- Advertisement -

Largest coal sale in a decade receives just one bid, prompting postponement

Must read


A haul truck is seen after being loaded with coal by a mechanized shovel at the Spring Creek mine, in this Nov. 15, 2016 photo, near Decker, Mont.
A haul truck is seen after being loaded with coal by a mechanized shovel at the Spring Creek mine, in this Nov. 15, 2016 photo, near Decker, Mont. | Matthew Brown

This past Monday, the largest lease sale for coal by the federal government in over a decade received only one bid. As a result, another coal sale in Wyoming was postponed until further notice.

The single bid was made by the Navajo Transitional Energy Company — a Native American-owned business that has coal mines in Arizona, Montana, Wyoming and New Mexico, as well as helium and lithium mines across the Southwest — for a lease in Montana’s Powder River Basin.

For a plot of land adjacent to its Spring Creek Mine, the company offered $186,000 to lease access to 167 million tons of coal, according to the Associated Press.

That translates to less than one cent offered per ton of coal. For context, the last bid in the region accepted was for $1.10 per ton in 2012.

An Interior Department spokesperson told the Wyoming-based news organization WyoFile that “while we would have liked to see stronger participation, this sale reflects the lingering impact from Obama’s and Biden’s decades-long war on coal which aggressively sought to end all domestic coal production and erode confidence in the U.S. coal industry.”

Adding that, “Fortunately, President Trump and his administration are rebuilding trust between industry and government as part of our broader effort to restore American energy dominance.”

Whether or not the federal government will accept the offer is not yet determined.

The majority of federal workers are not currently working due to the shutdown, but the Interior Department deemed those working on oil and gas leases as “essential,” so there is potential for updates soon.

But those sales are a representation of the Trump Administration’s concerted effort to push natural resource extraction, with a specific emphasis on coal mining.

The tepid response from the private sector, however, might be an indication of flagging interest in coal and its diminished value.

An Associated Press investigation revealed that most of the power plants served by the mines near Powder River Basin lease sale intend to stop burning coal within the next 10 years.

No new coal plant has been built in the U.S. since 2013, and in a study by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, 23 coal power plants are scheduled to close or be converted to other power sources. In the following five years, the authors wrote, another 109 coal plants are set to be shut down.

Nearly 25% of all coal plants that remain are expected to close by 2029.

Coal prices, too, have decreased steadily since a high in 2022, with, according to the International Energy Agency, drops across all major indexes over the past 12 months.



Source link

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article