Trump Admin Offers Up Coal Mining Leases Next to Utah's Famed National Parks
October 9, 2025 - Environmental groups are knocking the Trump administration’s decision to open thousands of acres for coal mining that are a stone’s throw away from beloved public lands like Zion, Bryce Canyon and Capitol Reef national parks.
The lease announcements came last week, and follow the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act this summer, along with President Donald Trump’s "Reinvigorating America’s Beautiful Clean Coal Industry" executive order issued in April.
Investing in the nation’s coal industry will help meet the nation’s insatiable energy demand and bring blue-collar jobs back to rural communities, federal officials said.
“Washington doesn’t build prosperity,” Interior Secretary Doug Burgum wrote in a news release last week, “American workers and entrepreneurs do, and we’re giving them the tools to succeed.”
Environmental advocates, however, say investing in coal is going the way of the dinosaur.
“These attempts to hand over our public lands and wild spaces to corporate polluters are tone deaf to the voice of the people,” said Franque Bains, director of Utah Sierra Club, in an emailed statement Tuesday.
The 48,000 acres of Utah leases on the auctioning block include:
- Multiple parcels immediately east and north of Zion National Park, including some that overlay the North Fork access road to Zion Narrows;
- A parcel bordering the western boundary of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument and directly south of Bryce Canyon National Park;
- Multiple parcels east of Capitol Reef National Park, including a parcel that directly borders the park near its east entrance.
“Our current government is lovesick for King Coal, and this is the ill-conceived result,” said Aaron Paul, an attorney with the Grand Canyon Trust. “Americans don’t want to visit Utah’s majestic national parks and monuments for a sweeping view of a coal mine.”
The leases contain lands the U.S. Bureau of Land Management previously deemed unsuitable for coal mining in resource management plans.
They also offer up about 30,700 acres that advocacy groups like Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance identified as eligible for wilderness designations.
Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, more than 13 million acres will be open for coal mining auctions across the West.
Burning coal creates air pollution and haze. It releases toxic mercury that ends up in waterways and works its way up the food chain.
The Trump administration posted the largest coal lease in nearly a decade last month, on public lands in southeast Montana. Only one company placed a bid, proffering fractions of a penny per ton.
Federal coal lease sales have averaged $0.35 per ton in Utah since 2006, according to available BLM data.