This case involves the scope of the tribal exhaustion rule in the context of the Price-Anderson Act. Appellants Kerr-McGee and Cyprus Foote Minerals (collectively “Kerr-McGee”) filed a claim in the District of New Mexico for a declaratory judgment and preliminary injunction, arguing that the Navajo Tribal Court is without jurisdiction to adjudicate nuclear tort claims against Kerr-McGee. Applying the tribal exhaustion rule, the district court denied the injunction and stayed further action in federal court until the tribal court ruled on jurisdiction. Our jurisdiction to hear Kerr-McGee’s interlocutory appeal arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Kerr-McGee milled uranium on the Navajo Reservаtion between 1952 and 1973, leasing land for the mill site from the tribe. Kerr-McGee sold the mill’s entire production to the federal government. In 1995, defendants (the “Tribal Claimants”), who are members of the Navajo Tribe and residents of the reservation, filed a complaint in Navajo Tribal Court, .alleging that the Kerr-McGee mill released vast quantities of radioactive and toxic materials, causing them injuries. Before the tribal court had proceeded with the case, Kerr-McGee filed the instant suit.
In the district court, Kerr-McGee argued that the tribal court had np jurisdiction to consider nuclear tort claims and should be enjoined in its proceedings, basing its conclusion on the Price-Andersоn Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2011 et seq. Kerr-McGee contends that the Price Anderson Act grants exclusive federal jurisdiction over nuclear torts if a defendant so wishes. The district court disagreed, *1501 finding that the Price-Anderson Act does not specifically divest tribal courts of jurisdiction over such claims. Because there is no explicit mention of exclusive federal court jurisdiction over Price-Anderson claims, the district court reasoned that the tribal court should ordinarily be given the first opportunity to determine its own jurisdiction. Moreover, because the Tribal Claimants alleged a cause of action based on torts committed on the reservation, the district court felt no need to engage in any extended comity analysis regarding the decision to defer to the Navajo Tribal Court. It concluded that the proper practice was to stay the federal court' proceedings until the tribal court had determined its jurisdiction.
Thereafter, the District Court of the Navajo Nation issued an order finding tribal court jurisdiction over the tort claims asserted by the Tribal Claimants. Farley v. Kerr-McGee, No. 103-95 (Navajo D. Ct. Aug. 1, 1996). Specifically, the Navajo court held that the Price-Anderson Act does not preempt the Tribal Claimants’ Navajo law right to tribal court adjudication of the alleged torts. In fact, the Navajo court concluded that the Price-Anderson Act does not apply at all to the Tribal Claimants’ suit and, therefore, tribal court jurisdiction could not interfere with Congressional intent in federal regulation of nuclear activity. We are unaware of any appeal by Kerr-McGee of the Navajo District Court order.
II. DISCUSSION
The scope of a tribal court’s jurisdiction is a federal question over which federal district courts have jurisdiction.
National Farmers Union Ins. Cos. v. Crow Tribe,
A
The tribal exhaustion rule was created in National Farmers, a ease involving a tort suit by a tribal member against a-school district and its insurer. The tribal member brought suit in tribal court, and the defendants promptly sued in federal court for a declaration that the tribal cоurt had no jurisdiction to entertain a civil suit against a non-Indian, even where the alleged tort took place on the reservation. Rather than further extending the rule in Oliphant 1 to tribal jurisdiction over civil matters, the Supreme Court concluded:
[T]he existence and extent of a tribal court’s jurisdiction will require a careful examination of tribal sovereignty, the extent to which that sovereignty has been altered, divested, or diminished, as well as a detailed study of relevant statutes, Executive Branch policy as embodied in treaties and elsewhere, and administrative or judicial decisions.
National Farmers,
471 U.S. at at 855-56,
The tribal exhaustion rule was extended and explained in
Iowa Mutual Insurance Co. v. LaPlante,
The precise question we address is not whether the Navajo courts have jurisdiction over the claims brought by the Tribal Claimants, but whether the Price-Anderson Act so obviously preempts tribal jurisdiction that an action in tribal court “would be patently violative of express jurisdictional prohibitions,” and that abstention in favor of tribal exhaustion is inappropriate.
National Farmers,
Kerr-McGee makes two tightly interwoven arguments in support of its position that Price-Anderson contains an “express prohibition” on tribal court jurisdiction despite the absence of statutory language explicitly addressing tribal fora. First, Kerr-McGee notes that 1988 amendments to Price-Anderson create specific procedures for adjudicating nuclear torts in federal court, and provide for an absolute right of removal to federal court. These procedures were explicitly designed to сonsolidate jurisdiction over claims arising from a nuclear incident in a single federal forum. Allowing jurisdiction to arise in “any one of a patchwork of tribal judicial entities that exist throughout the West,” Appellant’s Br. at 19, would run counter to the express purposes of the Act as amended in 1988. Thus, the Price-Anderson Act and its amendments have expressly provided for exclusive federal court jurisdiction in this ease, and the tribal court’s assertion of authority is “patently violative of express jurisdictional prohibitions.”
National Farmers,
The Tribal Claimants dispute Kerr-McGee’s construction of the law. They argue that even if federal regulation has limited tribal regulatory authority over Kerr-McGee’s uranium milling, that does not imply adjudicatory preemption in the circumstances of this case. Given Price-Anderson’s silence, civil jurisdiction over the activities of non-Indians on reservation land should be presumed to lie with the tribal court even if Cоngress has chosen to federalize the substantive law governing those activities. That presumption could be overcome, but only by an express statement removing tribal court adjudicatory authority, and Price-Anderson contains no such statement. Alternatively, plaintiffs contend that Price-Anderson does not apply to this ease at all because Kerr-McGee does not have an indemnity agreement with the federal government. To assess these various competing arguments, we turn to the genesis and development of the Price-Anderson “system” governing nuclear torts, and determine how far down the road of exclusive federal court jurisdiction Con *1503 gress went in the Priee-Anderson 1988 amendments.
B
The Atomiс Energy Act (AEA) was created in 1954 to facilitate a transition from a federal government monopoly over the production and use of atomic materials to a regime in which private industry also would have a role in their production and use.
Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation and Dev. Comm’n,
In 1957, Congress amended the AEA through the Priee-Anderson Act (PAA), creating specific protections from tort liability for the nuclear industry.
See Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
The PAA has been amended several times, further refining the relationship between federal and state roles regarding nuclear torts, and the protections to be afforded privatе industry and the general public. Recent amendments, the Price Anderson Amendments Act of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-408, 102 Stat. 1066 (1988) (“1988 Amendments”), which is the law at issue in this case, arose out of congressional understanding that the Priee-Anderson system “provides persons seeking compensation for injuries as a result of a nuclear incident with significant advantages over the procedures and standards for recovery that might otherwise be applicable under State tort law.... [It] also provides a mechanism whereby the federal government can continue to encourage private sector participation in the beneficial uses of nuclear materials.” S.Rep. No. 100-218, at 4 (1988). While not otherwise superseding the decision in
Silkwood,
the 1988 Amendments can be read in part as a congressional response to the result in
Silkwood
suggesting that the PAA never preempts state punitive damages awards.
TMI II,
The 1988 Amendments expand federal jurisdiction over claims arising out of a “nuclear incident”:
With respect to any public liability action arising out of or resulting from a nuclear incident, the United States district court in the district where the nuclear incident takes place ... shall have original jurisdiction without regard to the citizenship of any party or the amount in controversy. Upon motion of the defendant or of the Commission, or the Secretary, as appropriate, any such action pеnding in any State court (including any such action pending [on the date of the 1988 Amendments]) or United States district court shall be removed or transferred to the United States district court having venue under this subsection.
42 U.S.C. § 2210(n)(2) (emphasis added). A “publie liability action” is defined as “any suit asserting public liability.” 42 U.S.C. *1504 § 2014(hh). Moreover, a public liability action “shall be deemed to be an action arising under section 2210 of this title [which creates a federal forum for suit].” Id. “Public liability” is sweeping: it encompasses any legal liability from “nuclear incidents,” which in turn are defined in § 2014(q) to include any occurrence causing any personal or property damage arising out of the toxic, radioactive, explosive or other hazardous properties of atomic or byproduct materials. 42 U.S.C. § 2014(w).
The 1988 Amendments also create other federal rules with respect to public liability actions. Section 2210(n)(3) creates specific federal court procedures for dealing with a mass nuclear incident, including a mechanism to fashion a caseload management panel empowered to consolidate claims and develop procedures for their resolution. 42 U.S.C. § 2210(n)(3). While creating a federal cause of action over “nuclear incidents,” the 1988 Amendments explicitly state that the substantive rules of decision for a public liability action “shall be derived from the law of the State in which the nuclear inсident involved occurs, unless such law is inconsistent with the provisions of such section.” 42 U.S.C. § 2014(hh).
From this framework, it is apparent that Congress intended to expand federal control over safety and liability issues involving the nuclear industry, particularly with respect to the role of federal courts in resolving liability. Prior to 1988, only a subclass of nuclear incidents, “extraordinary nuclear occurrences,” triggered absolute federal rights of removal.
TMI II,
The Tribal Claimants first contend that we need not even consider the jurisdictional provisions of the 1988 Amendments. .Citing
Silkwood,
they assert that the PAA system simply does not apply to this case because Kerr-McGee does not have an indemnity agreement with the federal government., This argument misreads
Silkwood,
which simply refused to
apply
the indemnification provisions of the PAA to the claim in that case because the defendant lacked the necessary indemnity agreement.
Silkwood,
1
Kerr-McGee argues that the PAA’s jurisdictional and liability provisions strongly suggest Congress intended something very close to exclusive jurisdiction: under the 1988 Amendments, the plaintiff to a nuclear incidеnt claim can bring her case in federal court if she wants, and the defendant has the absolute right of removal from state court. As the legislative history of the 1988 Amendments indicates, this jurisdictional framework was intended to prevent inefficient fragmentation and inconsistent resolution of nuclear tort claims by providing for their consolidation in federal court.
See O’Conner v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
In the end, however, we are not persuaded that the PAA regime
expressly
prohibits the exercise of tribal jurisdiction. The PAA does not include removal from tribal courts in its jurisdictional grant, and we are unwilling to speculate on what Congress might have done with public liability actions commenced in the tribal courts. We cannot conclude that the 1988 Amendments created an exclusive enclave of federal adjudicatory control such that tribal courts lack jurisdiction to decide PAA claims, even those arising out of torts against tribal members on the reservation.
2
Becenti v. Vigil,
2
Once we conclude that the PAA’s jurisdictional provisions do not create exclusive federal court jurisdiction over nuclear incidents, the Tribal Claimants urge us to apply the basic jurisdictional presumption of
Iowa Mutual,
namely that tribal civil jurisdiction over “activities of non-Indians on reservation lands ... presumptively lies in the tribal courts unless affirmatively limited by a specific treaty or provision or federal statute.”
Iowa Mut.,
at 18,
Relying primarily on
State of Montana v. United States,
The proper inference to be drawn from silence presents questions that might require reconciling two arguably divergent strands of caselaw.
4
This is a difficult issue, and the difficulty itself belies Kerr-McGee’s assertion that tribal authority here would be “patently violative of express jurisdictionаl prohibitions.”
National Farmers,
Ultimately, this case requires an attempt to accommodate two independent and impоrtant congressional concerns: comity interests flowing from tribal sovereignty and nuclear energy regulation. Though a close question, we cannot conclude that the 1988 Amendments, or the PAA’s scope generally, create an “express prohibition” to tribal court jurisdiction. Congress intended to control where and how nuclear incident litigation is to take place, but did not take the next step of specifically divesting tribal courts of jurisdiction. While the precise scope of retained tribal jurisdiction in this case is subject to reasonable debate, tribal adjudicatory authority over this nuclear incident is not “patently violative of an express jurisdictional prohibition.”
C
The tribal exhaustion requirement created by
National Farmers
is based on comity concerns for Indian tribes in maintaining their remaining sovereignty.
National Farmers
recognizes that three specific interests are advanced by proper application of the rule: (1) furthering congressional policy of supporting tribal self-government; (2) promoting the orderly administration of justice by allowing a full record to be developed in the tribal court; and (3) obtaining the benefit of tribal expertise if further review becomes neeessaiy.
National Farmers,
We have taken a strict view of the tribal exhaustion rule and have held that “federal courts should abstain when a suit sufficiently implicates Indian sovereignty or other important interests.”
Pittsburg & Midway Coal Mining Co. v. Watchman,
*1508 Here, the Tribal Claimants suggest that we need not even weigh the comity factors because of the nature of the underlying action. We agree that strong tribal interests аre implicated by these claims. The mill that allegedly produced the toxic and radioactive waste was located on the reservation pursuant to a lease with the tribe, and the alleged victims of the tort are tribal members residing on the reservation. The tribal nexus is strong, as is the interest of the tribe as a sovereign in protecting and vindicating the rights of its residents, as well as its interest as lessor of the land for the mill. Yet, Kerr-MeGee’s argument that this is not a classic “reservation affair” has some force. Nuclear production is of national interest, the mill sold its entire production to the federal government, and the orderly administration of claims arising out of the United States’ atomic energy and weapons program implicates concerns far beyond the borders of the reservation. While the district court appeared to consider the tort claims “a reservation affair” and therefore reviewed the comity factors only briefly, the unique concerns implicated in this case deserve a more thorough comity analysis.
In this case, the first factor most strongly Supports abstention. If courts are to honor Congress’s commitment to tribal self-government, tribal courts must be allowed to exercise their authority over mass toxic tort claims occurring within their jurisdiction and alleging injury to tribal members, absent overwhelming countervailing concerns. Even
Strate
and
Montana,
cases that curtailed tribal authority over non-Indians, recognized that tribes retain a core sovereign interest in protecting the health and welfare of the tribe such that they may regulate non-Indians on all lands within the reservation.
Strate,
— U.S. at -,
The second factor, the orderly administration of justice, does not so obviously cut in favor of tribal exhaustion. The PAA, contemplating mass tort litigation arising from a nuclear incident, creates specific procedures to facilitate and consolidate adjudication of such claims. Though National Farmers recognizes that allowing tribal courts to make initial jurisdictional determinations minimizes a potential “proсedural nightmare,” it is not clear that such a justification holds here. Because of Iowa Mutual’s expansive abstention, we are required to allow full exhaustion of tribal court litigation, potentially including litigation of the merits. Given Congress’s authorization of specific procedures for dealing with these cases in federal court, abstaining in favor of the tribal court hardly seems to minimize the prospect of a “procedural nightmare.” 7 It is difficult to balance the loss of specific procedures developed by the PAA for case consolidation and case management of cases such as these against the full record that will be developed in tribаl courts by virtue of federal court abstention.
The third comity consideration, obtaining the benefit of tribal court expertise may be of value in this case. 42 U.S.C. § 2014(hh) requires that the substantive rules of decision in such actions are to be derived from the “law of the State in which the nuclear incident involved occurs, unless such law is inconsistent with the provisions of such section.” At oral argument, counsel for the Tribal Claimants argued that the substantive rule'of decision in this case should be derived from Navajo tribal law.
Upon reviewing the comity factors, we conclude that abstention is appropriate. Kerr-McGee contends that it is inappropriate to analyze the tribаl court jurisdiction question and the comity factors separately. Specifically, it argues that our comity analysis must consider the strong role afforded federal courts in resolving Price-Anderson suits. We disagree. The National Farmers *1509 framework does not accord countervailing federal concerns a place in the comity analysis. Consideration of federal jurisdictional concerns is only appropriate in the context of determining whether to engage in the comity analysis at all.
It does not serve Congress’s interest in promoting development of tribal courts,
see Iowa Mutual,
Notes
. In
Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe,
tribal courts were found to lack criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians for crimes committed on the reservation.
. Kerr-McGee seizes on language from
Smith v. General Electric Co.,
. Kerr-McGee also cites
UNC Resources, Inc. v. Benally,
. On this point, the recently issued Supreme Court opinion in
Strate v. A-1 Contractors,
- U.S. -,
. In support of its contеntion that an “express jurisdictional prohibition" need not be quite "express," Kerr-McGee cites
Lower Brule Construction v. Sheesley’s Plumbing,
. Kerr-McGee, in its supplementary brief, points to the statement in
Strate
that "[a]s to nonmembers, we hold, a tribe’s adjudicative jurisdiction does not exceed its legislative jurisdiction.” Strate, - U.S. at -,
. Currently, there appears to be litigation involving Cyprus Foote’s Uranium mines in at least two separate Navajo tribal courts, as well as in the federal courts of the Ninth and Tenth Circuits. See Farley v. Kerr-McGee, No. SR-CV-103-95 (Navajo D. Ct., District of Shiprock); Richards v. Texas Zinc, KY-CV-002-95 (Navajo D. Ct., District of Kayenta); Kerr-McGee v. Farley, (D.N.M.); El Paso Natural Gas v. Neztsosie, No. 96-49/ 96-1524 (D.Ariz.). The Price-Anderson Act has instituted procedures specifically designed to avoid this sort of atomized litigation and the "procedural nightmares” attendant to it.
