MICHAEL BIESECKER
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — In a clear message about its policy priorities, the Trump administration has updated the home page for the federal agency that oversees public lands to showcase a large photo of an open-pit coal mine in Wyoming.
The photo was stripped across the Bureau of Land Management site after Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke announced approval Wednesday of a $22 million lease of more than 6,000 acres in Utah to a coal-mining company. In the past, the web page has more typically featured photos of fields of wildflowers, green forests and snow-capped mountains.
The coal mining photo replaced the image of a man and young boy with camping gear watching a scenic sunset.
The change came after President Donald Trump last month lifted a freeze imposed in the waning days of the Obama administration on leases of public lands for coal mining. Trump, who has pledged to revive the struggling U.S. coal industry, also issued an executive order rolling back federal regulations on planet-warming carbon emissions.
The Interior Department did not respond to a request for comment Thursday, but in a statement with the announcement of the coal lease Zinke described the bureau as being "in the energy business."
The bureau manages more than 245 million acres of public land in a dozen Western states. Much of that acreage has for decades been leased for mining and drilling, but the use of public lands for coal mining has come under increasing scrutiny due to climate change.
Coal is the dirtiest of fossil fuels, accounting for more than three-quarters of carbon emissions from U.S. power plants despite generating less than 40 percent of the nation's electricity. Several of the country's largest coal companies have recently sought bankruptcy protection as utilities have switched to cheaper, cleaner-burning natural gas.
The land bureau's photo swap garnered significant attention on social media Thursday, especially among environmentalists.
"What more evidence do you need that the Trump administration wants to pave paradise to put up a coal mine?" said Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club. "They are literally trading a photo of families enjoying our most cherished landscapes for a pile of coal. This is one of the most obvious signs yet that they are putting the profits of corporate polluters before the public."
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Follow Associated Press environmental reporter Michael Biesecker at www.Twitter.com/mbieseck."