Site overview

Boulby Mine is an active deep underground mining operation situated near the village of Boulby on the North Yorkshire coast, east of Loftus. Potash deposits in the area were first identified in 1939 during oil exploration drilling near Aislaby; reserves were investigated in the 1950s but initially judged too deep to exploit economically. Following a public inquiry, planning permission was granted to Cleveland Potash Ltd, a joint venture of Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), and shaft sinking commenced in 1968.

Two shafts, each 5.5 metres in diameter and approximately 1,150 metres deep, were sunk using ground-freezing and grouting techniques. First potash production from one shaft began in 1973, with full production from 1976. The mine extracts sylvinite ore from a Permian evaporite sequence at depths between 1,200 and 1,500 metres, yielding potash and rock salt as co-products.

Profitability was not achieved until 1984. ICI sold its interest to Anglo American, which divested to Israel Chemicals Ltd in 2002, operating as ICL UK. In 2011 commercial polyhalite production began, becoming the primary product from 2016 onwards, with potash production ceasing around 2018.

The mine also hosts the Boulby Underground Laboratory, a deep-science facility operated by the Science and Technology Facilities Council at 1,100 metres depth.

The mine stands in an exposed coastal landscape near the cliff edge, where large modern buildings and shafts read as a substantial working industrial site within open surroundings.

Map & photo

Boulby Mine mine headframe or winding tower site
Photograph taken: 19 March 2025
Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.

History

Potash was first identified in the northeast England Permian evaporite sequence in 1939, when the D'Arcy Exploration Company drilled boreholes near Aislaby in search of oil and gas. Further boreholes in the 1950s and early 1960s confirmed the extent of the Zechstein evaporite deposits, but the depth of the potash horizon — between 1,200 and 1,500 metres — initially made commercial extraction appear uneconomic. Solution mining was considered from 1962 but not pursued. By the late 1950s and early 1960s, ICI reached agreements with oil companies to allow deepening of boreholes in an area from Newton Mulgrave to Loftus, where the potash beds were shallower than at Sleights.

By 1967 ICI had identified Charter Consolidated Limited (CCL) as a partner with experience in sinking deep shafts. Planning permission was obtained in 1968 following a public inquiry. The site selected for the surface infrastructure was adjacent to the North Yorkshire coast near the old alum-mining hamlet of Boulby, west of Staithes, with access to the sea for processing water and to the former coastal railway for transport. The planning context was favourable, as the area had experienced high unemployment following the closure of the ironstone mines. Cleveland Potash Ltd was established as the operating entity under ICI, which later came to hold the mine jointly with Anglo American.

Shaft sinking commenced in 1968. The two production shafts, each 5.5 metres in diameter and approximately 1,150 metres deep, were sunk through Triassic Sherwood Sandstone aquifers using ground-freezing and grouting techniques. First potash production began from one shaft in 1973; full production from both shafts commenced in 1976. The ore horizon — sylvinite comprising 35–45% sylvite (potassium chloride) and 45–55% halite (rock salt) — occurs in a seam averaging seven metres thick. The room-and-pillar extraction method was adopted. Despite early operational success, the mine did not achieve financial profitability until 1984, the intervening years being consumed by the costs of establishing the most efficient mining system and managing unanticipated faulting and pressurised gas in shaly sections of the potash horizon.

ICI subsequently sold its stake in Cleveland Potash Ltd to Anglo American, which held the operation alongside De Beers for a period. Ownership was transferred to Israel Chemicals Ltd in April 2002, since when the mine has operated as ICL UK. By the mid-1990s output had stabilised at around 2.8 million tonnes per year of potash from six production sections, with rock salt co-produced at between 384,000 and 662,000 tonnes per year. Output capacity reached over one million tonnes of potash annually. In 2011 the mine began the world's first commercial production of polyhalite, a multi-nutrient mineral fertiliser marketed by ICL as Polysulphate, from a seam extending offshore with estimated total resources exceeding one billion tonnes. In early 2016 polyhalite mining commenced as the primary operational focus. Potash production ceased around 2018, accompanied by a reduction in workforce from over 1,000 to approximately 470 employees. By 2023 the mine was producing over one million tonnes of polyhalite annually. Rock salt co-production continues, supplying approximately half of the UK's road de-icing salt requirements.

The mine has more than 1,100 kilometres of underground roadways, some extending up to 15 kilometres beneath the North Sea, and at its deepest reaches 1,400 metres. Rail transport links the surface facilities to Teesport, using a goods-only branch of the former Whitby Redcar and Middlesbrough Union Railway, closed to passengers in 1958 but retained open to Boulby for mineral traffic. Surface facilities were designed by the architect Sir Frederick Gibberd.

Since the 1990s the mine has hosted the Boulby Underground Laboratory, operated by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) with support from ICL UK. The laboratory sits at 1,100 metres depth, shielded by a thickness of rock that reduces cosmic-ray flux by a factor of one million compared to the surface. A new underground laboratory was constructed with STFC investment and was completed and brought into use from 2014 onward. The facility provides over 4,000 cubic metres of experimental space and hosts a range of research programmes including dark matter detection, astrobiology, geomicrobiology, and space exploration technology development. It has been used to test NASA Mars rovers and hosted European Space Agency personnel. The ZEPLIN dark matter experiments concluded in 2011; ongoing programmes at the time of the most recent consulted sources included DRIFT-II and BUGS.

Timeline

1939
Exploration

Potash deposits first identified near Aislaby

The D'Arcy Exploration Company identified potash in the Permian evaporite sequence near Aislaby while drilling boreholes for oil and gas. This was the first identification of commercially relevant potash deposits in the northeast England region.
1950–1962
Exploration

Reserves investigated; solution mining considered

Further exploratory drilling in the 1950s and early 1960s mapped the Boulby potash horizon but commercial viability was initially judged unfavourable because of depth. Solution mining was considered from 1962 but not pursued.
1967
Construction

Charter Consolidated Limited selected as shaft-sinking partner

ICI identified Charter Consolidated Limited (CCL), experienced in sinking deep shafts, as its development partner for the Boulby project.
1968
Legislation

Planning permission granted; shaft sinking commenced

Following a public inquiry, planning permission was granted to Cleveland Potash Ltd for underground working of potash and salt over approximately 8,200 hectares. The first shaft was begun in 1968 and shaft sinking continued from 1969 under ICI management of Cleveland Potash Ltd.
1973
Operation

First potash production from one shaft

Potash production began from one shaft in 1973, marking the start of commercial output. The ore was sylvinite containing 35–45% sylvite and 45–55% halite, extracted from depths between 1,200 and 1,500 metres.
1976
Operation

Full production from both shafts commences

Full production of the mine commenced in 1976 with both shafts operational. The mine became the source of all UK-produced potash, meeting approximately 55 per cent of total UK market demand.
1984
Operation

Financial profitability first achieved

The mine did not achieve profitability until 1984, eleven years after first production, as the costs of developing the most efficient mining system and managing geological challenges in the deep ore were progressively resolved.
1990–1999
Operation

Boulby Underground Laboratory established

The Boulby Underground Laboratory was established in the 1990s at a depth of 1,100 metres, exploiting the mine's extreme depth and the low natural radioactivity of the surrounding rock salt to provide conditions suitable for ultra-low background particle physics experiments, initially focused on dark matter detection.
2002
Legislation

Ownership transferred to Israel Chemicals Ltd

ICI had sold its stake in Cleveland Potash Ltd to Anglo American; Anglo American in turn divested the operation to Israel Chemicals Ltd in April 2002. The mine has since been operated as ICL UK.
2011
Operation

World's first commercial polyhalite production begins

In April 2011 the mine began the world's first commercial production of polyhalite, a multi-nutrient mineral fertiliser marketed by ICL as Polysulphate, from a seam extending offshore with estimated total resources exceeding one billion tonnes.
2014
Construction

Government grant awarded; new underground laboratory constructed

Cleveland Potash was awarded a £4.9 million government grant in April 2014 to support polyhalite mining. STFC investment funded construction of a new, larger underground laboratory at depth, completed and brought into operation from 2014 onward.
2016
Operation

Polyhalite mining becomes primary operational focus

In early 2016 polyhalite mining commenced as the mine's primary production activity, with the product marketed as Polysulphate. Potash production was progressively wound down and ceased around 2018.
2018
Closure

Potash production ceases; workforce reduced to approximately 470

Potash production at the mine ended around 2018 following the transition to polyhalite as the primary product. The workforce was reduced from over 1,000 to approximately 470 employees as a result of the operational shift.
2023
Operation

Polyhalite output exceeds one million tonnes

In 2023 the mine produced 1,009,000 tonnes of polyhalite, an increase on the 953,000 tonnes produced in 2022, representing a record annual output for the Polysulphate product.

Sources and records

Wikipedia article (English): Boulby Mine
ICL Boulby official website history page: icl-uk.uk
Mining Technology project profile: Boulby Potash Mine
North Yorkshire Moors Archive publication: The Story of Boulby Potash Mine (1973)
Subterranea Britannica site record: Boulby Potash Mine
UKRI / STFC: Boulby Underground Laboratory overview
Boulby Underground Laboratory overview page: boulby.stfc.ac.uk
Grokipedia article: Boulby Mine
Teesside Live / Yorkshire Post press reporting, January 2025
This researched site record is part of the HAABase Mines database. Normal personal research and browsing is welcome. Automated bulk extraction, republication, or harvesting of site text and images is not permitted without written consent.