June 20, 2009
Coal's costs outweigh benefits, WVU study finds
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Coal mining costs Appalachians five times more in early deaths as the industry provides to the region in jobs, taxes and other economic benefits, according to a groundbreaking new study co-authored by a West Virginia University researcher.

In the latest in a series of papers, WVU researcher Michael Hendryx questions the idea that coal is good for West Virginia and other Appalachian communities, and recommends that political leaders consider other alternatives for improving the region's economy and quality of life.

"Coal-mining economies are not strong economies," Hendryx said in an interview last week. "[Coalfield communities] are weaker than the rest of the state, weaker than the rest of the region, and weaker than the rest of the nation."

Writing with co-author Melissa Ahern of Washington State University, Hendryx reports that the coal industry generates a little more than $8 billion a year in economic benefits for the Appalachian region.

But, Hendryx and Ahern put the value of premature deaths attributable to the mining industry across the Appalachian coalfields at -- by one of their most conservative estimates -- $42 billion.

"The human cost of the Appalachian coal mining economy outweighs its economic benefits," they wrote.

Their new paper, "Mortality in Appalachian Coal Mining Regions: The Value of Statistical Life Lost," appears in the July-August issue of Public Health Reports. That is the official, peer-reviewed journal of the U.S. Public Health Service, a part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The journal is online at www.publichealthreports.org, but articles are available only by subscription.

"The reliance on coal mining in some areas of Appalachia constitutes a de facto economic policy: coal is mined because it is present and because there is a market for it," the study concluded. "However, other economic policies could be developed if reliance on this resource was not in the best interest of the local population."

Hendryx is the research director at WVU's Institute for Health Policy Research and is an associate professor in the university's Department of Community Medicine.

Over the last two years, Hendryx has published at least four other papers that attempted to quantify coal's impact on public health across West Virginia and in the broader Appalachian region.

Previous papers, also published in peer-reviewed journals, found that residents of coal-producing counties are more likely to suffer from chronic heart, lung and kidney diseases and more likely to be hospitalized for certain health problems that are connected to coal pollution. Hendryx has also reported that coal county residents are more likely to contract lung cancer and generally suffer from excess numbers of premature deaths. In each of his studies, Hendryx has tried to weed out other possible factors -- such as smoking and diet -- to pinpoint coal's possible role in these public health problems.

The newest study concedes that this work still has some limitations.

"Despite the significant associations between coal-mining activity and both socio-economic disadvantage and premature mortality, it cannot be stated with certainty that coal-mining causes these problems," the new study says.

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Posted By: ejackson (10:59pm 03-31-2010)
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Over the last 25+ years I have been doing business across the globe. Most of my business has been it what I would call "extractive" industries--fisheries, mining, agriculture. The common elements are very similar; abundant local resources, lack of infrastructure/conversion technologies, and an elite minority controlling the wealth that results from extraction and marketing. Whether it is a country, state, or region--the symptoms are the same. The workers do not share in the wealth upside and the investors do not share in the health downside. The "fix is in", and the locals get left to deal with the consequences. The real dilemma remains--how do the people who happen to live in an area of immense resource benefit from that happy coincidence without carrying the water for the real beneficiaries?

Posted By: One Citizen (4:45pm 06-30-2009)
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Publicly funded campaign would make a huge difference in WV. http://www.publicampaign.org/

Posted By: FYI25203 (11:25am 06-24-2009)
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If coal is so good for West Virginia, then why do the counties with the most coal mining history have the lowest amounts of public water systems, of sanitary sewer systems, and other infrastructures, the poorest performing schools, and the lowest standards of living in this state?

Because WV Democrats on the local, state and federal level have sold out their constituents for 80 years.

Posted By: Frank (9:21am 06-24-2009)
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If coal is so good for West Virginia, then why do the counties with the most coal mining history have the lowest amounts of public water systems, of sanitary sewer systems, and other infrastructures, the poorest performing schools, and the lowest standards of living in this state?

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