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Home / Environment / Coal Cleanup Funds Shifted for Wildfires

Coal Cleanup Funds Shifted for Wildfires

22 Jan

•

Summary

  • Half a billion dollars for mine cleanup redirected to fire management.
  • Abandoned mines cause ongoing pollution and safety hazards.
  • Funding shift threatens environmental and economic recovery for communities.
Coal Cleanup Funds Shifted for Wildfires

Environmental and safety cleanup efforts in communities impacted by the coal industry face potential delays. In early January 2026, the House of Representatives passed a bill that would repurpose $500 million. This funding was initially earmarked for remediating hazards from a century of coal mining under the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

The redirected funds are now intended for wildland fire management, a move that has drawn criticism. States with numerous abandoned coal mines, such as Pennsylvania, are particularly vulnerable. These sites continue to pose risks including underground fires, sinkholes, and severe water contamination.

Advocacy groups are urging the Senate to block this funding shift. They warn that less money means less reclamation, which could prolong economic decline and environmental damage in areas already struggling from the downturn of the coal industry. The redirection threatens progress on addressing acid mine drainage and restoring ecosystems.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Pennsylvania has the most abandoned coal mines, leading to underground fires, sinkholes, and contamination of over 5,500 miles of waterways.
A House-passed appropriations bill proposes redirecting $500 million, originally for mine reclamation, to fund wildland fire management.
Abandoned mines release acid mine drainage, heavy metals, and methane, polluting water and soil, harming wildlife, and rendering rivers unusable.

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