china s tariffs impact us coal

While U.S. coal producers were busy digging black gold from the earth, China quietly prepared its economic weapon. February 10, 2025 arrived with a nasty surprise – a 15% tariff slapped onto American coal imports. Just the beginning of Beijing’s retaliatory measures against U.S. trade actions.

The numbers don’t lie. U.S. coal exports plummeted 11% in the first half of 2025 compared to 2024. China? Responsible for a whopping 73% of that decline. Talk about a targeted attack.

Cold, hard facts: China engineered 73% of America’s coal export collapse with laser-targeted economic warfare.

Steam coal exports dropped 10%. Metallurgical coal fell 13%. Both casualties in this economic showdown. China represented three-quarters of the metallurgical coal export decline and 68% of steam coal losses. American miners kept digging, but fewer ships sailed for Chinese ports.

Things only got worse. April brought a 34% reciprocal tariff on all U.S. goods. Then China cranked it up to 84% on certain items – including coal – by April 10. Ouch. They didn’t stop there. After Trump escalated tensions with his 84% tariff on April 9, China pushed duties to a crushing 125% by April 12, devastating U.S. exporters. Export controls on critical minerals followed, plus restrictions on U.S. companies through their Unreliable Entity List. Beijing played hardball.

The impact hit home fast. CSX and Norfolk Southern reported declining coal tonnage. By August, 500 coal workers in southern West Virginia lost their jobs. Coal lease sales in Montana, Wyoming, and Utah? Crickets. No acceptable bids.

The only silver lining? Domestic coal consumption ticked up thanks to pricier natural gas and higher electricity demand.

Global markets didn’t help either. Coal prices fell worldwide due to soft demand and plenty of supply. U.S. producers faced stiffer competition from other exporters. The math was simple – fewer exports, less revenue, fewer jobs. The EIA reported that total U.S. coal exports dropped 14% in the first nine months of 2025.

China knew exactly what it was doing. Three-quarters of America’s overseas coal demand vanished. An industry already struggling now faced another blow. The message from Beijing couldn’t be clearer: mess with our trade, we’ll hit where it hurts. And in coal country, it hurt bad.

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