The Decline of Coal and Local Mortality

78 Pages Posted: 1 Jun 2026 Last revised: 22 Jun 2026

See all articles by Dylan Brewer

Dylan Brewer

Georgia Institute of Technology - School of Economics

Eleanor Krause

University of Kentucky; Harvard University

Jancy Ling Liu

The College of Wooster

Date Written: May 27, 2026

Abstract

The health consequences of sectoral transitions are theoretically ambiguous. Reduced industrial activity and associated pollution may improve health, while economic deterioration may worsen it. We examine these competing forces in the context of coal’s decline, linking restricted-access mortality data with records of coal-fired power plant and mine activity from 2004 to 2019. Power sector contractions reduce elderly mortality, while mining contractions increase mortality, especially among working-age adults. Declines in coal activity increase overdose deaths in both sectors. Pollution reductions alone provide an incomplete account of coal’s health consequences, as environmental and economic channels generate heterogeneous effects across sectors and populations.

Keywords: energy transition, mortality, deaths of despair, air pollution, coal

JEL Classification: J65, I10, Q52, Q53, R11

Suggested Citation

Brewer, Dylan and Krause, Eleanor and Liu, Jancy Ling, The Decline of Coal and Local Mortality (May 27, 2026). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=6839178

Dylan Brewer (Contact Author)

Georgia Institute of Technology - School of Economics ( email )

217 Habersham
Atlanta, GA 30332
United States

Eleanor Krause

University of Kentucky ( email )

Lexington, KY 40506
United States

Harvard University ( email )

1875 Cambridge Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States

Jancy Ling Liu

The College of Wooster

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