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Library Costs of abandoned coal mine reclamation and associated recreation benefits in Ohio

Costs of abandoned coal mine reclamation and associated recreation benefits in Ohio

Costs of abandoned coal mine reclamation and associated recreation benefits in Ohio

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2012
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201400175654
Pages
52-58

Two hundred years of coal mining in Ohio have degraded land and water resources, imposing social costs on its citizens. An interdisciplinary approach employing hydrology, geographic information systems, and a recreation visitation function model, is used to estimate the damages from upstream coal mining to lakes in Ohio. The estimated recreational damages to five of the coal-mining-impacted lakes, using dissolved sulfate as coal-mining-impact indicator, amount to $21 Million per year. Post-reclamation recreational benefits from reducing sulfate concentrations by 6.5% and 15% in the five impacted lakes were estimated to range from $1.89 to $4.92 Million per year, with a net present value ranging from $14.56 Million to $37.79 Million. A benefit costs analysis (BCA) of recreational benefits and coal mine reclamation costs provides some evidence for potential Pareto improvement by investing limited resources in reclamation projects.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Mishra, Shruti K.
Hitzhusen, Frederick J.
Sohngen, Brent L.
Guldmann, Jean-Michel

Publisher(s)
Data Provider