Light at the end of the tunnel: Sussex eyes mine shaft geothermal - Action News
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New Brunswick

Light at the end of the tunnel: Sussex eyes mine shaft geothermal

PotashCorp's original mine at Penobsquis has been capped and allowed to slowly fill with water, which now could play an unexpected role in the southern New Brunswick towns energy future.

Old mine could hold valuable reservoir for use as a renewable energy source

Mine shaft geothermal is already being used in the one-time mining boomtown of Springhill, N.S.

PotashCorp's original mine at Penobsquis has been capped andallowed to slowly to fill with water.

But according to the town's economic development co-ordinator, that water continuously pumped from the mine shaft from the late 1990s until itsclosure in 2015 could play an unexpected role in the town's energy future.

"The Penobsquis mine holds the potential to hold a large reservoir, seven kilometres long, that we can tap into," said Bill Thompson, economic development co-ordinator for the Town of Sussex.

Mine shaft geothermal involves drawing water from the area hollowed out by the mining operation, whichdescends hundreds of metresbelow the surface. Water is then cycled through heat pumps on the surface, thereby "extracting heating or cooling," according to Thompson.

It's been estimated the Penobsquis mine takes on saltwater brine at a rate of 4,500 litres per minute necessitating, at times, dozens of tanker truck trips to cart water away per day.

The water temperature hovers consistently between 18 and 20Celsius, according to Thompson.

Already in use in Nova Scotia

Mine shaft geothermal is already being used in the one-time mining boom town of Springhill, where water that collects in the former coal mines, abandoned since the 1970s, hasbeen used to heat local homes and businesses.

Springhill used to be synonymous with coal mining, but now water collected in the abandoned mines is being used to heat local homes and businesses. (CBC)

Using thisapproach, according to Thompson, industrial consumers could realize cost-savings "between 40 and 50 percentof the cost of heating and cooling."

Geothermal energy helps to reduce CO2 emissions and, unlike other renewable energy sources such as solar or wind, doesn't depend on other climate factors.

"It's not potable water, so you're not interfering with people's well systems, either," Thompson said.

Thompson expectsthe energy could be used in "the greenhouse business, the hatchery business, industrial buildings of all sorts."

'The potential is there'

The idea came up in a public engagement survey conducted by the Sussex and Regional Chamber of Commerce. Thompson said the town is taking steps to secure funding for a technical feasibility study.

"The geothermal idea is one of seven ideas defined as areas where Sussex and the Hampton region can provide a service that gives it a competitive edge over other areas," Thompson said.

"We've been talking to ACOA and the province," Thompson said.

Sussex iswaiting for variousgovernment agencies to review theideabefore the townapproaches engineering firms with a request for proposals.

"All things indicate the potential is there," Thompson said.