Thursday, January 22, 2026

SUN DAY Campaign: U.S. Solar Growth Dominates for the 26th Consecutive Month; Total Utility-Scale Solar Capacity Has Now Surpassed Wind

SUN DAY CAMPAIGN  

8606 Greenwood Avenue, Suite #2; Takoma Park, MD 20912-6656  
   
   
Brief News Update & Analysis  
   
UTILITY-SCALE SOLAR GENERATING CAPACITY
SURPASSES WIND FOR THE FIRST TIME
 
FOR 26 MONTHS STRAIGHT, SOLAR HAS PROVIDED
MORE NEW GENERATING CAPACITY
THAN ANY OTHER ENERGY SOURCE
 
OVER THE NEXT THREE YEARS,
SOLAR PROJECTED TO ADD ANOTHER 90-GW

 
For Release:  Wednesday, January 21, 2026
 
Contact:         Ken Bossong, 301-588-4741
 
Washington DC – A review by the SUN DAY Campaign of data belatedly released by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) reveals that solar accounted for 72% of U.S. electrical generating capacity added during the first ten months of 2025. Solar continues to dominate new capacity additions and has held the lead among all energy sources for 26 consecutive months. As a consequence, for the first time, installed utility-scale solar capacity now exceeds that of wind. Further, FERC foresees solar adding another 90 gigawatts (GW) over the next three years by which time solar capacity will be greater than that of either nuclear power or coal.


Solar was 60% of new generating capacity in October and 72% year-to-date:

In its latest monthly “Energy Infrastructure Update” report (with data through October 31, 2025), FERC says 66 “units” of solar totaling 1,082 megawatts (MW) were placed into service in October, accounting for 59.8% of all new generating capacity added during the month. Natural gas provided the balance (727-MW) plus 1-MW of new oil capacity.

The newest facilities include the 153.0-MW Felina Project in El Paso, TX; the 150.0-MW Ratts 1 Solar Project in Pike County, IN; and the 145-MW Axial Basin Solar Project in Moffat County, CO.

The 649 units of utility-scale (i.e., >1-MW) solar added during the first ten months of 2025 total 22,457-MW - slightly less than the 22,618-MW added during the same period in 2024 - and were 72.0% of the total new capacity placed into service by all sources.

Solar has now been the largest source of new generating capacity added each month for 26 months straight: September 2023 - October 2025. During that period, total utility-scale solar capacity grew from 91.82-GW to 160.56-GW. No other energy source added anything close to that amount of new capacity. Wind, for example, expanded by 12.39-GW while natural gas’ net increase was just 6.55-GW. [1]

As a consequence, for the first time ever, the installed generating capacity of utility-scale solar has now surpassed that of wind (160.09-GW).


Wind capacity additions through October exceed those of natural gas:

Between January and October, new wind provided 4,746-MW of capacity additions – an increase of 55% compared to a year earlier and more than the new capacity provided by natural gas (3,896-MW). Wind thus accounted for 15.2% of all new capacity added during the first ten months of 2025.


Renewables were more than 87% of new capacity added year-to-date:

Year-to-date (YTD), wind and solar (joined by 4-MW of hydropower and 6-MW of biomass) accounted for 87.2% of all new generating capacity while natural gas added just 12.4%. The balance of net capacity additions came from oil (66-MW) and waste heat (17-MW).


Solar + wind are a quarter of U.S. generating capacity; all renewables combined are over a third:

Taken together, wind and solar constitute nearly one-fourth (23.79%) of the U.S.’s total available installed utility-scale generating capacity.

Moreover, more than 25% of U.S. solar capacity is in the form of small-scale (e.g., rooftop) systems that are not reflected in FERC’s data. [2] Including that additional solar capacity would bring the share provided by solar + wind to more than a quarter of the nation’s total.

With the inclusion of hydropower (7.57%), biomass (1.05%) and geothermal (0.31%), renewables currently claim a 32.72% share of total U.S. utility-scale generating capacity. If small-scale solar capacity is included, renewables are now more than one-third of total U.S. generating capacity.


Solar is on track to become the second largest source of U.S. generating capacity:

FERC reports that net “high probability” net additions of solar between November 2025 and October 2028 total 89,720-MW – an amount more than four times the forecast net “high probability” additions for wind (19,660-MW), the second fastest growing resource.

FERC also foresees net growth for hydropower (555-MW) and geothermal (92-MW) but a decrease of 124-MW in biomass capacity.

Meanwhile, natural gas capacity would expand by 8,983-MW and nuclear power would add just 335-MW, while coal and oil are projected to contract by 19,741-MW and 1,363-MW respectively.

Taken together, the net new “high probability” net utility-scale capacity additions by all renewable energy sources over the next three years - i.e., the Trump Administration’s remaining time in office - would total 109,903-MW. On the other hand, the installed capacity of fossil fuels and nuclear power combined would shrink by 11,786-MW.

Should FERC’s three-year forecast materialize, by mid-fall 2028, utility-scale solar would account for 17.3% of installed U.S. generating capacity - more than any other source besides natural gas (40.1%). Further, the capacity of the mix of all utility-scale renewable energy sources would exceed 38%. Inclusion of small-scale solar - assuming it retains its 25% share of all solar - could push solar’s share to over 20% and that of all renewables to over 41% while that of natural gas would drop to about 38%.

In fact, the numbers for renewables could be significantly higher.

FERC notes that “all additions” (net) for utility-scale solar over the next three years could be as high as 232,487-MW while those for wind could total 65,658-MW. Hydro’s net additions could reach 9,932-MW while geothermal and biomass could increase by 202-MW and 34-MW respectively. Such growth by renewable sources would significantly exceed that of natural gas (30,508-MW).


"It has now been a full year since Trump launched his assault on renewable energy with a string of anti-solar and anti-wind executive orders," noted the SUN DAY Campaign's executive director Ken Bossong. "And while they may have slowed progress, the economic and environmental benefits of renewable energy sources continue to drive their dramatic growth." 
  
# # # # # # # # #  
   
Source:  
FERC's 8-page "Energy Infrastructure Update for October 2025" was posted on January 20, 2026. The link to the full report can be found at: Anchorhttps://cms.ferc.gov/media/energy-infrastructure-update-october-2025.

For the information cited in this update, see the tables entitled "New Generation In-Service (New Build and Expansion)," "Total Available Installed Generating Capacity," and "Generation Capacity Additions and Retirements."

FERC notes: “Data derived from Velocity Suite, Hidachi Energy, and Yes Energy. The data may be subject to update.”
 
Notes:   
[1] Generating capacity is not the same as actual generation. Fossil fuels and nuclear power usually have higher "capacity factors" than do wind and solar. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reports capacity factors in calendar year 2024 for nuclear power, combined-cycle natural gas plants and coal were 92.3%, 59.7%, and 42.6% respectively while those for wind and utility-scale solar PV were 34.3% and 23.4%. See Tables 6.07.A and 6.07.B in EIA's most recent "Electric Power Monthly" report. 

[2] While FERC does not provide capacity data for small-scale solar, the EIA does. In its latest “Electric Power Monthly” report issued on December 23, 2025, EIA reported that as of October 31, 2025, installed solar capacity totaled 200,995.5-MW of which 58,065.8-MW (i.e., 28.9%) was provided by small-scale solar (estimated). See table 6.1 at https://www.eia.gov/electricity/monthly/epm_table_grapher.php?t=table_6_01

# # # # # # # # # 
   
The SUN DAY Campaign is a non-profit research and educational organization founded in 1992 to support a rapid transition to 100% reliance on sustainable energy technologies as a cost-effective alternative to nuclear power and fossil fuels and as a solution to climate change.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

[decomm_wkg] "German steam generators arrive in Sweden for recycling"

Watch for this one. 
This was attempted (2011) in Canada with Bruce Power steam generators to travel from Lake Huron through the Great Lakes out the St. Lawrence Seaway to Sweden.
We stopped them from sending 64 steam generators each larger than a bus.

"German steam generators arrive in Sweden for recycling"

"Decommissioning Is Creating a New Pipeline of Opportunity in Europe"

N2
Michael J. Keegan
Coalition for a Nuclear Free Great Lakes 

DOE memo on ALARA - Re: E&E: DOE kills decades-old radiation safety standard (ALARA)

https://www.eenews.net/articles/doe-kills-decades-old-radiation-safety-standard/

DOE kills decades-old radiation safety standard

The standard is based on the principle that there is no safe dose of radiation.

Avatar of Francisco "A.J." Camacho

By: 

 | 01/12/2026 04:32 PM EST
The Department of Energy in Washington.
​​​​​​​The Department of Energy in Washington on May 1, 2015. Jacquelyn Martin/AP

E&E NEWS PM | Energy Secretary Chris Wright killed the Department of Energy’s decades-old radiation safety standard Friday.

Wright ended the department's use of the As Low As Reasonably Achievable — or "ALARA" — principle, which has long been a staple of nuclear regulation. ALARA is rooted in the idea that any radiation exposure carries risks, but low doses can be justified by practical considerations. Critics in the nuclear power and health fields argue that the standard is overly burdensome with no real safety benefits.

The move could lower operational costs and accelerate projects using nuclear material, but it will alter an established safety-first culture. The change in safety standards may impact DOE’s ongoing advanced nuclear reactor pilot program and high-stakes radiation cleanups, like the Hanford site in Washington state that has been dubbed the most contaminated place in the Western Hemisphere.

A person familiar with the Trump administration’s nuclear policy, granted anonymity to discuss sensitive issues, confirmed that Wright decided to remove ALARA from DOE regulations and that there would be a subsequent process to decide replacement standards. DOE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

"ALARA is effectively, as far as I understand it, as of Friday, totally nullified and gone," said Emily Caffrey, a radiation health physicist and assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. "So anywhere you see ALARA in DOE regulations, you'll scratch it out with no replacement."

DOE is engaged in an advanced reactor pilot program with nine companies. The participating companies have their sights on selling their technology commercially to power military bases, data centers and homes across the country.

The secretary’s memo does not directly affect the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which regulates the operation of America’s 94 nuclear reactors powering one-fifth of the country. That means the pilot program participants won’t need to adhere to ALARA immediately, but they will still need to satisfy it if they want the requisite NRC license to build reactors to feed the larger electricity grid.

The severe health impacts of ionizing radiation became apparent to the public after the 1945 atomic bombings in Japan, where thousands of initial survivors died of cancers linked to the bombings.

In response, the U.S. sought to establish increasingly strict safety standards for nuclear workers and civilians. This evolution culminated in the As Low As Reasonably Achievable protocol. Since its introduction by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the 1970s, ALARA has been the "gold standard for nuclear safety" despite its significant implementation costs.

DOE began to adopt ALARA for certain activities in 1988. Today, its regulations apply the ALARA standard across various aspects of radiation safety, including occupational exposure, environmental releases and site decommissioning.

“It is the underlying philosophy that NRC and the Department of Energy use when thinking about radiation exposures,” Caffrey said. “Anytime you have a worker or someone who is going to encounter ionizing radiation, you think about ALARA.”

The decision might put additional pressure on the NRC to ditch ALARA, too. A May 2025 executive order from President Donald Trump asked the NRC to reconsider its use of the standard. Wright’s move may also have implications for DOE’s ongoing radiation cleanups of abandoned uranium mines and Manhattan Project sites, like the one in Hanford.

Hanford produced the bulk of America’s weapons-grade plutonium, and nuclear waste is still stored on the site. But Hanford has been plagued with problems from explosions to toxic vapor releases to nuclear waste leaking from its tanks, and the federal government has paid out nearly $2.7 billion to thousands of workers for illnesses linked to exposure to radiation and toxic chemicals.

DOE estimates it will cost $364 billion to $590 billion to finish the Hanford cleanup. Lowering the radiation dose standard might allow the cleanup to proceed faster.

ALARA has long been hotly debated in the nuclear industry and among health experts.

“ALARA means different things depending on the context,” Caffrey said. “You can get a state like California, where if you need to decommission a facility, you have to go to zero radiation dose.”

Caffrey said she thinks that California takes ALARA too far since people are naturally exposed to some radiation from the sun and space constantly.

“This is really the fundamental reason why so many people get so upset about ALARA,” she said.

The nuclear power industry has also often complained about the principle. A December report from the pro-nuclear Breakthrough Institute points out that the ALARA principle often means minimizing doses to 25 times lower than what other regulations consider already safe.

“This increases licensing costs and timelines without improving protection,” the report says of ALARA.

Edwin Lyman, a physicist and the director of nuclear power safety with the Union of Concerned Scientists, defended the NRC’s radiation standard in a 2025 interview.

“Documented scientific evidence has only indicated that [low-level radiation exposure] is more dangerous than was known decades ago, when these standards were set,” Lyman said. “Evidence has emerged about the impact of the level of radiation exposure on cardiovascular disease.”

“ALARA has been misapplied across the board in a lot of different areas, and it has cost taxpayers a lot of money, and it has caused a lot of unnecessary fear in the public by saying, ‘Well, any little bit of radiation dose is going to give you a cancer,’ which is just fundamentally not true,” Caffrey concluded. “But as a radiation protection principle and paradigm, it was well-intended.”

DOE ALARA Memo_01092026.pdf

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Trump replaces NRC chair as he remakes agency

Ho Nieh is now chair. David Wright is still on the commission, but apparently he was not compliant enough with the “rubber stamp” agenda to satisfy the White House to remain in charge. So implies the article:

Wright’s tenure as chair was marked by growing tension between the historically independent NRC and the White House and Department of Energy. Wright told lawmakers in September that he had pushed back when a DOE attorney suggested in 

[decomm_wkg] Fracking / Nuclear Waste - PA

"Twenty years into fracking, Pa. has yet to reckon with its radioactive waste"

"Residents demand action at one of the largest nuclear waste dumps in US: 'We want to make sure it's being done right'"

Monday, December 22, 2025

These 15 Coal Plants Would Have Retired. Then Came AI and Trump

These 15 Coal Plants Would Have Retired. Then Came AI and Trump.

Posted on  by 

By Joe Fassler, a writer and journalist whose work on climate and technology appears in outlets like The Guardian, The New York Times, and Wired. His novel, The Sky Was Ours, was published by Penguin Books. Cross posted from DeSmog.


Since the second Trump administration took power in January, at least 15 coal plants have had planned retirements pushed back or delayed indefinitely, a DeSmog analysis found.

That’s mostly due to an expected rise in electricity demand, a surge largely driven by the rise of high-powered data centers needed to train and run artificial intelligence (AI) models. But some of the plants have been ordered to stay open by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), despite significant environmental and financial costs. Energy Secretary Chris Wright, a former fracking executive, has frequently cited “winning the AI race” as a rationale for re-investing in coal.

The fossil fuel facilities are located in regions across the country, from Maryland to Michigan and Georgia to Wyoming. Together, their two dozen coal-fired generators emitted more than 68 million tons of carbon dioxide in 2024. That’s more than the total emissions of Delaware, Maryland, and Washington, D.C. combined.

Nearly 75 percent of the coal plants were on track to shutter in the next two years.

The delays buck the overall trend in the U.S., where coal’s importance as an energy source has diminished rapidly over the past two decades. Coal’s critics say this broad-based phaseout is an urgent matter of public and environmental health. Often called the “dirtiest fossil fuel,” coal creates more climate emissions per gigawatt-hour of electricity than any other power source. And the human impacts of its pollution have been profound: A 2023 study in Science attributed 460,000 extra U.S. deaths between 1999 and 2020 to sulfur dioxide particulate pollution belched out by coal plants.

Cara Fogler, managing senior analyst for the Sierra Club, called the recent spate of delayed closures “unacceptable.”

“We know these coal plants are dirty, they’re uneconomic, they’re costing customers so much money, and they’re polluting the air,” said Fogler, who co-authored a report showing many utilities have backtracked on climate commitments, including coal phaseouts, often citing data centers as a cause. “They need to be planned for retirement, and it’s really concerning to see utilities becoming so much more hesitant to take those steps.”

DeSmog identified the 15 plants by examining changes to the planned retirement dates listed by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), a DOE agency that compiles data on energy providers, as well as public statements from utilities and the Trump administration. Some of the voluntary delays appear to directly contradict previous net-zero pledges made by several companies.

Neither the Department of Energy nor American Power, a trade association representing the U.S. coal fleet, responded to requests for comment.

What Led to Coal’s Decline?

Not long ago, coal really did keep the lights on. In 2005, it provided roughly half of America’s electricity, making it by far the dominant power source nationwide. But in the past two decades, coal’s market share has rapidly waned. No new coal plants have come online since 2013. These days, its footprint has dwindled, with just 16 percent of the overall energy mix.

In March 2017,  President Trump appeared to blame environmental regulations for coal’s poor fortunes — a trend he promised to reverse.

“The miners told me about the attacks on their jobs and their livelihoods,” Trump said at U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) headquarters. “I made them this promise … My administration is putting an end to the war on coal.”

But environmental regulations didn’t kill coal. Instead, its demise became inevitable mostly thanks to the rise of a competing fossil fuel: natural gas.

Gas has both economic and technological advantages over coal, said David Lindequist, an economist at Miami University who co-authored a recent paper on the environmental impacts of the shale gas boom.

As new fracking technologies helped to flood the U.S. market with cheap gas in the mid-2000s, utilities began a broad coal-to-gas pivot that’s still underway today. Abundant, often less expensive gas flowed into power plants that operate more efficiently and nimbly than coal plants. This combination of price, efficiency, and flexibility made ditching coal an easy calculation for many utilities.

“The fact that we were able to so successfully phase out coal in the U.S. would never have happened without the fracking boom,” Lindequist said.

Today, coal is at an even greater disadvantage, as renewable energies continue to make economic and technological inroads. The International Renewable Energy Agency found that, in 2024, solar and wind routinely delivered electricity more cheaply than fossil sources of energy. That dynamic has helped solar in particular become the fastest-growing source of power in the U.S.

Meanwhile, America’s newest coal plant — the Sandy Creek plant near Waco, Texas, built way back in 2013 — is currently sitting idle after another catastrophic failure. It isn’t set to resume operations until 2027. The average U.S. coal plant is more than 40 years old, a factor that’s contributed to their decreasing reliability.

“These [coal] plants are so old that at this point there’s very little that could really revive the fleet,” said Michelle Solomon, manager in the electricity program at the nonpartisan think tank Energy Innovation. “I’ve been using the analogy of an old car: Nothing is going to bring my car that has 200,000 miles on it back to being a brand new, efficient car.”

During the Biden years, as technological advancements and historic subsidies made renewables even more attractive, observers broadly believed that coal’s days were numbered. The “writing was on the wall” for coal, Lindequist said.

“Coal may retain a grip in U.S. politics, but its actual role in the generation system is shrinking annually,” researchers for the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis wrote in a 2024 report. “It is a trend we believe is irreversible.”

Yet even before Biden left office, a new dynamic began emerging: As tech companies started proposing billions in data center build-outs to feed the AI frenzy, utilities started to take a fresh look at their coal plants.

Data Centers Changed Coal’s Trajectory 

In 2020, Dominion Energy, a utility that provides electricity to millions of customers across Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, announced non-binding plans to retire the Clover Power Station by 2025. Running the plant — an 877 megawatt (MW) coal-fired facility near Randolph, Virginia — would be uneconomical under any future scenario, the company found. It just didn’t make financial sense to keep it going.

It reversed course just three years later. Under its 2023 plan, Dominion projected that its energy demand from data centers would nearly quadruple by 2038. That’s an astonishing rise, considering that Virginia already leads the U.S. in data center development by a wide margin. Known as Data Center Alley, the state is home to more than one-third of the world’s largest-scale data centers. Today, Dominion says it doesn’t anticipate retiring any of its existing coal plants — including Clover — until at least 2045, the year that Virginia law stipulates its economy must be carbon-free.

Dominion wasn’t the only utility to cite data center growth as it backtracked on coal. In an August 2024 earnings call, executives of the Wisconsin-based utility Alliant Energy said that the company was “proactively working to attract” data center projects. A few months later, Alliant announced it would delay retiring the Columbia Energy Center, a coal-fired plant near Madison, from 2026 to 2029. The plant’s retirement had already been pushed back once.

Utilities have delayed the retirements of at least 15 U.S. coal plants since President Trump took office in January 2025. Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration. Credit: Joe Fassler/DeSmog

The trend became notable enough to attract the attention of analysts at Frontier Group, an environmental think tank. In January 2025, Frontier analyst Quentin Good published a white paper showing that utilities had already cited data center growth as a rationale for delaying the phaseout of seven fossil fuel power plants across the U.S.

“We were concerned about the potential for all of this new electricity demand from data centers to slow down the transition to clean energy,” he told DeSmog. “In that report, we discovered it was basically happening already.”

But two other dynamics also began playing out in January: AI hype started to reach new levels of intensity, and power changed hands in Washington.

AI Hype Highs, New Coal Lows 

Data centers aren’t the only reason for the recent upswing in electricity demand. Building electrification, industrial growth, and increased electric vehicle ownership all play roles, too. But nothing has quite caught utilities’ attention like data center projects, which are cropping up with highly localized impacts across the U.S. at a historic rate. Filled with stacks of high-powered computing equipment, the facilities are projected to account for about half of new electricity growth between 2025 and 2030.

On January 21, 2025 — one day after President Trump’s second inauguration — he revealed a new AI infrastructure joint venture involving ChatGPT parent company OpenAI called the Stargate Project, which would spend up to $500 billion on data center build-outs in the next four years. Tech executives announced the initiative’s details alongside Trump during the unveiling at a White House event.

Days later, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he planned to spend $65 billion on data center build-outs in 2025 alone, including one project “so large it would cover a significant portion of Manhattan.” These announcements followed a similar one from Microsoft in January: a pledge to spend $80 billion on data centers this calendar year.

As the world’s largest tech companies raced to outdo each other, a wave of delayed coal plant retirements followed.

On January 31, Southern Company, a utility serving over 9 million customers across 15 states, announced plans to delay the retirement of generators at two of the largest coal plants in the U.S., both in Georgia. The massive, coal-fired units — two at the Bowen Steam Plant outside Euharlee, and one at the Robert W. Scherer Power Plant in Juliette — had been scheduled to go offline between 2028 and 2035. Under its revised plan, the company pushed retirement back to as late as January 1, 2039(though both plants would be 40 percent co-fired with natural gas by 2030 in that scenario).

In legal documents and public statements, company spokespeople point to data centers as a key rationale for the delays. Last month, at an industry conference in Las Vegas, Southern Company CEO Chris Womack cited data center growth as a key factor keeping fossil energy online, according to the trade publication Data Center Dynamics.

“We’re going to extend coal plants as long as we can because we need those resources on the grid,” he reportedly said.

Next door in Mississippi, Southern Company also delayed the closure of a 500 MW generator at the Victor J. Daniel coal plant in Jackson County. It pushed the retirement back from 2028 until “the mid 2030s.” In documents filed with Mississippi’s Public Service Commission, the state’s utility regulator, Southern appeared to cite a 500 MW Compass Datacenters project as a reason for the change. Southern has pledged to be net-zero by 2050.

As the months passed, the same dynamic unfolded in other states. Alarmed, Good, the Frontier Group analyst, started to track the delays. By October, he published an update to Frontier’s report that found data centers had pushed back at least 12 coal plant closures in the past few years.

“The data center boom has shown no signs of abating,” he wrote. “Even more fossil fuel plants that had been scheduled to retire have been given a new lease on life.”

In its own analysis, DeSmog found that at least 15 coal plant retirements have been delayed since January 2025 alone. Together, those plants emitted nearly 1.5 percent of America’s total energy-related carbon dioxide emissions from 2024.

This comes at a time when the world’s nations need to cut their climate emissions roughly in half to avoid the worst impacts of global heating, according to a recent United Nations report.

But not all the delays can be attributed directly to data center growth. Some have stayed open for a different reason: top-down orders from the Trump administration.

The Department of Energy Steps in 

The J.H. Campbell Generating Plant, a 1.5 gigawatt coal plant in Ottawa County, Michigan, was scheduled to close May 31. The plant even held public tours to give a rare, behind-the-scenes look at aging fossil infrastructure, before it shut its doors for good.

“Now we know cleaner, renewable ways to generate electricity,” a Campbell employee told members of the public on a September 2024 tour.

But just eight days before scheduled to shutter, Department of Energy Secretary Chris Wright ordered Campbell to stay open another 90 days, citing an “emergency” shortage of energy in the Midwest.

Keeping the plant open cost its owner, Consumers Energy, almost $30 million in just five weeks, the company said. Though the plant’s closure was projected to save ratepayers more than $650 million by 2050, Campbell was costing more than $615,000 a day as of September. Yet Wright has since extended his order twice. Campbell now is scheduled to stay open until at least February 2026.

“The costs to operate the Campbell plant will be shared by customers across the Midwest electric grid region,” including customers serviced by other utilities, Matt Johnson, a Consumers Energy spokesperson told DeSmog by email.

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is challenging DOE’s order to keep Campbell open, calling the orders “arbitrary.”

“DOE is using outdated information to fabricate an emergency, despite the fact that the truth is publicly available for everyone to see,” Nessel said in a November 20 press release. “DOE must end its unlawful tactics to keep this coal plant running when it has already cost millions upon millions of dollars.”

Meanwhile, DOE is telling a very different story.

“Beautiful, clean coal will be essential to powering America’s reindustrialization and winning the AI race,” Wright said in September, as the Department of Energy announced $350 million in funding for coal plant upgrades, along with other incentives.

Energy Innovation’s Solomon called the funding “a waste of taxpayer dollars.”

“We’ve been calling it a ‘cash for clunkers’ program where you don’t trade in the clunker,” she said. “Trying to build a modern electricity system using the most expensive and least reliable source of power is really not the answer.”

However, the Trump administration said in September that it plans to feed the AI boom — with an estimated 100 gigawatts of capacity in the next five years — by keeping more old coal plants open. “I would say the majority of that coal capacity will stay online,” Wright said.

Executives from Colorado’s Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association confirmed to DeSmog that they also expect an order to keep a 421 MW coal-fired generator at Craig Station open past its December 2025 decommissioning date.

In late October, Colorado Congressman Jeff Hurd sent a letter to the Trump administration, urging it to extend the life of a 400 MW coal generator at the Comanche Power Station near Pueblo as the owner, Xcel Energy, works to repair the plant’s chronically troubled main reactor. The smaller unit was slated to go offline in December — but, in its case, the administration never needed to act. Last month, Xcel, with the help of Colorado Governor Jared Polis, began to lobby to keep it open at least another 12 months. The state utility regulator appears to have granted that request, according to an agreement with Xcel and other stakeholders.

This delay wasn’t just due to data centers, though their numbers are growing in Colorado. Xcel spokesperson Michelle Aguayo said the delay was “due to a convergence of issues,” including rising electricity demand, “supply chain challenges,” and the continued outage at the main generator. “We continue to make significant progress towards our emission reduction goals approved by the state which would require us to retire our coal units by 2030,” she said.

Delaying the Inevitable

Whether the data center boom will play out as projected is still a matter of speculation.

Last month, power consulting firm Grid Strategies reported that utilities may be overestimating electricity demand from data centers by as much as 40 percent. That’s due in part to the many hypothetical projects, and a widespread practice of double- and triple-counting. Tech companies tend to pitch utilities in multiple regions as they shop around for incentives, creating the appearance of demand from many more data hubs than actually will be built.

Experts have a name for this growing phenomenon: “phantom data centers.”

At the same time, a growing chorus of critics are warning of an AI bubble, arguing that runaway costs can’t justify the kinds of investment being floated. Even the head of Google’s parent company has acknowledged the “irrationality” of the boom.

Critics also say contradictory actions taken by the Trump administration — citing an “energy emergency” while canceling billions in funding for renewable projects — are making the problem worse.

Yet even with all the unknowns, one thing’s certain: Coal’s role in America’s power push can be extended, but it can’t last forever.

Seth Feaster, an IEEFA analyst, says even AI hasn’t changed the big picture: Eventually, coal will die, and it will be killed by other, cheaper forms of energy.

He called the current phenomenon a “period of pause and delay.” In his view, the technological and economic rationales for quitting coal remain undeniable.

“The policy changes here may have a delaying effect on the decline of coal, but they are certainly not changing the direction of coal’s future,” he told DeSmog.

The questions for now are, how long the delays will continue — and at what cost.