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Open-pit coal mining in the United Kingdom ended in November 2023.[1]
Each open-pit coal mine usually lasted four or five years at extraction rates of up to a quarter-million tons a year. [citation needed] Until 2014, statistics on open-pit coal mining were compiled by the British Geological Survey from information provided by local planning authorities.[2]
In September 2017, there were 9 sites operating in the UK with a total manpower of 590.[3] Production has declined to around 3 million tonnes in 2017.
The Ffos-y-fran Land Reclamation Scheme was (as of October, 2021) the only major open pit operating in the UK with a few small to very small other sites (employee count much less than 50 per mine for all sites other Ffos-y-fran) still in operation. Also, no major applications were pending to open new mines as of October, 2021.
The opencast at Ffos-y-fran ceased operation in November 2023, which ended opencast coal-mining in the UK.[4]
Miller Argent ran the Ffos-y-fran Land Reclamation Scheme in eastern Merthyr Tydfil, which involved mining the coal from under 367 hectares of land made derelict by earlier coal-mining operations; the coal will be provided to the Aberthaw Power Station on the Glamorgan coast. The project started in 2007 and finished in 2023.[5] Aberpergwm was also reopened in 2018.[6] Note, that according to this source, this mine is an underground drift mine, and not an open-pit mine.
Celtic Energy only operated the expanded East Pit,[7] until Nant Helen was reopened in 2019 to replace the soon to be closed East Pit.[8] The site's licence was revoked in June 2020; thus mining is to stop.[9]
Hargreaves plc operated one site in Scotland, House of Water in Ayrshire;[10] the site stopped operating in 2020.[11]
Banks Mining started working on its Bradley site in May 2018 amid protesters camping on the site.[12][13] Banks had three additional operation sites in Shotton, and Brenkley Lane both in Northumberland, and Rusha in Scotland.[14] All of these sites are closed (or under restoration) as of August, 2020 but Banks were awaiting decisions on two proposed sites to open (Druridge Bay and Newcastle).[15] The application for Druridge Bay was rejected on 8 September 2020 for a second time, and Banks company decided not to appeal this time, making the decision final.[16] The application for opening a mine in Newcastle (Dewley Hill) was rejected on 18 December 2020.[17]
A mine in Hartington, Derbyshire was still operating in August, 2020 but was planning on closing by the end of 2020.[18] It closed in September, 2020.[19]
The following information relates to 2016 and earlier. Output has fallen every year since 2010. In 2010, the United Kingdom was forecast to produce about ten million tonnes (9,800,000 long tons; 11,000,000 short tons) of coal a year[20] from open-pit mines. Most came from Scotland,[21] with the largest operator there being the Scottish Coal subsidiary of Scottish Resources Group.[22] Actual production in 2010 was over 13 million tonnes but this has declined to less than 8 million tonnes in 2014.
In November 2015, the UK Government announced that all the remaining coal-fired power stations would be closed by 2025.[23] In February 2020 the UK government said that it would consult on bringing the closure date forward to 2024.[24][25]
Year | England | Wales | Scotland | GB total |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 2,884,935 | 2,488,321 | 2,497,014 | 7,870,270 |
2013 | 3,411,955 | 2,342,812 | 2,829,155 | 8,583,922 |
2012 | 2,956,331 | 2,408,313 | 4,823,357 | 10,188,001 |
2011 | 2,948,997 | 2,102,995 | 5,527,765 | 10,579,757 |
2010 | 2,599,941 | 4,423,295 | 6,038,479 | 13,061,715 |
Hargreaves plc announced in 2016 the closure of the following operations:[10][26]
The deep mine at Tower Colliery closed in 2008, but there is a plan to build an 80-hectare 165-metre open-pit mine to extract a remaining 6Mton reserve of anthracite, for which a planning application was registered in July 2010.[27] The opencast operation stopped production in March 2017 after it was unable to sell the coal to Aberthaw Power Station due to stricter environmental controls.[28]
Energybuild Ltd operated an opencast site here;[29] it was estimated to have 450 kton of recoverable coal in 2006, which has mostly been excavated between 2006 and 2009. The overburden was sold as road stone.
The site was approved in 1995 but operation was delayed until 1997. Celtic Energy operated a mine at Selar in the Neath Valley.[30] Planning permission was granted to extend the extraction by 800,000 tonnes in 2013 which will keep the mine operational until 2020.[31] The site was mothballed in 2015 due to low coal prices.[7] Celtic Energy now only operates only the expanded East Pit.
Miller Argent planned to extract 6m tonnes of coal at Nant Llesg, near Rhymney. Their application was rejected by Caerphilly county borough council on 7 August 2015.[32] The company is considering an appeal.[33]
Banks Mining applied in October 2015 for planning permission to extract about three million tonnes of coal and other minerals from the Highthorn site in Northumberland. The application was rejected in March 2018.[34]
In 2010, UK Coal had the following prospective sites in England and Scotland.[39]
The Sunday Herald reported on 13 July 2014 that "Mines in Ayrshire, Lanarkshire and Fife, abandoned by Scottish Coal when it went bust in April 2013, are threatened by rising water levels, contaminated lagoons and erosion".[44]
On 9 July 2015 an Opencast Coal Summit was held to "explore what the planning system can do to ensure all opencast coal sites are fully and sustainably restored for the benefit of communities and the environment". After the summit a report was published by Carl Sargeant AM, the Welsh Minister for Natural Resources.[45]
Open-pit coal mining is opposed by the Loose Anti-Opencast Network (LAON)[46] and by Greenpeace[47] and Friends of the Earth.[48]