From Deseret News archives:

Will hot rocks yield clean energy?

Drilling deep into Earth's crust costly, may cause tremors

Published: Saturday, Aug. 4, 2007 11:59 p.m. MDT
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"Currently in the U.S. new technologies in the power sector are competing against coal, which is very cheap," he said.

Humans have used heat from the Earth for thousands of years. The ancient Romans drew on hot springs for bathing and heating their homes. Geothermal energy is in use in 24 countries, including the U.S.

But those sources — geysers and hot springs — are close to the surface. Hot dry rock technology, also called "enhanced geothermal systems" or EGS, drills down to where the layers of granite are close to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. The equipment is similar to that used for oil but needs to go much deeper and be wider to accommodate the water cycle.

Hot dry rock technology is meant to stay well away from the 99 percent of the Earth's interior that is over 1,000 F.

Aeneas Wanner, a Swiss expert, says that if you imagine Earth as an egg, "a bore hole would only scratch the shell of the egg a little bit."

The United States led the way in demonstrating the concept with the Los xx

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Backers in the United States hope government funding will increase as oil and gas prices rise. But Steve Chalk, deputy assistant secretary for renewable energy, said the Department of Energy won't spend more money beyond the $2 million it has already allocated to hot rock technology.

However, he said the MIT study, which was funded by the Department of Energy, serves as a basis for studying the idea further.

Major energy companies, including Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and American Electric Power, told the AP they are following the research but not investing in it.

"This is an interesting technology for Chevron, and we are currently evaluating its potential," said spokesman Alexander Yelland.

In Basel, the first shaft was bored last year by a 190-foot-tall drilling rig towering above nearby apartment buildings. Water was pumped down the injection well in the test phase in December, and as expected, it heated to above 390 F. as it seeped through the layers of rock below.

But that's where the water remains for the time being; it caused the rock layers to slip, causing the tremors and rumbles that spooked the townspeople.

Geopower Basel had forecast some rock slippage. In fact, it said the location on top of a fault line — the upper Rhine trench — was an advantage because it meant the heat was closer to the Earth's surface.

But with $51 million already spent, drilling stopped and the official launch date was moved back from 2009 to 2012.

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Georgios Kefalas, Associated Press

A drilling derrick rises 190 feet above nearby apartment buildings in Basel, Switzerland. Scientists estimate geothermal energy could provide 250,000 times more energy than the world currently uses.

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