SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2026|No. 1933
Energy · Policy · US

Trump Plans $700 Million Lifeline for US Coal Power Plants

President Trump plans $700 million in Defense Production Act funds to upgrade coal plants and support coal projects.

A coal-fired power plant, like those targeted for upgrades under President Trump's $700 million plan.
A coal-fired power plant, like those targeted for upgrades under President Trump's $700 million plan.
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Trump Plans $700 Million Lifeline for U.S. Coal Power Plants

By [Charles Kennedy] - Jun 04, 2026, 1:30 AM CDT

President Donald Trump plans to allocate a support package of $700 million for coal power generation, Reuters has reported, citing an unnamed White House official ahead of a formal announcement by the U.S. President.

The plan is to invoke the 1950 Defense Production Act, which grants the president of the country powers to provide financial support to industries considered critical for national security. The money will be used to upgrade more than 12 coal power plants, the report said.

Of the total sum, more than 50% would go towards coal power plant upgrades, another $185 million will be used to match corporate commitments for coal projects in Alaska, Maryland, and West Virginia, and the remaining $75 million will be invested in the West Gateway export terminal in California, the Reuters report also said.

Coal has been in decline as part of the U.S. power generation mix, with cheap and abundant natural gas replacing a lot of capacity. However, President Trump has named the energy industry critical for national security, reversing the Biden administration's efforts to phase out coal completely.

Earlier this year, the Energy Information Administration said power plants scheduled for a shutdown this year may be kept operating for longer, after the Department of Energy warned in a January report that if the scheduled shutdowns take place, the U.S. will face a 100 times higher risk of power shortages by 2030 than if it keeps the existing facilities operating.

Of course, a big reason for these decisions to keep relying on coal alongside other sources of power generation is artificial intelligence and the fast proliferation of data centers to house the technology. These have led to significant jumps in electricity demand, which has, in turn, rearranged priorities, with security and reliability of supply trumping the previous administration’s focus on emissions.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 1 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

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