The Department of the Interior (DOI) has allocated $140 million to tackle dangerous and polluting abandoned mine lands (AML) in West Virginia. The money comes from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) and builds upon grants of the same amount from FY 2023.
AMLs pose risks of water pollution, land degradation and health hazards due to historic coal mining. Addressing AMLs requires strategies for water treatment, land reclamation and community redevelopment to mitigate environmental and social impacts while promoting sustainable land use.
“There are thousands of miles of streams throughout Appalachia that are polluted and lifeless due to acid runoff from former mines,” Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Dr. Steve Feldgus said in a statement.
The BIL allocates $11.3 billion in AML funding over 15 years. This funding supplements annual AML grants from active coal sites, both of which are facilitated by the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE). OSMRE’s AML reclamation program has provided $8 billion since it was enacted almost 50 years ago.
One project is partly funded by AML grants to West Virginia is the Richard Mine acid mine drainage treatment plant, which extracts rare earth elements from acid mine drainage of the defunct Richard Mine. It then releases treated, clean water into Deckers Creek.
There is almost $540 million in AML grants being distributed in other states, and the program is still accepting applications on a rolling basis, prioritizing projects that employ dislocated coal industry workers. AML funding is expected to address all recorded AML sites in the next 15 years.
Photo courtesy of the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
The post DOI announces $140 million for abandoned mine land grants appeared first on Government Market News.