Identification

Title
Mine Water Heat Opportunity Map for Wales
Abstract
<h2>Background</h2> <p>Coal mines are a legacy of Wales&rsquo; mining past, however where suitable they may now offer a potential source of heat to support the development of new mine water heat networks. Welsh Government commissioned the Coal Authority to produce a &lsquo;mine water heat opportunity map&rsquo; for Wales which is designed to provide information to local authorities or developers as to where mine water heat schemes could be considered.</p> <h2>Methodology</h2> <p>All the recorded coal workings in Wales have been assessed for potential borehole-based mine water heat schemes. These areas have been designated to indicate where possible mine water heat schemes, using purpose drilled boreholes to access the workings, could be investigated further.</p> <p>The opportunity maps consider many different factors which are assessed by technical experts. Factors considered include:</p> <ul> <li>Underground working depths</li> <li>Known mine water levels</li> <li>Mine water level recovery status</li> <li>Evidence of opencast mine workings</li> </ul> <p>There are three levels of opportunities for mine water heat developments: &ldquo;Good&rdquo;, &ldquo;Possible&rdquo; and &ldquo;Challenging&rdquo;. In addition there is a &lsquo;point source&rsquo; map illustrating locations where known mine water discharges could offer potential for heating schemes.</p> <h2>Mine Water Heat Opportunity Categories</h2> <h3>Good Opportunities</h3> <p>These areas represent where there appear to be ideal conditions for a mine water heat scheme to take place, with fewer challenges. All the following criteria will be met, in order to classify an area as &ldquo;Good&rdquo;. However, these areas still require a site-specific assessment to determine local water levels, condition of the workings, and feasibility of developing a scheme.</p> <ul> <li>Multiple recorded underground coal mine workings overlap each other, and;</li> <li>Workings are flooded, and;</li> <li>Workings between 30 m and 300 m below ground level, and;</li> <li>Water level estimated to be less than 75 m below ground level, and;</li> <li>Water levels have recovered or are recovering.</li> </ul> <h3>Possible Opportunities</h3> <p>These areas represent where there appear to be challenges for developing mine water heat. If any of the conditions below are met, the area is to have &ldquo;Possible&rdquo; opportunities for mine water heat. These areas will need a thorough investigation, and may represent a good or poor opportunity in the future.</p> <ul> <li>Workings are overlapping, and;</li> <li>Workings are flooded, and;</li> <li>Workings are near to or shallower than 500 m below ground level, or;</li> <li>Water levels are between 75 and 100 m below ground level, either recovering or recovered, or;</li> <li>Water levels are deeper than 100 m below ground level, but recovering, or;</li> <li>There is evidence of open cast coal mine workings, with the possibility of underground workings beneath intact.</li> </ul> <h3>Challenging Opportunities</h3> <p>These areas represent where conditions do not appear favourable for developing a mine water heat scheme, and may not improve in the future. If any one of these criteria are met, the area is classified as &ldquo;challenging&rdquo;. It is not that a scheme could not be successful here, but that there would be a number of challenging barriers to overcome versus other opportunity areas for mine water heat.</p> <ul> <li>Workings may not be flooded, or;</li> <li>Workings are less than 30 m below ground level only, or;</li> <li>Workings are more than 500 m below ground level with no shallower targets, or;</li> <li>Water levels deeper than 100 m below ground level, and are recovered, or;</li> <li>There are known issues with mine gas, or;</li> <li>There is evidence of opencast workings where underground workings may have been completely removed, or;</li> <li>There is a single seam, which is fully flooded, and not impacted by opencast workings.</li> </ul> <p>Single seam opportunities have been included as &ldquo;challenging&rdquo;, and would require a thorough appraisal to determine whether the nature of the workings would support a scheme. Having a borehole based scheme into a single seam can result in rapid &ldquo;short circuiting&rdquo; of a heat scheme, as colder spent water can rapidly move to the abstraction well after reinjection.</p>
Licence
Open Government Licence for Public Sector Information (OGL)

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Copyright:

None

Publication Date
Type
Spatial data
Regions
Global, United Kingdom
Approved
Yes
Published
Yes
Featured
No
Group
Coal Authority

Information

Spatial extent
Projection system
EPSG:27700
Extension x0
242606.578125
Extension x1
336706.59375
Extension y0
181531.109375
Extension y1
385681.125

Features

Edition
1

Contact

Email
data@gov.wales
Organisation
Coal Authority

References

Link online
/layers/geonode:welshgov_opportunity_shp
Metadata page
/layers/geonode:welshgov_opportunity_shp/metadata_detail

OWS endpoints

WMS