Site overview

This record documents a separate shaft/headframe site north of the main Mina Vulcan surface complex, in woodland above the town of Vulcan. It should not be merged with the main Mina Vulcan record. The broader Vulcan mining field included several historically distinct workings, including Vulcan Vest, Valea Lupului, Valea Crividiei, Vulcan Est, Puțul Principal, Puțul Plesnitoarea, Puțurile 15 and 13, Puțul Priboi and other associated shafts.

The position of this record north of the main Vulcan site suggests that it may relate to the Crividia / northern Vulcan workings rather than to the principal active mine yard. The exact formal shaft name should be confirmed from field evidence, maps or local mining records.

The mine stands in a settled valley setting at Vulcan, where the industrial site remains clearly defined within the broader urban fabric of the Jiu Valley.

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 first surface coal exploitation in the Vulcan area is associated with the activities of the Hoffmann brothers and Karol Maderspach, who began working the coal outcrop at Vulcan, Petroșani, and Petrila from around 1840, under the commercial and administrative framework of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In 1884, the hotelier Pricop from Petroșani, having obtained a concession from the Kendeffy family covering the Arpad and Terezia mines in the Vulcan area, began formal opening works, with extracted coal transported by cart to Petroșani. Although exploitation works commenced between 1882 and 1884, successive ownership changes meant that the future Mina Vulcan was not formally opened until 1900, when mines were established in the Valle Lupului field between Valea Crividiei and Valea Lupului, extending as far as the limestone formations at Paroșeni–Măceșd.

The principal shafts sunk as part of this opening included Puțul Principal and Puțul Plesnitoarea, with Puțurile 15 and 13 subsequently added in Valea Arsului and Puțul Priboi in Valea Priboi. Before the First World War, a new mine was opened on Valea Crividiei approximately 580 metres north of the bank of the Western Jiu, accessed by Puțul Dr. Khorin. These works collectively formed the basis of the Grupul Vulcan.

Supporting infrastructure included a mechanical preparation facility, a funicular of 1,200 metres constructed in 1903 linking the Vulcan Est mine to the preparation plant, an inclined plane with chain transport, and an electric power station opened in February 1910 — the first such installation in the Jiu Valley. The settlement of Vulcan had grown from a small mountain village to a town of 5,000–6,000 inhabitants by the early twentieth century, with several workers' colonies — Cocoșvar, Eternit, Colonia de Jos, and Roter — established near the mine by the Austrian management. On 1 October 1931, the mines of Vulcan Est and Vulcan Vest were closed due to the interwar economic crisis.

During the early 1940s, the Vulcan area hosted Lagărul 9 Vulcan on the Crividia stream, where over 3,000 Soviet prisoners of war were held and employed in the valley's mines. Reconstruction of the Vulcan mine began in 1949, and the first tonnes of coal were brought to the surface on 9 April 1951. The mine was subsequently administered within the state's successive coal management structures: SOVROMCĂRBUNE until 1954, then the Combinatul Carbonifer Valea Jiului from 1956, Centrala Cărbunelui Petroșani from 1969, and the Combinatul Minier Valea Jiului from 1977.

Following the 1991 reorganisation, the mine passed to the Regia Autonomă a Huilei, and from 1998 to the Compania Națională a Huilei. The mine was assessed as one of the four profitable operations in the valley and was incorporated into the Hunedoara Energy Complex (Complexul Energetic Hunedoara) alongside Livezeni, Lonea, and Lupeni. The mine holds reserves of 23.5 million tonnes of coal.

Serious mine accidents were recorded in 1986 and again in 1989 and 2001 and 2002, involving methane ignitions with significant casualties. CEH entered insolvency in 2019 and was declared bankrupt on 31 March 2025. In November 2024 the European Commission approved €790 million in closure support for the four remaining Jiu Valley mines.

Under GEO 108/2022 and Romania's National Recovery and Resilience Plan, Vulcan is scheduled for safe closure by 31 December 2032, with final land reclamation to follow.

Timeline

1840
Exploration

First surface coal exploitation in Vulcan area

The Hoffmann brothers and nobleman Karol Maderspach began surface exploitation of coal outcrops in the Vulcan, Petroșani, and Petrila area from around 1840, among the earliest coal extraction activities in the Jiu Valley.
1882–1884
Legislation

Concession of Arpad and Terezia mines; opening works begin

In 1884, after obtaining the Arpad and Terezia mine concessions from the Kendeffy family, the hotelier Pricop from Petroșani commenced formal opening works in the Vulcan area. Exploitation works had begun between 1882 and 1884, though ownership changes delayed completion.
1900
Construction

Formal opening of Grupul Vulcan

Despite early exploitation works commencing in 1882–1884, the mine was formally opened in 1900 through the establishment of workings in the Valle Lupului field between Valea Crividiei and Valea Lupului. Principal shafts included Puțul Principal, Puțul Plesnitoarea, and Puțul Dr. Khorin, forming the basis of the Grupul Vulcan.
1903
Construction

Funicular and preparation plant constructed

A 1,200-metre funicular was constructed in 1903, linking the Vulcan Est mine to the mechanical preparation facility. An inclined plane with chain conveyor transport was also installed as part of the surface infrastructure.
1910
Construction

First electric power station in the Jiu Valley inaugurated

The electric power station built beside the Vulcan coal mine on the right bank of the Western Jiu was inaugurated in February 1910. Construction had begun in 1909. It was the first power station in the Jiu Valley.
1931
Closure

Closure of Vulcan Est and Vulcan Vest mines

On 1 October 1931, Mina Vulcan Est and Mina Vulcan Vest were closed as a result of the interwar economic crisis. During the closure period only four mines remained active in the valley, at Lonea, Petrila, Aninoasa, and Lupeni.
1949–1951
Construction

Re-opening works begin; first coal raised

Reconstruction and re-opening works at the Vulcan mine commenced in 1949. The first tonnes of coal were brought to the surface on 9 April 1951.
1998
Legislation

Transfer to Compania Națională a Huilei

From 20 November 1998, the Vulcan mine was administered by the Compania Națională a Huilei (CNH), established by the Romanian Government to manage the Jiu Valley coal operations. The mine holds reserves of 23.5 million tonnes.
2024–2032
Closure

Final closure programme confirmed for 2032

Under GEO 108/2022 and a November 2024 European Commission approval of €790 million in closure support for the four remaining Jiu Valley mines, the Vulcan mine is scheduled for safe closure by 31 December 2032, with land reclamation to follow. CEH was declared bankrupt in March 2025.

Sources and records

Wikipedia article: Vulcan Coal Mine
Wikipedia article: Jiu Valley
Romanian-language mining history blog: Scurt Istoric al mineritului în Valea Jiului (valeajiului.blogspot.com)
Realitatea Petrileană: Scurt Istoric al mineritului în Valea Jiului
Historia.ro: Vulcan – Marele centru minier din România comunistă
România Misterioasă: Povestea orașului Vulcan și a exploatărilor miniere
SNIMVJ Istoric (snimvj.ro)
Global Energy Monitor: Hunedoara Energy Complex
Energy Industry Review: Mining Closures in Romania
Jiu Valley Portal: Coal Mining timeline
Ziare.com: 30 de ani de la tragicul accident la Livezeni (accident list reference)
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