200 miners evacuated from Yorkshire pit in methane scare
Work at the site in Kellingley in has been suspended until it is safe for the miners to return.
The scare took place last Tuesday, when miners detected high levels of poisonous carbon monoxide, indicating that methane seeping from the waste or the surrounding rock was being ignited by a heat source in the rubble.
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Hide AdAfter the workers were safely evacuated, UK Coal pumped nitrogen gas into the area to starve it of oxygen to ensure there were no further ignitions.
When the levels of carbon monoxide had dropped, a skilled team walked the length of the coal face to investigate but could not find where the combustion was taking place.
The mine and the mining equipment were not damaged in the incident, the team concluded, and more nitrogen is expected to be pumped into the mine until the problem is resolved.
Doncaster-based UK Coal hopes to reopen the mine by the middle of December, but it estimates the incident will reduce coal production by between 100,000 and 200,000 tonnes, which is up to 2.7% of the total 7.3 million tonnes the group aimed to extract in 2010.
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Hide AdHowever, it is in discussions with unions for mining to continue over Christmas to make up some of the shortfall.
The company is one of the UK's largest brownfield site property developers as well as the supplier of 15% of all the coal burned in the UK.
It operates two other deep mines, at Daw Mill near Coventry and Thoresby in Nottinghamshire.
The three deep mines had previously been expected to produce six million tonnes of coal in 2010, after production in the third quarter was up 40% on the previous year at 1.7 million tonnes.
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Hide AdThe firm also operates surface mines at locations including Steadsburn in Northumberland, Cutacre in Bolton, Lodge House in Derbyshire and Long Moor in Leicestershire. It recently announced a delay in opening a site near Telford.
UK Coal bought the English assets of British Coal for 815 million in 1994 when the state-owned business was privatised.