Compass Minerals and Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands Finalize Voluntary Agreement for Great Salt Lake Conservation
03 Septiembre 2024 - 3:05PM
Business Wire
Agreement Includes Significant Water Rights
Donation to the State
Compass Minerals (NYSE: CMP), a leading global provider of
essential minerals, today announced that it has executed a binding
Voluntary Agreement (Agreement) with the Utah Division of Forestry,
Fire and State Lands (FFSL) outlining water and land conservation
commitments the company is making toward the long-term health of
the Great Salt Lake. As previously announced, Compass Minerals and
FFSL had entered into a Term Sheet in early March, 2024,
establishing the framework for negotiations on a binding
Agreement.
“The Great Salt Lake is a vital ecosystem and economic engine
that we must all work to protect, and Compass Minerals stands with
the many diverse stakeholders contributing toward the preservation
of this globally significant resource,” said Edward C. Dowling Jr.,
president and CEO. “Through this Voluntary Agreement, we commit to
significant contributions toward lake health, while also ensuring
future predictability in our water use allotment that supports
sustainable production at our Ogden facility.”
Per the terms of the Agreement, Compass Minerals will donate
non-production-related water rights totaling approximately 201,000
acre feet annually to be used by the State of Utah for lake
conservation and preservation. Additionally, the company will remit
back to the State nearly 65,000 acres of leasehold, also currently
not utilized for production, which will subsequently be set aside
from future mineral leasing to be preserved in perpetuity for
conservation and other beneficial uses according to FFSL’s existing
management authority. Finally, the Agreement outlines a progressive
set of brine withdrawal caps for certain of Compass Minerals’
consumptive water rights, based on annual lake elevation and
informed by the Great Salt Lake Strategic Plan. Compass Minerals
does not expect these consumption caps to materially impact its
essential mineral production on the Great Salt Lake unless lake
elevations were to fall to historic lows.
“This agreement is an example of the good we can accomplish when
public and private come together to be a part of the solution,”
said Utah Governor Spencer J. Cox. “The donation from Compass
Minerals will ensure that water delivered to the Great Salt Lake
will remain in the lake. We look forward to the lasting benefit
this will make toward the health and sustainability of the lake for
generations to come.”
Statutory authority and subsequent benefits for operators to
enter into Agreements of this nature was established during the
2024 Utah legislative session through the passage and enactment of
House Bill 453 (H.B.453), “Great Salt Lake Revisions”. This
legislation, now Utah state law, amends and expands current state
statute governing mineral extraction on the Great Salt Lake,
including but not limited to new severance taxes and a requirement
for the state to develop a mandatory water distribution plan for
mineral extractors on the lake. The proactively negotiated caps on
certain of Compass Minerals’ consumptive water rights included in
the Agreement will be reflected in the state’s water distribution
plan. H.B.453 also enabled severance tax relief and protections
against potential eminent domain actions for mineral extraction
companies that enter into Voluntary Agreements with the state.
“When lake levels are high, Compass can withdraw up to its
existing water right, just as they could always do – but in years
with lower lake levels, they have committed to decreasing their
water use – or suspending it completely if the lake reaches the
critical levels we experienced several years ago,” Jamie Barnes,
director of the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands,
said.
As part of its regulatory authorities, FFSL is responsible for
managing Utah’s sovereign lands, including the beds and banks of
navigable rivers and lakes within the State.
“We have been working with stakeholders across the state to
identify ways to conserve water and ensure it makes it to the
lake,” said Brian Steed, Great Salt Lake Commissioner. “We
recognize restoring the lake to healthier levels will take years,
and we appreciate the action Compass Minerals is taking today to
help protect the lake. Together, we can make a difference.”
Compass Minerals’ Ogden facility has operated on the Great Salt
Lake for over half a century, producing sulfate of potash, salt and
magnesium chloride from the lake’s mineral-enriched brine. The
company’s Ogden operation currently provides nearly 400 local jobs
and representatives of Compass Minerals participate on multiple
policy and advisory groups focused on ensuring a healthy lake
ecosystem.
About Compass Minerals
Compass Minerals (NYSE: CMP) is a leading global provider of
essential minerals focused on safely delivering where and when it
matters to help solve nature’s challenges for customers and
communities. The company’s salt products help keep roadways safe
during winter weather and are used in numerous other consumer,
industrial, chemical and agricultural applications. Its plant
nutrition products help improve the quality and yield of crops,
while supporting sustainable agriculture. Additionally, it is
working to develop a long-term fire-retardant business. Compass
Minerals operates 12 production and packaging facilities with
nearly 2,000 employees throughout the U.S., Canada and the U.K.
Visit compassminerals.com for more information about the company
and its products.
Forward-Looking Statements and Other Disclaimers
This press release may contain forward-looking statements
including, without limitation, statements regarding future
operational stability, the donation of water rights and remission
of leasehold, the impact of such donation and remission on mineral
production, severance tax relief, protections against potential
eminent domain actions and the ability to proactively negotiate
water conservation commitments. These statements are based on the
company’s current expectations and involve risks and uncertainties
that could cause the company’s actual results to differ materially.
The differences could be caused by a number of factors including
those factors identified in the “Risk Factors” and “Management’s
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations” sections of the company’s Annual and Quarterly Reports
on Forms 10-K and 10-Q, including any amendments, as well as the
company’s other SEC filings. The company undertakes no obligation
to update any forward-looking statements made in this press release
to reflect future events or developments, except as required by
law.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240903751142/en/
Media Contact Rick Axthelm Chief Public Affairs and
Sustainability Officer +1.913.344.9198
MediaRelations@compassminerals.com
Investor Contact Brent Collins Vice President, Investor
Relations +1.913.344.9111 InvestorRelations@compassminerals.com
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