Is Geothermal the Exception to the Heaven and Hell Metaphor?

The Big Gav has been on a geothermal kick of late. Most recently, he ponders whether the state of Washington is sitting on a hot energy source?

Christmas Greetings
“The United States is frequently embarrassed over its energy policy,” noted the Big Gav. “The most recent occurrence was in the area of geothermal energy.”

Last fall, the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resource Committee sat through one of the best presentations on our nation’s geothermal energy potential. It was delivered by the president of Iceland.

He spoke to the expansion of geothermal energy in the Western United States. That expansion is coming to Washington state. Our location on the edge of a regional “hot zone,” along with the accelerating interest in all forms of renewable energy, means that developers soon will be knocking at our doors.

Underground windmills, heat mining and enhanced geothermal systems are all names and references for geothermal energy. Instead of digging or drilling for gas or coal to burn and generate steam in order to turn a turbine, you tap the Earth’s natural heat to create energy. It works. And, it works today.

Power engineers consider it a mature technology — a demonstrated one — and most of the technology, though 20 years old, is available today off the shelf. Utilities show keen interest in it because it is steady, not intermittent like wind and solar. However, like those two energy sources, geothermal is renewable. It has high initial costs, roughly two-thirds coming from drilling. But, once built, it has no fuel costs.

The Nesjavellir Geothermal Power Plant in Iceland
Image Credit: Gretar Ívarsson
The Nesjavellir Geothermal Power Plant in Iceland

The hot zone of California, Nevada (the Saudi Arabia of geothermal), Idaho and Oregon could produce tens of thousands of megawatts along the spine of the Sierra Nevadas and Cascades. Washington state sits on the edge of this hot zone. The 34 thermal hot springs throughout the state are just the surface of our potential.

Yet, Washington state has zero megawatts of geothermal. “It also has zero planned, proposed or within the plant-approval process, even though we have excellent potential,” laments Susan Petty, one of the world’s leading geothermal reservoir engineers. Petty, who is based in Seattle, points out there is no current hard data on the exact nature of the state’s geothermal resources. But, working off 25-year-old geologic studies, it’s reasonable to say we are among the top-10 states. …

Yet, we must not mislead ourselves into thinking geothermal is a clean and limitless energy (we did that with nuclear power in the 1950s). There are impacts. Water issues are the biggest concern, especially if developers work on the cheap and do not have the proper recovery technology. Carbon dioxide is produced, but the impacts are one-fifteenth to one-thirtieth those of natural gas, the cleanest of the abundant fuel sources currently in our portfolio.

U.S. Geothermal Potential
Geothermal has been among those renewable energy technologies, which are currently commercially available and which the IPCC has recommended as a way to mitigate emissions from energy production. the Western United States is an area with considerable potential for greater development.

If geothermal is done correctly and respectfully — no development on sacred sites or in wilderness areas and national parks — we can bring hundreds of megawatts online in Washington state. The discussion needs to begin now with the tribes, utilities, environmentalists and state agencies.

It is time for Washington state to recognize the great potential for what is being called “the forgotten renewable.” The underground windmills are waiting.

The H&H metaphor, for any AG latecomers, comes from Ulf Bossel.

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5 Comments

  1. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-5-21 at 8:48 am | Permalink

    Tyler Hamilton has been participating in a discussion in Google Groups — The Energy Collective Group and noted that geothermal should be a priority for Canada. He advocated that the Canadian federal government and some provinces encourage more serious investment in “engineered geothermal” since it allows for power plants to be located closer to transmission infrastructure and populations and offer emission-free baseload.

    Simon Donner added, “Geothermal is quite the rage here in sustainability-conscious Vancouver.”

    Howwever, it may be an “apples and oranges” reference since Donner is referring to a ground heating program underway in the suburb of Richmond. He noted, “You’ll find many a more central condo development prominently advertising geothermal heat.”

    While both are sources of renewable energy, ground source heat pumps are supplemental, whereas Hamilton is referring to underground hot zones for utility scale power production.

  2. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-8-6 at 1:39 pm | Permalink

    Roland Moesl has a report on a company near Salzbburg, Austria that has used ground source heat pump, augmented by solar thermal, since 1984.

  3. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-8-28 at 10:54 am | Permalink

    TreeHugger has a report on the rapid growth of geothermal power in the US – 4000 Megawatts of US Geothermal Power in Development, Sector Has Grown by 20% This Year.

    Geothermal plant
    There’s been a good deal of geothermal energy news in the past few weeks—less than solar and wind perhaps, but that’s more a function of publicity and popularity rather than the potential of the resource—and the latest US Geothermal Power Production and Development Update from the Geothermal Energy Association shows just how much geothermal power has grown so far this year.

    New Developments Will Nearly Double Current Capacity

    According to the new report, geothermal power has grown by 20% since January of this year, with 103 project currently underway in 13 states for a combined capacity of nearly 4,000 megawatts. The GEA says when completed these projects will be able to meet the electric needs of about 4 million homes.

    Currently, installed geothermal power capacity in the United States is nearly 3,000 megawatts, with 2555 MW of that in California alone.

    California, Nevada Lead the Way

    By state, this is what’s on tap geothermally: Alaska, 5 projects/53-100 MW; Arizona 2/2-20 MW; California 21/928-1037 MW; Colorado 1/10 MW; Florida 1/0.2-1 MW; Hawaii 2/8 MW; Idaho 6/251-326 MW; Nevada 45/1083-1902 MW; New Mexico 1/10 MW; Oregon 11/297-322 MW; Utah 6/244 MW; Washington 1/(unspecified capacity); Wyoming 1/0.2 MW.

    Just so everyone’s clear on this, the geothermal power being talked about in this report is a different thing entirely than ground source heat pumps, which are sometimes called geothermal heat pumps. While both utilize the heat of the planet, the two really shouldn’t be confused.

  4. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-8-28 at 12:43 pm | Permalink

    The US, Australia and Iceland have formed an international partnership for the development of geothermal energy. According to Green Car Congresss, the DOE (US Department of Energy) Geothermal Technologies Program will work with Australia’s Ministry of Resources, Energy and Tourism and Iceland’s Ministry of Industry, Energy and Tourism to identify and encourage research, development and deployment projects critical to widespread deployment of EGS and deep drilling technologies.”

    The IPGT (International Partnership for Geothermal Technology) will foster close working relationships among the international partners to support an accelerated evolution of geothermal technology through knowledge gained from projects in different countries and geologic settings.

    In addition to establishing the IPGT, ministerial representatives of Australia, Iceland and the US held a two day workshop bringing together experts from government, industry and academia to discuss research, development and deployment priorities for geothermal energy. The IPGT is open to expansion and in the future may include members from other countries with commitments to emerging geothermal energy technologies.

  5. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-11-5 at 10:04 am | Permalink

    Maria Dickerson, L.A. Times staff writer, notes that in the Western United States, utilities are investing in geothermal energy.


    Photo: David Calvert / Ormat Technologies Inc.
    Ormat Technologies’ geothermal power plant in Reno, NV.

    Billionaire Warren E. Buffett has invested big. Internet giant Google Inc. is bankrolling advanced research. Entrepreneurs are paying record prices for drilling leases in places such as Nevada, where they’re prospecting for heat instead of metals.

    “This is the new gold rush,” said Mark Taylor, a geothermal analyst with the consulting firm New Energy Finance in Washington. He credits high fossil fuel prices and concerns about global warming with jump-starting the U.S. industry, along with federal tax credits and state laws mandating the wider use of renewable energy.

    Global investment in geothermal was around $3 billion last year, Taylor said. Although that’s a blip compared with the estimated $116 billion funneled into wind and solar, it’s still a 183% increase over investment in 2006. In a difficult year for alternative energy funding, the industry snagged $600 million through the first six months of 2008, Taylor said.

    A lot of that new investment is in the United States, the world’s leader in geothermal energy. More than 80% of the country’s 3,000 geothermal megawatts lies in California. The Geysers, a network of 22 geothermal plants about 75 miles north of San Francisco in the Mayacamas Mountains, is the largest geothermal complex on the planet. Calpine Corp. owns the largest part of it.

    The area around the Salton Sea in Imperial County is another hot spot. CalEnergy Generation, a subsidiary of Buffett’s Mid-American Energy Holdings, owns and operates 10 plants there. It plans three additional facilities in the next few years, CalEnergy President Steve Larsen said.

    In October, the Bureau of Land Management said it planned to open more than 190 million acres of federal land in California and 11 other Western states for new geothermal development.

    Nevada, the nation’s No. 2 geothermal producer, has 45 new projects underway, said Lisa Shevenell, director of the Great Basin Center for Geothermal Energy at the University of Nevada in Reno. An August lease sale of Nevada lands by the federal bureau brought in a record $28.2 million.

    “I’ve been at this 25 years, and I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Shevenell, a research hydrologist. “Money is falling out of the sky.”

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