This piece originally was published by InsideSources on June 11, 2026.
Across the nation, individuals and companies are grappling with steeply rising electricity costs. Last year, 80 million people faced difficulties in paying their utility bills. Simultaneously, the demand for electricity is escalating due to the expansion of AI-driven data centers, which could lead to even higher costs.
The necessity for transformation is evident, as is the solution: increasing investments to create an affordable, reliable, and clean electricity system.
However, the Trump administration’s continuous use of taxpayer funds to support the coal industry represents a reckless and costly strategy that fails to meet these needs. This approach ties the country to outdated energy sources, resulting in higher costs, less dependable power, and negative impacts on both climate and health.
Recently, the administration declared its intention to inject hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars into sustaining over a dozen costly and unreliable coal plants, developing more speculative ones, and facilitating the construction of a controversial coal export terminal.
This follows previous attempts to compel the military to use coal-fired electricity, spending additional taxpayer dollars on prior coal plant subsidies, demanding ratepayers cover the costs to keep aging coal plants operational, and weakening regulations on harmful coal plant emissions, such as mercury, toxic wastewater, coal ash, and carbon dioxide.
Considering the financial burden placed on taxpayers to support the coal industry, it raises the question of what benefits are actually being received.
We are not achieving a more affordable electricity system. Coal-fired power plants are costly and often more expensive to maintain than investing in new renewable energy sources, which are the most cost-effective. To achieve affordability, we should focus on expanding renewable energy, but instead, the administration’s approach is increasing electricity costs.
We are not achieving a more reliable electricity system. Coal-fired plants are currently the least reliable option within our electricity system. Despite significant costs, subsidizing repairs will only provide temporary fixes. As the coal fleet becomes outdated, taxpayer dollars are being wasted on maintaining plants that are nearing obsolescence.
We are not achieving a cleaner electricity system. Coal-fired plants are significant polluters. Calling it “beautiful, clean coal” does not change the reality of air pollution, toxic wastewater, and hazardous coal ash, which severely impact public and worker health and the environment. Furthermore, the administration is reducing critical pollution safeguards, undoing hard-won progress.
Not affordable, reliable, or clean—and the situation is even worse. The administration is working to embed coal into the nation’s electricity system while attempting to hinder the development of solar and wind projects across the country.
These renewable resources are the fastest and most economical to implement. Combined with investments in energy efficiency, storage, and strategic grid expansion, they offer a path to a truly affordable, reliable, and cleaner electricity system.
Meanwhile, coal workers and communities need policies addressing their concerns amid the rapidly changing energy landscape, but the administration is neglecting them, removing health protections, and ignoring future investments for empty promises.
Now is the time for leaders to offer genuine solutions to these pressing issues. This extravagant coal bailout benefits a select few at the expense of the broader public and clearly falls short of what is needed.

