Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate...

27
Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008

Transcript of Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate...

Page 1: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Chuck KutscherNational Renewable Energy Laboratory

Geothermal Power Potential

Energy and Climate Mini-WorkshopNovember 3, 2008

Page 2: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Source: EIA Annual Energy Review 2007

Geothermal in the Energy Portfolio Net Generation – 2006

Page 3: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

U.S. Renewable Energy Electric Capacity

Sources: Chalk, AWEA, IEA, NREL, EIA, GEA

Page 4: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Geothermal Resources

Hot granite

Geopressured

Enhanced Geothermal System

Hot water

Wells

Magma

Volcanic

Hydrothermal

Page 5: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Carbon Benefits

Page 6: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Advantages of Geothermal EnergyAdvantages of Geothermal Energy

• Environmentally sound

• Resources last the life of the plant

• High plant availability (over 95%)

• Provides steady base load power

• Relatively low cost (5 to 8 cents per kWh)

Page 7: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Today’s Status

• 8,000 MW generated in 21 countries

• In U.S. 3,000 MWe installed, 4,000 MWe under development

• DOE funding 21 companies $43 million over 4 years for EGS projects

• Cost 5-8¢/kWh with no PTC

• Capacity factor typically > 90%, base load power

Page 8: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

G E O T H E R M A L

G E O T H E R M A L

Hydrothermal ResourceHydrothermal Resource

Page 9: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Geothermal Power Plants

Page 10: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Plant Type vs. TemperaturePlant Type vs. Temperature

0oC32oF)

90oC(195oF)

175oC(350oF)

Flash steam

Binary cycle

Page 11: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

G A 0 2 - 5 0 6 8 3 - 2 2

Generator

Steam

ProductionWell

InjectionWellGeothermal Zone

Waste Brine

Water

Air and Water Vapor

Air

DirectHeatUses

Air

Page 12: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

G A 0 2 - 5 0 6 8 3 - 2 4

Generator

Iso-Butane

ProductionWell

InjectionWellGeothermal Zone

Water

Heat Exchanger

Air and Water Vapor

Air

Pump

Air

Water

CoolBrine

Condenser

Page 13: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Plant CostsPlant Costs

Flash ($/kW)

Binary ($/kW)

Exp./drilling 700 500

Equip. 750 1600

TOTAL 1,450 2,100

Page 14: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Favorable Geothermal Areasand Known Systems

Page 15: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Geographic Distribution of Hydrothermal Resources

Identified Geothermal Resources Undiscovered Resources

USGS, 2008

Page 16: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

U.S. Hydrothermal Electric Power Potential

0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

60,000

70,000

80,000

90,000

100,000

95 50 5 Mean

Percent Confidence

Po

ten

tia

l (M

We

)

Undiscovered

Identified

Williams, et al., USGS Fact Sheet, “Assessment of Moderate- and High-TemperatureGeothermal Resources of the United States,” September 2008

Page 17: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Heat

Fluid Content Permeability

Geothermal Domains

Enhanced Geothermal

System

Hot Dry Rock(HDR) – Fracturingand water injectionrequired

Note: System must have fluid content, permeability, and heat to be potentially viable. This combination can be natural (Hydrothermal) or created in an enhanced geothermal system.

Water InjectionRequired

FracturingRequired

Hydrothermal

Page 18: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Geographic Distribution of EGS

USGS, 2008

Page 19: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

EGS ResourceTemperatures at 6 km Depth

Page 20: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

EGS Steps

Source: NREL

Page 21: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

The U.S. Enhanced Geothermal System Resource

Source: MIT Study- TheFuture of Geothermal Energy

Page 22: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

MIT EGS Supply Curve:10% of U.S. Capacity by Mid-Century

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

10 100 1,000 10,000 100,000EGS Capacity Scenario (MWe)

Bre

ak-e

ven

Pri

ce (

¢/k

Wh

)

MIT EGS model predictions with today’s drilling and plant costsand mature reservoir technology at 80 kg/s per production well

2004 US $

Page 23: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

EGS Challenges

Technical• Site selection - regional exploration

techniques for EGS• Creating EGS under various geologic

environments– achieving low flow impedance– achieving sufficiently large

sustainable reservoir without short circuiting (80 kg/s at 200°C)

– minimizing water loss– microseismicity

• Few EGS field experiments yet conducted worldwide; only 25 kg/s achieved at Soultz

Geologic variability and uncertainty make the technical challenges of EGS very different from other

renewable energy sources.

Page 24: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Economic• Exploration cost and risk• Drilling, completion and reservoir stimulation costs• Capital cost of surface facilities• No commercial EGS site for benchmarking

Commercialization• Validating EGS technology requires high risk field

experiments in a variety of geologic settings• Limited Federal R&D funding

EGS Challenges

Page 25: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

U.S. EGS Electric Power Potential

0

100,000

200,000

300,000

400,000

500,000

600,000

700,000

800,000

95 50 5 Mean

Percent Confidence

Po

ten

tia

l (M

We

)

Williams, et al., USGS Fact Sheet, “Assessment of Moderate- and High-TemperatureGeothermal Resources of the United States,” September 2008

Page 26: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

ASES Study Supply Curve

Geothermal Supply Curves(Petty, Porro)

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

- 20 40 60 80 100

Cumulative Capacity (GW)

LC

OE

(2

004 ¢

/ k

Wh)

current technology basis

with projected DOE gains

Bases for market penetration studies using NEMS.

Hydrothermal 27 GWSedimentary EGS 25 GWCo-produced fluids 44 GWBasement EGS 4 GW

Page 27: Chuck Kutscher National Renewable Energy Laboratory Geothermal Power Potential Energy and Climate Mini-Workshop November 3, 2008.

Geothermal Power Savings

Carbon Savings: 83 MtC/yr

• 50,000 MW by 2030• 25% existing resources, 25% expanded,

50% from oil & gas wells• 5 to 10 ¢/kWh