Current:Home > ScamsCheap Federal Coal Supports Largest U.S. Producers -ProfitPioneers Hub
Cheap Federal Coal Supports Largest U.S. Producers
View
Date:2025-04-11 22:19:10
The top three coal companies in the U.S. mine the majority of their coal, as much as 88 percent of their total production, from land owned and leased by the federal government, according to a report published Wednesday by the environmental group Greenpeace.
The report, which detailed the companies’ dependence on subsidized, government-owned coal, came two months after Arch Coal, the second largest U.S. coal producer, filed for bankruptcy. On Wednesday Peabody Energy, the world’s largest private sector coal mining company, said in a financial report that it may also seek bankruptcy protection.
Greenpeace obtained the information through a public records request for information about federal coal production for each of the companies and their subsidiaries in 2014. The group then compared this information to each company’s total coal production. The report added to existing knowledge of industry’s reliance on subsidized coal from federal lands or coal that is otherwise owned by the U.S. government.
“These three companies are tremendously dependent on what has been an underpriced and undervalued public resource,” said Bill Corcoran, Western regional director for Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign, who did not work on the report. “I didn’t know these companies were this dependent, I hadn’t seen it put together like this.”
The report found that each of the three companies rely on federal coal for more than two-thirds of their production. Two of the companies, Cloud Peak Energy and Arch Coal, get more than 80 percent from federally leased land. At the same time, the companies have tried to block federal policies that threaten this business model.
“These companies are attacking climate change policies, clean air rules, clean water rules and decry a so called ‘war on coal,'” said Joe Smyth, Greenpeace spokesperson and author of the report. “At the same time they depend to a huge extent on federal coal.”
Government watchdogs said the report shines a light on longstanding policies favorable to coal companies. The federal government has provided the coal industry with more than $70 billion in tax breaks and subsidies since 1950, according to a 2009 report by Taxpayers for Common Sense. For years, companies have been granted access to the country’s immense public-land coal resource at prices well below market value.
“We have these vast amounts of coal that taxpayers own and that we are losing significant revenue on by undervaluing it in the form of royalty giveaways, bad leasing deals and an uncompetitive process,” said Autumn Hanna, senior program director for Taxpayers for Common Sense.
The Obama administration announced a moratorium on new coal leasing on federal lands on January 15, as part of an overhaul of its leasing program to better reflect environmental and climate costs. Federal coal leases produce as much greenhouse gases a year as 161 million cars, according to a recent study commissioned by the Center for American Progress and The Wilderness Society. The leases in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and Montana alone account for 10 percent of U.S. emissions.
“I think most Americans would be surprised to know that coal companies can make a winning bid for about a dollar a ton to mine taxpayer-owned coal,” Interior Secretary Sally Jewell said prior to that announcement.
The moratorium doesn’t affect existing leases, which the Department of the Interior said are enough to sustain current levels of production from federal land for the next 20 years. In addition, companies that file for bankruptcy would not be forced to stop production or cancel their leases. They could restructure their debt and continue to operate.
The Greenpeace report also highlighted climate-related damages caused by the coal industry.
“Combined, the 522 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from these top three U.S. coal mining companies’ 2014 federal coal production would amount to $18.8 billion in damages to society,” the report said. The damages are based on the federal government’s social cost of carbon figures that include increasing health costs and other impacts from climate change.
“It makes sense for the Obama administration to completely overhaul the federal coal program to bring it in line with what the administration is trying to do on climate change,” Smyth said.
veryGood! (79842)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Funeral home gave grieving relatives concrete instead of ashes, man alleges in new lawsuit
- Sofia Coppola turns her lens on an American icon: Priscilla Presley
- Senior Chinese official visits Myanmar for border security talks as fighting rages in frontier area
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Antisemitism policies at public city colleges in New York will be reviewed, the governor says
- Minnesota governor eliminates college degree requirement for most state jobs
- The fight against fake photos: How Adobe is embedding tech to help surface authenticity
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Sherri Shepherd Invites You to Her Halloween Renaissance With Must-See Beyoncé Transformation
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Wildfire fanned by Santa Ana winds forces thousands from their homes outside L.A.
- Robert De Niro tells jury that emotional abuse claims by ex-assistant are nonsense
- Deputies killed a Maine man outside a police station. Police say he was armed with a rifle
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- States are getting $50 billion in opioid cash. And it's an issue in governor's races
- Funeral home gave grieving relatives concrete instead of ashes, man alleges in new lawsuit
- New oil leak reported after a ferry that ran aground repeatedly off the Swedish coast is pulled free
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
On a US tour, Ukrainian faith leaders plead for continued support against the Russian invasion
Police seek suspect in Southern California restaurant shooting that injured 4
UN human rights official is alarmed by sprawling gang violence in Haiti
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Yemen’s Houthi rebels claim attacks on Israel, drawing their main sponsor Iran closer to Hamas war
Auto strike settlements will raise costs for Detroit’s Big 3. Will they be able to raise prices?
Henry Winkler on being ghosted by Paul McCartney, that 'baloney' John Travolta 'Grease' feud