Volume 1219, Issue 1 p. 73-98

Full cost accounting for the life cycle of coal

Paul R. Epstein

Center for Health and the Global Environment, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

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Jonathan J. Buonocore

Environmental Science and Risk Management Program, Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts

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Kevin Eckerle

Accenture, Sustainability Services, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

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Michael Hendryx

Department of Community Medicine, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia

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Benjamin M. Stout III

Wheeling Jesuit University, Wheeling, West Virginia

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Richard Heinberg

Post Carbon Institute, Santa Rosa, California

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Richard W. Clapp

Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts

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Beverly May

Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, London, Kentucky

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Nancy L. Reinhart

Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, London, Kentucky

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Melissa M. Ahern

Department of Pharmacotherapy, Washington State University, Spokane, Washington

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Samir K. Doshi

Gund Institute for Ecological Economics, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont

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Leslie Glustrom

Clean Energy Action, Boulder, Colorado

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First published: 17 February 2011
Citations: 162
Address for correspondence: Paul R. Epstein, M.D., M.P.H., Center for Health and the Global Environment, Harvard Medical School, Landmark Center, 401 Park Drive, Second Floor, Boston, Massachusetts 02215. paul_epstein@hms.harvard.edu

Preferred citation: Paul R. Epstein, Jonathan J. Buonocore, Kevin Eckerle, Michael Hendryx, Benjamin M. Stout III, Richard Heinberg, Richard W. Clapp, Beverly May, Nancy L. Reinhart, Melissa M. Ahern, Samir K. Doshi, and Leslie Glustrom. 2011. Full cost accounting for the life cycle of coal in “Ecological Economics Reviews.” Robert Costanza, Karin Limburg & Ida Kubiszewski, Eds. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1219: 73–98.

Abstract

Each stage in the life cycle of coal—extraction, transport, processing, and combustion—generates a waste stream and carries multiple hazards for health and the environment. These costs are external to the coal industry and are thus often considered “externalities.” We estimate that the life cycle effects of coal and the waste stream generated are costing the U.S. public a third to over one‐half of a trillion dollars annually. Many of these so‐called externalities are, moreover, cumulative. Accounting for the damages conservatively doubles to triples the price of electricity from coal per kWh generated, making wind, solar, and other forms of nonfossil fuel power generation, along with investments in efficiency and electricity conservation methods, economically competitive. We focus on Appalachia, though coal is mined in other regions of the United States and is burned throughout the world.