Steam pipes in Indonesia sit on the "Ring of  Fire," a frequent target of deadly earthquakes, volcanoes and tsunamis,  but also the source of possibly the world's greatest geothermal resource  base.
You can make electricity from heat in the Earth, just ask residents of Northern  California. Their electricity comes from natural geothermal energy, or hydrothermal energy,  and here's how it works. It starts with water 6,562 to 13,123 feet (2  to 4 kilometers) underground, trapped in holes or cracks in rocks. The  water and rock get heated by Earth's hot mantle or by radioactive  minerals in the rock. Energy companies drill wells into the rock and  pump up hot water or steam. The steam drives turbines in generators,  which send electricity to residents' houses.
Since nature provided the hot rock, the connected holes or cracks  and the water, it's considered natural geothermal energy. By contrast, enhanced or engineered geothermal systems (EGSs)  don't wait for the full setup. They start with hot rock and add the  water or the cracks and connections or all of it. So, all geothermal  electricity comes from hot water inside hot rock; in natural geothermal,  nature makes the system. In engineered geothermal, engineers make some  part of it.
Why bother to build the system if nature can give it to you for free?  In a way, it's a chance to design the perfect geothermal system. You're  no longer stuck with what nature provides, which could be colder water  or more of a puddle than a vast reservoir. You don't have to hunt for  the natural sources, and you aren't limited to regions of the world  where natural sources exist. For a cost, you can engineer a geothermal  system anywhere. And you can make it more efficient than anything nature  provides.
 In this article, we'll explore the benefits, limits  and promise of a future powered by EGS. First, we'll tour an EGS power  plant. 
Inside an Engineered Geothermal System Power Plant
To understand how engineered geothermal systems (EGSs) work, it helps  to start with how the systems are built. They're built into hot, deep  rocks: basement, sedimentary or volcanic rocks.  Developers drill wells 1.9 to 6.2 miles (3 to 10 kilometers) into the  rocks, using conventional oil drills. The temperature down there  measures some 160 degrees F to 600 degrees F (71 degrees C to 315  degrees C). The depth is deeper than that used in natural geothermal  systems, but the temperature is about the same.
The rocks need to have a special history. These rocks, like all  rocks, were stressed long ago -- thereby becoming cracked. Over time,  the cracks resealed with crusts of minerals, but that's all part of the  plan. The next step is to force water into the rock using high-pressure  pumps.
Here's where another piece of the rock's history comes in. The rock  is still under stress, so it's just aching to break along its old  cracks. Forcing water into it does the trick, and it slips along its  cracks. The rock's rough edges prop it open. 
Now, we're ready to talk about electricity. The power plant on the surface has pairs of wells -- injection wells and production wells.  Cold water gets pumped down the injection wells. As it percolates  through cracks in the hot rock, it heats. Once it's hot enough, it rises  by its own heat or by the pressure from incoming water up the  production well. The rest is geothermal as usual: Hot water makes steam  and drives turbines. Cooling towers or pipes cool the water and recycle it back into the injection wells. 
 A drilling derrick that's part of the Deep Heat  Mining energy project rises up in Switzerland in 2007. Geothermal power  could provide 250,000 times more energy than the world currently  consumes yearly.
 Almost any site can be used to build an EGS because hot rock is  everywhere. But the best sites occur where the hot rock is most stressed  and closest to the surface. Developers can drill temperature wells and  look for stress in the surface geology to assess sites. In several  countries, including the United States, governmental surveyors are  making systematic maps.
Earthquakes and Other Risks of Artificial Geothermal Energy
Harvesting engineered geothermal energy requires construction underground, so it carries risks, but they can be controlled.     
The first risks are vibrations at the surface. When engineers  build an engineered geothermal system (EGS), they create something like  an earthquake underground. It happens during fracturing, as the hot rock  collapses on itself and slips. The slipping is on a much smaller scale  than when a big fault slips to cause an earthquake we can easily feel.  We rarely feel these man-made quakes at the surface, but if we do, it's  as a light vibration.The rock movements are monitored and controlled. By planting  seismometers around the rock to be fractured, engineers can watch the  cracks spread. Since their own water pumps control the cracking and  slipping, if engineers want it to stop, they can turn off the water. 
With good planning, no large earthquakes will occur. Developers  wouldn't put an EGS site near a big fault, where high-pressure pumping  could disturb the fault. Developers can check regional geological maps  to know where big faults are. And just in case, developers measure  seismicity at sites before they start working in an area.
Water use poses an even bigger issue than surface vibrations. EGS  sites use water during building and operation. The first water gets  invested to prop open the cracked rock and measures 2 million gallons or  more (about three Olympic swimming pools or 7.6 million liters). Once  the rock is unsealed, it will suck down nearby reservoirs, lowering the  water table, unless you add millions to billions more gallons of water  at the surface. In some systems, more water is used for cooling the  power plant.
The good news is that all water added at the surface can be reused,  so it's invested only once. It also doesn't have to be drinking-grade  water. EGS is most economical in the arid West, because that's where the  hot rocks are shallowest, so developers have to buy water rights. 
Water pollution is another issue. As water circulates through the  hot rock, it may pick up arsenic and other poisonous substances. The  contaminants shouldn't leak at the surface or into underground  freshwater. To try to ensure they don't, engineers keep the circulating  water contained. On the surface, it flows through pipes that dive down  into the wells, and when the water flows through the cracked rock, a  jacket of uncracked rock serves as insulation.
 Benefits of Artificial Geothermal Energy
All geothermal power, whether natural or engineered, has economic and  environmental benefits, like reliability. It can supply electricity  nonstop, owing to the Earth always being hot and radiating heat  predictably. The same can't be said of wind or solar power, since the  wind dies down, and the sun sets.
     Engineered geothermal, like natural geothermal, is renewable,  meaning it doesn't deplete Earth's heat. That's not to say that sites  don't wear out. 
They do. "You mine heat from this local region  underground faster than it's being resupplied by radioactive minerals in  the rock and conduction through the Earth," says Jefferson Tester, an  EGS expert at MIT. Eventually, the rock between the injection and  production well gets cold. But like crop rotation, new wells can be  drilled nearby, where the rock is as hot as ever. By rotating among  several pairs of wells, you can keep getting hot water. Overall, the  process extracts a small fraction of the heat in a big block of rock and  a laughably small amount of Earth's heat. No system could dream of  cooling off the Earth. 
Engineered and natural geothermal use the same power plants, which are very clean. Binary plants,  the cleanest designs, emit no gas into the environment, not even steam  clouds. The circulating water stays in a pipe and boils another fluid to  turn the plant's turbines. Steam and flash plants,  which puff out billowing steam clouds, naturally emit little sulfur  dioxide, nitrogen oxide and carbon dioxide and have scrubbers that let  virtually no hydrogen sulfide escape. 
In addition, geothermal power plants don't occupy much land: 7,460  square meters (80,299 square feet) per megawatt. Let's see how other  energy sources compare:
     - Solar panels are the worst on space, sprawling over 710,418 square feet (66,000 square meters) per megawatt of electricity under ideal conditions.
 - Coal plants and their strip mines occupy 430,556 square feet (40,000 square meters) per megawatt.
 - A nuclear plant takes up 107,639 square feet (10,000 square meters) per megawatt.
 
Geothermal power also offers a country energy security. Because the  resource is on home soil, and for all purposes, unlimited, there's no  need to worry about the cost of imports. And unlike nuclear power,  byproducts of geothermal can't be used for weapons.
Engineered geothermal's big advantage over natural geothermal is  that it works almost anywhere. Engineered geothermal needs only hot  rock. "You drill deep enough anywhere, and you'll hit hot rock," says  Peter Rose, an EGS expert at the University of Utah.  
 Here's another benefit of geothermal: Monkeys like  it. Japanese macaques hanging out at the hot springs in Macaca  Yamanouchi Town, Nagano Prefecture, Japan.
The Cost of Artificial Geothermal Energy: Dollars, Cents and Watts
We can't avoid the economics. Investors want to know how fast  engineered geothermal systems (EGSs) will pay for themselves, and  consumers are concerned about the cost of the power.
The most expensive part of engineered geothermal energy is drilling  the wells. To drill one 2.5-mile (4-kilometer) well, which is  middle-range, it costs about $5 million. If the heat happens to be  deeper, at 6.2 miles (10 kilometers), the drilling cost skyrockets to  $20 million per well [source: Tester]. These costs could drop by the millions per well as drilling technology progresses.
Once the wells and power plant are built, the system is inexpensive  to operate. The heat from the Earth is free. Operators pay to keep the  water pumps pumping and to maintain the wells. They also pay to redrill  wells every five to 10 years, says Tester. 
A mature engineered geothermal power plant can churn out between 1  and 50 megawatts of electricity, enough to supply 800 to 41,000 average  U.S. homes [sources: Tester, EIA].  The output is less than some natural geothermal plants and pales in  comparison to the more than 2,000 megawatts that a coal-fired plant can  supply [source: Tester].
     Investors can get a good deal in the end, each year recovering 17  to 18 percent of the money they spend on building underground parts of  the system, the same as what they'd get from an oil or natural gas  field, says Tester. For consumers, the cost of the electricity depends  on how well the system milks heat from the rock. The cost drops if more  water circulates through the rock and if the recovered water is hotter.
Tester and his colleagues ran models on six U.S. locations where  engineered geothermal systems would be practical. They estimated that  the first engineered geothermal systems would be inefficient, getting 20  kilograms of hot water per production well per second, setting the cost  of the electricity between 18 and 75 cents per kilowatt-hour. But with  mature technology, able to harvest 80 kilograms of hot water from each  production well per second, the cost could drop to 4 to 9 cents per  kilowatt-hour, in-range or below the cost of electricity from coal  [source: Tester].
Raising the power output and lowering the cost is a manageable  engineering problem, says Tester. "We don't have to make significant new  discoveries or find new materials. We have to re-engineer the  subsurface [rock] system by better knowledge of what's down there. It's a  much more tractable route."
Artificial Geothermal Energy Around the World
Engineered geothermal is still experimental worldwide, but a few small commercial power plants do exist.   
     Japan burst onto the engineered geothermal scene early by  demonstrating it on the side of a volcano, at a site called Hijiori. Its  longest test ran for a year and harvested enough heat to run a small,  130-kilowatt power plant. The test stopped because one well cooled a  dramatic 63 degrees F (17 degrees C) in one year [source: Tester].
The prospects look good in Australia because throughout the  continent, radioactive sources heat basement rock that's shallow,  cracked and now under the right kind of stress. In the Cooper Basin,  currently used for oil and gas, surveyors found a 386-square-mile  (1,000-square-kilometer) slab of granite sizzling at 482 degrees F (250  degrees C). Geodynamics Ltd. scooped up the site, sunk in a pair of  wells, aptly called "Habanero-1" and "Habanero-2," cracked the rock and  started circulating water. 
A power station is being built, which could  generate hundreds to thousands of megawatts of electricity, the latter  making it competitive with a coal plant, if many wells go into the big  field [source: Tester]. 
France and Germany are now producing electricity by engineered  geothermal. One plant, in Soultz-sous-ForĂȘts, France, produces about 1  megawatt of electricity. The other, in Landau, Germany, produces 2 to 3  megawatts, says Rose. These small outputs could grow if the projects  raise money to drill more wells.
     In the United States, engineered geothermal is now starting. The  first demonstrations will be at natural geothermal power plants at the  Geysers in California and at Desert Peak and Brady in Nevada. In the  demonstrations, engineered geothermal techniques will rescue some dry  wells and boost power production at the sites.
The U.S. Geological Survey plans to demonstrate more engineered  geothermal in the Midwest and in hot rock basins east of the  Mississippi. "That would capture the imagination of a lot more states  and congressmen and would help tremendously if it convinced them this  wasn't only a Western resource," says Rose. If all goes well,  stand-alone power plants might appear in the United States in five  years, says Rose.
by "environment clean generatiions" 



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