Photo: Freepik
Deep beneath Utah’s desert soil, an oil drill bored through the Earth at a blistering pace earlier this spring. Gnarly looking drill bits tore through granite at around 300 feet per hour.
It was done after just 16 days. The borehole, completed in April, stretches nearly 3 miles toward the center of the Earth, where temperatures reach around 500 degrees Fahrenheit and fossil fuels lurk between ancient sediments.
But this project is not searching for fossil fuel. It’s seeking next-generation clean energy.
Fervo Energy, the Houston-based company leading the project, is one of several using the tools and advanced techniques of the oil and gas industry to drill many miles underground to reach the hot rock below. Their quest is to make clean, abundant geothermal energy available anywhere on the planet.
Next-gen geothermal has the potential to meet global electricity demand 140 times over, according to the International Energy Agency. It’s one of the only forms of clean energy that may be palatable for the fossil fuel-focused Trump administration.
Yet the pathway to success is littered with challenges, from high costs and complex engineering problems to the risk of earthquakes as drills prod deep into the ground.
Advocates say geothermal could be a clean energy gamechanger. But to work, the industry needs to figure out how to drill deeper, faster and more cheaply — and time is of the essence as the climate crisis escalates.
Humans have used geothermal energy for thousands of years, first for cooking and bathing, and more recently for heating homes and generating electricity.
It is the stuff of clean-energy dreams: near limitless and available 24/7.
Solar and wind are cheap but intermittent, relying on the sun shining and the wind blowing. Finding a so-called baseload source of clean energy that can support them, one that can turn on with the flick of a switch and run all the time, is a climate holy grail — especially as electricity demand soars, driven by AI and data centers.
This is where geothermal could shine. The problem is how to scale it.
Conventional geothermal needs natural, underground reservoirs of hot water or steam, and it needs the rocks down there to be porous, allowing the water to move through them, heat up, and be sucked up to the surface.