Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland
In this capstone project, geothermal energy is investigated both in its role in the United States, as well as in Iceland. The feasibility of geothermal energy for electricity production will be analyzed within a framework of technical, economic, environmental, and political implementation. Key backg...
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ftnorthillinuni:oai:commons.lib.niu.edu:10843/13715 2023-05-15T16:46:14+02:00 Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland Root, Larissa Martin, Kevin The Institute for the Study of the Environment, Sustainability, and Energy 2015-05 application/pdf http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/13715 en_US eng Northern Illinois University http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/13715 NIU theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from Huskie Commons for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without the written permission of the authors. geothermal energy Iceland United electricity production Text Conference Poster 2015 ftnorthillinuni 2020-09-22T09:41:21Z In this capstone project, geothermal energy is investigated both in its role in the United States, as well as in Iceland. The feasibility of geothermal energy for electricity production will be analyzed within a framework of technical, economic, environmental, and political implementation. Key background information about geothermal energy as a resource, as well as technology used to capture this energy are explored initially. The United States and Iceland’s resource base differs, and does their approaches to utilize this renewable resource. This analysis is demonstrative of the challenges any energy resource faces. An assessment of the geothermal market at this time will lead to a general advisement on resource potential in the United States. Iceland has made an amazing transformation from one of the poorest countries in Europe dependent upon peat and coal for its energy needs to becoming a global leader in renewable energy, creating an industry profiting from abundant power, and increasing the quality of life among its citizens. The United States is currently the world leader in both geothermal electrical generation and deployment of geothermal heat pumps (Tester and Horne, 2014). The question is, how many sites are truly suitable for Enhanced Geothermal Systems expansion? With the highest grade reservoirs already discovered, are we able to, and should we, engineer more reservoirs to produce electricity? B.A. (Bachelor of Arts) Text Iceland Northern Illinois University (NIU): Huskie Commons Repository Horne ENVELOPE(8.098,8.098,62.640,62.640) |
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Northern Illinois University (NIU): Huskie Commons Repository |
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English |
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geothermal energy Iceland United electricity production |
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geothermal energy Iceland United electricity production Root, Larissa Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland |
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geothermal energy Iceland United electricity production |
description |
In this capstone project, geothermal energy is investigated both in its role in the United States, as well as in Iceland. The feasibility of geothermal energy for electricity production will be analyzed within a framework of technical, economic, environmental, and political implementation. Key background information about geothermal energy as a resource, as well as technology used to capture this energy are explored initially. The United States and Iceland’s resource base differs, and does their approaches to utilize this renewable resource. This analysis is demonstrative of the challenges any energy resource faces. An assessment of the geothermal market at this time will lead to a general advisement on resource potential in the United States. Iceland has made an amazing transformation from one of the poorest countries in Europe dependent upon peat and coal for its energy needs to becoming a global leader in renewable energy, creating an industry profiting from abundant power, and increasing the quality of life among its citizens. The United States is currently the world leader in both geothermal electrical generation and deployment of geothermal heat pumps (Tester and Horne, 2014). The question is, how many sites are truly suitable for Enhanced Geothermal Systems expansion? With the highest grade reservoirs already discovered, are we able to, and should we, engineer more reservoirs to produce electricity? B.A. (Bachelor of Arts) |
author2 |
Martin, Kevin The Institute for the Study of the Environment, Sustainability, and Energy |
format |
Text |
author |
Root, Larissa |
author_facet |
Root, Larissa |
author_sort |
Root, Larissa |
title |
Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland |
title_short |
Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland |
title_full |
Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland |
title_fullStr |
Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland |
title_full_unstemmed |
Should the U.S. Expand its Use of Geothermal Resources? Lessons from Iceland |
title_sort |
should the u.s. expand its use of geothermal resources? lessons from iceland |
publisher |
Northern Illinois University |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/13715 |
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ENVELOPE(8.098,8.098,62.640,62.640) |
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Horne |
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Horne |
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Iceland |
genre_facet |
Iceland |
op_relation |
http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/13715 |
op_rights |
NIU theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from Huskie Commons for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without the written permission of the authors. |
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