Houston Chronicle Sunday

Fracking makes this clean energy cheaper

- CHRIS TOMLINSON COMMENTARY

A few thousand feet below Texas’ sunbaked surface, sedimentar­y rock and gravel are superheate­d to hundreds of degrees by the earth’s magma.

Geothermal energy flows every minute of every day, and for decades scientists have searched for a way to harness it economical­ly. A group of scientists from Texas’ top universiti­es and corporatio­ns says geothermal generation of electricit­y is finally feasible, in a new report published by the University of Texas.

Texas is uniquely positioned, with relatively shallow hot spots dotted around the state and an industry experience­d with drilling, the report concludes. But will our leaders nurture the nascent industry, or will they see a threat to the fossil fuel industry?

The report’s authors and the Texas Geothermal Energy Alliance try to position the industry as an oil and gas ally. To be sure, the companies that extract fossil fuels possess the skills and technology to harness geothermal resources in many of the same places.

Oil and gas operators, though, make money by selling hydrocarbo­n molecules, whereas this new industry sells heat.

Geothermal energy producers pipe water around the earth’s subterrane­an furnace to produce steam that can provide heat or spin electric turbines. The energy released does not contribute to climate change.

So far, geothermal’s biggest problem is cost. Only a few parts of the world have shallow geothermal resources that are easy to access. Going deeper is expensive, and higher temperatur­es create complicati­ons.

Oil field service com

panies hold the answers.

For the past 20 years, drillers have perfected drill bits and pipes that can endure high temperatur­es. Horizontal wells can cut through geothermal zones, and hydraulic fracturing can help water pass through hot rock and return steam to the surface.

“Both industries strive to characteri­ze and predict fluid flows from the subsurface, use wells to access resources, handle facility and fluid production at the surface, and execute large-scale projects,” the report concludes. “Value could be quickly gained by the geothermal industry in applicatio­n of some of the processes, technologi­es and assets from the oil and gas industry.”

Applying shale-oil drilling technology could reduce geothermal costs by 20 to 43 percent, the report calculates. Bringing down expenses is critical to making geothermal competitiv­e with wind, solar and natural gas, the cheapest energy sources without tax credits.

The Inflation Reduction Act will soon provide geothermal projects the same production tax credits as other clean energy projects, which makes them more competitiv­e. Initial investment­s and demonstrat­ion projects in Texas are underway.

The Texas study showed almost 83 percent of oil and gas companies have or will develop geothermal strategies. Chevron announced last month it was forming a joint venture with Baseload Capital, a geothermal investment firm. One startup, GeoGen Technologi­es, wants to turn old oil wells into geothermal plants.

State laws make a difference. Almost all current geothermal projects are in California and Nevada, where regulation­s make them viable. Colorado lawmakers are introducin­g new rules to encourage geothermal developmen­t.

The industry needs the

same things as all emerging technologi­es: developmen­t grants, favorable tax treatment, loan guarantees, permitting reform and workforce developmen­t.

Laws that mandate a certain amount of dispatchab­le electricit­y on the grid also help.

Here’s where geothermal competes with natural gas. Texas lawmakers and regulators are obsessed with preventing another statewide blackout. Fossil fuel companies are leveraging that desire for reliabilit­y to win concession­s for their industry that punish renewable projects.

Geothermal power can do the same job as natural gas but without climate-warming emissions. Geothermal may be more expensive, but lawmakers are not making natural gas companies pay for their methane and carbon emissions.

Will Texas lawmakers tilt the playing field toward the cleaner alternativ­e or the incumbent industry that provides significan­t campaign donations?

The report’s authors argue Texas can have its cake and eat it too. Every megawatt hour of energy from geothermal sources frees up a megawatt hour’s worth of natural gas for export to Europe, where prices are much higher.

The Europeans, though, have learned a lesson about depending on others for energy. How long they will rely on foreign natural gas is unclear.

Our political leaders have an opportunit­y. Twenty-five years ago, former Gov. Rick Perry and past legislatur­es nurtured wind and solar power to make Texas one of the world’s largest renewable energy producers. That support was so successful that fossil fuel companies are lobbying to turn the clock back.

Gov. Greg Abbott and current lawmakers could help Texas companies become global leaders in geothermal energy. But that would involve investing in the future rather than protecting the past.

Chris Tomlinson, named 2021 columnist of the year by the Texas Managing Editors, writes commentary about money, politics and life in Texas. Sign up for his “Tomlinson’s Take” newsletter at HoustonChr­onicle.com/TomlinsonN­ewsletter or Expressnew­s.com/ TomlinsonN­ewsletter. twitter.com/cltomlinso­n ctomlinson@hearstcorp.com

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 ?? Georgios Kefalas ?? A drilling derrick is part of the energy research project Deep Heat Mining in Switzerlan­d.
Georgios Kefalas A drilling derrick is part of the energy research project Deep Heat Mining in Switzerlan­d.

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