In the colder parts of the United States, most homes rely on natural gas and other fossil fuels for their heating.
The low temperatures experienced in early 2025 saw consumption of these fuels increase by nearly 7% compared with the previous year.
Extra electric power was also needed by the boom in data centres and cryptocurrency mining operations in places like Texas and the Ohio Valley region.
The rising demand for power combined with the higher cost of gas meant that coal use surged, rising by 13%.
"The grid decided to meet that additional load this year, in part with renewables, in part with fossil but because of higher natural gas prices, there was some fuel switching that saw marginally more coal than there was in 2024," said Michael Gaffney, from Rhodium Group, the report's lead author.
Other observers see the high price of gas in the US as closely related to continuing large exports of gas to the rest of the world.
"Higher natural gas prices means that finally, coal, which had been kind of driven to extinction by low natural gas prices, well [gas is] now so expensive that coal's worthwhile again," said Jesse Lee, from Climate Power, a US-based environmental campaign group.
"And that's what is allowing coal to make this comeback."
Since 2007 coal power generation in the US has shrunk by 64%, with last year's rise only the second in the last decade.
Last year also saw a slowdown in the rate of coal plant retirements, as electricity companies delayed closures to meet demands.
So is 2025 the start of the revival of coal?
"It's more than just a blip," said Michael Gaffney.
"This is a response to the demand growth in the sector, a lot of it is coming from data centres, cryptocurrency operations, other large load customers, and that demand growth is here to stay."