Woodhouse Colliery

Woodhouse Colliery
Location
Woodhouse Colliery
Location in Copeland Borough
Woodhouse Colliery
Location in Cumbria
LocationWhitehaven
CountyCumbria
CountryEngland
Coordinates54°31′31.8″N 3°35′49.7″W / 54.525500°N 3.597139°W / 54.525500; -3.597139
Production
ProductsCoal
Production3,000,000 tonnes (3,300,000 tons) projected per annum
History
Opened(cancelled)
Owner
CompanyWest Cumbria Mining (WCM)
WebsiteOfficial website

Woodhouse Colliery, also known as Whitehaven coal mine, was a proposed coal mine near to Whitehaven in Cumbria, England. The coal mine had been advertised as bringing jobs to a deprived area, but had also come in for criticism by green campaigners. The mine was proposed by West Cumbria Mining and planned to extract coking coal from beneath the Irish Sea for 25 years. The plan was criticised by some MPs, scientists and environmentalists due to the coal mine's environmental impact and the UK government's legal commitments to reduce UK carbon emissions.

The planning application had been under consideration since 2019, when Cumbria County Council granted planning permission for the venture. The colliery would of been the first new deep coal mine in the United Kingdom in 30 years (the last such development was the Asfordby pit in 1986). It is not to be confused with the former Woodhouse Close Colliery in Woodhouse Close, Bishop Auckland (County Durham) which operated between 1835 and 1934.

The government initially took the view that the decision should be a local one, but became involved in March 2021, putting the project on hold. There was speculation that Robert Jenrick, the Secretary of State involved, was influenced by the forthcoming United Nations Climate Change Conference, held that year in Glasgow, but he did not give a reason. Michael Gove, Jenrick's successor as Secretary of State, gave planning consent in December 2022, but faced legal challenges which had not been resolved by the time of the 2024 United Kingdom general election. After the election, as well as uncertainty about the outcome of the court case, there was some uncertainty about whether the incoming Labour government would oppose the project. However, shortly before the court hearing, the new Secretary of State expressed the view that the previous government's decision to approve Woodhouse Colliery was unlawful because emissions had not been taken into consideration.

On 31  March  2025, West Cumbria Mining withdrew its planning application for Woodhouse Colliery at Whitehaven after the High Court had quashed the mine’s 2022 approval in September 2024 for failing to consider downstream greenhouse‑gas emissions, effectively cancelling what would have been the United Kingdom’s first deep coal mine in more than three decades. Environmental organisations, including Friends of the Earth and South Lakes Action on Climate Change, welcomed the decision and called for investment in well‑paid, low‑carbon jobs for the region, ensuring West Cumbria benefits from the transition away from coal.