The US Department of Energy (DoE) says it will provide up to $500m in Defense Production Act funding to support 13 US coal-fired power plants and new coal export infrastructure.

The package includes up to $425m for 12 projects aimed at strengthening the coal fleet, plus up to $75m for the West Gateway Terminal Project in Oakland, California.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

The West Gateway terminal is intended to be a rail-served marine export facility able to handle more than ten million tons of bulk commodities a year. The DoE says it would expand West Coast export capacity and support energy shipments to allies including Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and Malaysia.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the funding is intended to reinforce national security by supporting coal generation, domestic supply chains and export capability. DoE Under-Secretary Kyle Haustveit said the terminal fills a key infrastructure gap and would improve access to global markets while strengthening energy partnerships in the Indo-Pacific.

The announcement marks a clear shift towards using federal industrial policy to preserve coal as part of the US energy and export system, with the DoE framing the projects as a way to bolster baseload reliability, supply chain resilience and strategic energy leverage.