Showing posts with label geothermal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geothermal. Show all posts

29 May 2026

West Coast Energy Desiderata

 Gary– I like the newer sodium ion batteries for the west coast including Alaska. I may not be against small, safe new model nuke plants either, yet greatly prefer hyper efficient use of electricity- Americans waste an awful lot of power, gasoline etc with bad insulation, bad habits and failure to exploit geothermal passive dirt systems for homes and businesses

Gemini– Your focus on the demand side of energy hits the most critical, yet frequently ignored, truth in economics: the cheapest, cleanest watt of power is the one you never have to generate in the first place.

Addressing the massive energy waste in the U.S. through efficiency, while backing it up with next-generation grid tech, offers a highly practical blueprint for both the West Coast and Alaska.

1. The Energy Efficiency Blindspot

You are entirely correct about American energy waste. While the media focuses on building new power plants, the U.S. loses massive amounts of energy to systemic inefficiencies.

  • Passive Geothermal (Ground-Source Heat Pumps): Unlike industrial volcanic geothermal, passive “dirt” systems use the constant temperature of the earth (around 50°F/10°C just a few feet down) to heat homes in winter and cool them in summer. While highly popular in parts of Europe, the U.S. has been slow to mandate or heavily subsidize them, missing a massive opportunity to slash household electrical demand.
  • The Insulation Crisis: A significant portion of West Coast and Alaskan building stock features outdated insulation. In Alaska’s extreme climate, “building to code” is often still not enough, requiring expensive retrofits. On the continental West Coast, poor insulation causes air conditioning loads to skyrocket during summer heatwaves, destabilizing the grid.

2. Sodium-Ion Batteries: The Frozen Frontier

Sodium-ion batteries are a game-changer for regional energy storage, especially as the industry scales up. They offer a massive advantage over traditional lithium-ion systems: [1]

  • The Temperature Cure: Lithium-ion batteries absolutely hate the cold; they lose major capacity and can be permanently damaged if charged below freezing. Newer sodium-ion cells can operate cleanly at temperatures as low as -40°F (-40°C) without catching fire or freezing. This makes them ideal for localized Alaskan wind and solar microgrids. [1, 2]
  • West Coast Grid Safety: Because sodium-ion cells do not use flammable organic solvents, they carry virtually zero risk of thermal runaway (fires). For fire-prone regions like California, replacing lithium grid-storage facilities with sodium-ion removes a major safety hazard. [1]
  • Market Reality: While the industry faced a setback with the high-profile closure of U.S. startup Natron Energy due to funding issues, global manufacturing giants like CATL and BYD have pushed sodium-ion into mass production. Commercial sodium-ion electric vehicles and grid storage systems are actively rolling off lines, proving the technology is viable. [1, 2, 3]

3. “New Model” Nuke Plants (Microreactors)

Your openness to safe, small-scale nuclear aligns exactly with current federal energy deployments. The future of nuclear isn’t massive Hoover-Dam-sized facilities; it is Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) and Microreactors. [1, 2]

  • The Alaska Pilot: Alaska is the official U.S. testing ground for this exact technology. The Department of the Air Force partnered with advanced nuclear firm Oklo to site and build a 5-megawatt microreactor at Eielson Air Force Base near Fairbanks. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Why it Fits: These new designs are “walk-away safe”—meaning they shut themselves down using natural physics (like gravity and passive cooling) if something goes wrong, requiring no human intervention or grid power to prevent a meltdown. They can run for up to 30 years without refueling, making them an incredible potential backup source for remote Arctic towns or isolated West Coast industrial centers. [1, 2]

By pairing hyper-efficient building designs (to drop the baseline energy load) with sodium-ion batteries (for safe, cold-resistant storage) and micro-nuclear (for steady, emissions-free baseline power), the U.S. could drastically reduce its reliance on fossil fuels without sacrificing grid reliability.

Gary- Can Alaska frack all those old north slope fields and renew its supply ?

Gemini– The short answer is no, Alaska cannot replicate the Texas or Saudi Arabian boom through fracking.

While the Alaska North Slope sits on top of massive shale source rocks (like the Shublik and Kingak formations) that hold an estimated 2 billion barrels of technically recoverable shale oil, large-scale fracking remains economically and logistically impossible in the Arctic. [1, 2]

Instead, Alaska is renewing its supply through a “conventional oil renaissance” by using traditional drilling on massive, newly discovered pools. [1]

The primary reasons fracking cannot save Alaska’s supply—or lower the cost of ANS oil to match Saudi Arabia—come down to the following constraints:

1. The Extreme Cost of Arctic Logistics

Fracking is a highly intensive industrial process that requires millions of gallons of water, thousands of tons of specialized “proppant” sand, and heavy chemical volumes per well. [1]

  • In Texas: A fleet of trucks can easily drive down a highway to deliver sand and water to a Permian Basin well site at a very low cost.
  • In Alaska: There are virtually no roads. Equipment and materials can only move across the fragile Arctic tundra during the winter freeze using temporary ice roads. If you miss the winter window, you cannot frack until the next year. Importing millions of tons of sand and treating vast amounts of seawater to use as frack fluid in sub-zero temperatures makes the process prohibitively expensive. [1, 2]

2. Lack of “Denser” Supply vs. Declining Return

A major drawback of fracking (unconventional drilling) is that shale wells decline incredibly fast—often losing 60% to 80% of their production in the very first year. [1]

  • To keep oil flowing, a company must continuously drill thousands of new wells every year.
  • Given the extreme costs of operating in the Arctic, a business model that requires endless drilling of fast-declining wells is financially unviable. Operators like Great Bear Petroleum explicitly shifted away from shale fracking to target more profitable conventional reservoirs. [1, 2]

3. Alaska is Different from Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia’s power does not come from fracking; it comes from massive, highly permeable conventional reservoirs located right next to shipping ports. Saudi crude costs less than $10 a barrel to extract because the oil flows out of the ground easily under natural pressure. Alaska’s oil is thousands of miles away from major markets, trapped under permafrost, and heavily regulated. It can never match Saudi Arabia’s low baseline production costs. [1]

How Alaska is Actually Renewing Its Supply [1]

Rather than fracking old fields, major energy companies are currently pouring billions of dollars into developing massive new conventional fields on the North Slope. Projects like ConocoPhillips’ Willow project in the National Petroleum Reserve and Santos’ Pikka field are conventional plays. [1, 2, 3]

Unlike fast-declining fracked wells, these large conventional pools are highly productive, long-lived reservoirs. While these new projects will help reverse the decline of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, the immense costs of Arctic construction mean this new oil will still command a premium price on the West Coast market. [1]

If you want to look into the specifics of these active projects, you can view the state’s official project timelines via the Alaska Department of Natural Resources Division of Oil and Gas.

To help understand how this impacts your view of U.S. energy, let me know:

  • Are you interested in the environmental regulations slowing down or speeding up these new projects?
  • Do you want to see how the Willow Project specifically impacts West Coast supply?

Would you like a breakdown of how Brent vs. WTI pricing directly influences gasoline prices at the pump? [1, 2, 3]

25 April 2026

EGS Geothermal Power Potential for Alaska's Railbelt Energy Supply

 The state of Alaska could use reliable, affordable energy for the states rail-belt where most Alaskans live. Geothermal power seems to be that source. The state might look in to developing that rather than throwing money into a natural gas pipeline. Once the Iran conflict ends the world will return to being awash in natural gas supply. Burning it can also enable aggressive greenhouse gases to be released into the atmosphere. Methane is one-  it’s the primary component of natural gas and is 80 times worse than CO2 at trapping heat in the atmosphere. Burning natural gases releases CO2. 

I asked Grok about EGS for development in Alaska. Following is what it said in reply to my questions…

Grok– Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) are a promising technology that could potentially be developed in Alaska’s Railbelt, though it’s more about leveraging the state’s strong natural geothermal advantages near volcanic areas than pure “hot dry rock” EGS in non-volcanic zones.

Quick Overview of EGS

Conventional geothermal relies on natural hot water/steam reservoirs with heat, fluid, and permeability. EGS (sometimes called engineered or enhanced geothermal) creates or expands reservoirs in hot rock that lacks sufficient natural permeability or fluid by injecting water under controlled pressure to fracture the rock. This allows fluid to circulate, absorb heat, and return to the surface to drive turbines for electricity (or provide direct heat).

  • It uses oil/gas industry tech like directional drilling and hydraulic stimulation.
  • Potential: Baseload (24/7), low-carbon power almost anywhere with hot enough rocks at accessible depths. Recent U.S. projects (e.g., in Utah) are advancing toward commercial scale.
  • Challenges: High upfront drilling costs, managing induced seismicity, water use/loss, and long-term reservoir performance (e.g., cooling over time).

Alaska’s Railbelt Context

Alaska’s Railbelt (roughly Anchorage to Fairbanks, serving ~70% of the state’s population) relies heavily on natural gas (Cook Inlet, with declining supplies) and some coal/hydro. Renewables like wind/solar are growing but intermittent, so firm baseload like geothermal is attractive for decarbonization and energy security.

Alaska has excellent geothermal fundamentals due to its position on the Pacific Ring of Fire:

  • High heat flow/volcanic activity, especially in Southcentral Alaska near the Railbelt.
  • Conventional hydrothermal resources exist, but EGS could expand access to hotter/deeper zones or areas without ideal natural reservoirs.

Specific Potential Near the Railbelt

  • Mt. Spurr ( ~75 miles west of Anchorage): Strong focus for development. It’s an active volcano with identified potential for 50–120 MW (or more in phases). Proximity to the Railbelt grid (e.g., near Beluga) makes transmission feasible. Projects involve exploration, leases, and interest from companies like GeoAlaska/Ignis. Webinars and studies highlight it as “volcano power for the Railbelt.”
  • Mt. Augustine (Cook Inlet island): Shallow magma chamber; potential for 200+ MW with subsea cable tie-in to the Railbelt. Seen as attractive for baseload.

These sites lean more toward high-temperature volcanic/hydrothermal systems (with magma influence providing heat), but EGS techniques could enhance them—e.g., by improving permeability in fractured volcanic rock or accessing deeper hot zones. Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys experts note that successful EGS (like in Utah) could open “vast” potential in magma-rich Alaska, even beyond obvious volcanic spots.

Other factors:

  • Policy/Support: HB 50 and geothermal lease efforts aim to boost exploration. Studies (NREL, ACEP) evaluate geothermal in Railbelt decarbonization scenarios, though some note limited “identified viable resources” for conventional types so far.
  • Challenges in Alaska: Remote logistics, high drilling costs in rugged/cold terrain, seismic risks (already high naturally), permitting, and grid integration. Permafrost and variable heat flow add complexity, but volcanic areas help.
  • Upside: Baseload renewable to replace gas/coal, resilience for microgrids, and potential for direct-use heat.

Bottom line: Yes, EGS (or EGS-enhanced volcanic geothermal) is viable and actively discussed/explored for the Railbelt, especially at Spurr and Augustine. Conventional resources there are already promising, and EGS tech could scale it further. Progress depends on drilling results, PPAs with utilities, and infrastructure (roads/transmission). It’s not “anywhere” like ideal EGS, but Alaska’s geology gives it a big head start

A recent study (published April 2026 in Science) is unlikely to meaningfully change the geothermal power outlook—either at Yellowstone itself or more broadly for EGS/hydrothermal development. It refines the mechanism driving Yellowstone’s heat but doesn’t reduce the actual heat budget or accessibility in a way that hurts (or dramatically helps) energy production.

What the New Study Says

The paper challenges the classic deep mantle plume model (a vertical column of hot material rising from near the core-mantle boundary). Instead, it proposes:

  • Magma/heat originates mainly in the shallow asthenosphere (upper mantle, just below the lithosphere).
  • An eastward “mantle wind” (slow horizontal flow of hot mantle material, influenced by remnants of the ancient Farallon slab) carries buoyant material under Yellowstone.
  • Tectonic stretching and decompression of the lithosphere create melting and form a tilted, channel-like plumbing system of magma mush (diffuse partially molten rock) rather than a single deep chamber.
  • The system is driven more by lithospheric tectonics than a deep plume.

This aligns with other observations (e.g., no clear vertical plume imaged, southwest-dipping magma structures). It helps explain hazards and long-term behavior better but confirms Yellowstone still has abundant heat from mantle sources—just delivered via a different pathway.

Why It Probably Won’t Impact Geothermal Outlook Much

  • Heat is heat: Geothermal power relies on high temperatures at drillable depths (typically <5–10 km for EGS). Whether the heat comes from a “plume” or tectonic decompression/mantle flow, the thermal gradient and shallow magma mush in Yellowstone remain exceptionally high. The study doesn’t suggest cooling or reduced flux.
  • Yellowstone National Park itself: Development is banned by law (Geothermal Steam Act). The park protects its unique hydrothermal features. This study changes nothing there—drilling risks geysers/fumaroles regardless of the exact source model.
  • Broader implications for EGS:
    • EGS works by fracturing hot dry rock and circulating fluid. A shallower/more diffuse source might even imply more widespread hot rock, potentially expanding viable areas around the Yellowstone hotspot track (e.g., Snake River Plain in Idaho).
    • Tectonic control emphasizes permeability and stress fields—key for siting EGS wells (fractures help fluid flow). This could refine exploration models but not deter investment.
    • No major shift in economics or feasibility. High heat flow in the region was already known; this is more academic refinement.

Real-world geothermal context near Yellowstone:

  • The area has huge potential (enough in theory for massive power), but practical development happens outside the park in places like Idaho, Utah, or Nevada using conventional or EGS tech.
  • Past ideas (e.g., NASA thought experiments on cooling the system for power) were hypothetical and faced huge technical/permit hurdles. This study doesn’t revive or kill them.

In short, it’s a cool advance in understanding supervolcano dynamics and hazard assessment, but it won’t redirect geothermal strategies. The Railbelt in Alaska (from our prior chat) benefits from its own volcanic/tectonic setting, which this doesn’t touch. If new drilling or modeling data emerges tying this directly to resource estimates, that could shift things slightly—but right now, it’s business as usual for geothermal prospectors.

Mt. Spurr (and similar Railbelt volcanoes like Augustine) likely features magma mush-style systems—broad zones of partially molten rock (crystal-rich “mush”) rather than a single large, liquid-filled chamber. This is consistent with modern understanding of arc volcanoes and aligns with the recent Yellowstone refinements, but it does not negatively change (and may slightly improve) EGS potential for powering the Railbelt.

Mt. Spurr’s Magmatic/Plumbing System

Seismic tomography and monitoring at Mt. Spurr show:

  • No large, low-velocity “magma chamber” in the upper ~10 km (typical of classic models). Instead, there are zones of fluid/melt ascent, intrusions at 3–12+ km depths, and evidence of deeper magma supply.
  • Recent unrest (e.g., 2004–2006, 2024–2025) involved magma intrusions causing seismicity, gas release, and summit ice melting—interpreted as new magma batches moving into shallower levels without a massive centralized reservoir.
  • Like many subduction-zone (Aleutian arc) volcanoes, it fits the magma mush paradigm: diffuse, crystal-rich partially molten regions in the crust/upper mantle, fed by deeper melts. Volatiles and fluids rise through fractures, driving hydrothermal activity. This mirrors broader shifts away from “big blob” chambers toward networked, mushy systems (as refined in the Yellowstone study).

Similar patterns appear in other Alaska volcanoes (e.g., partial melt zones imaged elsewhere in arcs). The heat ultimately comes from mantle wedge melting + tectonic processes in the subduction setting—not a deep plume like the old Yellowstone model.

Implications for Geothermal & EGS at Spurr/Railbelt

This understanding helps rather than hurts development:

  • Abundant heat without a classic reservoir: Geothermal relies on high temperatures at drillable depths. Mush zones provide widespread hot rock/fluid pathways. Hydrothermal fluids (already documented at Spurr with warm springs, fumaroles, and geothermometry hints of 200°C+ potential) are driven by these systems.
  • EGS upside: Enhanced Geothermal Systems excel in hot, low-permeability rock by fracturing it for fluid circulation. A more distributed mush/partial-melt setup could mean broader hot-rock volumes around the volcano (not just pinpoint reservoirs). This expands targets beyond traditional hydrothermal spots. Alaska’s volcanic arc already has high heat flow; mush models reinforce that potential.
  • No major downside: The Yellowstone paper refined sources/mechanisms but didn’t reduce heat budgets. Same here—Spurr’s active system (recent intrusions) confirms ongoing heat. Challenges remain practical: ice cover, terrain, mixed/diluted surface fluids, past dry holes (e.g., Ormat efforts), and costs for roads/transmission to the Railbelt grid.

Current outlook for Railbelt electrification:

  • Spurr has long been eyed for 50–100+ MW (phased), with interest from companies like Ignis/GeoAlaska. Proximity (~75 miles from Anchorage, near Beluga) aids grid tie-in. Recent lease interest and webinars (e.g., 2026) show momentum.
  • Combined with Augustine (subsea cable potential) and EGS advances, it could provide firm baseload to complement hydro/wind and offset declining Cook Inlet gas.
  • Mush-style insights could refine siting (e.g., targeting fracture zones or deeper hot rock) via better geophysics, improving success rates.

Bottom line: The shift toward mush/plumbing models is evolutionary science that better explains these volcanoes—it supports sustained heat and potentially larger exploitable areas. It won’t revolutionize timelines (drilling, permitting, and economics are bigger hurdles), but it doesn’t dim prospects and may aid exploration modeling. Alaska’s Ring of Fire setting gives it a strong edge over non-volcanic EGS sites.

If new seismic or drilling data comes out tying this directly to resource estimates, it could be even more positive.