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Cumberland’s abandoned coal tunnels could become the town’s geothermal heating and cooling powerhouse
Science
Published on 11 May 2026

Water trapped underground may work as a thermal battery
The former coal-mining town of Cumberland is turning an old fossil-fuel legacy into a potential clean-energy breakthrough. Researchers with the University of Victoria’s ACET initiative are studying geothermal heat use from underground mine tunnels, where trapped water could act like a massive underground thermal battery to heat and cool local buildings—using infrastructure that once powered coal extraction.
- Old mine tunnels in Cumberland may support geothermal heating and cooling
- Trapped water in shafts could function as an underground thermal battery
- Researchers are studying the feasibility with the University of Victoria ACET initiative
- The project shows how abandoned fossil infrastructure can be repurposed
Read the full story at The Economic Times
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
