There’s enough geothermal energy below ground to power the entire country. Some are trying to tap it — by using techniques from the fracking boom.
(www.nytimes.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 2023 22:00
https://lemmy.world/post/4029502
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 2023 22:00
https://lemmy.world/post/4029502
There’s enough geothermal energy below ground to power the entire country. Some are trying to tap it — by using techniques from the fracking boom.::The United States has enough geothermal energy to power the entire country. Some are trying to unlock it by using techniques from the fracking boom.
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@autotldr@lemmings.world in my dm pls?
I’m sorry, I don’t know how to handle links for that site. You may contact my maintainer, @rikudou@lemmings.world, if you wish to add it to supported sites!
😭😭
I’ve added the support for that site! @autotldr@lemmings.world
I just created the summary! You can find it at lemmings.world/comment/1684060.
❤️
Do we really have to link to paywalled sites?
It’s a bot that just harvests posts from reddit and reposts them here after the reddit post has reached a pre-set popularity threshold.
Ideally, the bot would automatically generate an archive link to the content so that there’s no paywall to read the article.
Here’s an archive link to the current article in this post:
archive.today/…/geothermal-energy-projects.html
12ft.io
In my experience this site works on 10% of the paywalls I encountered. It’s better than nothing still but not really a solution.
Firefox with ublock and bypass works on some sites, not the WSJ or ft though
We already know the effects of fracking.
Do we really want to start fucking with more resources further down? Lol
No, but at least these would be permanent wells, rather ones that can run out of gas.
Geothermal is a really excellent power source. Would be better if we had the new version though that let you place pipes diagonally, instead of having them snap to the grid.
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.nz/pictrs/image/23e79431-cf6e-40a1-bc39-351afd3a1d80.png">
I’m all for geothermal energy, but come on, geothermal energy is related to the mantal being close to the surface or fault line activity… And people want to do a fracking like thing? Am I the only one that sees the problem?
I’ve read the Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jemisin. First you start out getting geothermal power, and the next thing you know we’ve yeeted the moon and the planet is trying to kill us. Just you wait.
(But seriously read that trilogy if you haven’t and you like SciFi/Fantasty, it’s fantastic. First book is The Fifth Season.)
It’s all fun and games until you end up stuck on an ancient spaceship billions of lightyears from home because you accidentally blew up the planet.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
In a sagebrush valley full of wind turbines and solar panels in western Utah, Tim Latimer gazed up at a very different device he believes could be just as powerful for fighting climate change — maybe even more.
Traditional geothermal plants, which have existed for decades, work by tapping natural hot water reservoirs underground to power turbines that can generate electricity 24 hours a day.
Fervo is using fracking techniques — similar to those used for oil and gas — to crack open dry, hot rock and inject water into the fractures, creating artificial geothermal reservoirs.
Near the town of Milford, Utah, sits the Blundell geothermal plant, surrounded by boiling mud pits, hissing steam vents and the skeletal ruins of a hot springs resort.
The Blundell plant relies on ancient volcanism and quirks of geology: Just below the surface are hot, naturally porous rocks that allow groundwater to percolate and heat up enough to create steam for generating electricity.
While enhanced geothermal could, in theory, work anywhere, the best resources are on federal land, where regulatory reviews take years and it’s often easier to win permission for oil and gas drilling because of exemptions won by fossil fuel companies.
The original article contains 1,901 words, the summary contains 199 words. Saved 90%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!