Submitted by Taps Coogan on the 31st of January 2019 to The Sounding Line.
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The following charts and text are courtesy of Our World in Data and detail the staggering decline of the UK coal industry:
1) Coal production peaked at 292 million tonnes in 1913. It’s now 100-fold lower.
Coal production in the UK, at least by today’s standards, was low throughout the 1700s. Output grew rapidly throughout the 19th century, and peaked at 292 million tonnes in 1913. This is shown in the chart below. After volatile but relatively high production throughout the 19th and first half of the 20th century, we see a fast decline from 1960 onward.
In 2017, annual production was only 3 million tonnes, 100 times lower than the 1913 peak. UK coal production is now back to levels last seen more than 300 years ago.
Since 2001, coal imports have been higher than domestic production. But imports are now declining as well: in 2016 and 2017 imports were less than 10 million tonnes.
2) Deepmine coal production has fallen to zero
The techniques required to extract coal depend on its position in the subsurface. Extraction of coal deposits at depth in the earth is, straightforwardly, called ‘deepmined coal’; extraction at or close to the surface is ‘opencast coal’.
Deepmined coal dominated most of the UK’s production history. In fact, opencast coal extraction was negligible until the 1940s. But as we see in the chart below, from the 1960s onwards there has been a continued decline in deepmined coal.
Kellingley colliery, the UK’s last deep coal mine closed in 2015. Deepmined coal production has stopped since 2016. Output from opencast mines was still 3 to 4 million tonnes in the last few years.
3) At its 1920 peak, UK coal employed 1.2 million. It’s now 2,000 times lower.
For two centuries the coal industry was a major source of employment in the UK. Employment in coal peaked in 1920 at 1.19 million workers: more than 1-in-20 of the total UK workforce.
Employment remained high throughout the first half of the 20th century. But there has been a continued decline from the 1960s onward. By 2017, this had fallen to 620 workers — 2,000 times lower than the industry’s peak.
4) Once a diverse energy supplier, coal is now primarily used for electricity
Historically, coal was the energy supply for a range of end uses: in the chart below we see that as recently as the mid-20th century, coal was used in industry, railways, for gas production, and heating in homes. But as these technologies, heating, cooking, railways, became increasingly electrified, coal’s role narrowed to electricity production.
In the 1940s, electricity accounted for only 12 percent of UK coal consumption. By 2017 this has increased to over 60 percent.1
5) Once the dominant energy source, coal supplied only 5% of primary energy in 2017
Throughout the 19th and first half of the 20th century, coal was the dominant energy source in the UK: in 1900 it supplied more than 95 percent of demand; by 1950 it still supplied around 90 percent.
More recent data on the primary energy mix is shown in the chart below2. Even by 1970, coal still accounted for almost half of the UK’s energy. Since then, natural gas and to a lesser extent nuclear and renewables, have displaced coal in the mix.
By 2017, coal’s share of primary energy supply had fallen to 5 percent. The UK government has announced plans to completely phase out coal in the UK by 2025. This will then be the death of coal in the UK.
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