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Geothermal energyโ€”the heat deep below our feetโ€”has the potential to become the workhorse of the energy transition as it grows from supplying just 0.4 percent of the worldโ€™s energy today to upward of 20, 30, and even 50 percent by 2050. Thatโ€™s according to the co-founder and CEO of a company working to tap the mother lode of that energy who presented at the SOSV Climate Tech Summit 2022 held October 25-26. SOSV is a global venture capital firm.

Carlos Araque of Quaise Energy made those remarks during a panel discussion titled, โ€œIs this geothermalโ€™s moment?โ€ Quaise is developing a unique drilling technique to reach the hot rock some two to 12 miles beneath the Earthโ€™s surface. Araque was joined by Kathy Hannun, co-founder and president of Dandelion Energy, a firm working on a different โ€œflavorโ€ of geothermal, or using it to heat and cool residential homes today. The Dandelion process uses established technology that doesnโ€™t require such deep drilling.

โ€œI didnโ€™t know much about geothermal until I started diving into [it] for this panel,โ€ said Moderator Candice Ammori, founder of The Climate Vine, which advises climate tech startups. โ€œIโ€™m excited to say now that Iโ€™m a believer in geothermal. I think thereโ€™s a fair amount of hypeโ€ฆbut I actually think that there probably should be more hype.โ€


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Araque and Hannun went on to not only describe the biggest barriers to scaling up their businesses for the world, but also what other geothermal problems they are โ€œitching for people to solve,โ€ according to Ammori.

First, however, the two described why geothermal could be so important. In addition to being clean and global, geothermal provides a baseload energy source thatโ€™s available 24/7, even if itโ€™s cloudy out or thereโ€™s no wind. Itโ€™s also โ€œthe most powerful and abundant renewable on Earth,โ€ said Araque, โ€œmuch more so than wind, solar, nuclear, and all fossil fuels combined.โ€

In addition, Araque said, itโ€™s important to weigh an energy source by its impact on externalities like the environment, land use, and mineral use. โ€œWhen you look at the [problem] from this lensโ€”how much land use per unit of energy you produce, the amount of materials necessary per unit of energy, and how much carbon dioxide you produce per unit of energyโ€”you start realizing that geothermal comes out way, way ahead of anything else.โ€

Barriers and Solutions

To fully tap the resource, however, will be very capital intensive and time intensive. โ€œItโ€™s very hard to achieve anything in our space with a million dollars or even $10 million,โ€ Araque said. โ€œYou have to start playing at the $100 million level or even $1 billion level. This is what it costs to get [deep geothermal] developed and deployed at portfolio levels.โ€

Further, the Quaise technology involved in deep drilling has been demonstrated in the lab, but not yet in the field. And that will take time.

However, Araque said that by the end of the decade Quaise aims to create power from a coal- or gas-fired power plant that has been converted to geothermal. โ€œYou feed in geothermal steam instead of steam from a fossil-fuel boiler. That in a brushstroke decarbonizes the power plant, and you can repeat that 10,000 times over with other plants.โ€

The key to making deep geothermal a reality? โ€œYou leverage the oil and gas industry,โ€ said Araque, who himself comes from that industry. โ€œI think of them as a ready-made workforce, supply chain, and regulatory framework that can push this into the world at the scale thatโ€™s required.โ€

Hannun noted that for Dandelion, simplifying complexity will be key to bringing down the costs associated with using geothermal for heating and cooling of residential homes. โ€œItโ€™s hard to advance our building stock and change all of the buildings that already exist [to geothermal because] theyโ€™re all slightly different and thereโ€™s a lot of complexity to manage. So a lot of our focus is on making geothermal [heat pumps] as simple to get into homes as it is to install a furnace or air conditioner.โ€

Room for Entrepreneurs!

Ammori ended the session by asking Hannun and Araque about remaining geothermal challenges that other entrepreneurs could tackle. Both agreed that better imaging systems to see underground are important. For deep geothermal, Araque said that thereโ€™s a need for electronics that can withstand the high temperatures associated with the resource. Hannun noted that anything related to weatherizing homes will help the geothermal heating and cooling industry.

She also stressed that for both her and Araqueโ€™s industries, โ€œI would encourage entrepreneurs not to just look at the central core technology, but also the enabling technologies, products, or businesses around permitting, licensing, and transmission. There are [many] things in the ecosystem that need to happen to enable scale.โ€

Araque concluded by noting that the energy transition itself is an unsolved problem. โ€œDonโ€™t for a second think that itโ€™s just a matter of scaling what we have. Thereโ€™s plenty of space for innovation. This is the greatest challenge of many generations, not just ours, and we need all human capital on the problem.โ€

Watch โ€œIs this geothermalโ€™s moment?โ€ | SOSV Climate Tech Summit 2022

IMAGE CREDIT: SOSV


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