• Feeble Old Fool Trump lies about coal as he signs executive orders to boost its use

    From John Sedra@JohnSedra@sedra.org to comp.os.linux.advocacy,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,comp.sys.mac.advocacy,alt.home-repair on Mon Jul 6 03:57:59 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.advocacy

    Trump lies about coal as he signs executive orders
    to boost its use


    Stupid old Donald Trump on Tuesday signed four
    executive orders designed to boost the U.S. coal
    industry, outlining steps to protect coal-fired
    power plants and expedite leases for coal mining
    on U.S. land. But in touting the benefits of coal,
    he lied about several aspects of its safety and
    use.

    Here’s a look at the facts.

    CLAIM: “I call it beautiful, clean coal. I told my
    people, never use the word coal unless you put
    beautiful, clean before it.”

    THE FACTS: The production of coal is cleaner now
    than it has been historically, but that doesn’t
    mean it’s clean.

    Planet-warming carbon dioxide emissions from the
    coal industry have decreased over the past 30
    years, according to the U.S. Energy Information
    Administration. Energy lobbyist Scott Segal said
    that “the relative statement that coal-fired
    electricity is cleaner than ever before is true,
    particularly when emissions are measured per unit
    of electricity produced.”

    And yet, coal production worldwide still needs to
    be reduced sharply to address climate change,
    according to United Nations-backed research.

    Along with carbon dioxide, burning coal emits
    sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides that contribute
    to acid rain, smog and respiratory illnesses,
    according to the EIA.


    Over the past 15 years, the U.S. has seen a major
    shift from coal to natural gas for electricity
    use, a key reason U.S. carbon emissions have
    declined over that period.

    Coal once provided more than half of U.S.
    electricity production, but its share dropped to
    about 16% in 2023, down from about 45% as recently
    as 2010. Natural gas provides about 43% of U.S.
    electricity, with the remainder from nuclear
    energy and renewables such as wind, solar and
    hydropower.

    Energy Secretary Chris Wright acknowledged during
    his confirmation hearing in January that the
    burning of fossil fuels — coal, oil and natural
    gas — causes climate change. That’s because the
    combustion of fossil fuels is drastically
    increasing the amount of carbon dioxide in the
    atmosphere, warming the planet.

    ___

    TRUMP: “It’s cheap, incredibly efficient, high
    density and it’s almost indestructible and kills
    70,000 red state Americans annually.”

    THE FACTS: Coal is one of the most expensive
    sources of new power generation. New coal plants
    would produce electricity at nearly $90 per
    megawatt hour on average, though no one in the
    U.S. is currently building or planning to build a
    new coal plant, according to estimates from the
    EIA.

    Standalone solar without battery storage is the
    cheapest source of new power generation at about
    $23 per megawatt hour on average for new projects
    connecting to the grid in 2028, the EIA estimates.
    That includes tax credits and other subsidies
    under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, which help
    reduce the cost of renewable energy.

    New natural gas plants are expected to produce
    electricity at nearly $43 per megawatt hour,
    according to the estimates.

    A nonpartisan climate policy think tank, Energy
    Innovation, found that 99% of existing U.S. coal
    plants are more expensive to keep running than if
    they’re replaced with local solar, wind, and
    battery storage. Americans immediately begin
    saving money when coal plants retire and
    communities transition to clean energy, according
    to Energy Innovation’s 2023 report.

    “Trump has promised to cut American energy bills
    in half – this is yet another way he’s forcing
    Americans to pay more,” Greg Alvarez, a
    spokesperson with Energy Innovations, wrote in an
    email Tuesday.

    Coal plants operated at full power about 42.4% of
    the time in 2023, according to EIA’s most recent
    data. In comparison, nuclear and geothermal plants
    ranked highest, at about 93% and 69.4%,
    respectively.

    ___

    CLAIM: “The value of untapped coal in our country
    is 100 times greater than the value of all the
    gold at Fort Knox.”

    THE FACTS: Although the U.S. does have an
    abundance of coal, its estimated value is not
    nearly as high as Trump claims.

    There are currently about 147.3 million troy
    ounces of gold stored at Fort Knox with a book
    value of approximately $6.2 billion, according to
    the U.S. Treasury. Gold closed on the open market
    Tuesday, trading at $2,990.20 per troy ounce,
    making its market value much higher, at about
    $440.6 billion. A troy ounce, a weight measurement
    for precious metals, is approximately 31.1 grams.

    There were about 469.1 billion short tons of coal
    in U.S. reserves as of Jan. 1, 2024, according to
    the EIA, though only about 53% of that was
    available for mining. EIA estimates its value at
    approximately $598.3 billion. That’s more than all
    of the gold at Fort Knox, but far short of 100
    times that amount. A short ton, also known as a
    U.S. ton, is equivalent to 2,000 pounds.

    ___

    TRUMP: “They’re opening up coal, coal plants all
    over Germany.”

    THE FACTS: That’s not accurate. According to
    Germany’s economy ministry, 18 coal-fired power
    plants were shut down in 2024. “No new coal-fired
    power plants will be built,” a spokesman for the
    ministry said Wednesday in response to a question
    about Trump’s claims. The spokesperson noted the
    country plans to phase out coal-fired power
    generation by 2038 at the latest.

    Germany did bring some coal-fired plants back
    online in 2022 and 2023 to deal with natural gas
    shortages after Russia invaded Ukraine. The
    government allowed up to six gigawatts of coal-
    fired power plants to return from the reserve to
    the market for a limited period of time. They were
    taken offline by the end of March 2024, according
    to Agora Energiewende, a Berlin-based climate
    policy think tank.

    ___
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