(Oil Price) – In a move that fuses domestic revival with international strategy, the Trump administration has greenlit the expansion of Montana’s Bull Mountains coal mine—unlocking nearly 60 million tons of coal destined for key U.S. allies Japan and South Korea.
The approval, announced Friday by the Department of the Interior, comes under President Trump’s national energy emergency directive, signaling a bold return to coal as a cornerstone of U.S. energy policy and foreign leverage. The mine’s expansion, led by Signal Peak Energy, is expected to extend its life by up to nine years and inject over $1 billion into local and state economies.
“This is what energy leadership looks like,” said Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, adding that the move supports both American jobs and Indo-Pacific energy security. The timing is strategic: Japan’s crude imports are falling amid a refining sector under pressure, while South Korea is aggressively pursuing energy diversification.
Under Trump’s second term, the coal industry has gone from a political afterthought to a geopolitical asset. Since Day One, the President has declared war on what he calls environmental extremism, pushing executive orders to halt coal plant closures, expedite new construction, and reopen shuttered facilities.
And while critics focus on coal’s environmental cost, the administration is focused on grid reliability and foreign policy. Japan and South Korea—nations that import more than 80% of their energy—are viewed as critical frontlines in the battle for global energy dominance.
The Bull Mountains move is also a warning shot to China, whose coal-fueled growth has dwarfed Western capacity for years. By positioning U.S. coal exports as both an economic tool and a diplomatic lever, the Trump administration is signaling it won’t cede the Indo-Pacific energy map without a fight.
Coal, long counted out, may be America’s most surprising comeback story yet.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com