Geothermal project heats up in Timmins.

AuthorRoss, Ian
PositionEnergy & Environment

Timmins' three-year effort to study the commercial and economic merits behind using re-circulated mine water to heat and cool buildings will likely enter a pilot project phase sometime in early January 2004.

The Shania Twain Centre, one of the city's main tourist attractions, is being considered as a candidate site in investigating the geothermal energy potential tapped from the former Hollinger gold mine.

Though project managers held rosy visions of heating public buildings throughout Timmins with water pumped from the former shaft, the economics of the plan has taken on a smaller scale for now, says Mark Jensen, the city's director of community development. Jenson is overseeing the effort along with project partners, Porcupine Joint Venture (formerly Kinross Gold Corp).

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Some pre-feasibility work conducted last summer to extend the technology to the McIntyre Arena and to the Timmins and District Hospital revealed there were tremendous energy savings in both heating and cooling the facilities. But the cost to retrofit the steam-based arena heating system to accommodate geothermal energy was too exorbitant and the north-end hospital was considered too far from the heat source to run infrastructure.

"The technology is very capital intensive and we were unable to find an economical project for the hospital," says Jensen.

So their efforts are re-focussing on the new Shania Twain Centre, which sits virtually on top of the former mine site. Project planners say the in-floor heating system is ideal for conversion to harness geothermal energy.

Using a simple heat exchange system, the plan is to use the flooded, abandoned Hollinger mine as a giant reservoir. It would be set up in a closed-loop system. A well will be drilled, and water would be pumped from a depth of about 200 metres to 250 metres up to an electric heat pump where the temperature would be boosted for heating purposes. The water would then be re-circulated back into the shaft.

The temperature in the mineshaft is estimated between 12 degrees Celcius to 13 degrees Celcius. In the summer, for cooling purposes, water would be extracted from shallower levels.

Bard Skagestad, a senior mechanical engineer with the city's consulting firm FVB Energy Inc. of Edmonton, is preparing the pre-feasibility report due out in mid-January, and pegs the estimated capital costs to run infrastructure into the Shania Twain Centre at between $200,000 and $250,000.

Skagestad says his...

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