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US to lease more land near Skyline coal mine

  • Market: Coal, Electricity
  • 07/08/25

The US Interior Department is planning on leasing out more acreage near Wolverine Fuel's Skyline coal mine in Utah.

Interior's Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on 6 August published a final environmental impact statement analyzing Wolverine subsidiary Canyon Fuel's application to lease the Little Eccles area near the Skyline, mine as well as a modification for the mine's Flat Canyon lease. BLM plans to seek comments from the public on the fair market value and the maximum economic recovery of coal contained in the leases and expects to issue a record of decision later this month, according to the agency's National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) register.

The Little Eccles lease tract covers 120 acres containing an estimated 858,000 short tons (778,365 metric tonnes) of recoverable coal, according to BLM. The BLM would also authorize the applicant's requested non-competitive lease modification to add 660 acres and an estimated 2.1mn st of recoverable coal to the Flat Canyon lease tract.

The Skyline mine produced 1.46mn st of coal in the first half of this year, data from the US Mine Safety and Health Administration show. That was a 20pc increase from the same period of 2024.

The environmental impact statement is the first expedited coal leasing action under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that was signed into law by President Donald Trump in July.

"President Trump made it clear that we will not tie up American energy in red tape," said interior acting assistant secretary for lands and minerals management Adam Suess.

The finalized environmental impact statement also fulfills obligations from a 2023 legal settlement between the agency and environmental groups WildEarth Guardians and the Grand Canyon Trust over BLM's previous approval of a previous lease for the Flat Canyon tract.

In the lawsuit, filed in 2015, the groups argued that when issuing a lease to expand the Skyline mine in the Manti-La Sal National Forest, BLM relied on outdated analyses that failed to account for climate impacts, which violated NEPA.


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