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[Episode #278] – Enhanced Geothermal Energy

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It's taken a very long time to arrive, but next-generation geothermal power is finally becoming a commercial technology. Even though the virtues of geothermal have long been known and appreciated as clean, low-impact, and capable of running continuously, the few conventional geothermal installations in the US operating for decades supply less than half a percent of the nation's electricity. The promise of next-generation, "enhanced" geothermal, which we discussed back in Episode #248, is that it can be used almost anywhere. But business and technical challenges have held it back.

Until recently, that is. Now, several companies have overcome those challenges and are hard at work on new projects in the US and elsewhere, including Fervo Energy's Cape Station project in Utah, which is expected to begin delivering power this year and expand to 500 MW by 2028.

And the resource is significant: According to the IEA, the technical potential for next-generation geothermal wells less than 5 km deep in the United States is greater than 7 terawatts, a number that's more than five times the nation's total existing electricity generation capacity. The US Department of Energy projects that as much as 300 GW of that could be economically deployed by 2050, enough to meet up to 40 percent of anticipated demand growth. Some studies suggest that if new data centers are sited strategically, geothermal could power all of them. And costs are coming down fast. The IEA estimates they could fall by as much as 80 percent, which would make geothermal cost-competitive across the US. All that development would also create or preserve hundreds of thousands of jobs, many using skills that transfer directly from oil and gas extraction and fossil power generation.

To lay out the opportunity, the obstacles, and the state of the art in enhanced geothermal, we are pleased to be joined by Dr. Emily Pope, a senior fellow at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions. Her report, Drilling Down—What it Will Take to Harness the Potential of Next-Generation Geothermal, was published in April and offers a comprehensive review of the sector. So if you gave up on geothermal years ago, this episode will show you what's changed.

Guest:

Dr. Emily Pope is a senior fellow at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (or C2ES), a nonprofit organization that works to advance durable and effective climate policy. Emily is part of a team that examines technological solutions that support decarbonization, and leads their work on geothermal systems, carbon management, and critical minerals. She has a PhD in geological and environmental sciences, and spent about a decade in academia before transitioning to the policy and science communication space.

Emily on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-pope-seyum/

C2ES on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/c2es.bsky.social

C2ES on X: https://x.com/C2ES_org

C2ES on the Web: https://www.c2es.org/

Recording date: May 7, 2026

Air date: June 17, 2026

Geek rating: 7