1 February 2012
A study of coal’s effects on Kentucky’s budget in 2006 found that it contributed $528m in revenue, but its on-budget costs—training, support, repairs to the roads, R&D for the coal industry—totalled $643m. A study in West Virginia in 2009 also found the coal industry a net cost to the state.
Filed under [Coal] [Energy] [Costs] [Incentives] [Subsidy] [America] [Economist]