Site overview

Mina Vulcan is an underground hard coal mine located in the town of Vulcan in Hunedoara County, Romania, within the Jiu Valley hard coal basin. Surface exploitation of coal at Vulcan began as early as 1840, making it one of the founding sites of Jiu Valley mining. Formal underground extraction commenced in 1867 and continued with only a temporary wartime interruption for more than a century and a half.

The mine is among the oldest continuously operated hard coal mines in Romania. In its communist-era peak, Vulcan was one of the region's principal production centres, supported by the Preparația Coroiești coal preparation plant and supplying coal to the Paroșeni thermal power station. Since the 1990s, employment has fallen sharply from tens of thousands to hundreds.

The mine forms part of Complexul Energetic Valea Jiului S.A., with final closure committed by 31 December 2032 under Romania's binding national decarbonisation plan. As of 2025 the mine remained in active operation.

The mine occupies a settled valley-floor site within Vulcan, where active industrial buildings and shafts still read as a substantial and clearly defined colliery complex.

Map

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No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

The coal deposits of the Vulcan area were first identified in the mid-nineteenth century. In 1840 the brothers Hofmann and Karol Maderspach began surface exploitation of coal outcrops at Vulcan, Petroșani, and Petrila, becoming the founders of Jiu Valley mining. In 1854 the original operators merged their interests into the Societatea de Mine din Transilvania-Vest.

In 1857–1858 the mines were acquired by the Societatea Anonimă de Mine și Furnale din Brașov, backed by Wiener Bankverein, Deutsche Bank, the Banca Comercială din Pesta, and the Banque de Paris et Pays-Bas, which became the fourth-largest pig iron producer in the Habsburg Empire and expanded the Simeria–Petroșani railway, completed in 1870. In 1859 a second mining enterprise at Jiu-Vaidei-Vulcan was established as the Societatea Minieră Árpád–Terezia, with 14 shareholders including Baron Lajos Kemény and the wife of Count György Teleki, with József Mara as the majority holder and director. This venture began production in 1867.

By the late 1880s Vulcan was already the administrative centre of the Jiu Valley mining region, though this status passed to Petroșani after the railway connection was completed. In 1884 the hotel proprietor Pricop from Petroșani began opening works after acquiring the Árpád and Terezia concessions from the Kendeffy family. In 1885 the Societatea de mine de cărbuni din Valea Jiului de Sus was founded in Vulcan by German investors Iosif Ritter and G. Gerbert, with concessions at Dâlja, Vulcan, Uricani, and Câmpul lui Neag; this company was absorbed by Societatea Petroșani in 1930.

In 1895 a further company, Societatea Valea Jiului de Sus, was active with its seat at Vulcan. The first electricity-generating plant in the Jiu Valley was built beside the Vulcan coal mine; construction began in 1909 and it was inaugurated in February 1910, supplying the eastern Jiu Valley. The Vulcan mine was closed for a period around the Second World War.

At this time only four mines remained active in the valley — Lonea, Petrila, Aninoasa, and Lupeni — and a prisoner of war camp, Lagărul 9 Vulcan, was established on the Crividia stream near the mine site, housing over 3,000 Soviet prisoners put to work in the valley's mines. In the first postwar years the communist regime reactivated and expanded mining at Vulcan, along with establishing the Termocentrala Paroșeni power station and the Preparația Coroiești coal preparation plant in the town. Production was organised under the Combinat Carbonifer Valea Jiului from 1956, which became the Centrala Cărbunelui Petroșani in 1969 and then the Combinatul Minier Valea Jiului from August 1977.

Following 1991, the mine was restructured under the Regia Autonomă a Huilei and then the Compania Națională a Huilei from 1998. In the communist-era peak of the 1980s, the Jiu Valley as a whole produced approximately ten million tonnes of coal annually, with Vulcan among the principal contributing mines. By 1990 Vulcan's population had grown to nearly 30,000; subsequent closures and restructurings reduced employment in the valley's mines from an estimated 40,000–50,000 in 1989 to a few thousand by the 2010s.

Mina Vulcan was among the four mines retained under the Hunedoara Energy Complex, which entered insolvency in 2019 and was declared bankrupt in March 2025. Its successor entity, Complexul Energetic Valea Jiului S.A., operating under Ministry of Energy ownership since January 2023, continued the mine's operation. Reported reserves at Mina Vulcan stand at 23.5 million tonnes of hard coal.

Under Romanian Government Emergency Ordinance 108/2022 on decarbonisation, Vulcan was committed to safe closure and land rehabilitation by 31 December 2032. In November 2024, the European Commission approved €790 million in state aid to cover the closure costs of the four remaining Jiu Valley mines, including Vulcan. In December 2025 a further state aid ordinance provided up to 3.15 billion lei for the phased closure programme.

The town of Vulcan was declared a local tourist resort in 2022, with ambitions to develop tourism around the Pasul Vâlcan mountain pass. Future plans for the mine site after closure had not been definitively established as of 2025.

Timeline

1840–1853
Exploration

First surface exploitation at Vulcan

In 1840 the brothers Hofmann and Karol Maderspach began surface exploitation of coal outcrops at Vulcan alongside Petroșani and Petrila, founding the Jiu Valley coal industry. In 1854 these operators merged into the Societatea de Mine din Transilvania-Vest.
1857–1858
Operation

Mines acquired by Societatea Brașoveană

The mines of the Societatea de Mine din Transilvania-Vest were acquired in 1857–1858 by the Societatea Anonimă de Mine și Furnale din Brașov, backed by major European banks. This company became the fourth-largest pig iron producer in the Habsburg Empire and developed the railway infrastructure serving the valley.
1859–1867
Legislation

Societatea Minieră Árpád–Terezia founded; production begins 1867

In 1859 a second mining enterprise, the Societatea Minieră Árpád–Terezia, was constituted at Jiu-Vaidei-Vulcan with 14 shareholders. Having prepared the necessary concessions and equipment, the company began production in 1867.
1909–1910
Construction

First power station in Jiu Valley built beside mine

Construction of the first electricity generating plant in the Jiu Valley began in 1909 beside the Vulcan coal mine on the right bank of the Jiu. It was inaugurated in February 1910, supplying the eastern part of the valley.
1918
Legislation

Mine passes to Romanian state administration

On 7 December 1918 the coal mines of the Jiu Valley, including Vulcan, were transferred to Romanian state administration following the union of Transylvania with Romania.
1931
Closure

Vulcan mine closed during Depression

The Vulcan mine was closed in 1931 during the global economic depression, along with several other Jiu Valley operations including Lonea II and Dâlja. Only four mines remained active in the valley during the wartime period.
1940–1944
Operation

POW camp established beside mine

During the early 1940s Lagărul 9 Vulcan was established on the Crividia stream near the mine, housing over 3,000 Soviet prisoners of war put to work in the Jiu Valley mines. This was the largest such camp in Hunedoara County.
1949–1956
Construction

Mine reactivated under Sovromcărbune; expansion begins

After the communist nationalisation decrees of 1949, Mina Vulcan was reactivated and expanded as part of the state's intensive coal-based industrialisation programme. The Termocentrala Paroșeni power station and Preparația Coroiești were also established at Vulcan in this period.
1991–1998
Operation

Successive post-communist restructurings

From 1991, Mina Vulcan was reorganised successively under the Regia Autonomă a Huilei and then from 20 November 1998 under the Compania Națională a Huilei S.A., headquartered in Petroșani, as part of the wider restructuring of Romanian hard coal mining.
2019–2025
Closure

Operator enters insolvency; mine transferred to state successor

Complexul Energetic Hunedoara entered insolvency in November 2019 and was declared bankrupt in March 2025. In January 2023 a successor entity, Complexul Energetic Valea Jiului S.A., was created under Ministry of Energy ownership to continue the mine's operations through the closure programme.
2024–2032
Legislation

EU approves €790 million closure fund; final closure by 2032

In November 2024, the European Commission approved €790 million in state aid covering the closure costs of Vulcan and three other Jiu Valley mines. Vulcan was committed to safe closure and land rehabilitation by 31 December 2032 under Romania's National Recovery and Resilience Plan.

Sources and records

Wikipedia article (English): Vulcan Coal Mine
Wikipedia article (English): Jiu Valley
Travellerinromania.com: Exploatarea Minieră Vulcan
Historia.ro: Vulcan — Marele centru minier din România comunistă, June 2023
Adevarul.ro: Marele centru minier din România comunistă, June 2023
Grokipedia.com: Vulcan Coal Mine article
Valeajiului.blogspot.com: Scurt Istoric al mineritului în Valea Jiului
Jiu Valley Portal (jiuvalley.org): coal mining history
Global Energy Monitor: Hunedoara Energy Complex
European Commission press release: approval of €790 million state aid for Jiu Valley mine closures, November 2024
Energy Industry Review: Mining Closures in Romania, March 2023
SNIMVJ (Societatea Națională de Închideri Mine Valea Jiului): Istoric page
Euronews / G4Media: reportaj on Jiu Valley coal transition
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