(AP) — As more coal companies file for bankruptcy, it's increasingly likely that taxpayers will be stuck with the very high costs of preventing abandoned mines from becoming environmental disasters.
"It's sort of a situation where nobody, really, is going to end up looking
good," said James Stevenson, director of North American coal for analyst firm IHS. "The states have I think a significant risk — the federal government does as well."
This reclamation crisis looms because of a practice called self-bonding,
which allows coal companies to promise to eventually cover the cost of cleaning up abandoned mines without first setting aside the necessary money.
Because of self-bonding, billions of dollars in legally required reclamation
funding exist only as IOUs, without dedicated assets or bonds backed by third-party investors.
Nationwide, self-bonding in the coal-mining industry tops $3.3 billion. That
includes $2.3 billion in IOUs that the three biggest bankrupt coal companies — Alpha Natural Resources, Arch Coal and Peabody — owe in five states, according to an Associated Press analysis of bonding obligations in the top 16 coal-mining states.
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