ThinkGeoEnergy – Geothermal News & Insights

Understanding the geothermal opportunity in mine waters

The UK Coal Authority is partly-sponsoring a PhD study that aims to increase the understanding how geothermal energy heats mine water that could be used for heating purposes.

Partly sponsored by the UK Coal Authority, University of Edinburgh student Mylène Receveur is studying how to expand the understanding of the geothermal warming of mine waters in the UK, as reported on the UK Government’s website.

Mylène’s thesis – Investigating geothermal heat resources of legacy mine workings, why are some mine waters hotter than others? – will explore the key controls that create differences between different sites.

When mines are abandoned and the pumps which kept them dry are switched off, the roadways, galleries and fractures fill with ground water, which is heated by geothermal energy from the earth’s core to temperatures of 11 to 20 degrees Celsius close to the surface and up to 46 degrees Celsius in deeper coal seams.

This difference in temperatures between mines has always been known and a recent Scottish government study on the geothermal potential of Scotland showed that there is a significant variation down to a depth of about 1,500 metres.

Temperature gradients ranging from 37 degrees Celsius/km to 45 degrees Celsius/km were recorded in 61 boreholes but understanding why mine waters reach a certain temperature is critical to being able to estimate the heat resource and storage potential.

The Coal Authority, which recognises that the past can help shape the future, is particularly interested in understanding this thermal energy resource better, including how quickly mine water heats up and how it could be used on a large scale for heating homes and business for decades to come.

Dr Ian Watson, technical lead on water for the Coal Authority and Mylène’s industry partner, said the Coal Authority is particularly interested in better understanding this resource because it is progressing a large number of district heating schemes that will use mines as their source of energy:

French-born Mylène has a master’s degree in geology from the UniLasalle Beauvais Engineering School in Beauvais, Paris, and also achieved a research master’s in geology, specialising in geothermal sciences, from the University of Iceland.

She will be collating data from the Coal Authority and spending time at our Mansfield headquarters.

She said she hopes to develop hydrogeological conceptual models before interpreting the results to ascertain the temperature resources that are available over the long term:

Jeremy Crooks, head of innovation for the Coal Authority, said the potential to repurpose the abandoned mines to provide a sustainable energy source for the benefit of future generations, and to help reach challenging climate change targets, is very exciting:

Christopher McDermott, Mylène’s principle supervisor at the University of Edinburgh, emphasises that it is important to understand the heat resource and distribution to help ensure its sustainability:

Source: UK Government

Alexander Richter
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