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Trump administration extends order keeping Michigan coal online past closure date

The Department of Energy's directive to keep the J.H. Campbell coal plant operating adds $80 million in costs and increases pollution despite state and grid operator opposition.

  • On Tuesday the DOE directed the J.H. Campbell coal‑fired power plant in Michigan to stay open for 90 days under Section 202, marking the third emergency directive this year.
  • Consumers Energy had planned to close the plant on May 31, but Michigan utility regulators and the Midcontinent Independent System Operator found its retirement would not threaten reliability for about 45 million people in 15 states.
  • The utility reported $80 million in extra costs through September, more than $615,000 per day, while EPA data shows the Campbell plant, opened in 1962, can generate up to 1,450 megawatts for 1 million people.
  • States and environmental advocates have gone to court to challenge the DOE's stay-open orders, while Consumers Energy acknowledged Wednesday it will continue operating Campbell despite Michigan Public Service Commission criticism and MISO's no winter reliability concern.
  • Recently the DOE released $625 million for coal infrastructure while Grid Strategies found broad DOE authority use could add nearly $22 billion in costs and cancelled clean projects total $22 billion.
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U.S. News broke the news in New York, United States on Wednesday, November 19, 2025.
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