Abstract

China, the largest coal consumer in the world, is one of the countries that experience the most coal fires. Hence, it is critical for China to monitor coal fires and carry out coal fire monitoring, assessment, and appropriate suppression work. The Wuda coalfield, located in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, was selected as the study area. This paper was aiming to analyze spatiotemporal changes of coal fires located in Wuda of China from 2000 to 2015 and focused on the assessment of fire protection project during 2006–2008. Landsat Thematic Mapper and Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus images were used to detect changes in coal fires over the last 16 years by utilizing a generalized single-channel method to retrieve land surface temperature data and natural breaks extracting coal fire zones. The results showed that: 1) the changes of coal fires area represented obvious three stages: Stage I (2000–2006) was before the fire suppression project with fire spread and expansion; Stage II (2006–2008) was the implementation of this project with rapid reduction of fire area; Stage III (2008–2015) was after this project with stable fire area at a low level; 2) the fire suppression work was highly successful; the area of coal fires basically remained at 192.98 ha, a reduction by 45.74% from 2000 and 62.40% from 2006 (before fire suppression projects); 3) fire suppression work in the south (zone F) and in the northwest (zone A) was the most successful, while some new patches sporadically appeared in other regions (zone B, C and D); 4) coal fire suppression methods have led to significant destruction of local geomorphology; 5) it was difficult to completely extinct coal fires underground with current suppression method. Compared with previous studies, this research paid more attention to the estimation of fire suppression projections which provided an available way for environment decision makers and coal energy producers to qualitatively assess the status and effectiveness of coal fire suppression projects.

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