President Donald Trump signed a series of executive orders April 8 that seek to keep existing coal-fired power plants running, ease regulations and permitting for coal mining, and remove “unlawful and burdensome” state laws that impede the industry.
The president also issued a proclamation that coal plants be exempt from the latest iteration of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standard, which the White House said will ensure they are not prematurely closed.
“For four long years, Joe Biden and congressional Democrats tried to abolish the American coal industry,” Trump said at a White House ceremony flanked by coal miners. “They did everything in their power — while he was awake, which wasn’t much — shutting down dozens of coal plants, upending coal leases on federal lands, and putting thousands and thousands of coal miners out of work.”
Trump ordered the secretary of energy to use Federal Power Act Section 202(c), which is meant to be used as a backstop to keep plants running for reliability even if that violates environmental rules, in a much broader way than previously used.
The president also called on the Department of Justice to go after “unconstitutional” state laws that limit the use of domestic energy resources, including coal and other fossil fuels.
The final order is titled “Reinvigorating America’s Beautiful Clean Coal Industry” and includes measures to open more federal land to coal mining.
The White House’s fact sheets tied to the announcements cite the recent return to demand growth from the expansion of data centers, which are expected to drive up overall demand by 16% in the next five years. They also call coal “essential” to the power grid, making up 16% of total generation, which is down from 52.8% in 1990, according to the Energy Information Administration.
Coal generation has been on a steady decline since 2007 when it produced 2,016 billion kWh, falling to just 675 billion kWh in 2023, according to EIA.
“It is highly unlikely, in fact, probably zero probability, that anyone will ever build a new coal plant,” energy consultant Alison Silverstein said in an interview.
Coal generation is more expensive to build than natural gas, which is facing stiff competition on its own from renewables in the markets. The best any policies can do would be to keep coal plants running longer, and that means going against decades of efforts to clean up the grid, Silverstein said.
Silverstein wrote a report for the Department of Energy in Trump’s first term when then-Energy Secretary Rick Perry submitted a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking with FERC that would have had grid operators pay coal plants their full operating costs. Her report said that was not needed, and FERC voted the proposal down unanimously 5-0 after several of Trump’s appointees had taken office.
FERC is not the focus of the current efforts, though some of the executive orders indicate the cabinet secretaries could consult with the agency as the policies are implemented.
The executive order on “Strengthening the Reliability and Security of the United States Electric Grid” directs Energy Secretary Chris Wright to “streamline, systemize and expedite” the Department of Energy’s process for issuing orders under Section 202(c). It gives the secretary 30 days to review and analyze forecasted reserve margins for all regions of the bulk power system regulated by FERC to identify those with margins “below acceptable thresholds as identified by the secretary.”
DOE will have to release that analysis in 90 days and then use it to identify at-risk plants of 50 MW or above. It will then use its 202(c) authority to prevent them from leaving the grid, or from converting fuel sources if that leads to a net reduction in generating capacity.
Recent uses of Section 202(c) have focused on maintaining reliability in extreme weather, and in many cases it was only in effect for days, according to DOE. A famous case from 20 years ago kept a plant in Alexandria, Va., open to avoid blackouts in D.C., including the White House (EL05-145).
One issue that will have to be addressed is what compensation any coal plants required to stay online are due. Most of the existing coal fleet is already uncompetitive and most are inefficient, Silverstein said.
“Keeping them running is costing the local utility ratepayers money because it is more expensive to buy coal production and to keep the coal plants running than it is to buy in the market from renewables or gas,” Silverstein said. “So, the thing that they are doing is essentially keeping these plants going by raising everybody’s costs.”
“Protecting American Energy from State Overreach” directs the Department of Energy to go after state policies that “target or discriminate against out-of-state energy producers.” The order specifically calls out climate policies enacted by California, New York and Vermont.
“These laws and policies also undermine federalism by projecting the regulatory preferences of a few states into all states,” the order says. “Americans must be permitted to heat their homes, fuel their cars and have peace of mind — free from policies that make energy more expensive and inevitably degrade quality of life.”
The order calls on Attorney General Pam Bondi to identify all such state laws and to prioritize challenges to laws purporting to address climate change, environmental justice, carbon or greenhouse gas emissions, and funds to collect carbon penalties and taxes. “The attorney general shall expeditiously take all appropriate action to stop the enforcement” of such state laws and file a report in 60 days on those efforts, which will include recommendations for additional executive actions or legislative measures.”
Reactions to the executive orders were mixed, with some saying they will help maintain reliability and others saying they are bad for the environment and consumers.
National Renewable Electric Cooperative Association CEO Jim Matheson and co-op executives from around the country were at the White House in support of Trump’s actions. NRECA members own at least part of 79 coal units with 21 GW of capacity, and 11 of them, totaling 3 GW, are currently scheduled to retire between now and 2030.
“At a time when electricity demand is skyrocketing, we need to be adding more always-available energy to the grid, not shutting down power plants that have useful life left,” Matheson said in a statement. “Electric co-ops provide reliable power to communities across the country. Today’s announcements help drive home smart energy policies that will support efforts to keep the lights on at a price families and businesses can afford. We thank the administration for recognizing the continued importance of always-available resources in the nation’s energy mix.”
Rep. Julie Fedorchak (R-N.D.), who was president of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners before assuming office this year, also praised the action, having introduced a resolution warning about growing demand and retiring plants April 7.
“At a time when reliable baseload power is being shut down without adequate replacement, his executive orders are exactly what we need,” Fedorchak said. “With electricity demand from AI and data centers surging, the U.S. urgently needs always-available power — and that’s what coal provides, especially the mine-mouth coal power we produce in North Dakota.”
Environmental Defense Fund Director Ted Kelly blasted the orders, saying that they could not overcome the market realities faced by coal. He also took issue with the use of FPA Section 202(c) and vowed to oppose the White House’s efforts.
“That law is designed for, and limited to, sudden emergencies creating an immediate risk of blackouts or other grid instability, such as storms, wildfires or sudden major infrastructure failures,” Kelly said. “It is time-limited for the same reason, and it further limits any power generation that conflicts with environmental laws or regulations to the minimum hours needed to address the emergency. Changes to the power system over time, like load growth driven by data centers or power plant retirements driven by economics, are properly addressed by planning and action by utilities and their regulators — not by irrational and unlawful emergency actions.”
Based on the market realities and likely challenges from EDF or Democratic state attorneys general, Silverstein predicted this second-term effort to bail out coal would wind up much like the failed NOPR from Trump’s first term.
“This particular effort, I think, is going to have more grandstanding impact than actual impact,” Silverstein said. “I think it will affect a few coal plants and a few coal-mining and coal-plant communities, and it’s going to raise costs for everybody. But it’s hard to imagine any data center wanting to sign a contract with a 60- to 80-year-old coal plant.”