Google digs into wallet for geothermal energy

Google.org will also invest $4 million in two separate “tranches” into Potter Drilling, which is making drilling products designed for hard-rock environments like granite. The technology can also be used for carbon capture and storage and nuclear waste storage.

Mixing water and hot rocks

The two companies Google is investing in–AltaRock Energy and Potter Drilling–focus specifically on so-called enhanced geothermal technology.

Meanwhile, Southern Methodist University’s Geothermal Lab will get a $489,521 grant to study the size and distribution of geothermal energy resources in North America.

Google is putting $6.25 million into AltaRock Energy, part of a larger $26.5 million second round of investment. First round investors included high-profile
green-tech venture capital firms Khosla Ventures and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

For a discussion about Google.org’s geothermal investment and the growing interest in clean tech, see the Daily Debrief video.

Google is also said to have been in discussions with Israeli geothermal company Ormat Technologies.

Reicher said enhanced geothermal system technology “hasn’t received the attention it merits.” Google.org is pressing for policies and commercial investment to better encourage EGS development.

The U.S. Department of Energy says that these advanced techniques can dramatically increase geothermal potential–by 40 times.

(Credit:
Google Earth)

AltaRock Energy is looking to develop a cost-effective method for pumping water underground and recuperating it. It plans to launch a pilot project and is targeting utilities in Western U.S. states that have renewable energy mandates.

While geothermal power plants are now in the Western U.S., the MIT study found that large-scale geothermal power production can be done in some parts of the Eastern U.S.

Google has invested in solar thermal companies eSolar and BrightSource Energy as well as wind company Makini Power. It has also installed a large 1.6-megawatt solar array, established a plug-in hybrid station at its headquarters, and spearheaded energy-efficient computing programs like Climate Savers.

The move is part of Google.org’s RE<C (shorthand for Renewable Energy Less than Coal), an initiative with the goal of producing one gigawatt of electricity–larger than a typical coal-fired power plant–through renewable sources.

“EGS (enhanced geothermal systems) could be the ‘killer app’ of the energy world. It has the potential to deliver vast quantities of power 24/7 and be captured nearly anywhere on the planet. And it would be a perfect complement to intermittent sources like solar and wind,” Dan Reicher, director of climate and energy initiatives for Google.org, said in a statement.

The latest investments are meant to spur development of geothermal, which a Massachusetts of Institute of Technology study last year found was underutilized. Like fossil fuel power plants, geothermal plants can supply electricity during peak times, while wind and solar have limitations in this regard.

Through its philanthropic arm Google.org, the Internet giant will invest in two geothermal technology start-up companies and give a university grant to study the potential of geothermal resources.

In an FAQ, Google.org said that development of enhanced geothermal systems means that renewable energy “could conceivably be deployed almost anywhere, and is essentially limitless in supply.”

Google is investing $10 million in “enhanced” geothermal systems–essentially technology for tapping underground heat–which it says is one of most promising forms of renewable energy.

Typically, geothermal plants, which are in the Western U.S., tap into existing wells of hot water or steam thousands of feet underground. The retrieved hot water or steam turns a steam turbine to make electricity.

Heat underfoot: a Google Earth representation of geothermal resources. Click the image for a larger view.

Enhanced geothermal technology pumps water underground to crack hot rocks. The heated water or steam is captured to turn a turbine and then pumped back down underground.

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