|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thu, 14th Jul 2022 10:10:00 |
Energy bills: Homes could be heated by floodwater from disused mines |
Wales' disused coal mines could get a new lease of life as a green energy source to heat homes.
Investigations will be carried out to find the best spots to pump naturally heated water from underground to communities.
The Welsh government is spending £450,000 on the project which it hopes will help cut energy bills and Wales' carbon footprint.
When Wales' pits closed, the pumps were switched off and the mines flooded.
Now ministers hope that the water, which is naturally heated underground, can be used to help Wales become carbon neutral by 2050.
The Coal Authority's Gareth Farr said water would be extracted from the disused mines and put through a heat exchanger, where some heat is recovered, before it is amplified by a heat pump.
"Then the heat is pumped around a heat network to homes, businesses and all parts of the local community and the water is returned underground," he said.
Why weather changes worry Wales' 'wettest town'
Climate change: Oranges 'a luxury' in bid to cut carbon
The Coal Authority will spend the cash on feasibility studies to map where heat can be taken from water in disused mines and used to benefit communities by heating homes, schools and businesses.
Mr Farr said: "Each mine water heat scheme will be bespoke, but the ultimate end game will be that consumers won't be paying any more than they currently are for their heating and hopefully they will eventually be paying significantly less."
He said to get to the water bore holes often had to be drilled. Once complete, they are then hidden beneath the ground with pipes for the water and heat network.
Gas currently heats most Welsh homes. But by 2025 newly built houses will not be connected to the gas mains.
Wales' climate change minister, Julie James, said: "It's very exciting that communities could be metres from a technology-ready alternative to traditional heating methods."
In Gateshead, England, a £9m programme has become the largest mine water heat scheme in the UK.
It will provide as much as half of the required heat to buildings on the network including homes, businesses and public buildings.
What is already happening?
In Wales there have been stumbling blocks.
Plans for a mine water scheme in Caerau, Bridgend county, stopped in recent months despite a feasibility study concluding it was achievable.
Bridgend council said it provided valuable information but that the scheme would have been too expensive.
Household energy bills to hit £3,000 per year
The man using kites to harness wind power
A spokesman said: "The council and its partners agreed to consider alternative options, and to develop and submit a re-profiled programme to the Wales European Funding Office instead."
Read original full article
|
|
|
|
Back to Featured Articles
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Energy News
|
|
|
|