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March 16, 2026 - Terra Energy Center is pouring $1 billion into a deal for a planned coal project in Alaska, marking the first investment in new US coal power in more than a decade.
The in-principal agreement with Hyundai Heavy Industries Power Systems for an order of power-plant boilers was described in a US Interior Department fact sheet Monday. The transaction is one of several that advanced during talks at the Indo-Pacific Energy Security Ministerial and Business Forum in Tokyo this weekend.
Terra Energy Center’s plan represents a striking reversal for the US coal industry. Coal once supplied more than half of the nation’s electricity, but that figure has been steadily declining and now stands at about 16%. The shift came as utilities turned to cheaper and cleaner power sources, including natural gas and renewables, in an effort to rein in climate change.
But US President Donald Trump has been pushing for the country to burn more coal, especially with electricity demand set to surge as power-hungry data centers run artificial intelligence. The move is part of Trump’s expansive plan to reshape the US energy landscape, promoting fossil fuels over intermittent renewables.
While Trump’s efforts to revive coal in his first term had little impact, he’s having more success since returning to the White House last year. The US Energy Department has also ordered five coal plants that were set to retire to remain in service, and has indicated that it may issue similar orders to other sites that are preparing to shut down.
The last major coal plant completed in the US was Sandy Creek, a 932-megawatt facility in Texas that went into service in 2013. Terra Power is planning a 1.25-gigawatt power plant, and Koreit, a South Korean private equity company, has agreed to make a $500 million equity investment, according to the fact sheet.
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