Republican lawmakers on Monday moved to declare Coal Week, amplifying the Trump administration’s push to expand U.S. coal output and keep aging plants online, the Washington Times reported. The resolution coincides with new executive actions to “reinvigorate” coal, including directives signed in April to boost production and preserve baseload capacity, as outlined in a White House executive order.
The message to miners and utilities is that federal support is rising for coal as part of an energy-security agenda centered on domestic supply.
Administration officials in late September detailed plans to open 13 million acres of federal land for coal leasing and to direct about $625 million toward recommissioning or modernizing coal-fired units. Parallel policy signals include a Senate measure to unwind limits on leasing in the Powder River Basin, part of a broader deregulatory thrust aimed at reversing years of plant retirements.
To test the market, the Interior Department and BLM set multiple competitive sales across Alabama, Montana, and Utah, with Reuters noting upcoming auctions as a gauge of industry appetite. Early signs have been mixed, with a Montana tract drawing a sub-penny-per-ton bid that was later rejected, and a large Wyoming sale postponed after weak interest, per AP News and Reuters. Even so, BLM says it advanced lease offerings totaling hundreds of millions of tons this year and scheduled additional actions in Wyoming and the Southeast, according to BLM releases.
For power markets, the near-term variable is whether risk-adjusted capital returns to coal amid high data-center load growth and grid-reliability narratives. Any uptick will depend on utility procurement, emissions compliance costs, and delivered-fuel economics versus natural gas and renewables.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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