New Fuel: The Heat Beneath Your Feet

A sign in front of a drilling derrick as part of the energy research project Deep Heat Mining is seen at the Industriellen Werke Basel in Basel, Switzerland, Jan. 16, 2007. Scientists say geothermal energy is clean, quiet and virtually inexhaustible, and estimate it could provide 250,000 times more energy than the world currently consumes each year, with nearly zero impact on the climate or the environment.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Keystone, Georgios Kefalas)

Whether you are cresting the peak of a majestic volcano or walking on a city street, there are immense amounts of heat beneath your feet — enough to provide all the energy the human population will ever need. In most places, though, that heat is trapped by solid rock — unavailable to our carbon-choked, energy-hungry populace.

But the power could now be unleashed. The 2009 Department of Energy (DOE) budget released in early February includes about $30 million for geothermal energy exploration — mostly for the construction of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) demonstration plants. This is the first step toward achieving enough clean, constant power from the earth to provide around 10 percent of our baseline energy needs — a goal put forward by a panel of experts in January 2007.

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