×

Trump plans $700 million in new coal support, White House official says

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 8:13 PM

By Jacob Bogage and Jarrett Renshaw

WASHINGTON, June 3 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump is planning to use Cold War-era national defense powers to send nearly $700 ​million to support coal facilities, according to a ‌White House official.

Trump could announce as soon as Thursday that he will invoke the Defense Production Act, the 1950 law granting presidents wide authority over national security-related industries, to upgrade more ‌than ​a dozen coal power plants, build ⁠a massive West Coast ⁠coal export terminal and match corporate funds to build new power plants, the official said.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity to not preempt the president’s ​announcement, and cautioned that the details could still change.

The Trump administration has framed energy issues in existential ⁠terms as it eyes the ⁠domestic need to sustain power-hungry artificial-intelligence data ​centers and aims to marginalize foreign adversaries that hold large ​fossil fuel reserves. Coal, though, has faced steady ‌declines in U.S. usage. It once accounted for more than half of U.S. electricity generation, but fell to less than one-fifth in recent years, according to the U.S. ⁠Energy Information Administration.

Power producers have largely switched to cheaper natural gas and renewable sources, wary of fossil fuel’s effect on ⁠the planet’s ‌warming climate and increasing reliance on brittle ⁠global supply chains.

Of the $700 million, more than ​half ‌will fund 13 coal plant upgrades, $185 million ​will match ⁠corporate funds for coal facilities in Alaska, Maryland and West Virginia, and $75 million will support the long-proposed West Gateway export terminal in Northern California.

Bloomberg first reported the planned coal support.

(Reporting by Jacob Bogage and Jarrett Renshaw; Editing ​by Jacqueline Wong)