skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Clean energy from abandoned mines at Springhill, Nova Scotia

Journal Article · · Energy Sources
 [1]; ;
  1. Geological Survey of Canada, Calgary, Alberta (Canada). Inst. of Sedimentary and Petroleum Geology

Flooded former coal mines of Springhill, Nova Scotia, contain about 4,000,000 m{sup 3} of water which circulates by convection and may be recovered at the surface at a temperature of about 18 C. The heat in the water is derived from the normal heat of the rocks, and the contribution from chemical heating is negligible. Water is pumped from the mines to act as the primary input to heat pumps for heating and cooling industrial buildings. Annual heat exchange with the mine by the largest user puts more heat into the mine in summer than is taken out in winter. Buildings without heavy machinery, such as office buildings, drain little heat from the mine, so that many heat exchange systems could operate indefinitely, without significant depletion of the heat source. Initial costs of heat pump installation are higher than the costs of conventional oil furnaces, but the operating costs are substantially lower. In the Springhill systems, heat pumps provide summer cooling as well as winter heating, and total costs of geothermal heating are substantially lower than heating by fuel oil in eastern Canada. There is a net saving in the emission of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
OSTI ID:
28048
Report Number(s):
CONF-9305402-; ISSN 0090-8312; TRN: IM9516%%174
Journal Information:
Energy Sources, Vol. 17, Issue 1; Conference: Annual meeting of the Canadian Society of Coal and Organic Petrology, Calgary (Canada), 21-22 May 1993; Other Information: PBD: Jan-Feb 1995
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English