Trump administration proposes gutting rules targeting coal plant ash
that threatens groundwater
[April 10, 2026]
By MICHAEL PHILLIS and ALEXA ST. JOHN
The Trump administration on Thursday proposed weakening rules for the
disposal of ash produced by burning coal that can contain hazardous
heavy metals and contaminate groundwater. Those regulations were
strengthened under the Biden administration as part of a wider crackdown
on pollution from coal-fired power plants.
The Trump administration proposed easing standards for monitoring and
protecting groundwater near some coal ash sites, and rolling back rules
that require the cleanup of entire coal properties rather than just the
sites where ash was dumped. The revisions would also make it easier to
reuse coal ash for other purposes.
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said the proposal reflects the agency's
"commitment to restoring American energy dominance, strengthening
cooperative federalism, and accommodating unique circumstances at
certain (coal) facilities.”
Burning coal produces tremendous amounts of ash, a waste product that
contains heavy metals such as mercury, lead and cobalt. If not stored
properly, coal ash can contaminate groundwater. Coal plants are often
situated on the banks of rivers or other waterways, with waste ash
sitting nearby.

Opponents say the proposal, which grants states and other regulators the
ability to grant exemptions from national standards, may open the door
for companies to leave coal ash sitting in groundwater.
The Biden-era EPA in 2022, for example, rebuffed the Gen. James Gavin
Power Plant in southern Ohio for trying to close a coal ash disposal
site that the agency said was in contact with groundwater. In January
2025, with Trump back in the White House, coal industry entities asked
Zeldin to revise the agency's stance on the issue.
“Opening the door to leaving ash in groundwater undermines one of the
central protections of this rule, and that's essentially what this
does,” said Nick Torrey, an attorney with the Southern Environmental Law
Center, a nonprofit.
The agency’s proposal does state that an owner would be required to
ensure that the ash “poses no reasonable probability of adverse effects
on human health and the environment.”
The Biden-era coal ash protections also required the cleanup of places
like the Michigan City Generating Station in Indiana, by Lake Michigan.
Local activists are worried about the land created at the site, which is
composed in part of coal ash. The 2024 rules set deadlines for cleanup.
At Michigan City and many other sites, standards to clean up the coal
ash used to make land would be eliminated under the agency's proposal.
The proposed rule also seeks to lift restrictions on the use of coal ash
— called “beneficial use” by the EPA — in secondary materials such as
cement and as structural fill.
The agency also said that industry and others have said the health risks
from coal ash were overstated in previous EPA assessments. Federal
officials said the estimated cost savings were more than enough to
justify the proposed changes.
The owners of Gavin Power Plant declined to comment. The owners of
Michigan City Generating Station did not immediately comment.
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 The Utility Solid Waste Activities
Group “appreciates EPA’s efforts to address the significant
challenges our members are facing in implementing” the existing
regulations, John Mavretich, executive director of the industry
association, said in a statement.
He added the group “supports changes that move away
from the existing ‘one-size-fits-all’ framework and incorporate
site-specific flexibility, an approach that is common in other
environmental programs.”
The genesis of these rules and current context
The EPA first set standards for coal ash during the Obama
administration. They included requirements for companies to line new
storage sites, monitor water and close leaky ponds, often requiring
the material to be moved elsewhere. In 2024, then-President Joe
Biden’s administration eliminated exemptions that had been granted
to some older coal ash sites.
The move is the latest in a series of Trump administration efforts
to weaken clean air and water standards as part of regulatory relief
for the fossil fuel industry. It's also in line with Republican
President Donald Trump's efforts to boost U.S. coal and suppress
cleaner alternatives, all the while declaring a “national energy
emergency.”
The coal industry has argued that a host of stringent rules that
raise the cost of operating a coal plant prematurely push them into
retirement.
A coalition of coal and energy associations wrote last year: “EPA's
recent unprecedented expansion of the federal (coal ash) regulations
has needlessly diverted funds from the power sector's efforts to
meet the Nation's growing energy needs; increased costs for power
companies and consumers without corresponding benefits to public
health or the environment."
Disasters first prompted the EPA to regulate coal ash. The agency
started looking into the problem after a dike failed in Tennessee in
2008, spreading coal ash over 300 acres or 120 hectares and forcing
a massive cleanup. Workers involved in that effort said the ash
exposure caused cancers. In 2014, tens of thousands of tons spilled
in North Carolina.

“The Trump administration just took a sledgehammer to the health
protections in place for toxic coal pollution," said Lisa Evans,
senior counsel at environmental group Earthjustice. "This is yet
another handout to the coal power industry at the expense of our
health, water, and wallets."
In other moves, the EPA earlier this year weakened limits on mercury
and other toxic emissions from coal-fired power plants. The Trump
administration has also halted the planned shutdown of several coal
plants, citing the need for consistent power during major storms or
periods of high demand, and arguing that without it, the grid would
be less reliable.
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