Nature-Based Solutions Needed to Combat Appalachia’s Growing Flood Risks

This blog is part of a series detailing the flood resilience policy roadmap for Appalachia, released by ReImagine Appalachia, Appalachian Citizens’ Law Center and the National Wildlife Federation. Read parts one, two, and three.

Boone County was once West Virginia’s premier coal producing county. Coal extraction in Boone increased from six million tons in 1950 to more than 32 million tons in 2000. But in 2003, devastation hit: Flood waters rushed down a mountaintop removal site, trapping a family in their home when their private bridge washed away. State officials blamed logging for the sudden rush of water, while federal regulators blamed the mine’s redesigned waste site that increased risks for minor flooding. It’s just one example of the impacts of natural resource extraction. 

Conventional Land Reclamation isn’t Enough

Extensive logging and mining has left visible scars throughout Appalachia, but those scars have never fully healed. Patterns of development in the region—with many residents living alongside rivers and streams—combined with this history of extraction, and increasing climate impacts, make Appalachia uniquely vulnerable to flooding. 

A great crested flycatcher visits a tree in West Virginia’s Monongahela National Forest. Parts of the forest were previously mine lands, and have been restored. Credit: Alicia Pimental/Chesapeake Bay Program

Companies are required to reclaim surface and underground coal mine sites permitted before 1977. But conventional reclamation has repeatedly shown to be ineffective at returning mine lands to their original ecologic and hydrologic functionality. Reclaimed soils are thinner, reducing the ability of the land to absorb and store water. Instead of native vegetation, mining companies often plant hardy conifers or grassland plants. Modeling suggests that reclamation can result in an almost “impervious” surface similar to a city.

Heavy logging, too, can play a role in Appalachia’s flood risk. Tree roots and a tree’s ability to soak up water from the soil help stabilize steep slopes in mountainous regions like Appalachia. Yet throughout Appalachia, few states currently have Best Management Practices in place for logging to help reduce landslides.

A Cheat Mountain salamander. This species is endemic to West Virginia, and an example of the kind of unique wildlife that can benefit from ecologically appropriate mine reclamation. Credit: Kerry Wixted

Investments in nature-based solutions are needed to restore and protect Appalachia’s landscape—and to better protect Appalachian communities and build long-term climate resilience. Earlier this year, NWF, the Appalachian Citizens’ Law Center, and ReImagine Appalachia released a flood resilience policy roadmap for Appalachia. The platform highlights the unique flooding challenges the entire region faces, and details four sets of policy recommendations to improve flood resilience and recovery for Appalachia.

Recommendations related to nature-based hazard mitigation include: 

  • Invest in the Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative (ARRI), a cooperative effort between the public and private sector to facilitate ecologically appropriate mineland reclamation. Despite a record of success—ARRI has reclaimed over 60,000 acres of mine lands and planted more than 20 million trees—the initiative has never had dedicated federal funding. 
  • Increase funding for popular, oversubscribed conservation programs at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, such as the Conservation Stewardship Program. Agricultural practices play an important role in flood resilience efforts: Nearly 30 percent of land in Appalachia is devoted to agriculture, largely small-scale family farms. Supporting climate-smart agriculture not only helps farmers and wildlife, it can protect water quality and reduce the severity of floods.
  • Incentivize nature-based hazard mitigation projects, including by requiring states to consider nature-based solutions as potential mitigation techniques in state hazard mitigation plans, and setting aside a portion of funding in the federal Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program for nature-based hazard mitigation projects.  

Learn more about the flood resilience policy roadmap for Appalachia here

Join a webinar with NWF, Appalachian Citizens’ Law Center, and ReImagine Appalachia to learn more about our coalition’s flood resilience priorities for Appalachia on December 12 from 12-1 p.m. ET. Register here.