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Supercritical Geothermal Energy Explained: The $60 Billion Future Power Source

Supercritical Geothermal Energy Explained: The $60 Billion Future Power Source Beneath our feet lies a virtually unlimited source of clean, always-on power. Yet conventional geothermal energy—even with major recent advancements—barely scratches the surface, currently accounting for only about 1% of global electricity demand. The game-changing potential lies far deeper, where water reaches a mysterious fourth state known as supercritical. This is the frontier of supercritical geothermal energy, a technology poised to reshape the global energy landscape and attract multi-billion-dollar investments. What Is Supercritical Geothermal Energy? Water in its familiar liquid, solid (ice), or gaseous (steam) states is just the beginning. When pressure and temperature exceed specific thresholds—approximately 22.1 MPa (over 200 times atmospheric pressure) and 374°C for pure water—the distinction between liquid and gas vanishes. This is the supercritical phase: a single, dense, highly energetic flui...
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Geothermal energy opportunities in Africa

Geothermal Energy in Africa: A Continent Poised to Lead a Renewable Revolution Africa, and East Africa in particular, sits on one of the world's most extraordinary geological phenomena: the East African Rift System (EARS). This 6,000-kilometer rift, stretching from the Red Sea down to Mozambique, is not just a source of breathtaking landscapes; it is a vast reservoir of underground steam and heat with the potential to fundamentally reshape the continent's energy future. Geothermal energy is not new to Africa. The world's first geothermal power plant was commissioned in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Kiabukwa mine between 1952 and 1960, a 250 kW operation that predates even the famous Wairakei plant in New Zealand. While that pioneer project faded, a revolution is now taking place that could see Africa overtake Europe in geothermal capacity by the end of the decade. The moment is here for Africa to transform its immense geological wealth into a driver of sustainable,...

Kaishan Group Bets Big on Nevada EGS Geothermal Breakthrough

Beyond Steam: Why Kaishan Group’s EGS Bet in Nevada Could Redefine Geothermal Energy By Robert Buluma   For decades, geothermal energy has occupied a frustrating niche in the renewable energy hierarchy. It is celebrated for its superpower—a capacity factor that rivals nuclear power, producing electricity 24/7 regardless of weather. Yet, it has remained geographically tethered to rare, naturally occurring pockets of underground water, steam, and permeable rock. Only places like Iceland, parts of California, and New Zealand have been able to tap it at scale. That limitation may be about to shrink dramatically. This morning, Kaishan Group (300257.SZ), a Chinese manufacturer-turned-geothermal-operator, announced that its U.S. subsidiary, Open Mountain Energy, LLC (OME), has signed a development agreement with Power Planet, Inc. to validate and commercialize Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) technology at its existing Star Peak geothermal project in Pershing County, Nevada. The announce...

Deep geothermal energy in Île-de-France: results of the Géoscan project

Seeing Through Stone: How the Géoscan Project Is Opening a New Frontier for Geothermal in Greater Paris By Robert Buluma   The Île-de-France region, home to the sprawling metropolis of Paris and its surrounding suburbs, is already the undisputed champion of deep geothermal energy in Europe. With 54 active installations as of 2025, no other region on the continent comes close. The eastern and northern parts of the region have been tapping the hot waters of the Dogger limestone aquifer for decades, heating tens of thousands of homes with clean, renewable energy. But what about the west? What about the south? For years, those areas remained a geothermal blind spot. The subsurface was less understood. The geology was more complex. Project developers hesitated to invest because the risk of drilling a dry well was simply too high to justify. The result was a lopsided geothermal landscape: thriving activity in the east and north, cautious silence in the west and south. On May 19, 2026, th...

Güzelyurt Geothermal Project Paused as Environmental Review Forces Redesign in Turkey

Stalled by Streams: The Güzelyurt Geothermal Project and Turkey’s Environmental Balancing Act By Robert Buluma   Date: June 8, 2026 Introduction: A Promising Project Hits a Geological Snag In a development that underscores the growing complexity of renewable energy infrastructure in Turkey, the proposed Güzelyurt Jeotermal Enerji Santrali (JES) in Aksaray province has been halted—not by market forces or technical failure, but by the very landscape it sought to inhabit. The 20 MW geothermal power plant, a flagship investment by GMK Enerji subsidiary Güzelyurt Jeotermal Enerji A.Ş., has been forced into a major revision after environmental and hydrological assessments revealed that the original site was dangerously crisscrossed by numerous dry stream beds. What initially appeared as a routine environmental review has now evolved into a significant case study for the Turkish energy sector. It highlights a critical tension: while Turkey pushes aggressively for domestic, baseload renewa...