Skip to main content

FOLLOWING a 100 year gestation period there are signs we could be about to witness the birth of a new coal rush.
The first Underground Coal Gasification (UCG) trials - during which coal’s inherent energy is extracted in situ - were conducted in the North East of England in 1912.
One hundred years later scientists and businesspeople based in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, just a few miles from the site of the original trials, have launched a new drive to fully commercialise the potential of the earth’s remaining 850 billion tonnes of coal.
They are amongst a host of global teams now working on commercial-scale UCG schemes, using directional drilling techniques from oil and gas exploration, which have added new momentum to the industry.
In Australia Linc Energy’s UCG demonstration facility in Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia is operating successfully.
And last month it signed a multi-million dollar deal with Chinese company GCL Projects Limited, a subsidiary of Golden Concord Group Limited, to commercialise UCG in China.
In the US, a project at Cook Inlet, Alaska, plans to go commercial in 2015, as is the US $1.4billion Swan Hills UCG site in Alberta, Canada.
In the UK the Coal Authority has granted 18 UK licences to companies keen on using UCG to access some of the UK’s remaining reserves.
Newcastle-based Five-Quarter, which has spun out of the city’s University, has the licence for a 400sq km area of the North Sea, stretching from the mouth of the River Tyne up to the Scottish border.
Prof Dermot Roddy, a director of Five-Quarter, said: “The UK was the originator of UCG technology, when Sir William Ramsay conducted exploratory experiments in the Durham coalfield in 1912.
“World War One put a stop to these and UCG was later neglected in the UK while its abundant domestic reserves of oil and gas were exploited.
“But the use of directional drilling technologies, an increased emphasis on energy security, and rising oil and gas prices has led to a renewed surge of interest.
“The technology is now maturing and reserves have been accessed with extended reach wells penetrating more than 20 km laterally at depths of over 400 meters.”
During the UCG process oxygen and steam are pumped through a directionally drilled borehole to ignite the coal.
As the supply of oxygen is limited, the coal is partially oxidised, forming a gas that still retains around 80% of the original energy content of solid coal.
This syngas – a combination of hydrogen carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and methane - is then recovered from a production borehole for use in power generation or conversion into liquid fuels.
Five-Quarter is currently in talks with investors as it aims to raise at least £30m to start work on a demonstration facility.
Meanwhile one of the UK’s major oil and gas industry players has entered the UCG market.
Clean Coal Limited was formed five years ago by Rohan Courtney OBE, who helped to turn Tullow Oil into one of Britain's biggest companies, by exploiting neglected energy reserves in Africa and the North Sea.
It has five UK licences and is also advising on schemes in Indonesia, China, India and Vietnam.
Some of UCG’s major players have been recruited to its team including its head Marc Mostade, who has over 20 years’ experience in UCG ranging from research to managing UCG pilot plants.
He is assisted by Paul Ahner, who has participated in all of the US UCG field trials from 1977 and consulted for 18 months on Linc energy’s Chinchilla project.
Fellow CCL staffer Dr Shaun Lavis, believes UCG is the ideal bridging technology to get through the next 30 years, until renewables are more thoroughly developed.
He said: “In the last decade UCG has become more viable. The main driver of this has been the use of highly accurate drilling technologies borrowed from the oil and gas industries.
“This has helped reduce the cost of recovery with the Swan Hills scheme likely to come in at as little as US $2 per gigajoules, bringing its close to parity with that of shale gas.”
As a carbon fuel, carbon dioxide emissions concern producers and for future schemes to be politically sustainable they will need to come with carbon capture and storage.
The goaf which is left in the gasified seams is being explored as one storage option and some current schemes are using the carbon dioxide for enhanced oil recovery in subsea oil and gas fields.
The Swan Hill scheme in Canada will capture and sequestrate over 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 each year from its 300MW power station
UCG supporters say concerns over possible groundwater contamination and subsidence can be mitigated through careful site selection, project design, and monitoring.
In India, the government is looking at UCG to utilize the 60% of its 270 billion tonnes of un-minable coal.
In neighbouring Pakistan the Thar project in Sindh Province is expected to produce 100MW of electricity by the end of 2013, using UCG.
Dr Lavis added: “In areas such as India, Pakistan and Africa where they are frequent power outages and substantial coal reserves the benefits of UCG are obvious.”
With over 85% of the world’s coal reserves unmineable UCG has the potential to play a major role in the supporting the world’s energy needs for generations to come.
North East England, the home of the railways, used its abundant coal reserves to fuel the first industrial revolution and it may now play its part in a new revolution in the way its abundant coal reserves are used.
By. Peter McCusker
Peter McCusker is an energy journalist, based in the North East of England.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Blaming CO2 Is The Analog Response To Climate Change

  OVER 125 years ago Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius fingered carbon dioxide role for its role in warming the planet. At the time it was seen as a good thing - after all it’s the cold that kills - but over the ensuing decades there’ve been a few revisions to how this additional CO2 is perceived. It is now the sinister suspect behind 200 years of global warming and is demonised in a way the witches were in the 16th and 17th centuries. Just as the witches were castigated for spoiling crops, and inducing bad weather, CO2’s fingerprint is now apparently detectable on almost any climatic event.   Such is the man-made warming mania that for the last five years the green stenographers in the BBC and mainstream media have neglected their duty of impartiality to the British people by claiming climate science is settled (1). But, surely it is not unreasonable to question how, and why, this trace gas, at a mere 0.04%, or 400 parts per million (ppm) of the atmosphere - and es...

Energy Security On The Brink - As Green Lobby Takes Cover

NEW Climate Change Committee boss Emma Pinchbeck wants policy costs taken out of UK energy bills in a cynical bid to hide from the public the soaring costs of supporting renewables. This is just the latest legerdemain from the climate ‘crisis’ crowd who mindlessly orate that energy will become greener and cheaper under their watch. Nothing could be further from the truth. Our energy bills are now the highest in Europe (1) and our energy security more fragile than at any time since the beginning of the fossil fuel era. This is purely a result of their slavish adherence to the Net Zero lunacy. Last week the media widely reported how the UK was paying gas-fired power plants some £2m an hour to fire-up and support the peak evening UK demand period (2). This followed Pinchbeck trumpeting on Radio 4 how wind had the largest share of UK electricity generation ever recorded in 2024, even more than gas. The preference given to the so-called renewables in the hierarchy of energy supply is the so...

Labour’s Growing Pains Causing Rifts In The Eco-Activist Class

FOR decades the hectoring Malthusian quangos, eco-activists, politicians, charities, and left-wing managerial class have placed protecting the environment ahead of development. But, we are now witnessing these eco-activists turning in on themselves, as the Labour Government presses ahead with plans to industrialise the countryside. And, with billions of pounds of unreliable energy infrastructure set to doorstep many unspoilt views, it’s going to be enjoyable watching them squirm as their green virtue-signalling collides with reality. The UK’s largest solar development, which will come on-line next year, is a case in point. Currently under construction the 860-acre Cleve Hill development engulfs the Graveney salt marshes, near Faversham in Kent. Green Thumb, Eco-Finger Its 560,000 solar panels, some on steel plinths the height of a double decker bus, are surrounded by a nature reserve and home to many, native wetland bird species.   Whilst this is the type of ‘green’ energy developm...