Hot Water From Mine Shafts  

Posted by Big Gav in , , ,

The Times has an article on harnessing passive geothermal energy from mine shafts in Holland, using hot water to heat homes - Dutch city kept warm by hot-water mines.

In an age of rapidly rising fuel bills the discovery of vast supplies of free hot water sounds too good to be true. But that is exactly what one Dutch city has found to run the radiators of hundreds of homes, shops and offices.

Heerlen, in the southern province of Limburg, has created the first geothermal power station in the world using water heated naturally in the deep shafts of old coalmines — which once provided the southern Netherlands with thousands of jobs but have been dormant since the 1970s.

Tapping “free energy” marks a breakthrough in green technology by exploiting the legacy of the coalmines that emitted so much pollution and helped to create the climate change emergency faced by the planet.

“With the threat of global warming and soaring energy prices, nobody can afford to sit back,” said Riet de Wit, a councillor in Heerlen. “We have proven that a local initiative can provide a local solution for sustainable energy. Moreover, our concept can be adapted by former mining regions all over the world.”

The concept sounds simple. The abandoned mineshafts were seen as a blight on an area that has struggled to recover economically from the mass redundancies of miners in the 1970s. After the mineworks were demolished new homes were built and linked to a geothermal power station pumping water up from the mines at a depth of 800 metres, where it reaches temperatures of 35C (95F). The water is used to provide heating for 350 homes and then pumped back into the pit after use, where it will again heat up for the cycle to continue. The water will circulate two or three times a year.

The only drawback is that the homes need to be close enough to the old mines to make use of the heat, which will be topped up by domestic boilers when greater temperatures are needed.

Scientists estimate that the project will produce 55 per cent fewer CO2 emissions than a traditional coal-fired power station — and are now working on a carbon capture system to liquefy the CO2 and pump it back into other disused shafts rather than release it into the atmosphere.

The goal is “emission-free” heating and it could revitalise other former mining areas as sources of cheap, renewable energy.

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