By Region,General,By Region,North America - April 02, 2009

U.S. Geothermal Mapping moving forward

written by: lxrichter

Heat-flow map of the conterminous United States – a subset of the geothermal map of North America (Blackwell and Richards, 2004; source: pesn.com)
Renewable Energy World talks in this recent article about geothermal mapping in the U.S. and much needed transmission lines.

Another article recently in Renewable Energy World that I found of interest. It talks about geothermal mapping in the U.S. and much needed transmission lines.

“Several large geothermal resource mapping projects are heading toward conclusion so that finally, the power source can be more accurately considered in siting new electricity transmission lines for renewable power development.

New geothermal plants are being considered along each of these renewable power transmission corridors under development. As city, county and regional utilities seek to increase their renewable energy source portfolios, geothermal projects will likely provide an increasing volume of power, along with wind and solar.

Given the Obama administration’s investment focus on new transmission line development, the result of the mapping efforts should be a relatively rapid increase in the number and size of commercial-scale geothermal projects.

The states of California and Nevada, along with the Western Governors Association, are moving rapidly to improve the mapping of geothermal resources in their regions, in part to facilitate the approval and construction of several new transmission lines in the West. And over the next few months, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) expects to unveil the data supporting its new assessment of mid-and high-temperature geothermal resources, which was released in summary form last fall.

These efforts are expected to lead to four or five new transmission lines in the West, with construction on at least one to begin as early as next year, reckons John McCaull, the western states representative for the Geothermal Energy Association, in Sonoma, CA.”

Source: RenewableEnergyWorld

This entry was posted on Thursday, April 2nd, 2009 at 1:33 pm and is filed under By Region, General, North America. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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