The National - News

Harnessing Earth’s heat will help region meet clean energy goals

- ROBIN MILLS Robin Mills is chief executive of Qamar Energy and author of The Myth of the Oil Crisis

There is an energy source that is low-carbon, reliably available all day round regardless of the weather and seasons, geographic­ally widespread, reasonably cost-effective, does not require scarce materials and makes use of well-known technology.

Yet it ranks only fifth in capacity among the renewables, far behind solar, wind, hydropower and bioenergy. As Masdar and Adnoc now show interest, is it time for geothermal to come to the boil?

The Earth’s heat comes from the continuous cooling of its interior following the planet’s fiery birth, and from the decay of natural radioactiv­e elements.

With temperatur­es typically gaining 30°C for every kilometre down, the exploitati­on of geothermal energy has historical­ly been limited to a few countries, mostly around the Pacific Ring of Fire, the mid-Atlantic Ridge and the East African Rift Valley, where magma brings high temperatur­es close to the surface. These include California in the US, Indonesia, the Philippine­s and Japan.

The role of geothermal today is tiny. In the US, which has the world’s largest geothermal capacity, it is still only 0.3 per cent of total installed electricit­y generation. It has a much higher share in countries such as El Salvador, Kenya and Iceland, but they have only small electricit­y grids.

Traditiona­l geothermal power requires permeable hot rocks with water circulatin­g through them, which could be brought to the surface to make steam and run a turbine.

Investment bank Lazard presents geothermal electricit­y as having a cost between 6.1 US cents to 10.2 cents per kilowatt-hour. This is more expensive than wind and solar but cheaper than moderately priced gas, particular­ly when including costs for carbon dioxide emissions for projects in Europe. Given Europe’s desperate need to replace Russian gas, heating with geothermal seems to be an obvious solution.

The advantage of geothermal is that it can be turned on or off as required to balance demand and variable renewable generation. As well as producing electricit­y, it can yield low-temperatur­e heat to warm up homes and greenhouse­s in cold climates, or yield medium temperatur­es for industries such as food processing, paper and chemicals. This heat can also drive air-conditioni­ng units and desalinati­on in hot, arid areas such as the Gulf.

There is also growing interest in extracting minerals from geothermal brines – particular­ly lithium, a key ingredient of batteries. And carbon dioxide can be sequestere­d in geothermal systems, removing it from the atmosphere.

Promising areas in the Middle

East include volcanic districts in Iran and eastern Turkey, the hot springs of Aegean Turkey and the Red Sea rift between Africa and Arabia, dotted with volcanic islands such as Jebel Al Tair off Yemen, which erupted in 2007. Western Saudi Arabia is strewn with recent lava flows, the last eruption happening as late as 1256. Other than in Turkey and some very minor efforts in Iran, geothermal power has not been adopted in the region.

Given its synergies with oilfield technology, it is surprising that petroleum companies have not been involved more, as they have sought to expand their green businesses. Chevron used to have a sizeable geothermal unit in Indonesia and the Philippine­s but sold it in 2017, while Shell and others are dabbling.

Maybe that is about to change. In February, Abu Dhabi’s green energy company Masdar made a strategic investment in Pertamina Geothermal, a unit of the Indonesian state oil corporatio­n, which raised $595 million in an initial public offering for a quarter of its shares. Pertamina Geothermal intends to invest $4 billion to double its capacity by 2027 to 2028.

And in March, Masdar agreed with Adnoc Drilling to explore geothermal opportunit­ies, with the Adnoc unit potentiall­y providing drilling services.

In 2021, Dubai-based district cooling company Tabreed also agreed to work on two deep geothermal wells at Masdar City. Masdar intends to have 100 gigawatts of capacity by 2030, up from 20 gigawatts today, which would make it one of the world’s biggest internatio­nal renewable players. The majority of this will be wind and solar energy, but there is room for other technology. The breakthrou­gh could come from engineered geothermal systems.

These use the past decade’s advances in oil-well and gaswell technology, including horizontal drilling, hydraulic fracturing, advanced reservoir simulation and corrosion-resistant materials. Wells can be placed into “hot dry rock”, which is then fractured, with the water circulated to provide heat. This greatly expands the scope of geothermal energy, eliminatin­g the need to find natural hot-water systems.

In 2021, the venture capital arms of BP and Chevron invested in Eavor, a Canadian start-up using a closed-loop system. The concept is that cold water is injected into one side and heats up before rising on the other, avoiding the need for pumping, so that even relatively cool rocks are viable.

Systems circulatin­g high-pressure supercriti­cal carbon dioxide, which flows in the same way as a gas but has the density and heat capacity of a liquid, could be more efficient than those based on water. Innovative drilling approaches using high-frequency radio waves or lasers are being tested, going deeper with tools able to withstand the high temperatur­es of 400°C or more, compared to the 150°C to 200°C encountere­d in typical oilfield operations. These could tap into supercriti­cal water and increase a well’s power output ten times.

Oil services companies Baker Hughes and Halliburto­n are carrying out research into such technology, which could bring costs down to 4.6 cents per kilowatt-hour.

The US Department of Energy has issued a “moon shot” to cut the cost of enhanced geothermal by 90 per cent by 2035.

The recently passed Inflation Reduction Act offers generous tax credits to the geothermal sector, as to other renewable technology. Maybe it is time for the Middle East too to delve deep into the Earth, not for oil but for heat.

Given the synergies with oilfield technology, it is surprising that petroleum companies have not been involved more

 ?? Reuters ?? A well operated by Pertamina Geothermal. Abu Dhabi’s Masdar invested in the Indonesian clean energy company this year
Reuters A well operated by Pertamina Geothermal. Abu Dhabi’s Masdar invested in the Indonesian clean energy company this year
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