The Potential of Geothermal Power
EskimoJoe wrote with a link to an AP article about progress in the development of geothermal energy. A Swiss company is competing with another in Australia to be the first to commercially develop a geothermal power plant. The concept is simple to understand: earth's core heat transforms water into steam, which in turn causes a turbine to revolve. The potential, though, is enormous. "Scientists say this geothermal energy, clean, quiet and virtually inexhaustible, could fill the world's annual needs 250,000 times over with nearly zero impact on the climate or the environment. A study released this year by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology said if 40 percent of the heat under the United States could be tapped, it would meet demand 56,000 times over. It said an investment of $800 million to $1 billion could produce more than 100 gigawatts of electricity by 2050, equaling the combined output of all 104 nuclear power plants in the U.S."
The summary is misleading, Geothermal power plants already exist.
http://ww.geothermie.de/iganews/no39/guadeloupe_ge othermal_developmen.htm
A Swiss company is competing with another in Australia to be the first to commercially develop a geothermal power plant.
I think they should go on a trip to Iceland... Frankly...
Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
Well they may be right that just 40% of the heat flow through the continental shield of the US may meet the energy demand 56k times over, the ticklish part is extracting the energy in an economic way. So far the only places where geothermal energy is usable is near active Volcanic areas where the geothermal gradient is steep enough to allow high temperatures near the surface and thus a high enough energy density to make the investment profitable (Think Iceland and California). All the other places the heat flow is too low to be usable for anything else than house heating.
Another thing one must address is that the heat flow can only be used where permeable strata exists in the ground making it possible to circulate water to extract the heat. In places with crystalline bedrock, the heat flow can not be used.
Yours Yazeran
Plan: to go to Mars one day with a hammer.
but Wairakei here in NZ is a geothermal power generator http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wairakei
It uses the natural geothermal activity local to the region.
ACK NAK RST
The oldest (over a century) and largest (produces 10% of the world's entire supply of geothermal electricity) is still in Italy, Larderello. It produces more than 500 MWe.
First off, there are no such things as "stalagtites". There are only stalactites (which hang tight from the ceiling) and stalagmites (which stand mightily on the ground); from your description I presume that you mean the latter. However, both are formed by dripping water, so perhaps you mean the tufa towers of Mono Lake. But those formed underwater and were only exposed when Los Angeles started diverting water from nearby rivers and the lake's water level fell. But no matter what you mean, these projects will only effect a very thin layer of the upper-most magma. You might as well worry about an oil spill effects the ocean's currents.
Shattering rock is how the process words. Water has a hard time passing through solid rock, so the mining process initially injects cold water to form microscopic cracks in the rock for the water to flow through. In the Swiss project, the earthquakes occurred because they were injecting water into a fault, in effect lubricating things enough that the two sides of the fault line could side easier. This may be a show stopper for that project. In North America, we will probably want to avoid drilling along the Pacific Coast or anywhere near the Reelfoot Rift.
Lastly, Earth's magnetosphere is produced by its core, not the magma. And if "sucking the heat out" could cause volcanoes to "dry up", I think that most people would consider that an additional benefit, not a disadvantage.
Nothing for 6-digit uids?
No doubt. And you can see this on NYTimes.com; I emailed them. How long do you think they will take to correct this?
Why would they correct something that they didn't get wrong? Just because a few slashdotters don't feel that the number cited is correct, you're going to tell them that they're wrong? How about doing three minutes of research to find out for yourself first? Let's hear it for "Citizen Journalism", where truthiness is more important than facts.
And for those of you playing at home, the relevent passage from the MIT study (press release here) (actual study here) [PDF warning] is this:
Based on growing markets in the United States for clean, base-load capacity, the panel thinks that with a combined public/private investment of about $800 million to $1 billion over a 15-year period, EGS technology could be deployed commercially on a timescale that would produce more than 100,000 MWe or 100 GWe of new capacity by 2050. This amount is approximately equivalent to the total R&D investment made in the past 30 years to EGS internationally, which is still less than the cost of a single, new-generation, clean-coal power plant.
This guy's the limit!
At a crude oil price of $75/bbl, a 13.7 bbl/day well is yielding $1027.50 of product per day, or $375,284 per year. At a cost of $1.44 million, it takes the well 3.84 years to pay for itself. At a cost of $7-$8 million, it would take 19-21 years to pay for itself. That's assuming you could extract as much energy-dollars from a hot rock well as from an oil well (can't find any numbers on this, but it can't be much higher or the oil companies would be all over this since they're already in the best position to take over any market involving drilling).
The hot rock well does have the advantage of being guaranteed productive for those 20 years, but you're talking "long term" as in way past the term of any elected official. It's hard to get them to pay for needed maintenance on roads and bridges, much less make an investment which won't pay for itself for 20+ years.
That being said, Earth is about 6E24 kg. The specific heat of silica & iron (the two most common minerals) is .7 & .45 J/gk - average it to .55. That would mean 3E24 J for a 1 degree drop. 3600J is a watt-hour... so 2.1E19 J is a terawatt-year. That means it would take about 140,000 years of 1TW 'drain' to cool the entire (interior of) earth about 1 degree. Even assuming that all human electricity was generated via geothermal energy, it would take somewhere in range of millions of years.
So, yeah, I wouldn't really worry about it.
Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?