Sunday 7 September 2014

July in Scotland

Pictures of the Islands trip with Brian

Sunday 4 May 2014

My Childhood Memories of Coal



Coal

My Memories of Coal

Coal powered the UK from the beginning of the industrial revolution up to the present day and still provides 30% of electrical power generation (Gas – 46%, Coal – 31%, Nuclear – 14%, Renewables – 5.5%  ) although the coal is mostly imported as it is cheaper to scrape the coal out of a vast hole in Western Australia and dump it in a ship via massive conveyer belts and then transport it half way round the world.
About 4% of the world rise in temperature due to CO2 emission comes from the coal burned in UK in the last 100 years.
When I was born coal was an every day experience especially in Yorkshire which still has the largest deposits of coal in the UK , many of the familiar towns in the West Riding started as mining towns with many local coal pits. There were three pits within a mile of our house where I lived from 1946 to 1962. Some of my friends came from coal mining families.
The coal lorries used to crawl up the hill past our house on the way to the mills in Bradford and they were so laden that the coal spilled on the road, every day my mum went out to collect the precious lumps scattered across the road. Outside our house was a gas lamp which illuminated the back street and my bedroom, the gas came from coal gas made from coal in a local gasworks about 2 miles away (coal is burned in an absence of air to produce coke, steam is blown through the hot coke and the shift gas reaction produces carbon monoxide and hydrogen.)
We had a coal hole to store the coal and we had a coal fire in the back room always on, I could roast my bare knees when coming in from the cold, we had a coke stove in front room with the TV, I learned how to light a fire at an early age. As an aside our house was the first one in our street to have a TV in 1952 and many neighbours came round to watch the coronation in 1953.
We had horrendous smogs when a high pressure caused fogs which trapped the particles, then  it was not possible to see even half way across the road so no traffic could move. I had to walk 3 miles home from school when this happened and your snot turned a hideous black green colour.
When it rained the washing went black so it was important to get the washing in before rain. The coal contained a lot of SO2 which forms sulphuric acid in the waste gas and is exceedingly corrosive. My Gran – Grandma Crowther - married to Grandpa Margetts, - my dad’s dad – died from damaged lungs caused by this corrosion. There were many like her.
The biggest coal field is the South  Yorkshire field between Leeds and Sheffield and stretching out to the east with Towns like Wakefield, Pontefract, Castleford, Rotherham, (see carboniferous in Yorkshire ) .  A typical coal seam is 3 meters high and the engineers drive two parallel tunnels 300 meters apart as far as they can into the seam maybe 1, 2 or 3 miles, these provide the services to the coal face which is formed by a connecting tunnel joining the two service tunnels. They install shearing machinery which moves across the face shearing the coal which falls onto a conveyer belt and transports the lumps to the service tunnel to another long conveyer belt , then it is on its way to the surface. As the coal is removed there are hydraulic jacks holding up the roof but the whole assembly the shearer and the jacks automatically move as the face advances. Here is the interesting bit, as the jacks move the roof collapses behind the jacks so that the whole area sinks. Eventually the whole landscape above drops by about half a meter across the whole coal field which is huge.
So some degree of housing subsidence was common. Mostly it was minor but occasionally houses split down the middle. It was quite normal to phone the National Coal Board (NCB) Representative and they sent round a team to sort it out, usually they did not quibble, any crack whether due to coal or not they would fix it. It was a bit like ICI Huddersfield Works where the azo dyes spray dryer used to occasionally spray out orange dye which covered the cars in the car park so you could get your car re-sprayed for free. (Only in Yorkshire !!). Also The NCB board supplied free coal to its employees, giving rise to the myth that miners kept coal in the bath instead of using it for ablutions.[2]

References


Industrial Risk Started in the Coal Industry

A famous legal case Edwards v NCB
I think you know that I have been involved with industrial risk assessment since 1974. Well the beginnings of industrial risk assessment started in the coal industry in 1949.
Mr Edwards died in an accident after the supporting structure for the mine roadway gave way. The National Coal Board argued that it was too expensive to shore up every roadway in all of the mines.
The case turned when it was decided that it was not 'all of the roadways' that needed shoring up; just the ones that required it. In essence this established the need to carry out a risk assessment to establish the cost, time and trouble to mitigate a risk balanced against the risk and the severity of any harm it might cause. This case established the concept of "reasonable practicability." The Court of Appeal decided that "reasonably practicable" was a more narrowly defined phrase than what was "physically possible." This allowed for the creation of equations that measured the risk present in a given situation against the reasonable practicability of mitigating that risk. In other words, the equation asked if averting the risk was worth the effort it took to negate that risk.[2]
Gas – 46%, Coal – 31%, Nuclear – 14%, Renewables – 5.5%

Coal Mining Pictures

Subsidence
Prince Of Wales Colliery, Casleford ( I went down this colliery in 1979)