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Trump says he’s authorising administration to produce coal power

Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Ari Natter / Bloomberg
Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Ari Natter / Bloomberg • 2 min read
Trump says he’s authorising administration to produce coal power
Trump officials have said that keeping coal plants online could help lower energy costs and supply energy to power-thirsty data centres working on artificial intelligence projects. Photo: Bloomberg
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US President Donald Trump said he would look to counter China’s economic advantage from coal-based electricity by authorising his administration to ramp up production of energy from the fossil fuel.

“I am authorizing my Administration to immediately begin producing Energy with BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN COAL,” Trump wrote in a social media post.

It’s not clear what Trump was referring to, or how his social media decree would impact actual US policy. Trump already signed an executive order earlier in his term declaring a national energy emergency and directed the Environmental Protection Agency to boost fossil fuel production and distribution.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright said earlier this month that the administration was working on a “market-based” plan to stem the closing of US coal-fired power plants.

Coal accounts for about 15% of power generation in the US today, down from more than half in 2000, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

An additional 120 coal-fired power plants are scheduled to shutdown in the next five years in part because of environmental regulations that have made them uneconomic, according to the America’s Power trade group representing utilities and miners such as Peabody Energy Corp. and Core Natural Resources Inc.

See also: Sembcorp enters 'new normal' with FY2024 dividend surprise

Earlier this month, the EPA said it planned to revisit regulations imposed during President Joe Biden’s administration limiting mercury and greenhouse gas pollution, which could help keep some coal plants operational.

Supporters of the limits have said that soot is particularly dangerous because particles of the pollutant can penetrate the bloodstream.

Trump officials have said that keeping coal plants online could help lower energy costs and supply energy to power-thirsty data centres working on artificial intelligence projects.

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