Why We Need Coal Reform
The need for federal coal leasing reform is well documented. Current flaws in the leasing program include:
- Effective royalty rates far below market value.
- Billions of dollars in lost royalty payments due to corporate self-dealing and subsidy manipulation.
- A lack of competitive bidding and Insufficient reclamation bonding that increasingly leaves cleanup costs to taxpayers.
- A failure to account for environmental impacts, including climate consequences.
Over the last 45 years, the federal coal program has undergone two federal coal-leasing pauses: one from 1973-1981 and one from 1984-1989. These were done because of significant findings of wrongdoing and mismanagement. In order to correct these issues, the federal government determined that a pause had to be instituted until reforms could be implemented and coal leases carried out in a environmentally responsible manner with a fair return to taxpayer assured.
Our Suggestions for Reform
The federal government should reform its leasing program to better determine:
- When, where and how leasing occurs.
- How to account the environmental and public health impacts.
- Policies to ensure that the American people are fairly compensated for the sale of their public resources.