davel wrote:- I was taken round Point of Ayre Colliery (on the north Wales coast near Prestatyn) sometime in the 1960s and the roadways there had pipes driven into the surrounding ground with connections to a main running along the roadway.
I seem to remember being told (either then or on another occasion) that the gas was injected into the national gas grid (this would be about the time of the conversion from towm gas to north sea gas) but I can't be sure about this.
Like davel I had a trip around Point of Ayre. In my case it was in the early 60's probably about 8/9 years before North Sea Gas reached N Wales. Two of the many things which stand out as memories of that trip were:-
1. The almost paranoid precautions to avoid the risk of sparks. It was explained that this was a very high methane mine and that the precautions were necessary. To go underground we had to relinquish all our clothing footware etc and use only the provided boots, socks, boilersuits and paper underwear. One member of our party was refused permission to go underground as he could not pass a simple eye test without his glasses which were of an NHS design with coiled spring steel ear pieces (older readers will remember these glasses, some called them 'Billy Bunter glasses').
2. The ventilation was amazing, in the main underground roadway the air must have been moving at 12-15 mph. Again it was explained that this was to keep the methane level down to acceptable limits.
Years later, after North Sea Gas had arrived I remember being told that methane was being extracted and pumped into the N Wales gas main.
Years later again, a coal to liquid fuel experimental pilot plant was built there and I believe this was powered by some of the extracted methane. Needless to say this never seemed to progress beyond the experimental stage.
Sometime ago I found this
http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file18655.pdf which around page 20 onwards lists the UK coal fields and some of their properties including presence, quantity, and use of methane.
~~~ The future is not what it used to be ~~~