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More Info on Geothermal Energy
WHAT
DOES
THE
WORD
"GEOTHERMAL"
MEAN?
WHAT
IS
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
HOW
DOES
GEOTHERMAL
HEAT
GET
UP
TO
EARTH'S
SURFACE?
HOW
HAVE
PEOPLE
USED
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
IN
THE
PAST?
HOW
DO
WE
USE
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
TODAY?
HOW
IS
ELECTRICITY
GENERATED
USING
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
WHAT
ARE
SOME
OF
THE
ADVANTAGES
OF
USING
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
TO
GENERATE
ELECTRICITY?
HOW
MUCH
ELECTRICITY
IS
FROM
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
WHAT
ARE
SOME
NON-ELECTRIC
WAYS
WE
CAN
USE
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
WHAT
PARTS
OF
THE
WORLD
HAVE
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
HOW
MUCH
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
IS
THERE?
WHAT
DOES
THE
WORD
"GEOTHERMAL"
MEAN?
"Geothermal"
comes
from
the
Greek
words
geo
(earth)
and thermal (heat).
So,
geothermal
means
earth
heat.
WHAT
IS
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
Our
earth's
interior
-
like
the
sun
-
provides
heat
energy
from
nature.
This
heat
-
geothermal
energy
-
yields
warmth
and
power
that
we
can
use
without
polluting
the
environment.
Geothermal
heat
originates
from
Earth's
fiery
consolidation
of
dust
and
gas
over
4
billion
years
ago.
At
earth's
core
-
4,000
miles
deep
-
temperatures
may
reach
over
9,000
degrees
F.
HOW
DOES
GEOTHERMAL
HEAT
GET
UP
TO
EARTH'S
SURFACE?
The
heat
from
the
earth's
core
continuously
flows
outward.
It
transfers
(conducts)
to
the
surrounding
layer
of
rock,
the
mantle.
When
temperatures
and
pressures
become
high
enough,
some
mantle
rock
melts,
becoming
magma.
Then,
because
it
is
lighter
(less
dense)
than
the
surrounding
rock,
the
magma
rises
(convects),
moving
slowly
up
toward
the
earth's
crust,
carrying
the
heat
from
below.
Sometimes
the
hot
magma
reaches
all
the
way
to
the
surface,
where
we
know
it
as
lava.
But
most
often
the
magma
remains
below
earth's
crust,
heating
nearby
rock
and
water
(rainwater
that
has
seeped
deep
into
the
earth)
-
sometimes
as
hot
as
700
degrees
F.
Some
of
this
hot
geothermal
water
travels
back
up
through
faults
and
cracks
and
reaches
the
earth's
surface
as
hot
springs
or
geysers,
but
most
of
it
stays
deep
underground,
trapped
in
cracks
and
porous
rock.
This
natural
collection
of
hot
water
is
called
a
geothermal
reservoir.
HOW
HAVE
PEOPLE
USED
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
IN
THE
PAST?
From
earliest
times,
people
have
used
geothermal
water
that
flowed
freely
from
the
earth's
surface
as
hot
springs.
The
oldest
and
most
common
use
was,
of
course,
just
relaxing
in
the
comforting
warm
waters.
But
eventually,
this
"magic
water"
was
used
(and
still
is)
in
other
creative
ways.
The
Romans,
for
example,
used
geothermal
water
to
treat
eye
and
skin
disease
and,
at
Pompeii,
to
heat
buildings.
As
early
as
10,000
years
ago,
Native
Americans
used
hot
springs
water
for
cooking
and
medicine.
For
centuries
the
Maoris
of
New
Zealand
have
cooked
"geothermally,"
and,
since
the
1960s,
France
has
been
heating
up
to
200,000
homes
using
geothermal
water.
HOW
DO
WE
USE
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
TODAY?
Today
we
drill
wells
into
the
geothermal
reservoirs
to
bring
the
hot
water
to
the
surface.
Geologists,
geochemists,
drillers
and
engineers
do
a
lot
of
exploring
and
testing
to
locate
underground
areas
that
contain
this
geothermal
water,
so
we'll
know
where
to
drill
geothermal
production
wells.
Then,
once
the
hot
water
and/or
steam
travels
up
the
wells
to
the
surface,
they
can
be
used
to
generate
electricity
in
geothermal
power
plants
or
for
energy
saving
non-electrical
purposes.
HOW
IS
ELECTRICITY
GENERATED
USING
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
In
geothermal
power
plants
steam,
heat
or
hot
water
from
geothermal
reservoirs
provides
the
force
that
spins
the
turbine
generators
and
produces
electricity.
The
used
geothermal
water
is
then
returned
down
an
injection
well
into
the
reservoir
to
be
reheated,
to
maintain
pressure,
and
to
sustain
the
reservoir.
There
are
three
kinds
of
geothermal
power
plants.
The
kind
we
build
depends
on
the
temperatures
and
pressures
of
a
reservoir.
- A
"dry'"
steam
reservoir
produces
steam
but
very
little
water.
The
steam
is
piped
directly
into
a
"dry"
steam
power
plant
to
provide
the
force
to
spin
the
turbine
generator.
The
largest
dry
steam
field
in
the
world
is
The
Geysers,
about
90
miles
north
of
San
Francisco.
Production
of
electricity
started
at
The
Geysers
in
1960,
at
what
has
become
the
most
successful
alternative
energy
project
in
history.
- A
geothermal
reservoir
that
produces
mostly
hot
water
is
called
a
"hot
water
reservoir"
and
is
used
in
a
"flash"
power
plant.
Water
ranging
in
temperature
from
300
-
700
degrees
F
is
brought
up
to
the
surface
through
the
production
well
where,
upon
being
released
from
the
pressure
of
the
deep
reservoir,
some
of
the
water
flashes
into
steam
in
a
'separator.'
The
steam
then
powers
the
turbines.
- A
reservoir
with
temperatures
between
250
-
360
degrees
F
is
not
hot
enough
to
flash
enough
steam
but
can
still
be
used
to
produce
electricity
in
a
"binary"
power
plant.
In
a
binary
system
the
geothermal
water
is
passed
through
a
heat
exchanger,
where
its
heat
is
transferred
into
a
second
(binary)
liquid,
such
as
isopentane,
that
boils
at
a
lower
temperature
than
water.
When
heated,
the
binary
liquid
flashes
to
vapor,
which,
like
steam,
expands
across
and
spins
the
turbine
blades.
The
vapor
is
then
recondensed
to
a
liquid
and
is
reused
repeatedly.
In
this
closed
loop
cycle,
there
are
no
emissions
to
the
air.
WHAT
ARE
SOME
OF
THE
ADVANTAGES
OF
USING
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
TO
GENERATE
ELECTRICITY?
- Clean.
Geothermal
power
plants,
like
wind
and
solar
power
plants,
do
not
have
to
burn
fuels
to
manufacture
steam
to
turn
the
turbines.
Generating
electricity
with
geothermal
energy
helps
to
conserve
nonrenewable
fossil
fuels,
and
by
decreasing
the
use
of
these
fuels,
we
reduce
emissions
that
harm
our
atmosphere.
There
is
no
smoky
air
around
geothermal
power
plants
--
in
fact
some
are
built
in
the
middle
of
farm
crops
and
forests,
and
share
land
with
cattle
and
local
wildlife.
For
ten
years,
Lake
County
California,
home
to
five
geothermal
electric
power
plants,
has
been
the
first
and
only
county
to
meet
the
most
stringent
governmental
air
quality
standards
in
the
U.S.
- Easy
on
the
land.
The
land
area
required
for
geothermal
power
plants
is
smaller
per
megawatt
than
for
almost
every
other
type
of
power
plant.
Geothermal
installations
don't
require
damming
of
rivers
or
harvesting
of
forests
--
and
there
are
no
mine
shafts,
tunnels,
open
pits,
waste
heaps
or
oil
spills.
- Reliable.
Geothermal
power
plants
are
designed
to
run
24
hours
a
day,
all
year.
A
geothermal
power
plant
sits
right
on
top
of
its
fuel
source.
It
is
resistant
to
interruptions
of
power
generation
due
to
weather,
natural
disasters
or
political
rifts
that
can
interrupt
transportation
of
fuels.
- Flexible.
Geothermal
power
plants
can
have
modular
designs,
with
additional
units
installed
in
increments
when
needed
to
fit
growing
demand
for
electricity.
- Keeps
Dollars
at
Home.
Money
does
not
have
to
be
exported
to
import
fuel
for
geothermal
power
plants.
Geothermal
"fuel'"
-
like
the
sun
and
the
wind
-
is
always
where
the
power
plant
is;
economic
benefits
remain
in
the
region
and
there
are
no
fuel
price
shocks.
- Helps
Developing
Countries
Grow.
Geothermal
projects
can
offer
all
of
the
above
benefits
to
help
developing
countries
grow
without
pollution.
And
installations
in
remote
locations
can
raise
the
standard
of
living
and
quality
of
life
by
bringing
electricity
to
people
far
from
"electrified"
population
centers.
HOW
MUCH
ELECTRICITY
IS
FROM
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
Since
the
first
geothermally-generated
electricity
in
the
world
was
produced
at
Larderello,
Italy,
in
1904
the
use
of
geothermal
energy
for
electricity
has
grown
worldwide
to
about
7,000
megawatts
in
twenty-one
countries
around
the
world.
The
United
States
alone
produces
2700
megawatts
of
electricity
from
geothermal
energy,
electricity
comparable
to
burning
sixty
million
barrels
of
oil
each
year.
WHAT
ARE
SOME
NON-ELECTRIC
WAYS
WE
CAN
USE
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
Geothermal
water
is
used
around
the
world,
even
when
it
is
not
hot
enough
to
generate
electricity.
Anytime
geothermal
water
or
heat
are
used
directly,
less
electricity
is
used.
Using
geothermal
water
'directly'
conserves
energy
and
replaces
the
use
of
polluting
energy
resources
with
clean
ones.
The
main
non-electric
ways
we
use
geothermal
energy
are
DIRECT
USES
and
GEOTHERMAL
HEAT
PUMPS.
DIRECT
USES
Geothermal
waters
ranging
from
50
degrees
F
to
over
300
degrees
F,
are
used
directly
from
the
earth:
- 'to
soothe
aching
muscles
in
hot
springs,
and
health
spas
(balneology);
- to
help
grow
flowers,
vegetables,
and
other
crops
in
greenhouses
while
snow-drifts
pile
up
outside
(agriculture);
- to
shorten
the
time
needed
for
growing
fish,
shrimp,
abalone
and
alligators
to
maturity
(aquaculture);
- to
pasteurize
milk,
to
dry
onions
and
lumber
and
to
wash
wool
(industrial
uses);
- Space
heating
of
individual
buildings
and
of
entire
districts,
is
-
besides
hot
spring
bathing
-
the
most
common
and
the
oldest
direct
use
of
nature's
hot
water.
Geothermal
district
heating
systems
pump
geothermal
water
through
a
heat
exchanger,
where
it
transfers
its
heat
to
clean
city
water
that
is
piped
to
buildings
in
the
district.
There,
a
second
heat
exchanger
transfers
the
heat
to
the
building's
heating
system.
The
geothermal
water
is
injected
down
a
well
back
into
the
reservoir
to
be
heated
and
used
again.
The
first
modern
district
heating
system
was
developed
in
Boise,
Idaho.
(In
the
western
U.S.
there
are
271
communities
with
geothermal
resources
available
for
this
use.)
Modern
district
heating
systems
also
serve
homes
in
Russia,
China,
France,
Sweden,
Hungary,
Romania,
and
Japan.
The
world's
largest
district
heating
system
is
in
Reykjavik,
Iceland.
Since
it
started
using
geothermal
energy
as
its
main
source
of
heat
Reykjavik,
once
very
polluted,
has
become
one
of
the
cleanest
cities
in
the
world.
Geothermal
heat
is
being
used
in
some
creative
ways;
its
use
is
limited
only
by
our
ingenuity.
For
example,
in
Klamath
Falls,
Oregon,
which
has
one
of
the
largest
district
heating
systems
in
the
U.S.,
geothermal
water
is
also
piped
under
roads
and
sidewalks
to
keep
them
from
icing
over
in
freezing
weather.
The
cost
of
using
any
other
method
to
keep
hot
water
running
continuously
through
cold
pipes
would
be
prohibitive.
And
in
New
Mexico
and
other
places
rows
of
pipes
carrying
geothermal
water
have
been
installed
under
soil,
where
flowers
or
vegetables
are
growing.
This
ensures
that
the
ground
does
not
freeze,
providing
a
longer
growing
season
and
overall
faster
growth
of
agricultural
products
that
are
not
protected
by
the
shelter
and
warmth
of
a
greenhouse.
GEOTHERMAL
HEAT
PUMPS
Animals
have
always
known
to
burrow
into
the
earth,
where
the
temperature
is
relatively
stable
compared
to
the
air
temperature,
to
get
shelter
from
winter's
cold
and
summer's
heat.
People,
too,
have
sought
relief
from
bad
weather
in
earth's
caves.
Today,
with
geothermal
heat
pumps
(GHP's),
we
take
advantage
of
this
stable
earth
temperature
-
about
45
-
58
degrees
F
just
a
few
feet
below
the
surface
-
to
help
keep
our
indoor
temperatures
comfortable.
GHP's
circulate
water
or
other
liquids
through
pipes
buried
in
a
continuous
loop
(either
horizontally
or
vertically)
next
to
a
building.
Depending
on
the
weather,
the
system
is
used
for
heating
or
cooling.
Heating:
Earth's
heat
(the
difference
between
the
earth's
temperature
and
the
colder
temperature
of
the
air)
is
transferred
through
the
buried
pipes
into
the
circulating
liquid
and
then
transferred
again
into
the
building.
Cooling:
During
hot
weather,
the
continually
circulating
fluid
in
the
pipes
'picks
up'
heat
from
the
building
-
thus
helping
to
cool
it
-
and
transfers
it
into
the
earth.
GHP's
use
very
little
electricity
and
are
very
easy
on
the
environment.
In
the
U.S.,
the
temperature
inside
over
300,000
homes,
schools
and
offices
is
kept
comfortable
by
these
energy
saving
systems,
and
hundreds
of
thousands
more
are
used
worldwide.
The
U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency
has
rated
GHP's
as
among
the
most
efficient
of
heating
and
cooling
technologies.
WHAT
PARTS
OF
THE
WORLD
HAVE
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY?
- For
electricity
and
direct
use:
Geothermal
reservoirs
that
are
close
enough
to
the
surface
to
be
reached
by
drilling
can
occur
in
places
where
geologic
processes
have
allowed
magma
to
rise
up
through
the
crust,
near
to
the
surface,
or
where
it
flows
out
as
lava.
The
crust
of
the
Earth
is
made
up
of
huge
plates,
which
are
in
constant
but
very
slow
motion
relative
to
one
another.
Magma
can
reach
near
the
surface
in
three
main
geologic
areas:
- where
Earth's
large
oceanic
and
crustal
plates
collide
and
one
slides
beneath
another,
called
a
subduction
zone
The
best
example
of
these
hot
regions
around
plate
margins
is
the
Ring
of
Fire
--
the
areas
bordering
the
Pacific
Ocean:
the
South
American
Andes,
Central
America,
Mexico,
the
Cascade
Range
of
the
U.S.
and
Canada,
the
Aleutian
Range
of
Alaska,
the
Kamchatka
Peninsula
of
Russia,
Japan,
the
Philippines,
Indonesia
and
New
Zealand.
- spreading
centers,
where
these
plates
are
sliding
apart,
(such
as
Iceland,
the
rift
valleys
of
Africa,
the
mid-Atlantic
Ridge
and
the
Basin
and
Range
Province
in
the
U.S.);
and
- places
called
hot
spots--
fixed
points
in
the
mantle
that
continually
produce
magma
to
the
surface.
Because
the
plate
is
continually
moving
across
the
hot
spot,
strings
of
volcanoes
are
formed,
such
as
the
chain
of
Hawaiian
Islands.
The
countries
currently
producing
the
most
electricity
from
geothermal
reservoirs
are
the
United
States,
New
Zealand,
Italy,
Iceland,
Mexico,
the
Philippines,
Indonesia
and
Japan,
but
geothermal
energy
is
also
being
used
in
many
other
countries.
- For
geothermal
heat
pumps,
use
can
be
almost
world-wide.
The
earth's
temperature
a
few
feet
below
the
ground
surface
is
relatively
constant
everywhere
in
the
world
(about
45
-
58
degrees
F),
while
the
air
temperature
can
change
from
summer
to
winter
extremes.
Unlike
other
kinds
of
geothermal
heat,
shallow
ground
temperatures
are
not
dependent
upon
tectonic
plate
activity
or
other
unique
geologic
processes.
Thus
geothermal
heat
pumps
can
be
used
to
help
heat
and
cool
homes
anywhere.
HOW
MUCH
GEOTHERMAL
ENERGY
IS
THERE?
Thousands
more
megawatts
of
power
than
are
currently
being
produced
could
be
developed
from
already-identified
hydrothermal
resources.
With
improvements
in
technology,
much
more
power
will
become
available.
Usable
geothermal
resources
will
not
be
limited
to
the
"shallow"
hydrothermal
reservoirs
at
the
crustal
plate
boundaries.
Much
of
the
world
is
underlain
(3-6
miles
down),
by
hot
dry
rock
-
no
water,
but
lots
of
heat.
Scientists
in
the
U.S.A.,
Japan,
England,
France,
Germany
and
Belgium
have
experimented
with
piping
water
into
this
deep
hot
rock
to
create
more
hydrothermal
resources
for
use
in
geothermal
power
plants.
As
drilling
technology
improves,
allowing
us
to
drill
much
deeper,
geothermal
energy
from
hot
dry
rock
could
be
available
anywhere.
At
such
time,
we
will
be
able
to
tap
the
true
potential
of
the
enormous
heat
resources
of
the
earth's
crust.
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