Trump this week suggested coal can help meet surging electricity demand from manufacturing and the massive data centres needed for artificial intelligence.
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«Nothing can destroy coal. Not the weather, not a bomb — nothing,» Trump told the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, by video link Thursday. «And we have more coal than anybody.»
Yet energy experts say any bump for coal under Trump is likely to be temporary since natural gas is cheaper and there's a durable market for renewable energy no matter who holds the White House.
«It's kind of been shown over the last three administrations even the president of the United States can't change markets, the trend for coal,» said University of Wyoming economics professor Rob Godby. «It might lead to a reprieve.»
Here's a look at the outlook for coal during Trump's second term:
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