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Geothermal project at Lakelse Lake in BC, Canada clears exploration milestone

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As reported locally, the geothermal project by Kitselas Geothermal Inc. has cleared a major exploration milestone and is looking now for more funding from government sources.

The company is a partnership between Kitselas Development Corporation and developer Borealis GeoPower.

First pre-feasibility studies of geothermal hotspots near Lakelse Lake were conducted back in 2014. In 2018, exploration drilling moved forward successfully, as now reported by the company to the local city council of Terrace, British Columbia, Canada.

The developer is now seeking support for its campaign for federal and provincial funding.

The company drilled four exploration wells, of which three were successful. Drilling was conducted at Lakelse Lake, across the lake from the Mount Layton Hot Springs.

The drilling revealed water that is at least 150 degrees celsius — a susbstantial amount of heat energy. Kiteseas Geothermal Inc.’s next set of wells will likely be production wells which can harness that heat energy for a variety of uses, Thompson said.

The plans for the project see the utilisation for electricity production, but also for heat for an industrial development park in the municipality.  The city council supports the project.

For more details see link below.

Source: Terrace Standard


Upper Rhine Valley – IGC Online Meeting – June 17, 2020 – 14:00-17:30 CEST

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An interesting program with experienced experts active in the Upper Rhine Graben since many years will introduce the actual development in the most promising geothermal spot in Middle Europe. The IGC Online Meeting: Upper Rhine Graben on June 17, 2020 takes place virtually from 14.00 to 17.30 (CET) and is supported by TRION climate and EGEC.

In the tri-national Upper Rhine Region, utilities are the pioneers of geothermal energy utilization. In all of the three countries bordering to this region, Switzerland, Germany and France, utilities operate successfully geothermal plants. In the northwest of Switzerland, the Basel utility IWB is in a partnership with the community of Riehen, running the heat plant since more than 25 years without any disruptions. In France Electiricté de Strasbourg (ES) is involved in cooperations with EnBW for the EGS pioneer project Soultz-sous-Forêts and with Roquette Frère in the industrial heat supply for drying of starch. In Germany EnBW is operating the combined heat and power plant in Bruchsal and the Pfalzwerke the power plant in Insheim. All utilities are involved in their geothermal projects since the beginning of the project development and operate the plants successfully with no interferences fort he public.

At the IGC Online Meeting about Geothermal Energy in the Upper Rhine Graben these projects will be presented regarding the experiences of the operators and their further perspective for geothermal energy utilization. Besides this, high lithium contents are getting in the focus of the existing operating plants but also giving a new economic perspective for the development of further plants. A general overview about the extracting technologies and the state of art is given by Lena Kölbel from Hydrosion. Further topics of the IGC Online Meeting Upper Rhine Graben is the monitoring of seismicity illustrated at the plant of Insheim, which is introduced by Ludger Küpperkoch from the IGEM in Mainz. A general overview on the potential for geothermal in the Upper Rhine Graben is given by Dr. Wolfgang Bauer from 360 plus Consult as introduction to the IGC Online Meeting. The Kick off on June 17 will be an introduction of the registered particpants to facilitate the exchange between participants and speakers and giving the possibility to connect to each other.

More information about the program you find at igc.eventsHere you can also register for 200 EUR. Every participant will get the chance to introduce himself and his company in 45 seconds with one slide and can contact every other particpant of the IGC Online Meeting – for this reason the number of participants is limited to 20. More than half of the spaces are already occupied.

Lean more about the Upper Rhine Graben on igc.events and secure your place today!

Source: Enerchange via LinkedIn

Video – Introduction to CarbFix, capturing and storing CO2 to stone

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As part of the webinar series “Focus on Geothermal” on June 12, 2020, Edda Sif Pind Aradóttir, the CEO of Icelandic Carbfix introduced the company’s method to store CO2 in the subsurface.

Since the start of the project in 2007, the partnership between several international companies, lead by Reyjkavik Energy developed a method to capture the climate destroying gas and turning it by natural mineral reactions into stone. Therefore, produced water of geothermal power plants is used to bring CO2 and H2S via the re-injection wells into the reservoir again.

The permeability is not affected by this process, as Edda Aradóttir confirmed in the Q + A session after the presentation.

 

Source: Enerchange/ YouTube

U.S. Women in Geothermal team opens nominations for 3rd Annual WING awards

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The United States Women in Geothermal (WING) country team has announced its 3rd annual WING awards! There are four awards, one for each of the Core values:

  • Courageous
  • Empowering
  • Open
  • Caring

If you know someone in the geothermal industry who expresses these values, give them a chance to be recognized, and nominate them for an award. All that is needed is their name, contact information, and 500 words or less describing what a Courageous, Empowering, Open and/or Caring person they are!

Please be sure to read more about what each core value looks like in action before providing your nomination.

Get your nominations in by 31 July 2020 (midnight, your time zone).

You’re welcome to nominate more than one person, but you can only nominate a particular individual for one of the categories.  Both men and women are eligible to nominate and be awarded.

Want some inspiration?  Read about the amazing winners of the 2018 and 2019 WING Awards!

Due to COVID-19 impacts to travel, awards will be presented at a virtual WING Event organized by the U.S. WING team during the virtual GRC Annual Meeting, 18-21 October 2020.  Physical awards will be mailed to awardees.

We look forward to receiving your nominations!

Opinion: Geothermal in report on public account of Chile’s Ministry of Energy 2019-2020

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Diego Morata, Director of the Center of Excellence in Geothermal Energy of Los Andes (CEGA) , shares his opinion column published in LaTercera on May 27, where he refers to geothermal energy in the annual public account of the Ministry of Energy From Chile.

“Last Friday, May 15, we attended virtually the presentation of the Participatory Public Account of the Ministry of Energy 2019-2020, headed by the Minister of Energy Juan Carlos Jobet. It was a good republican exercise in which our Energy Minister highlighted the main achievements in this area in the last year, and where for one more year, Chile’s most stable renewable energy, geothermal energy, was practically invisible.

The progress of the seven thematic axes of the Energy Route shows good progress towards an increasingly clean matrix, but there are still many mysteries to be solved. Chile opted for the decarbonisation of its energy matrix, that is, the coal-fired thermoelectric plants that generate almost 5000 MWe must be dismantled and replaced by renewable energy. This is a great challenge as a country and, in fact, it was announced at the last COP that before 2025 Chile will close 25% of the existing coal-fired plants. And it is a decision that should be applauded, but one that invites an immediate question: with which renewable energy source are those coal-generated black MWe to be replaced?

2025 is a very close tomorrow. Coal allows the generation of electricity 24/7, and therefore gives stability to the energy matrix. So what renewable energy has that 24/7 quality that can fill that space it leaves, and will leave in the coal once it leaves our matrix? Let’s analyze some of the data presented in the public account to see if you can have an answer to that question that seems obvious.

Today NCREs generate just over 20% of the electricity consumed in Chile. If we consider large hydroelectric plants, it can be affirmed that 47% of the electricity it consumes in Chile comes from renewable and clean energy. Then 53% comes from fossil fuels in their different forms.

As much as I do the calculations and see the report of the Minister, I cannot find how, with the current panorama, the climatic uncertainty that invites us to think that hydroelectricity may not generate the energy to which we are accustomed, and the current energy policy We can replace coal (not to mention replacing all fossil fuels!) with renewables.

In the same public account, it is indicated that we will continue betting on solar energy, and this bet seems evident when we know that our Big North is one of the areas with the most solar radiation on the planet. But will it be logical to put all the eggs in one basket? Basket that, in addition, we know that it does not allow stability to the system since today it is not an efficient technology to generate electricity 24/7.

Why is geothermal systematically forgotten? We know that our country is capable of generating electricity with this renewable source that we have under our feet. Cerro Pabellón has already demonstrated this with the first 48 MWe of South America. So what is it that the State does not commit to massively developing our geothermal resources?

The public account is betting that by 2020 the geothermal legislation will be modernized, but is that the boost that our marginalized geothermal really needs for its great takeoff? Why is it announced that a strategy will be launched to promote green hydrogen (which is still in an embryonic phase worldwide) and is not betting on a renewable, safe and stable source such as geothermal energy? I have nothing against any energy source that gives security to our country, but the systematic silence of our geothermal energy does not invite us to be very optimistic.

It is true that there is encouraging news in this public account for the direct use of geothermal energy, but that will be the reason for another column. The carbon neutral goal by 2050, with the consequent reduction of the feared GHG and the withdrawal of coal-fired power plants, must be based on the great potential of renewable energies that we have and, in this spectrum of replacement of that black way of generating electricity for our country for a clean and stable must consider our NCRE and, among them, geothermal energy must become the one that ensures stability to our electrical system ”.

Disclaimer: the author of this note is the Director of the Los Andes Center of Excellence in Geothermal Energy (CEGA) and academic of the Geology Department of the FCFM – University of Chile *

Source: Press release Diego Morata – CEGA – via our Spanish language platform PiensaGeotermia

Seequent sees the future of geothermal – deep, shallow, hot and cold

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In a recent article NZ-based software house Seequent shares its view on the future of the geothermal sector describing the wide variety of opportunities in this exciting industry of ours. Seequent has made great inroads in software solutions related to the subsurface work, both for deep geothermal and increasingly also for shallow(er) geothermal resources. (details here)

Tomato farmers in the Alps and fishermen casting lines on remote Indonesian islands show how expansive geothermal energy has become.

Miklos Antics, Managing Director of GPC IP/GEOFLUID and President of the European Geothermal Energy Council, has watched it evolve. He’s spent more than 30 years in the industry.

Between oil and gas crashes, the $1 billion Euro Green Deal in response to climate change, and the recent COVID-19 pandemic, geothermal energy has been turned to in times of need.

“Everything will change after this Corona Virus,” explains Miklos.

“We are going back to the origins and we will try to use our own natural and in-place energy resources for heating, for food, for transport.”

COVID-19 brought society to a standstill. It changes how countries will interact globally for years to come, and has forced economies to look for local resources, including energy.

Miklos himself is based in a geothermal success story: Paris, France.

“The Paris area has become the largest district heating system in the world by heating the homes of more than 2 million people and producing more than one million megawatt thermal hours a year,” Miklos says.

Yet, that success too came out of a crisis.

Birth and rebirth of geothermal

Paris was always well suited for geothermal energy. Below the Eiffel Tower’s heartwarming romance an equally warm bedrock resource waited to be tapped. The city also had the population density to make a system an effective investment.

Except back in the 1970s, there was already a convenient energy source: oil. The tables turned during the oil and gas crisis in the 1970s to 1980s. The city then had new incentive to look at the consistent, sustainable energy resource below its streets.

“In the 80s and 90s, they developed 52 doublets – that means more than 104 wells for geothermal space heating in the area – all around Paris,” says Miklos.

In a doublet system, one well pushes water down into a deep geothermal reservoir. A second well draws the heated water back up to be used.
How long this system works depends on many factors, and Miklos has been working on expanding its lifespan.

“In 2005, we have seen the rebirth of geothermal in France with more development of the Paris area,” Miklos explains.

“Geothermal has been developed more than 30 years in the area and exploited for 30 years, and operators were looking at the question: What would we do when thermal breakthrough will occur in our doublets?”

How long would the expensive systems last?

Threats to geothermal success

One major challenge to operations is within geothermal fluid. It can contain H2S CO2 , which is corrosive to the wells.

“Essentially, we deal with this with inhibitors to protect the casing. But in spite of injecting inhibitors, we also need to come and rehabilitate the wells in time.”

Rehabilitation typically meant adding a new lining to old wells. Yet, adding a lining decreases a well’s diameter — and thus its flow rate and production.

“And this is where the concept of ‘triplet’ came in. We convert the re-lined existing wells, into injectors,” Miklos explains.

The concept of a triplet was born out of failing wells. Two re-lined (now smaller) wells were repurposed for injecting water, and a third brand new well – built with more capacity to extract – draws the hot water out.

The new wells are dressed with modern technology to combat the corrosive fluids, so that they also last longer.

“We have also developed new techniques, like the anti-corrosion well, which is a material solution to corrosion. We have lined the steel prop-casing well with fiberglass.”

At one site in the north of Paris, Miklos’ team converted doublets from the 1980s into triplets and extended the life of the resource for another 25 years.

Keeping the heat alive

Yet, some wells become too low producing to be effective, even when a good geothermal resource remains below them. Once traditional well technology has failed, geothermal engineers began looking to other industries that drilled wells – like an energy competitor, oil.

“We want to be able to harvest more geothermal energy from the same resource by adopting modern well architectures,” says Miklos.

“Horizontal, sub-horizontal, radial wells: They are very common in the petroleum industry, especially offshore multilaterals… so we have started to copy the petroleum guys a bit.”

Although many geothermal techniques remain the same as when Miklos started his career, with more ambitious projects and new well architectures, reservoir modelling has evolved too.

Geothermal wells are multimillion dollar projects and a lot of risk is involved when selecting targets. Modern surveys for geological, geophysical, and hydrogeological data paired with software to interpret it are helping companies target and drill with more accuracy.

“Are we going to change modeling habits? Yes, we absolutely need to change for de-risking, and also for more modern reservoir approaches, ” Miklos says.

Geothermal goes deeper

Many municipal projects in Europe are now mandated to explore green energy options during development, from libraries to housing.

“District heating should be the key – and district cooling. In Europe, we spend over 45% of energy on heating,” Miklos explains.

There are now over two million shallow geothermal installations in Europe. These systems don’t require a very hot resource to be effective. One site in the north of Paris is only 56 degrees Celsius yet heats around 10,000 homes.

After COVID-19, Miklos hopes more funding and interest in local energy will allow for larger scale projects that go deeper.

Past government incentives weren’t sufficient to seriously pursue deep geothermal resources, but as a result of the pandemic and climate change, many major cities are looking for larger, localised sources of energy.

“We certainly will need deep geothermal to take the lead on district energy systems with large density of population, like the Paris suburbs, like the Amsterdam suburbs, like Munich area,” says Miklos.

“Munich, has the ambition of converting the entire city into geothermal until 2030 – and they will do it.”

What’s the future of geothermal?

A greenhouse grower in the Alps recently reached out to Miklos to find a geothermal source to grow tomatoes, because their customers want vegetables grown with green energy. The energy market is being driven not only by necessity, but demand.

“We can produce food sustainably with geothermal, with green energy, and feed the European population using geothermal heat.”

Miklos’ vision is global. His team is also helping to develop off-grid energy for cooling systems on remote Indonesian islands. Communities there need a local, consistent electricity source and fishermen need refrigeration to store catches longer for their businesses to grow.

The volcanic islands are an obvious choice for geothermal development. Yet, from heating and cooling, shallow or deep, geothermal technologies clearly adapt to many landscapes and needs.

“I’m looking at geothermal resources as a house with many stories, with many neighbors,” explains Miklos.

“There are neighbors who are looking for the resource because they have huge needs. Neighbors who are looking for less energy demand. There are neighbors who are looking for so-called Smart Grid.”

“I think every application will take its place.”

Source: Seequent

Geothermal in the Philippines – an urgent revamp of targets and development needed

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With climate change being a direct threat to the population of the Philippines, think hurricanes etc, particularly the densely populated Manila capital area of the country could be hit the hardest.

So with that luring high risk of natural disasters, such as earthquakes, floods and hurricanes, there have been a number of organisations and experts who are preaching powering a greener future through cleaner sources of energy.

As the effects of climate change are clearly visible around the world, including the Philippines, a cleaner source of power is very much coveted. Another energy source that has the potential to make a difference in the Philippines is geothermal. Southeast Asia is home to 25 percent of the world’s geothermal generation capacity. Most, if not all of this geothermal capacity is located in the Philippines and Indonesia.

Geothermal energy is a form of renewable energy produced by heat from the earth. It is considerably safer than most other energy sources. Unlike fossil fuel plants, geothermal power does not produce greenhouse gases (GHG) that are harmful to the environment.

The Philippines is one of the world’s top producers of geothermal power, as it is located along the Ring of Fire zone of Pacific volcanoes. However, in 2018, the country dropped in the global rankings for geothermal countries, just behind Indonesia. This prompted the Philippines to consider revamping its geothermal development again.

In June 2018, the country launched a new string of exploration surveys, which is an addition to roughly 10 contracts with power companies on geothermal exploration, according to Think GeoEnergy, a geothermal news and research site.

The Philippines currently has seven geothermal fields which supply about 12 percent of the nation’s energy, with a long-term plan to nearly double capacity by 2040.

Targeting geothermal, the Philippines Department of Energy has set targets for geothermal power generation capacity additions … short term 183 MW (2016-2020), 900 MW in the medium-term (2021 to 2025), and 288 MW in the long-term (2026 to 2030). The total objective to be reached by 2030 is 1,371 MW in added capacity (correlating with a total installed capacity of around 3,200 MW). With that the Philippines would reach a level that comes somewhat close to the current top 1 country, the United States that has today an installed of around 3,676 MW. With ambitious development plans elsewhere, the Philippines would though find it hard to remain in its no. 3 position it holds today.

However, despite the potential of geothermal resources in the Philippines, there are still a number of factors contributing to a decline in investments: unattractive incentives package compared to other countries, a privatised energy sector, tedious permitting processes and a lack of potential investors who are willing to take the risk. Although geothermal energy is theoretically free, finding the resource is an expensive enterprise, with exploration wells costing up to US$8 million each with no guarantee of success.

Geothermal trailblazer and leading renewable energy company, Energy Development Corporation (EDC) believes that geothermal is the key to establishing a stable energy baseload suited to the constant yet dynamic power needs of the Philippines’ developing economy. Perhaps, geothermal might be the answer to the Philippines’ goal of cutting carbon emissions by 70 percent by 2030.

In reports from this week, its seems the outlook is though not as bright with a new low in renewable power generation only 21% in 2019.

With that the National Renewable Energy Board is looking at a review of its renewable energy program. The country is way behind its 15,000 MW by 2030 target. With around 35% of the energy mix in 2008 when the renewable energy legislation was passed, it gradually decreased to 25.6% in 2014, 24.2% in 2016 and now to 21%.

The overall renewable energy power generation capacity stood at 5,438 MW in 2010 (with about 35% represented by geothermal) with a target of 15,000 MW by 2030. So proposals are made to increase the target to 20,000 MW to realistically reach the set energy mix targets.

With a focus on mostly solar capacity (15,000 MW), wind 3,000 MW, hydro 1,000 MW, geothermal (and biomass) would see an increase of only 500 MW each. This is naturally far off from the targets initially set by the Department of Energy in the Philippines.

So industry expectations and the now rather old and outdated targets need to be revisited.

Source: Asean Post via EDC, Manila Standard

Indonesia defers geothermal target of 7,000 MW by 5 years to 2030

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An article this week, by the Jakarta Post in Indonesia reports on the ambitious target of 7,000 MW of geothermal power generation capacity by 2025 always promoted by the country’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM) for years.

With reality looking quite different, the Ministry has now announced that the 7,000 MW target will now be pushed by 5 years given the current circumstances.

Ida Nuryanti Finahari, the ministry’s geothermal director, said that the country would likely only reach its goal of having 7,000 MW of geothermal power production by 2030, five years behind the target set by the General Plan for National Energy (RUEN).

Despite the various incentives in place for geothermal development, the seem to be insufficient in significantly lowering electricity tariffs of geothermal plants.

The geothermal industry describes the uncertainty of electricity prices and high production cost as key obstacles to make the economics work for geothermal development.

With expected new presidential regulation, there is hope that this will change and help make investments and outcomes more predicatable.

“Honestly, the Finance Ministry already has many incentives, but we need more breakthroughs or other incentives to lower geothermal prices,” said Indonesian Geothermal Association (API) chairman Prijandaru Effendi on Thursday.

The Ministry is still holding its expectations high on a $1.05 billion investment target for geothermal in 2020. The first quarter investment for this year though was only around $160 million or a mere 16% of the $1bn target, as we reported.

Source: Jakarta Post


Government of Ethiopia approves PPAs with private geothermal developers

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In a meeting of the Council of Ministers, the government of Ethiopia approved the power purchase agreement signed with Corbetti Geothermal, the development company developing the Corbetti geothermal power project in the country.

The Power Purchase agreement for the fist time engages the Ethiopian electric power and Ethiopian engineering authority on one side, and the Corbetti and Tulu Moye companies on the other side in a public private contract in which the Ethiopian Power company provides guarantee and reliability in offtaking the electricity.

The conclusion of the Power Purchase Agreement with Corbetti comes after many years work from the Government to create effective legislation such as PPP, Geothermal & Energy Proclamations to support foreign direct investment and private sector participation for investment and technology transfer in Ethiopia. Ministry of Water, Irrigation and Energy’s EEP, EEA on one hand & Corbetti and Tulu Moye companies on the other will develop total of 300 MW Geothermal Power as Public Private Partnership. The geothermal sector and skills in Ethiopia will tap in to this green, clean and renewable energy source to increase energy capacity, security and reliability of Ethiopia. Geothermal provides great baseline constant output power to support our industrialization and continued economic growth.

Source: Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed Facebook post

Additional 5,880 MW of geothermal capacity planned for Indonesia

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The Indonesian government projects geothermal investment needs of up to US $ 29.39 billion to boost the installed capacity of geothermal power plants (PLTP) to reach 8,008 MW by 2030, so Investor Daily in an article this week. In fact, geothermal installed capacity currently only 2,130.7 MW.

Director of Geothermal at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM) Ida Nurhayatin Finahari said that her office had prepared a roadmap for geothermal development. Referring to this roadmap, the capacity of the new national geothermal power plant will reach 8,007.7 MW in 2030, retreating from the RUEN target of 7,241.5 MW in 2025. This means that there are 177 projects planned by 2030 with a total capacity of 5,877 MW. “Assuming an investment requirement of US $ 5 million per 1 MW, a total investment of US $ 29.39 billion is needed,” she told Investor Daily.

If divided based on the progress of geothermal project development, she continued, currently there are 57 projects in 28 geothermal work areas (WKP) with a total capacity of 2,232 MW underway or have an electricity purchase agreement (PPA) with PT PLN (Persero).

Furthermore, as many as 44 projects in 34 geothermal blocks with a total capacity of 1,630 MW are still in planning or have entered the General Plan for Electric Power Supply (RUPTL), but do not yet have a PPA. “Then there are 76 potential projects in 54 regions with a total capacity of 2,015 MW that have not been included in the RUPTL,” said Ida.

Furthermore, if divided according to commercial operation targets (commercial on date / COD), as many as 29 projects with a capacity of 740 MW are targeted to operate in 2020-2024.

In 2025-2028, 71 projects with a total capacity of 2,872 MW are targeted to start operating. While 77 projects with a capacity of 2,265 MW are planned to begin operations in 2029-2030.

“Based on location, as many as 116 projects or 5,085 MW exist in western Indonesia and 61 projects with a capacity of 792 MW in eastern Indonesia,” said Ida.

In order to accelerate the development of geothermal energy, Ida said, the government is currently drafting a Presidential Regulation on renewable new energy.

The new regulation is expected to provide certainty attractive geothermal electricity prices for investors and minimize renegotiations with PLN.

“In addition, we also seek incentives such as proposed exploration incentives by the government, tax allowance, import duty facilities, UN exemptions, and tax holidays. In addition, there are proposals for low-cost geothermal financing schemes, ” she explained. Indonesia has geothermal resources reaching 28,508 MWe with reserves of 17,435 MWe. This year, the installed capacity of PLTP is targeted to increase to 2,270.7 MW.

Source: Investor Daily

Lithium extraction from geothermal targeted by projects in Germany and France

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In an article shared by our partner TiefeGeothermie in Germany, the increasing interest in Lithium extraction from geothermal brine receives is described in the context of wider attention to the topic in general German media.

The article reports that test facilities for the extraction of lithium from the geothermal deep water are to be built at the geothermal sites in Bruchsal and Insheim, both geothermal sites in Germany. Lithium and various extraction methods for this were in the focus of the recent IGC Online Meeting: Upper Rhine Graben on June 17th.

Lithium in geothermal deep waters in the Upper Rhine Graben has been a hotly debated topic for quite some time with a recent uptick. The background is that lithium extraction could serve for the production of electric vehicle batteries in Germany. Last week saw several articles in the large German publications of Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, Spiegel Online and in the Welt am Sonntag.

The focus is on the Australian company Vulcan Energy Resources Ltd., which has applied for and received, among other things, two exploration fields for salts, ores and geothermal energy in the Baden-Württemberg part of the Upper Rhine Trench – Mannheim and Ortenau. In November 2019, Vulcan Energy and Pfalzwerke Geofuture GmbH signed a letter of intent to work together on lithium extraction at the geothermal site in Insheim.

German and French companies are involved

The lithium levels in the deep waters of the Upper Rhine Trench range from 150 to 200 mg / l. And this applies to the systems on both the German and French sides. While receiving a lot of the attention, it is not only Vulcan Energy in Insheim that is planning to extract the element that is important for e-mobility, but also ÉS Geothermie, a subsidiary of Électricité de Strasbourg, which is involved in an EU research project that is to develop an extraction method.

Energy supplier EnBW also wants to build a demonstration plant for the production of lithium chloride, as project manager Dr. Thomas Kölbel is quoted in the Welt am Sonntag: “It worked quite well in the laboratory, now we try a demonstration system.”

Lithium and geothermal energy – several advantages

The advantage of lithium from deep water is that there is multiple use together with the generation of energy from geothermal energy, which increases the efficiency of the drilling. In addition, smaller amounts of water are required than for the extraction from salars in South America.

With its own lithium funding, Europe could become more independent of imports of an important raw material for the expansion of e-mobility. Michael Schmidt, an expert at the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR) summarizes this in the Welt am Sonntag as follows: “The potential of European projects could serve the local lithium demand for cell production to a considerable extent.”

At the IGC Online Meeting: Upper Rhine Graben on June 17, 2020 various projects were presented based on their plans for lithium production.

Source: TiefeGeothermie

Geothermal job creation opportunity – U.S. industry seeks inclusion in stimulus packages

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In a policy memorandum (pdf) shared by the Policy Committee of the Geothermal Resources Council (GRC) already earlier this month, the U.S. geothermal industry seeks support for geothermal in the economic stimulus packages prepared by law makers in the country.

Geothermal is a secure fuel, clean energy resource that provides significant environmental and economic benefits to local communities. The GeoVision study, released by the Department of Energy in 2019, notes that the right technology investment would catalyze $219 billion in domestic expenditures on geothermal energy through 2050. Further, the report shows that “Geothermal can provide more than double the long-term jobs per powered household compared to other electricity-generation technologies considered.” (GeoVison Analysis: Results, Opportunities and Impacts. Department of Energy (2019). As we look for ways to drive employment and put people back to work, the geothermal industry stands ready to be part of the solution.

Geothermal energy also presents a compelling opportunity to drive economic activity in one of the hardest hit sectors: oil and gas workers.

As Doug Hollett, former Acting Assistant Secretary for Fossil Energy recently noted:

“Geothermal uses many of the same services, technologies and personnel as the oil and gas sector. In the midst of this historically impactful oil and gas downturn, there is a unique opportunity to quickly leverage oil and gas capabilities and technologies into the geothermal sector while preserving jobs and regional economic viability, and ensuring US energy sector vitality.” (A Historic Downturn Meets Historic Opportunity: Geothermal Development Will Save Oil and Gas Jobs. Hollett, Doug (2020).)

There is also the opportunity to expand geothermal beyond its traditional geographic footprint. Promising direct use projects at places like the West Virginia University Project (Feasibility of Deep Direct Use Geothermal on the WVU Campus-Morgantown, WV. Garapati and Anderson (2017)) and the Cornell University Project (Earth Source Heat: Feasibility of Deep Direct-Use of Geothermal Energy on the Cornell Campus. Gustafson et al (2018).) where feasibility studies have already been completed could immediately put idle rigs in the Northeast and Midwest to work.

Geothermal can create many permanent, high quality jobs while at the same time building clean energy infrastructure that will benefit the United States for decades. Due to the severity of this crisis, we need solutions immediately; 2021 is too late. Decisive action at the federal level is needed and the following R&D and Deployment priorities will ensure this opportunity is captured:

Deployment priorities:

  • Restoration of the ITC/PTC to 2017 levels with an extension long enough (5+ years) to provide investment certainty for geothermal development timelines.
  • Restoration of the Section 1603 Treasury Grant Program.
  • Development of programs to increase access to low cost financing to project development.
  • Deploy underutilized staff knowledgeable in subsurface project review, such as BLM permit managers with oil and gas experience, to fast track and streamline geothermal permitting and approvals.

Research and Development priorities:

  • Increased Appropriations to the Geothermal Technology Office. The AGILE Act, passed out of Senate Committee last year, would provide a good template. – Funding could immediately accelerate and scale up the ongoing Frontier Observatory for Research in Geothermal Energy.
  • Increase funding to ARPA-E for the SCALEUP program to immediately finance shovel-ready advanced technologies.
  • Expansion of technology transfer programs within the Office of Fossil Energy to immediately restore oil field services jobs by putting people back to work in geothermal, carbon capture and storage, subsurface energy storage, offshore wind and other adjacent industries.

These actions will have an immediate and lasting impact on job creation.

The provisions in the AGILE Act alone could support over 3,500 jobs. (Low-Hanging Fruit for COVID Stimulus and Decarbonization. Breakthrough Institute. ) The remaining provisions could accelerate several shovel ready projects and lead to 10,000s of more jobs. A deployment timeline in line with the targets in the GeoVision study would create 8,300 new jobs by next year, and as many as 44,300 new jobs by 2030 based on analysis using the National Renewable Energy Laboratory Jobs and Economic Impact Model.

By contrast, the oil price crash of 2014-15 led to a decrease from 200,800 jobs to 140,900 jobs, a decrease of nearly 60,000. This price crash will likely follow similar patterns as the US rig count has already fallen to just 284 rigs as of June 5, down from 975 rigs just one year ago, and continues to fall rapidly. Geothermal has the opportunity to put a meaningful percentage of the lost oil and gas jobs back to work immediately and could replace all lost jobs within the decade, but appropriate and decisive policy support is required to make this a reality. 

The group is grateful for the lawmakers’ consideration and is available to answer questions and engage in a discussion.

The policy paper is signed by Tim Latimer, GRC Policy Committee Research Chair and Co-Founder at Fervo Energy, Paul Thomson, GRC Policy Committee Chair and VP Business Development at Ormat Technologies, and Will Pettitt, GRC Executive Director.

Source: GRC Policy Memorandum (pdf)

Job – Research Assistant, Geothermal, Geoscience/ Engineering – TU Berlin, Germany

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The position of a Research Assistant, salary grade E13 TV-L Universities of Berlin/ Germany has been advertised seeking for applicants.

  • Location: Site Charlottenburg, TU Berlin, Germany
  • Category: Research Assistant without teaching oblication
  • Duration: until 31.12.2023
  • Starting date: Earliest possible
  • Field of studies: geotechnology, engineering geology, hydrogeology, geothermics, geoecology, geos­ci­ences
  • Level of edu­c­a­tion: Mas­ter, Dip­lom or equi­val­ent
  • Lan­guage skills: German (excellent knowledge of language), English (excellent knowledge of language)
  • Closing Date: 03/07/20
  • Further details: here

 

Work­ing field:

  • Work within the research pro­ject “EnEff: HCBC” : Use of the urban sub­sur­face as a geo­thermal under­ground thermal stor­age, ener­getic dis­trict solu­tion for the uni­versity cam­pus Ber­lin-Char­lot­ten­burg
  • Geo­thermal mod­el­ling, devel­op­ment of a sub­sur­face model, explor­a­tion of poten­tial sites for a geo­thermal stor­age in soil
  • Exper­i­ence with geo­thermal mod­el­ling soft­ware like Feflow, MOOSE or Com­sol
  • Invest­ig­a­tion of tech­nical solu­tions for geo­thermal energy stor­ages in urban dis­tricts
  • Invest­ig­a­tions on integ­ra­tion of geo­thermal stor­ages in multi-level dis­trict heat­ing net­works
  • Work­ing on ques­tions at the inter­face between hydro­chem­ical inter­ac­tions and micro­bi­o­logy
  • Inter­dis­cip­lin­ary pro­ject coordin­a­tion and cooper­a­tion with pro­ject part­ners
  • Sci­entific super­vi­sion of prac­tical imple­ment­a­tion Tests
  • Field work
  • Plan­ning and main­ten­ance of mon­it­or­ing sys­tems, inter alia, with LOR­AWAN
  • Pub­lic­a­tion of research find­ings in sci­entific journ­als
  • Ment­or­ing of stu­dent work­ers and stu­dent theses

Require­ments:

  • Suc­cess­fully com­pleted uni­versity degree (Mas­ter, Dip­lom or equi­val­ent) in Geo­tech­no­logy, Engin­eer­ing Geo­logy, Hydro­geo­logy, Geo­therm­ics, Geoe­co­logy or equi­val­ent.
  • Advanced know­ledge of shal­low, urban geo­thermal sys­tems are required.
  • Expert­ise in numeric sim­u­la­tion of shal­low geo­thermal energy sys­tems: Heat trans­port and ground­wa­ter flow sim­u­la­tion is essen­tial.
  • Expert know­ledge in ana­lysis and inter­pret­a­tion of geo­lo­gical, struc­tural geo­lo­gical and hydro­geo­lo­gical explor­a­tion data, prefer­ably for the Ber­lin area.
  • Com­pet­ent use of GIS applic­a­tions and data bases is expec­ted.
  • Neces­sary is know­ledge of reg­u­lat­ory require­ments for geo­thermal use, espe­cially in Ber­lin is desir­able.
  • Exper­i­ence in cooper­a­tion with respons­ible author­it­ies and com­pan­ies is desir­able.
  • Proven exper­i­ence in pub­lic­a­tion of reviewed sci­entific papers and present­a­tion is desir­able and an import­ant decision cri­terion.
  • Com­mand of the Ger­man and Eng­lish lan­guage spoken and in writ­ing is required.
  • Abil­ity to per­form field work is essen­tial, f.e. to take ground­wa­ter samples.

Further inform­a­tion: https://www.ingenieurgeologie.tu-berlin.de/menue/home/ (seems to be available only in German)

How to ap­ply:

Please send your applic­a­tion with the ref­er­ence num­ber and the usual doc­u­ments (CV, uni­versity cer­ti­fic­ates, pub­lic­a­tion list and ref­er­ences) only by email (single pdf file, max. 5 MB) to Prof. Dr. Tomas Fernan­dez-Stee­ger (pia.daute@tu-berlin.de).

By sub­mit­ting your applic­a­tion via email you con­sent to hav­ing your data elec­tron­ic­ally pro­cessed and saved. Please note that we do not provide a guar­anty for the pro­tec­tion of your per­sonal data when sub­mit­ted as unpro­tec­ted file. Please find our data pro­tec­tion notice acc. DSGVO (Gen­eral Data Pro­tec­tion Reg­u­la­tion) at the TU staff depart­ment homepage: https://www.abt2-t.tu-berlin.de/menue/themen_a_z/datenschutzerklaerung/ or quick access 214041.

To ensure equal oppor­tun­it­ies between women and men, applic­a­tions by women with the required qual­i­fic­a­tions are expli­citly desired. Qual­i­fied indi­vidu­als with dis­ab­il­it­ies will be favored. The TU Ber­lin val­ues the diversity of its mem­bers and is com­mit­ted to the goals of equal oppor­tun­it­ies.

Tech­nis­che Uni­versität Ber­lin – Der Präsid­ent – Fak­ultät VI, Insti­tut für Ange­wandte Geowis­senschaften, FG Ingenie­ur­geo­lo­gie, Prof. Dr. Tomas Fernan­dez-Stee­ger, Sekr. BH-N 3-1, Ernst-Reu­ter-Platz 1, 10587 Ber­lin.

Source: TU Berlin

Opinion piece – Geothermal is ready, but is Denmark ready for development

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In an opinion article in Danish publication, Ingenioren, Susanne Poulsen, Technical Director at AP Moller Holding Geothermal, raises the question if Denmark is ready for geothermal development?

Danish utilities are leaders in collective supply, including district heating, clean drinking water and green power. Danish architects and engineers are leaders in urban planning. Danish geologists and engineers are leaders in environmental technology, including subsurface mapping, groundwater modeling and drinking water protection.

Danish engineers, chemists, physicists and mathematicians are leaders in pump and heat pump technology, process chemistry, filtration, well technology and digitalisation. And finally, yes, in Denmark we are world champions in collaborating and integrating technology and creating green change that can be exported on a large scale.

In other words , in Denmark we have both the competences and the infrastructure to build Europe’s largest geothermal plant. So shouldn’t we just look to get started.

We hold our breath these weeks as politicians embark on crucial negotiations on the framework conditions for geothermal energy. Under our feet lies a great inexhaustible source of renewable energy, which can be harvested without CO2 emissions and particle pollution. It is a source of green heat, but also of green jobs, and it is an opportunity for us from Denmark to make an even greater green difference in the world. Let’s seize the opportunity now.

We are ready in the starting blocks with a ready-made project that several Danish companies, universities, authorities and utilities have helped to develop. We are, in fact, thieves. We have done an early strategic environmental assessment, which is our bid for responsible development and operation of geothermal energy.

However, the framework conditions have to fall into place first and it is urgent. As early as 2021 we can be ready to drill the first exploration wells, collect static and dynamic subsurface data, analyze water samples and thus map the quality of the resource. All the data we collect – in close collaboration with the utility company – we use to tailor the large-scale plant, which offers the lowest possible heating price and the highest security of supply.

Exploded view of the larger components of the standardized, modularized and scalable geothermal facility concept developed by the AP Møller Holding geothermal team. Illustration: APM
Exploded view of the larger components of the standardized, modularized and scalable geothermal facility concept developed by the AP Møller Holding geothermal team. Illustration: APM – [and of course shown with Lego bricks]
A large-scale plant requires a wide collaboration between many qualified suppliers. Wells, heat pumps, heat exchangers, filters, electronics, control systems, etc. are widely offered. About 80 per cent. of the subcontractors must be in supply, so that we ensure competitive prices.

By 2023 , we may be ready to start building the large-scale plant itself. The system includes a series of small decentralized systems that are connected to the same district heating network. All the technology used in a geothermal plant is well tested and well known. But we have rethought the way to build geothermal plants, and we are patenting that.

What is new is that the system is modular, standardized and scalable. In practice, this means that the plants can be built off-site at yards or at suppliers and then installed quickly. This means that as a citizen you do not have to be a neighbor to a building site for a long time. Our construction method also means that we will not oversize the plants.

It is crucial for us to take good care of our neighbors and the surrounding environment. A completed system fills what is similar to the penalty area on a football field, and it can be partially buried – in a bunker solution – so that there are no noise nuisance from the system. We enter with talented architects who involve the local community in the visual and functional integration of the type of small technical installations in the urban space. Danish drinking water is our most precious natural resource. This is why we use a certified drinking water well drill as we pass the groundwater layers, and we will insulate our wells with an extra casing.

By 2024, we may be ready to switch on the first plant. This means 30 years of stable production of green heat at a plant that can be operated 100 per cent of wind turbine power. A large-scale geothermal plant will typically produce between 70 and 150 MW of heat for the base and intermediate load of district heating. Geothermal is thus one of several types, hopefully renewable green, heat production plants in a big city. It is the district heating company that plans and decides when and how they use the heat from the geothermal plant, so that they get the cheapest possible heat to the citizens.

There are a number of classic challenges in geothermal – for example, corrosion, precipitation of salts and clogging of wells. These are some of the themes that interest us the most, because there are still landmarks to do in smart water. We are in dialogue with Danish and foreign universities about the water treatment of the future, just as we are in dialogue with subcontractors on filter technology and oxygen-proof solutions.

90 per cent of a geothermal plant is in the underground. It was ‘built’ 200 million years ago and no drawings and user manuals are included. Our geologists, petrophysicists and engineers must make them themselves. Our team of engineers and geologists have been training for this since we each started in the oil industry over 20 years ago. And we experience an overwhelming reinforcement from a large number of Danish companies, universities and utilities.

In other wordswe are many who are ready in the starting blocks and waiting for the framework conditions, so that we can start delivering green heat to Denmark. And later to the rest of the world.

Source: Ingenioren

Canton of Fribourg in Switzerland betting on geothermal energy

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With the revision of the Energy Act last June, the Canton of Friborg recognizes the public interest in the use of renewable energy in heating and power generation plants, so a recent article in Swiss publication Baublatt. The revised energy regulations have also been in force since the beginning of this year. The amendments to the law were made after advances in the cantonal parliament, and Freiburg also adopted the model regulations of the cantons in the energy sector (MuKEn 2014).

The cantonal government has set itself the goal of reducing annual energy consumption by 1000 GWh (heat) and 550 GWh (electricity) by 2030. The “4000-watt society” is targeted as an intermediate step with regard to the 2050 energy strategy. In addition to reducing consumption, the corresponding cantonal energy strategy mainly provides for the increased use of renewable energy.

Photovoltaics and geothermal energy

The state also wants to give the program for the installation of photovoltaic systems on the roofs of buildings an additional boost. To do this, he demands that the municipalities draw up an energy plan as part of the local planning and convert the lighting in the public space.

The canton wants to achieve more sustainable energy production by promoting geothermal energy. With Groupe E, Freiburg therefore founded gpfr SA, which is to generate electricity and thermal energy using deep geothermal energy. According to the Freiburg Office for Energy (AfE), the company was commissioned in the government’s activity report to prospect deep wells that are said to reach over 3,000 meters.

The company gpfr SA, founded by the canton of Friborg and Groupe E, is to advance the exploration of energy generation using geothermal plants. It is evaluated that the deep holes are drilled to a depth of 3000 meters.

Expansion of the building program

The Freiburg building program was supplemented by an additional measure that will make significant financial contributions to new heat distribution systems from 2020 when replacing decentralized electric heaters. The program also includes professional energy advice for large consumers, in particular accompanying companies with their energy-saving projects.

On the basis of the revised Energy Act, an information concept is proposed in cooperation with the municipalities to raise awareness of the topic of heating among the owners. In the case of canton’s own buildings, the Minergie-P standard already applies to new buildings and renovations. The state covers its own consumption of its own real estate primarily from renewable energy sources.

Source: Baublatt


Despite great resources, what is holding back geothermal in Italy?

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In Europe, the geothermal market is going through a very flourishing moment as a whole, as highlighted by the European Geothermal Council (EGEC) in its European geothermal market report 2019 , we reported. Geothermal power plants are doubling, geothermal district heating has the wind in the stern while geothermal pumps have exceeded 2 million installations.

Yet precisely in Italy, or precisely the country where geothermal technologies first came to light over two centuries ago, the sector finds it hard to find a new way of development. Why? This is the basis of an interview published by Greenreport in Italy with Adele Manzella, first researcher at the Institute of Geosciences and Georesources (Igg) of the National Research Council (Cnr) of Pisa, president of the Italian Geothermal Union (UGI) and national coordinator for EGEC.

The European geothermal market report 2019 shows rapid progress in the use of geothermal energy in Europe, but with wide regional differences: in summary, what is the picture of the situation in Italy?

“I would say that the report clearly shows how Italy shines for the great resources it has, not for the rapid progress in their use. In the electricity sector, new projects are struggling to progress even to demonstrate super-green technologies, incentives are for now beyond the horizon and Italian companies produce and sell too little in geothermal energy. The most effective application in the thermal sector is geothermal district heating, which has seen an increase in plants and production, while applications with geothermal heat pump still languish.”

Italy was the first country in the world, over two centuries ago, to develop geothermal technologies. Do you believe that there is still room for development both as regards the production of electricity and the direct use of heat?

“There is no doubt that there are technical margins. In the electricity sector, numerous projects are in the request phase, the interest is evident. All the more reason there are wide margins for the progress of thermal applications, which require resources at lower temperatures, not to mention the air conditioning systems with heat pumps, which can be installed in almost all the national territory. The limits to development are dictated by an organizational difficulty, I would say.”

How do you think it is possible to help overcome the various Nimby and Nimto syndromes that block the development of renewable sources – including geothermal energy – in our country?

“On other occasions I have already answered similar questions, saying that trust must be restored and the territories and citizens more and more effectively involved in decision-making processes. And consolidate information, often lacking and biased. I add a personal dream of mine: taking care of the aesthetics of the systems, creating an “Italian style”, a show so beautiful as to make you want to have more. Also connected to a beautiful Italian industrial chain, of course, which contributes to beauty in Italy and exports all over the world “.

The European geothermal market report 2019 emphasizes the importance of the right policies and right market conditions for the development of the geothermal chain. What do you think are the main gaps in Italy in this respect?

“At UGI we made various operational proposals. Greater support for thermal technologies is a must, given that the thermal sector consumes over half of the energy in Italy and renewable sources provide only 20% of the energy consumed. In particular, geothermal energy could produce much more in the face of economic incentives (such as guarantee funds for investors, relief for consumers), regulations that facilitate the installation of geothermal heat pumps and investments for those who do research and innovation for make the sector more advanced. The great gap to be filled in Italy in the electricity sector is soon said: the FER2 decree and the recovery of incentives for geothermal plants, also to strengthen technological developments aimed at ever greater environmental performance. But that’s not enough, if the action is not accompanied also by an acceleration of the authorization times for the plants and stable electricity tariffs in the medium-long term. In short, we need a complete planning.”

Source: Greenreport 

Happy World Bathing Day – the comforts of geothermal energy for wellbeing

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Today is World Bathing Day, celebrated for the third time since its introduction in 2018. Theme of this year is Sunrise Bathing.

World Bathing Day is a global event shining a spotlight on the vital importance of humanity’s relationship with water for health, community and cultural purposes. The Day has participants engaging from all over the world, including: New Zealand, Australia, the Phillipines, Thailand, Vietnam, Japan, Russia, India, Czech Republic, Finland, Sweden, Iceland, United Kingdom, Iran, South Africa and the United States of America.

This year the theme is Sunrise bathing … Get Involved by sharing a beautiful sunrise bathing image on Instagram! #worldbathingday

And what would be bathing without heat … yes it would be cold … and this is where geothermal is so connected to the comfort of being in the water, relaxing and the overall wellbeing.

From ancient times indigenious people all around the world made use of natural hot springs to bath, wash and relax. Taken to the next level by Romans and their bathing culture, today hot springs in all parts of the world are enjoyed by people of all ages in facilities that range from a natural hot pot, an abandoned bath tub, to the fancy spa temples of this world.

To see the different approaches to using geothermal hot springs and the set up is fantastic … in the end it is about enjoying what the earth has to offer and what better way to be closer to the natural resource of geothermal than a geothermal bath.

Learn more about World Bathing Day here.

Commercial operation started for expanded Steamboat Hills geothermal plant in Nevada

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In a release today, Ormat Technologies Inc. (NYSE: ORA) announced that the enhancement of its Steamboat Hills geothermal power plant located near Reno, Nevada is complete and achieved commercial operation on June 6, 2020. Enhancement work included the replacement of all old generating unit equipment with new, state-of-the-art equipment and resource modifications that increased the generating capacity of the Steamboat complex by approximately 19 MW to a total of 84 MW. The new equipment will increase the productivity and efficiency of the power plant and is expected to reduce maintenance costs per kWh.

The Steamboat Hills power plant continues to sell its electricity under the current 25-year long term portfolio power purchase agreement with Southern California Public Power Authority (SCPPA), with 100% of the 28.4 MW of capacity going to the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

Isaac Angel, CEO of Ormat Technologies, said, “For more than 30 years, Ormat’s Steamboat Hills power plant has been producing environmentally responsible, advanced geothermal energy in Reno for the region. Today, Ormat unveiled the new Steamboat Hills plant, benefitting from new and advanced technology which will enable this resource to continue providing clean and renewable power, more efficiently than before, for decades to come. This new state-of-the-art facility will provide additional electricity for 22,000 homes while offsetting four million tons of CO2, providing the highest level of efficiency and safety in the geothermal industry. The increased generation of our Steamboat Hills power plant helps LADWP to make the transition to 100% clean energy while maintaining a reliable and perpetual power supply for Los Angeles”.

Mr. Angel added, “This additional capacity added to our existing electricity portfolio helps us to mitigate the decrease in our product backlog, which is affected by the continuation and the increasing severity of the COVID-19 global pandemic. Currently, we no longer expect to sign a significant product sale contract in the coming months in a different market. In light of this current situation, we are continuing our efforts to expand and expedite our growth in the electricity segment and energy storage segment.”

Source: Company release 

Drilling started for second geothermal well for Trias Westland in the Netherlands

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The journey to warm water at a depth of 2.3 kilometers started June 12, 2020 with the drilling of the second geothermal well. Thanks to the expansion of Trias Westland, another 100 hectares, owned by 30 greenhouse horticultural entrepreneurs, can be heated sustainably. A unique feature is that 345 homes in the Liermolen district will also be included in the project and will be heated via this geothermal heat source. The use of geothermal energy leads to considerably less CO2 emissions. The expansion has a production capacity of approximately 15 MWth, comparable to the natural gas consumption of approximately 15,000 households.

There is plenty of sustainable energy in the Westland soil. The earth’s soil contains natural aquifers; the deeper, the warmer the water in the earth. The hot water is pumped up and transferred to the heat network with a heat exchanger. From here, the water can be distributed to the glasshouse horticultural businesses and homes in the Liermolen district. After use, the cooled water returns to the earth. The earth’s core then heats up the water.

Grow to 56 participants

The drilling will take place at Lange Broekweg in Naaldwijk near Zandheullaan. It is the second geothermal heat source of Trias Westland. The greenhouse horticultural companies associated with Trias Westland, which were unable to participate in the first drilling, will also have access to sustainable heat thanks to the expansion (Trias Westland 2). Another 30 Westland greenhouse horticultural companies will soon heat their greenhouses and buildings in a sustainable way thanks to Trias Westland 2. In addition, Royal Flora Holland and 345 new-build homes in Liermolen will be connected to sustainable heat from Trias Westland.

Work has started

Work on the drilling site has now started. Local residents were informed about this. Drilling to the Lower Cretaceous stratum is expected to take about 2 months. The second geothermal heat source is expected to become operational in the second quarter of 2021 after a successful well test.

Powerful collaboration

Trias Westland is a project by and for greenhouse horticultural entrepreneurs. Through their own cooperative, they work together with each other and with large regional parties in order to switch to a sustainable energy supply. For the connection to the heat network, they pay a fixed amount annually based on actual costs. They take the heat off at real cost, taking advantage of any windfalls. What they don’t use they can trade among themselves; this way they can keep costs low and make optimum use of the heat source. After fifteen years, the Westland heat cooperative fully owns the geothermal energy company.

Heat network in the Westland

The expansion of the heat network of Trias Westland on Kasteelweg in Naaldwijk has recently been carried out so that a combination with the planned maintenance work from the municipality of Westland was possible. The heat network of Trias Westland will be expanded further in the coming year to realize the new connections. A large part of this network also functions as a main line within the Westland Heat System (WSW), the regionally planned heat network in Westland.

Trias Westland is an initiative of HVC, Capturam, Royal FloraHolland and a large group of greenhouse horticultural entrepreneurs. These partners attach great importance to sustainability and see geothermal energy as an important alternative to natural gas.

Source: Trias Westland

Drilling started for geothermal heating project in Malmö, Sweden

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In March of this year we reported on plans by E.On to develop a geothermal heating project in the Swedish city of Malmö across the bay from Danish capital of Copenhagen.

Things are going fast and it is now reported that drilling has already started with several pictures shared by several people and companies involved on the different social media platforms.

E.ON plans to build a geothermal deep-heat plant in Malmö, with wells will be drilled five to seven kilometers deep into the ground. The expected maximum temperature of 160 degrees Celsius will be sufficient to feed the heat directly into Malmö’s district heating network. The pilot project is one of Europe’s first geothermal power plants to extract geothermal energy from depths of several kilometers on an industrial scale.

We will share more details if we get them.

 

 

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