You`re on the Geothermal energy page

Geothermal Energy is energy from heat inside the Earth.

Introduction  How it works  More details  Advantages   Disadvantages   Is it renewable?

Introductionnatural geothermal steam escaping from the ground

The centre of the Earth is around 6000 degress Celsius - hot enough to melt rock. Even a few kilometres down, the temperature can be over 250 degrees Celsius.

In general, the temperature rises one degree Celsius for every 36 metres you go down.

In volcanic areas, molten rock can be very close to the surface.

Geothermal energy has been used for thousands of years in some countries for cooking and heating.

The name "geothermal" comes from two Latin words: "geo" means "Earth" and "thermal" means "heat".

How it works

a geothermal power stationHot rocks underground heat water to produce steam. We drill holes down to the hot region, steam comes up, is purified and used to drive turbines, which drive electric generators.

There may be natural "groundwater" in the hot rocks anyway, or we may need to drill more holes and pump water down to them.

The first geothermal power station was built at Landrello, in Italy, and the second is at Waikato in New Zealand. Others are in Iceland, Japan, the Philippines and the United States.

Southampton town hallIn Iceland, geothermal heat is used to heat houses as well as for generating electricity.

If the rocks aren't hot enough to produce steam we can sometimes still use the energy - the Town Hall in Southampton, England, is partly heated this way.

More details

Geothermal energy is an important resource in volcanically active places such as Iceland and New Zealand. How useful it is depends on how hot the water gets. This depends on how hot the rocks were to start with, and how much water we pump down to them.

Water is pumped down an "injection well", filters through the cracks in the rocks in the hot region, and comes back up the "recovery well" under pressure. It "flashes" into steam when it reaches the surface.

The steam may be used to drive a turbogenerator, or passed through a heat exchanger to heat water to warm houses. A town in Iceland is heated this way.

The steam must be purified before it is used to drive a turbine, or the turbine blades will get "furred up" like your kettle and be ruined.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Is it renewable?

Geothermal energy is renewable. The energy keeps on coming, as long as we don't pump too much cold water down and cool the rocks too much.


Contents page
Fossil Fuels - Coal, Oil and GasNuclear Power
Energy from the SunYou`re already on this page
Wind PowerHydro-electric Power - energy from water
Tidal PowerPumped Storage Reservoirs - storing energy ready for high demands
getting energy from waves on the seaBiomass - burning wood and waste
Try the Quick Quiz