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Selby Coalfield

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Gascoigne Wood, covered conveyors, and rail wagon loading bays (2006)

Selby coalfield (also known as the Selby complex, or Selby 'superpit') was a large-scale deep underground mine complex based around Selby, North Yorkshire, England, with pitheads at Wistow Mine, Stillingfleet Mine, Riccall Mine, North Selby Mine, Whitemoor Mine and at Gascoigne Wood Mine. All coal was brought to the surface and treated at Gascoigne Wood before being distributed by rail. The primary purpose of the pit was to supply coal for electrical power generation; much of it was used in the nearby Aire valley power stations.

Mining peaked in 1993–4 at 12 million tonnes a year. The mines were acquired by RJB Mining in 1997 after the privatisation of the coal industry; loss of financial subsidy, geological problems, and low UK coal prices made the pits unprofitable by the 21st century. Closure was announced in 2002, and mining completely ceased by 2004.

History

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In 1974, the Labour Government and National Coal Board (NCB), backed by the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) initiated a decade-long, ambitious expansion of coal production, named the Plan for Coal; the plan was based on maximising income from indigenous coal reserves, at a time when oil prices had risen (1973 oil crisis) to above that of coal. The plan included continued closure of older pits, and investment in new capacity; Selby Coalfield was a major element of the plan.[1][2][3]

Exploratory drilling in the Selby area had taken place in the 1960s, and detailed exploration was carried out in the early 1970s, showing that a northern extension of the 'Barnsley Seam' was present and between 1.9 and 3.25 m thick, resulting in an estimate of 600 million tonnes of coal in the seam, with total estimated coal reserves of 2,000 million tonnes. Open extraction would have required a stripping ratio of around 500:1, so the coal was extracted by underground mining. A geological report "Coal reserves in the Selby Area" was published 1972, and planning permission sought for a mine in 1974, which was given in 1976 after opposition, including concerns about flooding of low-lying land due to subsidence; extraction was limited to the Barnsley seam, though other seams existed.[2][4]

Wistow Mine, cladding covered pit head (2005)

The project was formally inaugurated by the Duchess of Kent in 1976. Initial estimates were for a construction cost of £400 million, with 4,000 people employed, with extraction beginning in the early 1980s and lasting for 40 years, producing 10 million tons per year. The scheme used an unusual arrangement of pits in the coal field – all coal was brought to the surface at the drift mine of Gascoigne Wood, whilst five pits were created to the east (Wistow, North Selby, Riccall, Stillingfleet, and Whitemoor) which transferred their coal via tunnels to Gascoigne Wood.[5][6] As part of the construction processes, the NCB paid for diversion of the East Coast Main Line from Selby (see Selby Diversion) to avoid areas that could be subject to mining subsidence.[7] Above ground equipment such as the winding gear was constructed enclosed by cladding and with limited height, to limit the visual impact on the environment, which was a predominately rural landscape.[8][9] Shafts for the pits were first sunk in the late 1970s, and in 1983 the Wistow Mine began production.[5][8]

The workforce was planned from the outset to be transferred from 11 collieries that were nearing exhaustion in the area around Wakefield and Rothwell, starting in 1978-9 with the transfer of miners from Walton Colliery, near Wakefield.[10] The collation of the workforce was due to be completed by 1986, but the Nostell miners did not transfer until 1987 and the process was not finished until the transfer of the Sharlston miners in 1993.[10] Large car parks were built to facilitate commuting.[11]

The new mine produced no coal in 1984/5 due to the UK miners' strike (1984–1985).[12] Gascoigne Wood was the scene of clashes between pickets and police.[9][13]

Output steadily rose from 1984 to 1994, reaching 10 million tonnes a year in 1992–93.[12]

In 1993/4, the complex had peak output of 12 million tonnes p.a.[5] In 1994, the Coal Industry Act created the legal framework for the breakup of British Coal;[14] in 1995, the coalfield was acquired by RJB Mining. Geological problems caused some coal seams to be ignored, and Whitemoor Mine was merged with Riccall Mine in 1996, and North Selby Mine with Stillingfleet Mine in 1997. By 2000, production was 4.4 million tonnes p.a.[5][15]

Between 1995 and 1999, the operation turned from being successfully profitable to loss-making, with the first loss recorded in 1999; relatively fixed costs associated with the single exit-point at Gascoigne Wood meant that the mine became less profitable as production was reduced at the five pits. By 2000, the loss was £30 million p.a. and it received no subsidy; in 2002, it was announced by UK Coal that the Selby coalfield would close in 2003/4. Mining ended in 2004 at Wistow (May), Stillingfleet (July), and Riccall (October). The total amount of coal mined was 121 million tonnes.[5][8][16]

Post closure

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The Gascoigne Wood Mine site is the largest, with 44 ha (110 acres) developable land, and best connected of the former mine sites, with rail connection onto the former Leeds and Selby Railway (Leeds-Hull Line) including sidings for trains of up to 775 m. On site facilities include a 58 MW electrical grid connection, and the site is close to the large Sherburn-in-Elmet Industrial Estate, and directly south of Sherburn-in-Elmet Airfield. Planning permission for re-use of buildings and infrastructure was granted in 2007.[17][18] Beginning 2008 part of the site has been used on short term lease to British Gypsum for storage of Gypsum produced at Drax Power Station as a byproduct of flue gas desulphurisation.[17][19] The site has also been proposed for use as a manufacturing site for rail vehicles (Hitachi, rejected 2010),[20] and an Eco-town development (rejected by Selby District Council 2008).[21]

The Whitemoor Mine and North Selby mine sites were converted to mixed commercial use as business parks by December 2005.[22][17][23]

Riccall Mine has been converted to an industrial and office development, having received planning permission for the development in 2007.[17][24]

In 2009 the North Selby Mine was proposed as a renewable energy site, using waste as a feedstock for electricity generation. The initially proposed energy generation methods of incineration and gasification were dropped in 2011 with the plan had been modified to include a larger facility for anaerobic digestion, as well as using in vessel composting of organic waste.[25] The plan was dropped and a new application was put forward to redevelop the land as leisure accommodation.[26]

As of early 2012 Stillingfleet Mine has been partially redeveloped, being used for extraction and generation from coal mine gas,[27] further redevelopment as a waste sorting centre is being sought.[28]

As of early 2012 Wistow Mine has not been redeveloped,[29] land manager Harworth Group, is seeking redevelopment of the site which utilises the legacy on site facilities, which includes a 12 MW electrical grid connection[17] and the regeneration of the site into an industrial park.[30] As of 2022 the site has not been redeveloped and is used as a storage facility for redundant HGV trailers.

References

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  1. ^ Sources:
    • Barlow, Keith (2008), The labour movement in Britain from Thatcher to Blair (2 ed.), Peter Lang, p. 166, ISBN 978-3-631-55137-0
    • Taylor, Andrew (2005), "3. Plans for Coal", The NUM and British Politics: Volume2: 1969–1995, Ashgate Publishing, pp. 111–142, also Preface, p.x, ISBN 0-7546-5333-1
  2. ^ a b Bayliss-Smith, Tim; Owens, Susan, eds. (1990), Britain's changing environment from the air, Cambridge University Press, pp. 202–3, ISBN 0-521-32712-1
  3. ^ NERA, 2003, Keeping the Selby Complex Open, "2. Background", p.2
  4. ^ Sources:
    • Nicholas Valéry (19 July 1973), "Coal ... all the way to Newcastle?", New Scientist
    • R.F. Goosens (1972/3), "Coal reserves in the Selby area"
    • PRODUCTION ENDS AT SELBY COALFIELD, UK Coal, 26 October 2004, "Key Dates" : 1972 – 1976
    • "2.6 Underground mining". Energy resources: Coal. openlearn.open.ac.uk (Report). The Open University. Box 2. "The rise and fall of an underground coalfield: the Selby complex in North Yorkshire". Retrieved 4 April 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d e PRODUCTION ENDS AT SELBY COALFIELD, UK Coal, 26 October 2004, "Selby Coalfield, Background Notes"; "Key Dates" : 1976 – 2004
  6. ^ "1976: Duchess opens massive Selby coalfield". On This Day. BBC. 29 October 1976. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
  7. ^ Sources:
  8. ^ a b c Hilary Macaskill (26 October 2004), "Dust to dust"
  9. ^ a b Dave Douglas, "The Selby Complex"
  10. ^ a b Downes, Eddie (2016). Yorkshire Collieries: 1947-1994. London: Think Pit Publications. p. 478. ISBN 9-780995-570900.
  11. ^ Adeney, Martin; Lloyd, John (1988). The Miners' Strike 1984-5: Loss Without Limit. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 26. ISBN 0-7102-1371-9.
  12. ^ a b Production Ends at Selby Coalfield, UK Coal, 26 October 2004, "Annual Production"
  13. ^ Clark, Matt (3 March 2010). "Former Selby miner Steve Shaw-Wright remembers the miners strike of 1984–85". The York Press. Archived from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  14. ^ "Coal Industry Act 1994", www.legislation.gov.uk, The National Archive, archived from the original on 5 May 2016, retrieved 2 April 2012
  15. ^ "Selby Coalfield", Hansard: House of Commons, 16 April 2002
  16. ^ Sources:
  17. ^ a b c d e Selby local development framework proposed changes to the submission draft core strategy : Representations on behalf of Harworth Estates former Selby Mine Complex sites (PDF), BNP Paribas Real Estate, 9 February 2012, archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2014, retrieved 8 April 2013
  18. ^ Sources:
  19. ^ Sources:
  20. ^ Harris, Richard (21 August 2010), "Hopes dashed for rail jobs in Selby", York Press, archived from the original on 1 February 2014, retrieved 8 April 2013
  21. ^ "Other site thrown out", Selby Times, 13 February 2008, archived from the original on 10 September 2012, retrieved 8 April 2013
  22. ^ "Ex-mine plans may be shelved". The Yorkshire Post. 12 December 2005. Archived from the original on 18 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  23. ^ Sources:
  24. ^ Sources:
  25. ^ Sources:
  26. ^ "Holiday accommodation proposed for former coal mine". Insider Media Ltd. Archived from the original on 5 August 2019. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
  27. ^ Stillingfleet, Selby, Y019 6HX, Haworth Estates, archived from the original on 2 August 2012, retrieved 4 April 2012
  28. ^ "Waste plan for North Yorkshire mine dubbed 'a betrayal'". York Press. Archived from the original on 5 August 2019. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
  29. ^ Wistow, Selby, YO8 3, Haworth Estates, archived from the original on 21 February 2014, retrieved 4 April 2012
  30. ^ Wilde, Claire (10 July 2018). "Plan to breathe new life into old colliery where link remains". The Yorkshire Post. p. 10. ISSN 0963-1496.

Sources

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Literature

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  • Massey, C. T.; Eaton, W. M. (1984). "The Selby coalfield–a new concept for an old industry". Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part A: Journal of Power and Energy. 198 (13): 241. doi:10.1243/PIME_PROC_1984_198_029_02. S2CID 128800315.

Locations

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