Paper No. 119-4
Presentation Time: 2:40 PM
QUANTIFYING THE ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE IMPACTS OF DAM REMOVALS
We investigate the removal of dams from 2010-2018 in the United States and if there are regional patterns in those removals. Specifically, we identify where the pattern of dam removals has exhibited disparate impacts favoring Whites, then quantify the degree to which these benefits accrue disproportionately to Whites through enhanced home values. Using data about large U.S. dams, we search for disparate impact by estimating linear probability models—stratified by region and ownership—of which dams were removed. We find that the probability of a dam being removed from 2010 to 2018 is positively associated with the proportion of proximate White residents only in the case of dams owned by local and state governments in the South. We then employ a regression model to quantify that proximate home values were enhanced 4% by removal of the aforementioned dams. Aggregating this gain across all owner-occupied dwellings by racial/ethnic group in areas where dams were removed, we find a $194 million-larger gap in home equity gains between White and Nonwhite homeowners compared to what would have been the case in a hypothetical scenario where the pattern of dam removal was not racially biased. This figure is equivalent to $7,700 per Nonwhite homeowner. We conclude that this represents a clear and substantial case of environmental injustice that calls for revisions in regulatory frameworks and management practices governing dam removals.