Data-center energy needs, executive orders and highwall mining play a part in new opportunity for coal - ME Feature Article
- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 966 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 1, 2025
Abstract
After years of steadily declining employment
and production, the U.S. coal industry
is having a moment. In 2016, when Donald
Trump was running for U.S. President, he cast
a spotlight on coal mining in his campaign
speeches, promising to end the “War on
Coal.” Fast forward to 2025. On the first day
of his second term, President Trump signed
the National Energy Emergency Act, which
emphasizes domestic energy production as
a matter of national security and focuses on
incentivizing domestic energy resources. Then
on April 8, President Trump issued an executive
order opening federal land to coal mining to
reinvigorate “America’s beautiful clean coal
industry.”
As the nation seeks to identify reliable
solutions to meet its ever-growing energy
needs, the administration is going all in on
proven, reliable and readily available natural
resources, including coal. This means the coal
industry is positioned to play a pivotal role in
the administration’s stated energy policy, and
highwall mining could be an integral factor in
helping the industry optimize the extraction of
ore to make the most of this
moment.
The White House
noted in a statement that the United States’
“abundance of energy and natural resources …
have historically powered our Nation’s economic
prosperity” and vowed to remove regulations
that have hindered developing these resources
— regulations that resulted in job reductions and
higher energy costs for U.S. consumers, while
weakening national security.
“There has been an increase in electricity
prices in the United States of over
30 percent in the past four years,”
said Rich Nolan, president and chief
executive officer of the National
Mining Association (NMA). “This
administration wants to focus on
that, inflation and on increasing
electricity availability to help lower
the price over time by incentivizing
energy policy. Coal is definitely a
high priority for this administration.”
Part of the White House’s
strategy is to facilitate investment
in coal-fired plants. The shift comes
at a time when the reliance of
coal-powered energy plants has
been waning. According to the U.S.
Energy Information Administration,
7.5 GW of electrical capacity from
coal-fired plants was retired in 2024,
following the retirement of 22.3 GW of electric
generating power the two years prior.
Citation
APA: (2025) Data-center energy needs, executive orders and highwall mining play a part in new opportunity for coal - ME Feature Article
MLA: Data-center energy needs, executive orders and highwall mining play a part in new opportunity for coal - ME Feature Article. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2025.