How Old Coal Mines Are Now Producing Clean Geothermal Energy
As the world rolls back on using coal to extract energy, it leaves behind empty coal mines. The BBC reports that the UK is actively using these coal mines as a source of geothermal energy.
The BBC visits a wine warehouse in the northeast England town Gateshead, where old coal mines “could still have a role to play in heating homes — but this time, without burning fossil fuels.”
A new district heating system in Gateshead is poised to begin warming homes and buildings in the area at a cost 5% below market rate, using the clean heat from its mines 150m (490ft) below the ground.
The water in the mines is naturally heated in the surrounding rocks to 20 degrees C (68 degrees Fahrenheit), according to the video report — so a heat exchanger on the surface just repurposes the extracted heat for energy consumers. It’s a technique that’s also being adopted in the Netherlands. But it’s especially applicable in the U.K., where a quarter of homes are above old coal fields (as are 9 of its 10 major urban centers).
The report points out that coal is the world’s largest source of CO2 emissions, but now coal production in the UK has fallen by 94% in the last 10 years. “So what happens when the coal mines that used to power our cities are no longer used?”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.