April 1 (Reuters) - The Trump administration on Tuesday
took a key step toward leasing new areas to a North Dakota coal
mine that is proposing to operate through 2045.
WHY IT MATTERS
The publication of a draft environmental analysis of new
lease areas for North Dakota's Freedom Mine is aligned with
President Donald Trump's goal to increase U.S. fossil fuel
production and revive the use of coal to produce electricity.
But the country's electricity supply from coal, which was
once the primary source of U.S. electricity, has dropped to
about 16%, giving way to the rise of cheaper natural gas
operations and renewable energy.
BY THE NUMBERS
Freedom Mine, owned by a division of NACCO Industries ( NC )
, produces between 11.5 million and 13.5 million tons of
lignite coal annually in Mercer County, North Dakota.
The company requested to lease tracts that cover 1,350 acres
and contain about 24 million tons of mineable coal.
The mine's owner was not immediately available for comment.
KEY CONTEXT
Freedom Mine supplies coal to power plants owned by the
Basin Electric Power Cooperative and first applied to lease the
new areas in 2019.
The company filed an emergency application, which would
require that a portion of the coal in the new lease areas be
mined within three years.
The leases are made up of private surface lands and a
mixture of federal and privately owned subsurface coal.
WHAT'S NEXT
The Bureau of Land Management will seek public input on the
leasing proposal through May 2. The agency, a division of the
Interior Department, is considering a range of options,
including leasing less acreage.
The company's mining plan modification must be approved by
Interior's assistant secretary for land and minerals.