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West Virginia 2025 Infrastructure Report Card: ASCE Grades & Key Needs

On Wednesday, December 17, the West Virginia Section of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) released its 2025 Report Card for West Virginia’s Infrastructure at the state capitol building in Charleston, giving the state an overall grade of a ‘D+’, an improvement of the ‘D’ it received in their 2020 report card. Reliable, resilient infrastructure is critical for the state’s economy, global competitiveness, and quality of life. West Virginia is the first state to include all 18 chapters aligned with the national report card and also featured research contributions from more than 50 Fairmont State University students.

A ‘D+’ means that West Virginia’s infrastructure is facing significant needs, with aging assets, rugged terrain, and inadequate funding, in part driven by weakened user fees due to a falling population. Yet, the state’s infrastructure is trending upward. Three of the five categories that were

ASCE West Virginia Section at the West Virginia State Capitol Building rotunda.

assessed in the 2020 report card saw improvements, and the overall grade increased, in part thanks to record investments through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA).

Three of the five categories assessed in 2020 saw an improvement

Dams (D+), Drinking Water (D+), and Roads (C-) all saw slight increases since the last report card in 2020. However, needs remain significant – for example, the estimated cost to address dam rehabilitation needs exceeds $1 billion, with limited funding currently identified. Many drinking water systems rely on pipes that are more than 50 years old, and some utilities lose up to half of their treated water through leaks.

Two of the five categories assessed in 2020 received the same grade

Thirteen new categories were assessed in the 2025 Report Card

The path forward

Despite the positive trend since 2020, West Virginia’s infrastructure faces significant needs. ASCE has five recommendations to increase the grade in West Virginia:

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