Geothermal energy faces a financing challenge where firms need customers to secure financing, but customers are hesitant without proof of project feasibility and financing. This creates a chicken-and-egg problem that hinders scaling.
Advanced geothermal, or enhanced geothermal systems, uses new technology to access deeper or impermeable rock formations to generate heat. Unlike traditional geothermal, which is limited to specific geologies like Iceland or Northern California, advanced geothermal can be deployed in more locations.
Geothermal currently accounts for about three gigawatts of power, which is less than 1% of the U.S. electric grid.
A study with Princeton University suggests that geothermal could provide up to 750 gigawatts of power by mid-century if the right technology is developed and deployed.
Both industries use horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing to create permeability in low-permeability formations. However, geothermal drilling requires higher temperatures and often deals with harder rock types like granite.
Fervo Energy's first successful project was completed in late 2023 in Northern Nevada, in partnership with Google. It included the first two horizontal well pairs for geothermal and demonstrated stable production over a year.
Initially funded by grants from the Department of Energy and venture capital, Fervo has recently secured project finance, including a $100 million construction loan in July 2024, moving away from expensive venture capital.
Rising interest rates make it harder for capital-intensive, long-payback projects like geothermal to secure funding. The high upfront costs and long payback periods mean that even small changes in interest rates significantly impact the economics of these projects.
The DOE has provided grants and research funding, including an $84 million allocation for geothermal in the bipartisan infrastructure law, with Fervo receiving a $25 million grant. The DOE's reports have also helped raise awareness and validate the technology among investors.
The three main priorities are cleaner energy, affordability, and reliability. While people may prioritize these differently based on their perspective, all three are essential for the future of energy.
The typical permitting timeline for geothermal projects in the Western U.S. is six to eight years, due to extensive environmental reviews and federal permitting processes.
Permitting reform could reduce the timeline from six to eight years down to two to four years by streamlining redundant processes and improving staffing at regulatory offices.
Currently, the bottleneck is the supply chain, particularly for transformers and other high-voltage electrical equipment, which have long lead times and high demand from data centers and other energy projects.
Geothermal is a promising technology to provide clean, low-cost, baseload power to the electricity grid. It works by getting heat from deep in the ground, using technology that is similar to that used in fracking. Despite this potential, however, geothermal still remains a very small percentage of the US power mix. So what will it take for it to scale up? One big challenge is the core problem of financing. Firms need customers in order to get financing. But customers don't want to sign up for projects unless firms can finance them and get them built. On this episode, recorded live onstage at the Department of Energy's Deploy24 conference in Washington DC, we speak with Tim Latimer, the founder and CEO of geothermal company Fervo Energy. Tim was previously in the fracking industry. He explained to us how geothermal works, what's being built, and what it will take from private and public actors in order to scale it up.
Read More:A Green Reason to Drill, Baby, Drill: Renewable Energy That’s Always On)
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