Japan’s $691 Million Geothermal Push Signals a New Era for Next-Generation Clean Energy May 4, 2026 Japan has just made one of its most decisive moves yet in the global geothermal energy race. With the announcement of US$691 million (¥110.2 billion) in subsidies by fiscal 2030 , the country is positioning itself at the forefront of next-generation geothermal innovation—an area long seen as promising but technically and financially challenging. Backed by the Green Innovation Fund , this policy shift is not just about incremental improvements in renewable energy. It is about unlocking entirely new geothermal technologies such as closed-loop systems and supercritical geothermal power , both of which could redefine how the world thinks about baseload clean energy. What makes this moment significant is not just the money. It is the timing. As countries scramble to decarbonize their power grids while maintaining reliability, Japan is betting that geothermal—historically underutilized—ma...
Sage Geosystems: The Geothermal Startup That Turns Pressure Into Power Most conversations about advanced geothermal circle around the same question: How do you extract heat from dry rock? Sage Geosystems started with a different question: What if the Earth could do most of the work for you? Based in Houston, Sage has quietly built a technology stack that treats the subsurface not just as a heat source, but as a pressure vessel. Their system captures heat and mechanical energy, stores energy underground like a battery, and uses a fraction of the surface pumping that conventional geothermal requires. This article focuses entirely on Sage , how their technology works, what makes it genuinely different, and where the blind spots still are. Part I: The Core Innovation , Pressure Geothermal Sage's foundational insight is simple but powerful: deep hot rock isn't just hot. It's also under immense natural pressure. Traditional geothermal systems ignore that pressure , they vent flui...