Site overview

Pozo Emilio del Valle was a deep coal shaft sunk from 1992 at Llombera de Gordón, in the municipality of La Pola de Gordón, León, as part of the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa's ambitious 'Nueva Mina' project — at the time described as the most ambitious mining project in twentieth-century Spain and Europe. Completed in 1994 to a depth of 694 metres and a diameter of 6.5 metres, the shaft was equipped with a 32-metre portico-frame headframe of riveted metal construction, relocated from the Pozo Alberto at Cardona in Catalonia. Originally named Tabliza after the mining group it served, it was renamed in 1995 to honour Emilio del Valle Egocheaga, a director of the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa from 1948.

The shaft exploited the Matallana and Llombera synclines. It was the scene of a catastrophic grisú gas escape on 28 October 2013 that killed six miners and injured eight others, the gravest mine accident in León province in recent decades. The mine closed at the end of 2018, the shaft headframe was demolished in October 2021, the shaft sealed, and the site converted to agricultural use.

The site stands in open valley-side surroundings near Llombera de Gordón, where the former shaft area has lost its industrial form and now reads only faintly within agricultural land.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

The Hullera Vasco-Leonesa was a private coal company with origins in the nineteenth century whose operations were concentrated in the Ciñera-Matallana coalfield of León. From the late 1980s the company planned a major investment to access deeper coal reserves, developing what was branded the 'Nueva Mina' — a project whose scale was described as the most ambitious in twentieth-century Spanish and European mining. The core element of this undertaking was the sinking of a new deep vertical shaft at Llombera de Gordón, in the municipality of La Pola de Gordón, León.

Profundisation of the shaft began in 1992. The site was known during construction as the Pozo Tabliza, after the Grupo Tabliza mining concession area it served. By the time sinking was complete in 1993–1994, the shaft had reached a depth of 694 metres and a diameter of 6.5 metres. In April 1995 the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa awarded the contract for the underground workings of the new shaft. The projected reserves accessible through the project were estimated at 50 million tonnes of coal, sufficient to sustain extraction for at least 25 years, with an initial target output of 2.5 million tonnes annually. The shaft was the third of the active headframes in the Nueva Mina complex, alongside those of the Aurelio del Valle and Eloy Rojo shafts.

The headframe erected at the Tabliza site was a portico-frame structure, 32 metres high, with four inclined uprights, originally designed to work with a Koepe tricable pulley system at ground level and two conventional cylindrical drums on the opposite side. Notably, the headframe was not purpose-built: it had been dismantled from the Pozo Alberto at Cardona in the province of Barcelona and re-erected at Llombera. The official inauguration of the Pozo Tabliza took place on 24 September 1994.

In 1995, under the presidency of Antonio del Valle, the shaft was formally renamed Pozo Emilio del Valle in honour of Emilio del Valle Egocheaga, who had served as a director of the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa since 1948. During its early productive years, the operation returned rapidly growing extraction rates. By 1996, productivity measured in kilograms per man-hour exceeded 634. The shaft exploited the Matallana syncline (capa Ancha) and the Llombera syncline (capa Competidora).

The fortunes of the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa and of Spanish coal mining more broadly began to deteriorate significantly from the late 2000s. The European Union's 2010 decision to require the closure of uneconomic coal operations by December 2018, combined with structural financing failures in the national coal subsidy system, placed the company in an impossible economic position. In March 2013 the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa entered a pre-insolvency process before the Juzgado de lo Mercantil in León.

On 28 October 2013, at 13:24 hours, a sudden escape of grisú (firedamp) at the seventh working level of Pozo Emilio del Valle, at a depth of approximately 449 metres in macizo 7 of the Grupo Tabliza, killed six miners and injured eight others. The dead were Carlos Pérez, Manuel Moure, Antonio Blanco, Orlando González, José Luis Arias, and Roberto Álvarez, all workers aged between 35 and 45 years. Post-mortem reports indicated asphyxia caused by oxygen depletion as the probable cause of death. The accident was the gravest in León province coal mining in the previous thirty years and the second gravest grisú-related accident in Spain in that period. Sixteen individuals, including the company's president, vice-president, and a board member from the Del Valle family, along with technical directors and safety personnel, were subsequently charged in connection with the deaths. The trial did not commence until February 2023 and resulted in the acquittal of all sixteen accused, a verdict delivered in November 2025.

Interior extraction operations at the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa had effectively ceased by 8 May 2015, the last day of underground coal extraction at the company's operations. The company formally declared insolvency in February 2016, ending 123 years of corporate history. Under concursal administration, residual surface operations continued in a reduced form until September 2018, when the total closure of the Tabliza installations was announced, with a formal closure date of 31 December 2018.

On 22 October 2021, the 32-metre headframe of Pozo Emilio del Valle was demolished. The demolition was a condition imposed by the mining authorities (Minas) as a prerequisite for the new owner of the site to pursue agricultural use. The shaft was sealed at the same time. By that date, cattle were already grazing on the former pit-top ground. A memorial monolith commemorating the six miners killed in 2013 was relocated to the nearby town of Ciñera. The former pithead site is now used as pasture land.

Timeline

1992
Construction

Shaft sinking begins at Llombera de Gordón

Hullera Vasco-Leonesa begins sinking the shaft initially named Pozo Tabliza at Llombera de Gordón, La Pola de Gordón, as part of the 'Nueva Mina' project. The shaft was projected to reach 694 metres depth with a diameter of 6.5 metres.
1993–1994
Construction

Shaft completed and headframe erected

Shaft profundisation completed in 1993–1994. The 32-metre portico-frame headframe, relocated from the Pozo Alberto at Cardona (Barcelona), was re-erected at the Tabliza site. The shaft reached 694 metres depth and 6.5 metres diameter.
1994
Construction

Official inauguration of Pozo Tabliza

The shaft was officially inaugurated on 24 September 1994 under the name Pozo Tabliza.
1995
Operation

Shaft renamed Pozo Emilio del Valle

In 1995 the shaft was renamed Pozo Emilio del Valle to honour Emilio del Valle Egocheaga, a director of the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa since 1948. Interior working contracts were also awarded in April 1995.
1996
Operation

Peak productivity recorded

Under the presidency of Antonio del Valle, productivity at the Grupo Tabliza exceeded 634 kg per man-hour, reflecting the shaft's strong early production performance.
2013
Operation

Fatal grisú gas accident: six miners killed

At 13:24 hours, a sudden firedamp escape at the seventh working level at approximately 449 metres depth (macizo 7, Grupo Tabliza) killed six miners — Carlos Pérez, Manuel Moure, Antonio Blanco, Orlando González, José Luis Arias, and Roberto Álvarez — and injured eight others. Asphyxia from oxygen depletion was the established cause of death. The accident was the gravest in León province coal mining for thirty years.
2013
Closure

Hullera Vasco-Leonesa enters pre-insolvency process

In March 2013 the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa presented a pre-insolvency filing before the Juzgado de lo Mercantil in León, reflecting the structural crisis in the Spanish coal sector.
2015
Closure

Last day of underground coal extraction

8 May 2015 was the final day of underground extraction operations at the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa, ending interior coal mining at the company's workings including Grupo Tabliza.
2016
Closure

Hullera Vasco-Leonesa declares insolvency

On 11 February 2016 the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa formally ended 123 years of corporate history by declaring insolvency. The company passed under concursal administration.
2018
Closure

Total closure of Tabliza installations

Following the September 2018 announcement by the concursal administration of a total closure and redundancy process affecting 65 workers, the Tabliza installations formally closed on 31 December 2018.
2021
Closure

Headframe demolished and shaft sealed

On 22 October 2021 the 32-metre headframe of Pozo Emilio del Valle was demolished as a condition imposed by the mining authorities for the site's conversion to agricultural use. The shaft was sealed at the same time. A commemorative monolith for the six miners killed in 2013 was relocated to Ciñera.
2021
Redevelopment

Site converted to agricultural pasture use

Following demolition and sealing, the former pithead site at Llombera de Gordón passed to a private owner and was converted to cattle pasture land.
2025
Legislation

All sixteen accused acquitted in accident trial

The Juzgado de lo Penal número dos de León acquitted all sixteen accused — including the Del Valle family members who had owned and directed the Hullera Vasco-Leonesa — of homicidio por imprudencia grave and related charges arising from the 2013 fatal accident. The court found insufficient evidence of criminal liability.

Sources and records

Diario de Valderrueda, October 2023: tenth anniversary article on the Pozo Emilio del Valle accident
La Nueva Crónica, October 2021: report on headframe demolition and site conversion
iLeon / El Diario León, various articles 2020–2024: judicial proceedings and accident anniversaries
MTI Blog (Minería y Tecnología Industrial), September 2013: technical description of Pozo Emilio del Valle
Diario de Valderrueda, November 2025: acquittal verdict article
La Nueva Crónica, May 2024: feature on Tabliza site and Hullera Vasco-Leonesa history
Leonoticias, October 2021: report on headframe demolition
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