U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Geothermal Technologies Office
DOE and Partners Test Enhanced Geothermal Systems Technologies
February 20, 2008
DOE has embarked on a project with a number of partners to test
Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) technologies at a commercial
geothermal power facility near Reno, Nevada. EGS technology enhances
the permeability of underground strata, typically by injecting water
into the strata at high pressure. The concept was initially developed
to create geothermal reservoirs in hot underground strata where no
water existed—a technology called "hot dry rock"—but has since
been extended as a means of enhancing the performance of existing
geothermal reservoirs. Under the DOE project, EGS technology will be
tested in a well at the 11-megawatt Desert Peak facility, which is
owned by Ormat Technologies, Inc. The well is currently not able to
produce commercially useful quantities of hot geothermal fluid, but
with the help of EGS, the site is thought to have the potential to
produce 50 megawatts of power or more.
DOE, Ormat, and GeothermEx are leading the research and development
project, with the participation of the University of Utah, TerraTek,
Pinnacle Technologies, the U.S. Geological Survey, and three of DOE's
national laboratories: Idaho National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, and Sandia National Laboratory. DOE is providing
$1.6 million to support the project. In addition to the current work
on the sub-commercial well, the project participants are planning to
use the EGS facilities at Desert Peak as a potential test site for
future technology developments. See the Ormat press release.
Meanwhile, an application of EGS in a true hot dry rock application in
Australia is continuing to make progress. Geodynamics, Limited
announced on February 5th that the company has completed its
production well, called Habanero 3. Any day now, the company should be
starting a circulation test by injecting water into Habanero 1 and
removing the heated geothermal water from Habanero 3. The test should
give the company an indication of the potential power production of
the artificially created geothermal reservoir. See the Geodynamics
announcement (PDF 41 KB).
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