compensation to local governments, though B.C. Hydro does have to compensate for impacts to farmland, fisheries, wildlife, and wetlands.

"The funding formula as part of [the 2013 agreement] is not linked to anything to do with the capacity of Site C, so the terms of the agreement will not change," Alexis said.

Pressure on province

Hiebert says the regional district will keep pressing for more compensation, including at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention this fall.

Provincial ministers need to see the scale of development and impacts firsthand, he said.

"If we can get the ministers, even if they come as a whole contingent, just take a couple of days to see how vast it is and everything that's going on in our region, I think they would have a much better understanding as to why our asks are the way they are," he said.
Making mud sexy: Scientists search for climate change answers in Quebec sea floor

Morgan Lowrie
Sun, August 24, 2025 
CBC

MONTREAL — Far below the seals and belugas that dive gracefully through Quebec's Saguenay fiord, there are small creatures burrowing in the sea floor mud that scientists believe play a crucial role in mitigating the effects of climate change.

Earlier this month, scientists from the United Kingdom and Université Laval spent several days on the fiord's bumpy waters, grabbing samples from 200 metres below in a quest to track the life in the mud.

Dr. Adam Porter, a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Exeter, said the sea can look like an "impenetrable blue" for those on the surface.

"I think mud is even more impenetrable because you get down to the bottom, you look at the sea floor, it can often look like there's not much going on," he said in a video interview. "But there's this whole world of life under the mud, and that is playing a really important role in keeping the planet healthy."

The research is part of the Convex Seascape Survey, a partnership exploring how the sea floor regulates climate through the sequestration of carbon, and the role that small animals in the mud play in keeping the planet healthy, Porter said.

Unofficially, he said the study has another title: "Trying to make mud sexy."

Rebecca Howman, a PhD student at Université Laval, said collecting the roughly 60 sea floor samples was complicated by the Saguenay fiord's tides, waves and current.

"You have to literally take a chunk of the floor off the ground, and considering that the Saguenay is 200 metres deep, that's quite a feat," she said in an interview. From the boat, the scientists used what she describes as a "big claw" to scoop samples, which were transferred to aquariums the scientists could use to study and experiment.

"It's very messy, very muddy, but also a good challenge and really quite fun," she said.

After they were pulled from the fiord's bottom, the samples were transferred to aquariums in Chicoutimi, Que., for study. Porter said the researchers put fluorescent sand on top of the mud in order to track the burrowing movements of the animals, some of which are too small to spot with the naked eye.

What emerged from the mud was a tiny world, teeming with life. "You can get worms, brittle stars, bivalves — so mussel-like organisms," Howman said. "So loads of different types of life live within the mud, which is interesting because you look at mud and you don't think that there's anything really going on."

While the creatures are small, she likened them to "little ocean gardeners" that help keep the sea floor healthy and ultimately support the whole marine ecosystem. "The way that they move the sediment changes the entire structure of the ecosystem," she said. "And it can support the ecosystem by changing nutrient fluxes — it oxygenates the sediment."


She said they also help store carbon in the sea floor by eating or trapping the organic matter that falls from above — a role that the researchers say could be crucial to mitigating the effects of climate change.

Porter described the floor of oceans and seas as "one of the largest carbon stores on Earth," holding more carbon than the rainforests.

The worry, he said, is that when the sea floor is disturbed through activities such as trawling, dredging or mining, "we are potentially releasing carbon and undoing any efforts that we're making to try and reduce our carbon emissions on land."


He hopes the five-year Convex Seascape Survey, which is taking place in countries around the world, will help researchers identify areas of the sea floor that are particularly important for carbon sequestration, and ultimately help convince decision-makers to protect them.

Many countries — including Canada — have signed a pledge to protect 30 per cent of the world's land and oceans by 2030. That includes the sea floor, Porter said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 24, 2025.

Trump’s DC crime crackdown has Stephen Miller at its core






Alex Gangitano
Sun, August 24, 2025
THE HILL

Stephen Miller has been by President Trump’s side for most of the last 10 years of the president’s political career, taking center stage on some of the president’s biggest battles — from border security to culture wars.

The crackdown on crime in the nation’s capital is Miller’s latest project, working to make his own mark as Trump and his administration officials fan out across the city to highlight a federal take over.

“Trump sees transforming Washington, D.C., as a victory that would define his legacy, and Miller is the one shaping and driving that message,” an aide in Trump’s first term said.

Miller, who serves as deputy chief of staff, joined Trump on Thursday evening to greet federal law enforcement agents who have been patrolling D.C. at a U.S. Park Police facility in Anacostia. Miller stood next to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem while the president touted the success of the crime crackdown.

Days prior, Miller joined Vice President Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth at Union Station to meet with National Guard troops, during which the deputy chief of staff railed against what he called “stupid white hippies” who were protesting the federal law enforcement in the nation’s capital.

As a key player in Trump’s orbit, Miller has a hand in major policy decisions, especially on domestic matters like issues of immigration and crime in cities that are run by Democrats. Trump said on Friday that the federal government would turn its attention to Chicago next.

“He is the 85 percent center of gravity in the White House,” a source close to the White House said of Miller. “It’s almost like open knowledge that if he’s not involved in it then it’s not important.”

“This is square right in the middle of his world. All the executive orders, all the focus — he spent four years putting together, here’s what we’re going to do when we take over. Crime is the first cousin to immigration. And deporting illegal aliens, criminal aliens, the whole nine yards, and it’s the centerpiece of the progressives-had-destroyed-the-country-conservative-retake thing from that wing of the MAGA movement.”

On Tuesday, Miller visited Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Administrator Terry Cole, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith as part of his work on coordinating the federal response with local D.C. officials during the crime crackdown.

The DEA said on the social platform X that his visit was “highlighting strong federal & local partnerships to #MakeDCSafeAgain.”

He has also made multiple Fox News appearances to talk about the effort in D.C., railing against other mayors such as Boston’s and celebrating the work of the federal agents in D.C.

“All you see all day long are crazy Democrats screeching on TV on behalf of foreign terrorists, hardened criminals and violent illegal aliens,” Miller said on Tuesday.


“The sigh of relief that I have seen from the local communities in this city,” Miller said last week. “President Trump is making D.C. safe, livable, clean and secure, not just for the people who live here but for every American citizen whose birthright is to visit our nation’s capital.”

As of Friday morning, 719 arrests had been made as part of the federal crackdown on crime. Of those arrests, 300 were migrants without legal status, and five of those arrested have been known gang members, including one MS-13 gang member.

The White House said 2,300 federal law enforcement worked in D.C. on Thursday night, and the number has been increasing by a few hundred on a daily basis as red state governors have sent more National Guard members into the city.

One area of success for Miller is his messaging approach to the city’s homeless problem, the first-term Trump aide said.

“For years, cities like Washington, D.C., treated homelessness as a housing affordability problem, which pushed the idea that living on the street was an acceptable alternative so long as civil liberties were preserved. What we’re seeing Miller do is flipping that script,” the former aide said. “His message is that the real crisis is driven by drug abuse, mental illness, and criminal activity, and that is why there is broad support for moving people indoors and into treatment.”

Meanwhile, the majority of D.C. residents aren’t supportive of the anticrime push.

A survey from The Washington Post this week found 69 percent of D.C. residents said they “strongly” oppose the president’s decision to take federal control of the Metropolitan Police Department, and 10 percent said they “somewhat” oppose the move.

Miller on Wednesday at Union Station bashed those who have protested the federal enforcement in D.C., calling them “communists.”

“All these demonstrators you’ve seen out here in recent days, all these elderly white hippies, they’re not part of the city and never have been. And by the way, most of the citizens who live in Washington, D.C., are Black,” he said.

“So we’re going to ignore these stupid white hippies that all need to go home and take a nap because they’re all over 90 years old,” Miller added. “And we’re going to get back to the business of protecting the American people and the citizens of Washington, D.C.”

When Trump first said he would activate hundreds of National Guard troops to take over D.C.’s police department, he argued it was to “take our capital back” with a focus on making D.C. clean and ridding the streets of homelessness.

While dozens of homeless encampments have been removed and illegal firearms have been seized, migrants without legal status are another major focus of the crackdown.

Of the 300 arrests made of migrants without legal status so far, “many” of them have been arrested for additional crimes or having outstanding warrants and convictions, according to the White House, which did not provide a specific number.

Nationwide, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has hit a pace of arresting 930 migrants without legal status a day and deporting more than 1,400 of them daily, The Washington Times reported.

Trump, with Miller prominent in his strategy-making, ran on a platform in 2024 of promising mass deportations and security at the southern border.

Tying immigration to the D.C. crime crackdown is part of the larger debate that proved a winning issue with voters.

“A lot of what he talks about resonates with the debate,” the source close to the White House said of Miller. “There’s alignment there, so it’s reinforcing. And I think Trump very much likes to get the roar of the crowd. If it seems like it’s something that’s going to drive his base, then he dives headfirst.”


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