Frontiers in Earth Science (Nov 2021)

Underground Hydro-Pumped Energy Storage Using Coal Mine Goafs: System Performance Analysis and a Case Study for China

  • Deyi Jiang,
  • Deyi Jiang,
  • Shao Chen,
  • Shao Chen,
  • Shao Chen,
  • Wenhao Liu,
  • Wenhao Liu,
  • Yiwei Ren,
  • Yiwei Ren,
  • Pengyv Guo,
  • Pengyv Guo,
  • Zongze Li,
  • Zongze Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2021.760464
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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In response to the Paris climate agreement, the Chinese government has taken actions to improve the energy structure by reducing the share of coal-fired thermal power and increasing the use of clean energy. However, due to the extreme shortage of large-scale energy storage facilities, the utilization efficiency of wind and solar power remains low. This paper proposes to use abandoned coal mine goafs serving as large-scale pumped hydro storage (PHS) reservoir. In this paper, suitability of coal mine goafs as PHS underground reservoirs was analyzed with respects to the storage capacity, usable capacity, and ventilation between goaf and outside. The storage capacity is 1.97 × 106 m3 for a typical mining area with an extent of 3 × 5 km2 and a coal seam thickness of 6 m. A typical goaf-PHS system with the energy type αw=0.74 has a performance of 82.8% in the case of annual operation, able to regulate solar-wind energy with an average value of 275 kW. The performance of the proposed goaf-PHS system was analyzed based on the reservoir estimation and meteorological information from a typical region in China. It has been found that using abandoned coal mine goafs to develop PHS plants is technically feasible in wind and solar-rich northwestern and southwestern China.

Keywords