DoE launches new Energy Earthshot to make geothermal energy cheaper
The US Department of Energy is aiming to reduce the cost of the green energy by 90 percent by 2035. US Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm has announced a new geothermal energy goal through the Department of Energy, for the reduction of its cost by 90 percent by 2035. The strategy is meant to take the cost of the renewable power down to $45 per megawatt hour. The Enhanced Geothermal ShotTM (EGS) was created to help accelerate the adoption of geothermal energy to tap into a clean, reliable and essentially inexhaustible heat source for US communities while broadening opportunities for a st…
The US Department of Energy is aiming to reduce the cost of the green energy by 90 percent by 2035.
US Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm has announced a new geothermal energy goal through the Department of Energy, for the reduction of its cost by 90 percent by 2035.The strategy is meant to take the cost of the renewable power down to $45 per megawatt hour.
The Enhanced Geothermal ShotTM (EGS) was created to help accelerate the adoption of geothermal energy to tap into a clean, reliable and essentially inexhaustible heat source for US communities while broadening opportunities for a strong domestic renewable power industry. In the United States alone, this source of clean power involves over 5 terawatts of heat resources. This represents enough to meet global electricity needs.
By capturing even a small portion of those resources, more than 40 million US homes could benefit from clean, affordable power and heating. EGS also has the potential to enable tech for mainstream geothermal heating and cooling deployment, which would make it easier for not just individual buildings, but entire American communities to pursue decarbonization.