A Performance Evaluation and Feasibility Study of Mine Thermal Energy Storage in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Background and Related Work
2.1. Overview of Thermal Energy Storage Technologies
2.2. Infrastructure and Operating Principles of MTES
- Direct systems, where mine water transfers heat directly to the working fluid (higher efficiency, but susceptible to fouling and corrosion), or
- Indirect systems, which use a secondary fluid (e.g., glycol or brine) to isolate the mine water and reduce maintenance needs [3].
- Open-loop systems, which extract and discharge mine water (either to the surface or back into the mine),
- Closed-loop systems, which use submerged heat exchangers and do not circulate mine water externally, and
- Standing column systems, which combine extraction and reinjection at different depths within the same shaft.
2.3. International Case Studies of MTES Systems
- Springhill, Canada: Located in Nova Scotia, the Springhill Mine Water Geothermal Project is one of the earliest operational MTES systems. Developed in the 1980s, it uses mine water extracted from depths up to 1350 m, with temperatures reaching up to 26 °C, to provide heating and cooling for industrial and public facilities. The system operates using heat exchangers and a network of 11 heat pumps and has achieved up to 60% heating cost reduction for some users, while significantly lowering GHG emissions [6,7].
- Heerlen, Netherlands: The Heerlen Minewater Project, launched in 2008, has evolved into an advanced fifth-generation district heating and cooling (5GDHC) system. It uses multiple extraction and reinjection wells to manage thermal flows between interconnected buildings and clusters. The system integrates renewable energy, smart thermal grid controls, and real-time balancing mechanisms to deliver more than 5 GWh of heating and cooling annually, achieving major efficiency gains and CO2 reductions [4,23,24].
- Bochum, Germany: The Bochum HT-MTES system in the Markgraf II shaft is a high-temperature seasonal thermal storage project integrated with solar thermal collectors and a district heating network. Heat is injected into the mine water during summer and extracted in winter using a 500 kW high-temperature heat pump. The system delivers over 13 GWh of heating and cooling annually, and its bidirectional flow, stratified storage, and DTS monitoring represent best practices in advanced MTES design [15,25,26].
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Heating and Cooling Demand Estimation
3.2. MTES Capacity Assessment
3.3. Heat Retrieval System Design
3.4. Electrical Energy Requirements
- Pumping system: Based on flow rate (), pumping head overcome (frictional losses + elevation difference) (), and pump efficiency (), density of water (), and acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s2) using [20].
- Heat pumps: Evaluated using thermal energy output delivered by the heat pump () and COP (from [29]):
- Auxiliary systems: Estimated as 1–2% of total system demand.
3.5. Cost Analysis and Economic Feasibility
- OPEX: Including labor, electricity, maintenance, and compliance [19].
4. Results
4.1. Heating and Cooling Demand Estimation in Glace Bay
4.2. Thermal Energy Storage Capacity in Glace Bay
4.3. Usable Thermal Energy Output in Glace Bay
4.4. Electrical Energy Requirements in Glace Bay
4.5. Economic Feasibility and Cost Analysis in Glace Bay
4.5.1. Capital Expenditure (CAPEX)
4.5.2. Operational and Maintenance Costs (OPEX)
4.5.3. Levelized Cost of Heat for the Glace Bay MTES System
4.5.4. Comparative Cost of Traditional Heating Options in Glace Bay
- Residential Heat Pumps: Using Equations (10) and (11), assuming a thermal demand of 72 GJ/year per household, a 20-year system lifespan, and a 5% discount rate, the LCOH was calculated based on a CAPEX of $12,000–$20,000 [60] and an annual OPEX of approximately $1440 [61,62]. OPEX includes electricity and maintenance: With a seasonal COP of 3.0, each household requires about 6.67 MWh/year (24 GJ) of electricity, costing ~$1239/year at the 2025 Nova Scotia rate of $0.18561/kWh [61]. Annual maintenance is assumed at $200 [62]. The resulting LCOH is between about $33.33/GJ and $42.22/GJ.
5. Discussion
5.1. Economic Feasibility and Cost Savings
5.2. Environmental Benefits and Emissions Reduction
5.3. Infrastructure Reuse and Grid Optimization
5.4. Job Creation and Regional Development
5.5. Technical Challenges and Limitations
5.6. Integration with Renewable Energy
- Onshore Wind: The Lingan Wind Farm near the Sydney coalfield generates 36–49 GWh/year [72], which could meet 37–50% of Glace Bay’s estimated 52 GWh/year MTES electricity demand (Section 3.4). However, grid commitments may limit dedicated supply, making further wind expansion essential.
- Offshore Wind: The Sydney Bight area has been identified as a key zone for offshore wind development. The 5 GW goal by 2030 could power over 3.7 million households [73]. Aligning MTES with future offshore capacity would ensure high-COP heat pump operation and utilize forecasted surpluses exceeding 2000 GWh/year [71].
- Solar Thermal: Seasonal solar thermal integration can further enhance MTES. During low demand months, surplus summer heat can be stored and recovered in winter. The Bochum project in Germany demonstrates how mine voids can serve as seasonal heat reservoirs charged by solar thermal [8]. Similar applications in Glace Bay, especially at institutional buildings like schools and hospitals, could reduce electric load and improve system efficiency year-round. In addition, solar photovoltaic (PV) could be used to power MTES components such as pumps and control systems.
5.7. Overall Summary
6. Conclusions and Outlook
- MTES has strong potential to meet community-scale heating and cooling needs through the reuse of legacy mine infrastructure.
- The system demonstrates compatibility with renewable energy integration, enhancing energy resilience.
- MTES offers significant cost savings over conventional heating options.
- MTES has the potential to substantially reduce emissions, directly supporting Nova Scotia’s climate targets.
- Pilot-scale demonstration in Glace Bay to validate the system design.
- Comprehensive hydrogeological modeling and corrosion risk management.
- Integration with renewable energy sources (wind, solar, and waste heat).
- Development of supportive policies, funding mechanisms, and regional collaboration to enable broader deployment.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CAPEX | Capital Expenditure |
CO2e | Carbon Dioxide Equivalent |
COP | Coefficient of Performance |
GJ | Gigajoule |
GWh | Gigawatt-hour |
LCOH | Levelized Cost of Heat |
MTES | Mine Thermal Energy Storage |
OPEX | Operational Expenditure |
$ | Canadian dollars |
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Parameter | Open-Loop System | Closed-Loop System |
---|---|---|
Efficiency | Higher (direct water extraction) | Lower (indirect conduction) |
Heat Loss | Lower, but requires careful reinjection placement | Higher due to conduction limitations |
Water Quality Impact | Requires filtration/treatment | No direct water contact |
System Complexity | More complex (extraction pumps, reinjection wells) | Simpler, fewer moving parts |
Common Applications | District heating, industrial energy use | Small-scale, retrofitting, pilot projects |
Sector | Area (m2) | EUI (GJ/m2) | Heating Demand (GWh/Year) * | Cooling Demand (GWh/Year) * | Combined Demand (GWh/Year) * | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residential | 1.4 × 106 | 0.58 | 0.655 | 0.006 | ≈148 | ≈1.36 | ≈150 |
Commercial | 170,000 | 1.12 | 0.424 | 0.089 | ≈22.45 | 4.70 | 27.15 |
Industrial | 48,000 | 0.8 | 0.60 | 0.05 | 6.4 | 0.53 | 6.93 |
Total | 1.62 × 106 | - | - | - | 177.45 | ≈7 | 184.45 (≈185) |
Component | Low Estimate (Million USD) | High Estimate (Million USD) |
---|---|---|
Well Drilling (5 wells total) | $0.09 | $0.17 |
Geothermal Heat Pump System | $28 | $52 |
Heat Exchanger System | $2.3 | $7 |
Piping and Distribution Network | $85.6 | $128.4 |
SCADA/Control System | $0.15 | $0.5 |
Subtotal Capital Costs | $116.1 | $188 |
Contingency (10%) | $11.6 | $18.8 |
Total Estimated Capital Cost | $127 | $206 |
Component | Low Estimate (Million) | High Estimate (Million) |
---|---|---|
Labor and Management | $0.57 | $0.66 |
Energy Cost | $5.80 | $5.80 |
Maintenance and Repairs | $1.70 | $2.70 |
Subtotal (Base OPEX) | $8.07 | $9.16 |
Contingency (5%) | $0.40 | $0.46 |
Total Estimated OPEX | $8.47 | $9.62 |
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Sohrabikhah, S.; Hughes, L. A Performance Evaluation and Feasibility Study of Mine Thermal Energy Storage in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. Energies 2025, 18, 4780. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174780
Sohrabikhah S, Hughes L. A Performance Evaluation and Feasibility Study of Mine Thermal Energy Storage in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. Energies. 2025; 18(17):4780. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174780
Chicago/Turabian StyleSohrabikhah, Sara, and Larry Hughes. 2025. "A Performance Evaluation and Feasibility Study of Mine Thermal Energy Storage in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia" Energies 18, no. 17: 4780. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174780
APA StyleSohrabikhah, S., & Hughes, L. (2025). A Performance Evaluation and Feasibility Study of Mine Thermal Energy Storage in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. Energies, 18(17), 4780. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174780