In 2017, renewable energy accounted for 19.5% of the total energy used for heating and cooling in the European Union. This paper analyses the technical and economic feasibility of using mine water from flooded underground coal mines in Spain to provide renewable thermal energy to buildings located in surrounding areas. High efficiency heat pump system is proposed to provide sustainable energy for district heating and cooling, leading to a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere. The results obtained show that 20 MW of thermal energy is available for heat recovery from mine waters, compared to 4 MW of electrical power committed for pumping from inside the mines and heat pump consumption. The economic model that has been developed indicates that the feasibility of the geothermal plants depends on the amount of thermal energy demanded, the efficiency of the system and the distance from the abandoned mines to potential users. A mine water geothermal plant with 10 MW of power provides energy for about 1,700 households at a distance of 2 km with an investment cost of 3.25 MV. Regarding the reduction of CO 2 emissions, the emission factor is reduced to 0.048 kgCO 2 kWh À1 using this approach.
Flooded mine workings have good potential as low-enthalpy geothermal resources, which could be used for heating and cooling purposes, thus making use of the mines long after mining activity itself ceases. It would be useful to estimate the scale of the geothermal potential represented by abandoned and flooded underground mines in Europe. From a few practical considerations, a procedure has been developed for assessing the geothermal energy potential of abandoned underground coal mines, as well as for quantifying the reduction in CO 2 emissions associated with using the mines instead of conventional heating/cooling technologies. On this basis the authors have been able to estimate that the geothermal energy available from underground coal mines in Europe is on the order of several thousand megawatts thermal. Although this is a gross value, it can be considered a minimum, which in itself vindicates all efforts to investigate harnessing it.
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