Trump Orders Military to Buy Coal Power Citing Grid Security

President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing the US Department of Defense to enter into power purchasing agreements with coal plants. He argued the move ensures reliable power and strengthens grid resilience, particularly citing coal's performance during recent winter storms. The President also framed coal as critical to national security and strategic industries like steel and shipbuilding. Industry leaders, including the CEO of Peabody Energy, welcomed the order as restoring confidence and sending a powerful message about coal's central role.

Key Points: Trump Orders Pentagon to Buy Coal Power for Grid Security

  • Military to buy power from coal plants
  • Trump cites grid resilience and national security
  • Order frames coal as vital for strategic industries
  • Industry leaders welcome the policy shift
  • Move deepens energy-defense integration
2 min read

Trump orders Pentagon to buy coal power

President Trump signs an executive order directing the US military to purchase power from coal plants, citing reliability and national security.

"We're going to be buying a lot of coal through the military now. - Donald Trump"

Washington, Feb 12

President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing the US military to enter into power purchasing agreements with coal plants, arguing the move would strengthen grid resilience and national security.

"I will sign an executive order that directs the Department of War to work directly with coal plants on the new power purchasing agreements, ensuring that we have more reliable power and stronger and more resilient grid power," Trump said at a White House event before signing the order on Wednesday (local time).

"We're going to be buying a lot of coal through the military now," he added. "It's going to be less expensive and actually much more effective than what we have been using for many, many years."

Trump described coal as "the most reliable, dependable form of energy that we have," saying it had proved its worth during recent winter storms. "Coal generation surged 31 per cent, while solar and wind totally collapsed," he said.

The President also framed coal as vital to strategic industries. "Coal is also critical to our national security, vital to everything from steel production to shipbuilding and artificial intelligence," he said.

Industry leaders at the event welcomed the move. Jim Grech, CEO of Peabody Energy and chairman of the National Coal Council, said recent policy changes had restored confidence in mining communities.

"We saw the impact of your wise policy in real time during the recent winter storm," Grech said. "The coal plants you directed to keep open provided the stability and resilience that the grid needed."

Grech added that the administration's actions had sent "a powerful message" that coal remained central to the nation's energy mix.

The executive order signals a shift toward deeper integration between energy production and defence procurement. By linking military purchasing agreements to coal-fired generation, the administration is emphasising grid stability as a national security priority.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Trump is right about reliability during extreme weather. We've seen power issues in Delhi during peak summer. A diversified energy mix with a strong base from coal or other stable sources is essential for any country's security. National security first.
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Arjun K
The military angle is smart politics. Linking defence to domestic energy creates jobs and reduces dependence. But calling coal "critical to AI" is a bit of a stretch, no? 🤔 The focus should be on modernizing the grid with all sources, including nuclear.
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Sarah B
As someone who follows energy policy, this is concerning. The world is moving away from coal. While grid resilience is important, propping up a declining industry with military contracts isn't a long-term solution. Investment should go to storage tech for renewables.
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Vikram M
Every country has the right to choose its energy path based on its resources. The US has vast coal reserves, so it makes sense to use them. India too uses its domestic coal. The key is to use cleaner technologies while ensuring the lights stay on. 💡
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Karthik V
The executive order seems more about politics and supporting a specific industry than pure national security. It's a short-sighted move. Climate change is the bigger security threat in the long run. Hope the next administration reverses this.

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