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Saskatchewan driller hits 'gusher' with ground-breaking geothermal well that offers h

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    #11
    So are some of you suggesting we shut down any geothermal projects and layoff some more workers?

    There are a lot of jobs in new technology and clean energy but I guess these jobs aren't as good? Please explain?

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      #12
      Money should only be made by agriculture or oil and gas. Any other employment is libtarded and not real money.

      Lay them off and make them get real jobs!

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        #13
        Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
        So are some of you suggesting we shut down any geothermal projects and layoff some more workers?

        There are a lot of jobs in new technology and clean energy but I guess these jobs aren't as good? Please explain?
        Let me guess, in Chuckworld for every 100 jobs there are in drilling and building a geothermal plant, there will be 10 government leaches living off their backs to regulate it.

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          #14
          If there are no regulations and regulators that would be good LEP. We can put one in your front yard then?

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            #15
            Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
            If there are no regulations and regulators that would be good LEP. We can put one in your front yard then?
            Yay, in chuckie's world, economic growth is growth in government payroll. That is the sign of someone who has the pulse of vibrant economy.

            Disclaimer: Sarcasm.

            By the way, my house on the farm is about 60 ft from the centre line of the road. It was there before the road was built. But they should never have been able to build a secondary highway there when a yard was established prior to any regulations.

            So don't talk to me about regulation.

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              #16
              Originally posted by Blaithin View Post
              They don’t have to find water...

              That’s why old oil wells can be converted to geothermal. You’re drilling deep for the heat, not water.
              Geothermal always depends on water to transfer the heat.

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                #17
                Originally posted by Happytrails View Post
                Geothermal always depends on water to transfer the heat.
                could be wrong , but i think the referral is that oil wells water out at the end of their life, usually what finishes them or makes a new well unfeasible , water is everywhere

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by Happytrails View Post
                  Geothermal always depends on water to transfer the heat.
                  Not really, but the system will depend on the goal. A closed loop system is usually the most common for temperature use and while water can be used, usually it's not.

                  Electricity production is about the only type of geothermal to date that focuses on finding a large reservoir which is why it's so extra expensive to set up.

                  Can't group all geothermal together as needing to drill to find water.

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                    #19
                    Geothermal cannot even be compared with wind or solar. It produces useful energy.
                    One word, dispatchable. Geothermal is in the same league as coal, gas, nuclear, hydro.
                    It can produce useful reliable dispatchable energy(electricity in this case) which a modern industrialized society requires ( and expects) to function, with no deleterious ( or expensive) effects on the reliability of the grid.

                    If it can be done at a cost that compares to the other dispatchable electricity generation sources is not as certain. But what can be certain, is that the generation cost that it is sold to the grid for, is the entire cost, unlike the unreliable sources which cause a cascade of higher costs all the way to the end consumer, regardless of any uninformed and ignorant claims of being cheapest.

                    The energy potential is massive, and it exists virtually anywhere, the environmental footprint (and above ground footprint) is insignificant, the required technology is all existing off the shelf type stuff ( and much of it home grown, and mature enough to be very cost effective), the sustainability is not in doubt, just the full life cycle EROEI that needs to be proven.

                    The shallow residential type geothermal systems which were becoming popular back when nat gas was expensive, and electrity was affordable, nearly all got turned off when gas got cheap, and electricity became artificially high. It took more dollars worth of energy to pump the fluid than came out the other end. On paper, these deep systems have a much higher EROEI, but there is also the issue that the temperature gradient declines over time. Time will tell. I'm optimistic.
                    Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Nov 28, 2020, 23:16.

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                      #20
                      Brooks solar farm is a 15 megawatt facility that cost $30 million to build. This geothermal project is a 20 megawatt facility with a projected total cost of $51 million dollars. One uses hardware built in China, the other uses hardware and technology built primarily in Canada. One produces intermittent power that requires a second generation source to produce power 24 hrs a day, the other produces electricity 24 hrs a day all on its own. Which one makes more sense?

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