Markets Don't Want More Coal. Trump Is Propping Up the Industry Anyway.
The president’s preferential treatment of fossil fuels will cost consumers.

President Donald Trump's preferential treatment toward fossil fuels has backfired and left many American energy producers anxious about the future of the industry. The president doesn't seem to care.
On Tuesday, Trump doubled down on his fossil fuel energy agenda with an executive order to bolster "America's Beautiful Clean Coal Industry." The edict labels coal as "cost effective" and "critical to meeting the rise in electricity demand" and directs federal agencies to identify and rescind federal regulations and programs that "seek to transition the Nation away from coal production and electricity generation."
Coal was once the dominant energy source in the U.S., making up more than 50 percent of the nation's electricity generation in 2005. Since then, coal use has steadily declined, and in 2023, it generated only 16 percent of America's electricity.
Coal's decline was not caused by a federal plot to transition away from coal, like Trump thinks, but rather by markets and innovation. Advancements in renewable energy technologies—which were, and continue to be, supported by subsidies—made the energy source more attractive to investors. Breakthroughs in horizontal drilling in the early 2000s brought a flood of cheap and abundant natural gas to the market. These technologies priced coal out, which lowered energy bills for consumers and significantly reduced greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.
The energy source is also not as cost-effective as the executive order claims. Coal plants are expensive to build and operate, and transportation costs can exceed the price of coal at the mine. These economic factors have informed investors and utilities not to build coal-fired power plants—the most recent large plant was built in 2013—which has made the current fleet of these power plants less efficient than other energy sources.
To be sure, some regulatory barriers, including federal air quality standards and state-level bans, have made coal less competitive. However, "it is the market that explains coal's decline better than regulations," Philip Rossetti, an energy policy analyst at the R Street Institute, tells Reason.
Perhaps the most concerning provision of the order is the one that designates coal as a critical mineral, which would give the federal government emergency powers to increase its production. In March, Trump signed an executive order invoking the Defense Production Act (DPA) to secure the supply of critical minerals, which, at the time, didn't include coal.
The DPA was passed during the Cold War and gives the executive branch broad power to influence whatever industries it deems necessary for national defense. Its use has time and again led to wasteful spending and cronyism. Under this executive order, the federal government will have unilateral authority to offer loans, create stockpiles, and facilitate offtake agreements to bolster the supply of coal, even though the market doesn't want it.
"The abuse of the Defense Production Act should be concerning to everyone," says Rossetti. "It was bad when [President Joe] Biden did it, and it's still bad when Trump does it. Americans should be making their own choices about consumption, not having bureaucrats in Washington make decisions on their behalf behind a fig leaf of national security."
Forcing a coal resurgence will be costly for consumers, and it may "force some retention or restarting of coal plants," according to Rossetti. However, it is unlikely to have a large impact on energy markets since most investors don't see a future for the energy source.
Despite this, the message from the Trump White House is clear: The president is ready to prop up his favorite energy sources even if markets don't want them.
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*reads the above*
*thinks*
*reads the above again*
*thinks harder*
*reads the above again*
*gives up*
Boy, we are really in high LAMA mode, today.
Biden was wrong to subsidize green energy. That means it's right for Trump to subsidize coal.
Based upon the logic above, if coal comes back into favor with investors, then it's the market doing it's work.
By the logic that you intentionally omitted, that would depend on the price of natural gas.
Poor sarcbot.
Send Sarcbot to the dump.
How's, "directs federal agencies to identify and rescind federal regulations and programs" = to subsidizing coal????????
Lie, Lie, and Lie some more.
Up next, an article about how government mandates are affecting the energy markets.
Reason thinks government mandates ARE the market.
So does Jesse, who claims Trump controls the market, not Wall St, therefore there never have been and never can be free markets, so I should stop using that phrase.
You’re not going to have. A free market for US businesses so long as nearly every country on the planet tariffs the shit out of our products. Not to mention targeted VAT’s.
Why did you leave out the next two sentences?
That's called "lying by omission" by the way.
I don’t know anyone who’s electric or gas bill has gone down. My electric bill has more than doubled last year.
I've got an idea. Why don't you focus only on last year and wave away the previous twenty. Great plan. If you cherry pick hard enough you can prove just about anything. What do you think?
I think you are a moron.
Your post says how it lowered energy bill for consumers. I’m call that false. But I totally understand how that flew over your head.
My post was to point out how RJ was being deliberately dishonest, not assert whatever strawman you're trying to refute.
By the way, my electric bill remained pretty steady over the last twenty years and only recently started to rise, mostly because of inflation.
You can think I'm a moron. That's fine. I think you're a mendacious, intellectually dishonest, Trump-defending piece of garbage.
Responding to words in your post is not a strawman.
My words were "Why did you leave out the next two sentences?" and "That's called 'lying by omission' by the way."
Looks to me like you ignored what I wrote and instead attacked a man of straw.
Your post still says. “ These technologies priced coal out, which lowered energy bills for consumers ”.
I guess you are lying by omission.
I was pointing out the fact that RJ was lying by omission, not asserting what was in the quote. That is very clear by the words that I typed.
Except I haven’t defended Trump on anything.
Didn't say you had. I'm just lumping you in with the rest of the liars in the comments.
You need to go back and look at your own post.
Looks like I ain't missing much with him.
And what specifically did I lie about?
You claim I was asserting what I quoted, not quoting it to point out that RJ deliberately omitted it. Which is very clear from what I actually typed.
Wrong again. I never asserted you said that. I commented on something you included in your post.
You could have simply said that your energy bill hasn’t moved much to counter my claim but instead you had to go full retard.
Lol.
“You can think I'm a moron. That's fine.”
Whew, that was a close one. Had me worried for a second.
Lol.
We're well past the thinking stage at this point. Well into the knowing stage.
Of course it’s false. But by the transitive property of Sarc’s drunken dishonest cuntyness, he will shovel this load of bullshit anyway
The market is flooded with natural gas. But one reason is that the price remains high. This actually isn't rocket science; high prices support more drilling, more pipelines, more railroad transportation....
And currently, New York State government policy is trying to eliminate Natural Gas as an energy option entirely.
Which will mean more coal.
More likely more dependence and higher prices.
A really stupid policy. Natural gas is the best way to heat homes in the cold belt. And it is the best way to cook, period.
Dude, if a looter gets a lie posted on Reason, that by itself is good to qualify for a "Grand Cross of the German Eagle" from the rest of the MAGAt, burning cross Tparty, Christian National socialist and Prohibition Party infiltraitors here posing as Jesus Caucus gerontophile Trumpanzistas. It's the rough-and-tumble of J6er and 88 politics. Deal with it!
He lied when he said he "thinks".
No contradiction there at all. If there were the editors would have caught it.
"Jeff Luse is a deputy managing editor at Reason."
Whoops! Who edits the editors?
Forget it Rick James, it's Reasontown
If I remember correctly around 10% of US energy comes from nuclear and another 15% or so from various renewables. These numbers would vary somewhat when we look at total energy or just electricity generation. Pretty much everyone here gets subsidies. This includes petroleum as well as renewables.
Decline of coal is due to logistics. Coal requires transportation on trains/trucks etc. Needs massive storage facilities. Also, coal is pretty much useless otherwise. So if you are going to move coal to Arizona, the only possible use is the powerplant.
On other hand, petroleum and natural gas can be transported via pipelines. Storages are smaller and both have alternative uses such as automobiles, domestic use etc.
Petroleum industry in USA has indeed innovated faster than anyone else and managed the economics (and politicians far better).
But I am happy if more Americans want to work in coal mines for whatever reason. It might make them feel more manly or whatever. Nothing wrong with that.
It’s extremely difficult to build a new pipeline in this country.
Coal has several benefits.
* It can be stockpiled ahead of time, big old piles of it.
* It's necessary for making iron/steel (and maybe aluminum?), since its carbon combines with the oxygen to de-rust the ore, so to speak. There may be other technologies which can also do this, I haven't paid a lot of attention, but I bet coal is a lot cheaper.
There are, and yes, it is.
" Pretty much everyone here gets subsidies. This includes petroleum as well as renewables."
By and large this is untrue, unless you are like these green NGOs that insist things like "depreciation" are subsidies.
https://reason.com/2011/05/17/the-difference-between-a-tax-b/
" petroleum and natural gas can be transported via pipelines. "
True. But only because of Big Government. SPipelines are private businesses and libertarians oppose allowing private businesses to take your property without your consent. But that would in practice prevent anyone other than the government from ever building a pipeline, electric transmission line, or railroad.
Didn't Obama eliminate some of the world's largest clean coal reserves by making them into a park in Utah or something? Didn't the EPA impose clean air regulations on coal fired plants that made it impossible for them to continue to operate, also under Obama? It's possible that I'm mis-remembering but I'm pretty confident both those things happened. So doesn't sound much like "the market just decided".
Also, Washington and Oregon also attempting to ban natural gas. The people of Washington voted to keep it, the governor and the courts are in the process of overturning their vote. Also, tearing out dams that generate electrical power.
So according to Reason tariffs don't work because everytime you raise prices on a good the market shifts and less of the product is sold totally independently. How much lead do you have to eat to be that stupid?
"not caused by a federal plot to transition away from coal"
Talk about the BS pollution.......
Anyone with a brain knows that's complete BS.
The market doesn't want coal or government regulations make it so the market can't afford coal? Cap and trade ain't cheap man.
Did you write this for some eco-terrorist blog? Vox? Yikes, "the market" doesn't want coal? Really? You want to go with that?
The president’s preferential treatment of fossil fuels will cost consumers.
It will cost consumers... access to highly subsidized forms of shitty energy generation. Oh noes! Stop the cheap coal energy.
Yes, that is what we're going with.
My takeaway is that "Philip Rossetti, an energy policy analyst at the R Street Institute" now identifies as "markets". Pronouns they, them.
Okay, even I have to call out the illogic of this article. If the markets didn't want coal, prior administrations never would have needed all those industry-killing regulations to "nudge" us away from it. Getting rid of unnecessary, counter-productive or just useless regulations is not "propping up" anything.
The only point in the article that I'll agree with is that the DPA is poorly written and grants too much discretion to the executive branch. But that's part of a century-old tradition of Congress refusing to do their damned jobs.
If and when we come into conflict with China, or if we are simply to meet them in AI capacity to prevent their bots from enslaving us, we will need every joule of energy we can lay our hands on.
“or if we are simply to meet them in AI capacity”
This is what this is really all about. Reason isn’t capable of 2nd order thinking. If they can Orange Man Bad, they’re going to.
Coal is expensive compared to natural gas and besides the base cost has 'unpriced' expenses in air quality (asthma, lung disease etc). Trump just has buddies in the coal industry who want him to subsidize them. Let the market decide. Don't subsidize coal, don't subsidize nuclear, don't subsidize windmills (but don't spout garbage like you can't build windmills because birds will die...)
Ok, but a the same time, it’s necessary to roll back democrat regulations that hamstring these industries. Plus, the lawfare waged by the democrat faux environmental movement, must be stopped.
Nuclear would not exist in the US were it not for a government imposed limit on liability, which is effectively a subsidy.
France does it better -- the government runs the nuclear plants, which produce electricity at a fraction of the cost of private utilities in the US.
Oh bullshit. If cars were held to the same proportional safety standard as nuclear plants, they'd be completely undrivable but they get sued regularly anyway. The limited protections that nuke facilities get are only to minimize the power of anti-nuclear activists to bankrupt-through-lawfare without ever actually winning a suit.
If we had a credible loser-pays system, not only would those protections be unnecessary but we'd clean up a lot of other problems at the same time.
Coal's decline was not caused by a federal plot to transition away from coal, like Trump thinks, but rather by markets and innovation.
Fatass Donnie is a central planner. He demands less efficiency.
turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Yes, Trump should just let the market dictate, by keeping subsidies for other form of energy (green) and strict regulations on coal, which were put in place to "nudge" America away from coal.
You are what you claim to hate: A Bush-era neocon who is more than happy with central planning, as long as it's a Democrat doing it.
The statement was either a lie or stupid. Explains why you liked it.
The statement is accurate.
I live in Georgia and Southern Company sold off most of their coal plants during the Bush 43 era. They put many of them into a spinco called Mirant that later went bankrupt.
Obama greelit the only new nuke plants of the time.
I have learned what I know about Southern from the WSJ. I know that conservatives are almost always poorly informed.
No it’s false.
No, democrats are always poorly informed. You also lie, and are a kiddie porn peddling pedophile.
Kill yourself.
I also live in Georgia. And I am here to tell you that building those new nuclear plants has been incredibly expensive. And they were under construction long before anyone had even heard of Obama.
We in Georgia have the largest coal fired plant in the United States, just east of Macon. They are said to be planning the shutdown of it.
If they do, you can watch your power bill go up big time. Coal is cheap. Cheap is wonderful.
So it was markets and innovation that moved us away from coal and subsidies made renewable energy more attractive to investors. Does Jeff Luse understand that subsidies are a market distortion to make less efficient options economically viable?
Where is Resson getting these writers from?
"Markets Don't Want More Coal"
This is a complete and utter lie. If coal is cheaper, which will probably be the case, then the markets want it a lot.
There's a reason why China and Europe are building hundreds of new coal plants right now.
It’s a bullshit article, written by a bullshit writer, for a bullshitt publication.
Coal is not ever going to be cheaper, ever again. Utilities have been converting to natural gas in droves. Utilities love gas because no pollution controls are required. Yes, you can eliminate pollution controls, but then you have to have society to pay for all the lung disease and building erosion from the pollution. Gas is just better. Period.
"Coal's decline was not caused by a federal plot to transition away from coal,"
He's right. It was a Democrat Plot to pacify their Green contingent. A Democrat Party candidate for President had "killing coal" on her platform. Isn't that right Hilary?
I think her specific goal was to put a lot of coal miners out of work.
The true basket of deplorables.
They could learn to code.
There are now more Walmart employees in West Virginia than there are coal miners in West Virginia. Coal is dead and even Trump can't bring it back to life.
You Marxists really excel at wishful thinking.
Where does reason find these shitheads?
Every realistic book on energy makes is clear that wind and solar will always be expensive, unreliable adjuncts to some baseload power generation. They cannot be otherwise, unless you don't care if the light comes on when you flip the switch.
Coal, NG, oil or nuke, take your pick and as of now, we still have very large coal-powered generating facilities, and they will be used.
I read something somewhere where someone made an interesting point about where coal beats even the other fossil fuels when it comes to grid reliability. With coal it is possible to store a lot of fuel on site, whereas with gas or oil you need pipelines and other infrastructure to keep working. SO for certain emergency situations at least, it's a good idea to keep a decent amount of coal based capacity available and ready to go. Nuclear probably has similar advantages.
Correct.
And all coal storage needs is land. No tanks, pipes, pumps. Probably a front loader or something.
Well it needs trucks and roads, or rail cars and tracks. Those already exist so we don’t have to deal with lawsuits the same way we do with pipelines.
Right, but I meant for stockpiling, as opposed to natural gas which would require mammoth tanks or refrigeration, instead of just bare land.
Do you finally understand why your PENGUINS!!!!!!!!!! bullshit is a product of your TDS?
Agreed.
I still have a small stocking of coal a girlfriend gave me one Christmas as a joke.
You need railroads to transport the coal.
We have that, dumbfuck.
The US has an excellent and efficient freight rail system. But that's beside the point. The point is that a lot of coal can be stored on site so that if disruptions to the rail transportation happen, it can still provide baseline power.
"propping up the coal industry"
LOL! Ass about tit - as the Limey's say...
most investors don't see a future for the energy source.
Translation: there isn't enough profit to be had.
To which I say: FUCKING GOOD. If there are any industries that should have low to abysmal profit margins to have a wealthy populace, energy is one of them.
China has increased coal usage by 200%, and India by about 100 since 2000, iirc. But sure, there’s no market for coal. Retard.
Both India and China have increased their population since than and have also doubled (or tripled?) their economies over 20 years. So they arent really good examples.
The only thing that matters is whether american market wants coal or not. If Trump removes barriers that make coal unattractive it is good for America. If Trump needlessly forced people to use coal so coal workers union helps him get elected it is terrible.
I suspect it is latter.
Politicians pander. No one is forcing anyone to use coal.
If coal is obsolete, then why would expanding nations double its production? Why not just build tons of solar panels?
So because their population grew at the same time as their usage, demand didn’t go up?
You sure you want to go with that?
They’re very good examples.
Also of note: coal is not exclusively used for energy production. Electricity generation is easily the majority use worldwide, but as alternatives emerge, industrial uses become even more important. Unsurprisingly, guess who produces and consumes the most coal? China. Guess who has the largest coal reserves? USA. You do the math.
Does the EO force market players to buy coal? No, then all hail the freer market. If coal isn't desired by the market like you claim, it will end up with the carriage makers - a bygone product. If coal is used by the markets, then you were wrong. Eitherway the Federal government has no business choicing winners and losers.
You completely misread this.
What we wanted was the Keystone Pipeline but now stupid Kamala and mindless Biden are gone we have to take the distrasteful coal route. How can you be so blind??
REASON even has an article posted right here
The Push To Eliminate Fossil Fuels Is Hurting Poor People
So do you even care what you say 🙂
As the author points out only 16% of America's electricity is generated by coal. That is exclusively in older power plants that remain active. President Trump can allow those plants to continue operation but eventually they will close. The current average age of these plants is 45 years old. No one is going to build new plants because of the capital cost for coal plants which exceed cost for other types of energy production. Trump knowledge of the energy sector is no better than his knowledge of how tariffs work.
Keeping them open will allow for a smoother transition to newer technologies over time with less interruptions. Doesn’t really matter if coal survives in the long run. He is keeping some people employed longer. Progressives want them to lose their jobs now.
Is he really keeping people employed or is he allowing his rich buddy to continue to make money in with a product that has end of its lifetime era.
Apples to giraffes.
Is Trump paying people to use coal? Forcing people to use coal? Or removing disincentives around coal use?
Let the market decide what the market wants.
Whatever , what you say IS WRONG
BIden the Stupid was willing to bankroll anybody but the US
South Africa to get $8.5 bln from U.S., EU and UK to speed up shift from coal
These are PUBLIC utilities , look it up
If costs for coal exceed costs for other energy sources, then no regulations are needed. Markets are really good at figuring out which alternative is lowest cost.
It's notable that comparatively unregulated markets (such as China's and India's energy sector) are choosing to build lots of new coal plants. So either they're intentionally wasting lost of money or you're wrong in your blind faith that 'coal bad'. (I'm probably gonna go with option 2.)
Take away all subsidies and see who wins.
^
From "Power Hungry" (Bryce), I can't remember who wins, but solar and wind lose by a landslide.
Absolutely worthless. In fact, worse than that; they cast far more in higher electrical bills than the subsidies cost the taxpayers.
I would like my source of energy to survive major storms.
https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/13/business/china-coal-plants-highest-level-hnk-intl/index.html
How stupid do you have to be to think the various subsidies and regulations are not market distortions that moved the market to enact a government plot (ok, plan)?
Sharknado Warmunists, aka anti-nuclear, anti-energy, formerly anarcho-communist Freeze and Surrenderists have gotten looter politicians to ban/cripple nuclear generating capacity. The remaining alternatives are 1. blackouts and 2. coal plants. Chinese communists burn more coal than anyone else, but thass OK because 100th anniversary of communist takeover of first political state. See the Sharknados? https://www.new-east-archive.org/articles/show/7469/future-soviet-cartoon-predictions-2017
Markets have never been given a chance to vote on coal. It was regulated out of existence by political pressure. In fact, it's not even offered by power companies. I could not purchase a coal-only plan if I wanted.
So your headline is a blatant lie.
What the markets want is cheap, abundant energy. We don't really care how it's generated - coal, oil, gas, solar, hydro, wind, nuclear, whatever - we just want it to be cheap and to be able to rely on its supply. If that means Mother Gaia has to take one for the team, so be it.
We know - with absolute certainty - that solar and wind cannot deliver on both cost and reliability. Not only should the only be encouraged as pet projects for rich eccentrics who like to dabble in the experimental, we should not be subsidizing them in any way. We can also argue that coal has taken a backseat to oil and gas when it comes to cost and reliability. We can also argue that nuclear hasn't had a fair shake in a few decades because of some night terrors we hold onto from past experiences.
But the point is simple: America needs energy. Doesn't matter what we use to generate it - just generate it.
The US Government should not be subsidizing any form of energy.
The US Government should be reducing and streamlining regulations.
It is not the place of the US Government to pick winners or losers and while the US Government could assist with grants and loans for developing new technologies, this should be limited to research.
If a energy source is a good investment, then people will invest and utilize this energy source.
Much like the capitalist argument against centralized control of a marketplace, there are far too many critical decision points for decisions to be made by a handful of people. Rather, in the US it is better for 350 million people to make their own individual decision as to what energy source makes the most sense for their circumstances and beliefs.
Libertarian???
Against rescinding Gov regulation and Gov programs????
Why is Reason employing these [Na]tional So[zi]alist journalists???
Did they sign-on for Biden's Ministry-of-Truth Gov-Grants program?
Who cares?
Some numbers to consider: 7, 27, 85 - in trillions of $.
Fed budget, US GDP, Market capital
Which effects the price of eggs?