Geothermal Power

Overview

Geothermal power is a renewable energy source that converts the thermal energy trapped beneath Earth's surface into electricity. Steam created from this energy can be funneled into a turbine, which, when spun, produces electricity in an attached generator. The US generated more geothermal power than any other country in 2024, and advances in drilling technology are anticipated to greatly expand its use over the coming decades.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Geothermal power can generate electricity and provide direct heating for homes

    By drilling several kilometers through penetrable rock, wells can access highly pressurized groundwater warmed by thermal energy trapped beneath Earth's surface. This water can be turned into steam to create electricity in generators. Heating systems several meters deep can pump fluid underground before circulating it through buildings.

  • Some geothermal power plants make electricity using a secondary fluid

    Direct dry-steam systems pull underground steam into a turbine-generator system, while flash and double-flash cycle systems spray extracted liquid water into a low-pressure tank, causing it to rapidly vaporize—"flash"—before moving to the turbine. Binary cycle systems use the extracted steam and water to flash a second fluid that easily boils, which then drives the turbine.

  • Enhanced geothermal power systems can trigger earthquakes

    These systems inject fluid into rock to create cracks that allow deeper reservoirs of fluid to escape or to create networks where water can be deposited for heating. This injection can increase subterranean pressure and potentially trigger earthquakes, necessitating the use of sensors and moderated drilling technologies.

  • Geothermal power can reduce the dangerous mining of rare earth elements

    Geothermal brines—mineral-rich underground fluids extracted for use in geothermal plants—contain small concentrations of REEs that can be recovered after energy generation. Although researchers suggest that this retrieval requires complex extraction methods at a significant scale to account for high flow rates, the chemical processes also occur in traditional REE processing.

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