Just 2 Degrees: Can Geothermal Topple Oil?

    just ahead there aren’t many sources of
    power as renewable as the heat benath
    our
    feet on this episode we look at
    geothermal its sustainability
    practicality and cost it’s effectively
    an unlimited source of energy and
    climate case against the Swiss
    government sets an enormous precedent
    after elderly women argue the health
    risks brought on by global warming
    violates their right to life the track
    we are on is more on 3° global warming
    just 2 deg is on now I’m now
    76 and now I know my daughter doesn’t
    like me to say this but statistically
    speaking in 10 years I’m gone so it’s
    not I and my generation that profit from
    what we gained today the next
    Generations
    [Music]
    you know I
    do I know I got it I got it I
    Do We Begin this episode taking a look
    at an energy source beneath our feet
    that could help Propel us to
    sustainability it supporters say it’s a
    clean renewable source of low carbon
    energy that could play a vital role in
    tackling the climate crisis the
    potential of geothermal energy seems
    enormous if estimates are correct then
    Geo is 50,000 time times more powerful
    than all oil and gas
    resources you may have soaked in a
    natural Hot Springs pool or witness the
    Old Faithful Giza blasting hot water
    into the air at Yellowstone National
    Park but have you ever wondered where
    all that heat comes from well it all
    lies deep below the Earth’s crust and is
    called geothermal energy in volcanically
    active areas close to tectonic plate
    boundaries it’s been used for decades to
    supply renewable Heat and electricity in
    dozens of countries at tectonic plate
    boundaries water breaks through the
    Earth’s surface with steam and hot water
    all by itself but it can also be used in
    other areas away from its origin listen
    to fris Juber director of a plant in
    France’s overseas guadaloop region which
    hopes to supply 20% of the Island’s
    electricity through geothermal energy by
    2035
    for Advocates say this renewable source
    has the potential to increase energy
    Security in an uncertain world after the
    1970s Oil Embargo spurred an energy
    crisis across the world Iceland
    harnessed its abundant geothermal
    resources for heat and electricity today
    the country receives more than 90% of
    its heat from geothermal energy experts
    say the resource has the potential to
    slash High emitting Nations dependence
    on dirty fossil fuels Indonesia for one
    has closed to 40% of the world’s
    geothermal potential while untapped
    resources in the United States could
    Supply 10% of today’s energy needs for
    countries with little to no natural
    resources geothermal energy could reduce
    Reliance on imported fuels it is an
    energy source that could be utilized
    more and better but it’s it’s not a
    completely renewable source and it’s not
    without its problems I think that’s
    important to remember but it’s overall
    better than coal and gas in
    environmental groups say Solutions must
    be found for the harmful drilling stage
    which can lead to sulfur pollution and
    CO2 emissions using geothermal for
    electricity however produces only
    about6 of the CO2 of a natural gas power
    plant and emits 13 times less greenhouse
    gases but the reason geothermal energy
    hasn’t been used as widely stems from
    one crucial Factor the high upfront cost
    during the initial exploration stage age
    and the risk of not being
    [Music]
    successful according to the World Bank
    initial exploration and test drill for 3
    to five geothermal plants cost anywhere
    between 20 to $30 million and for an
    average sized home installation of heat
    pumps cost between1 to
    $20,000 a global effort to exploit the
    potential of geothermal energy would
    therefore demand a major mobilization of
    private sector Investments experts say
    this must include risk mitigation
    mechanisms and funding from public
    sources climate finance and guarantees
    center of the earth is is extremely hot
    um due to long standing radioactivity
    and um the the pressure of of gravity
    pushing on the center of the earth so
    it’s it’s
    effectively an unlimited source of
    energy and how is this um uh connected
    to the magma that flows within the
    Earth’s
    crust well this the heat is creating the
    the molten rock the Magna uh the magma
    which comes out when we have volcanoes
    um so everything below a certain depth
    is effectively um molten and and it it
    normally stays there unless there’s a
    crack in in in the surface that allows
    it to come up closer to to where we
    are um what’s your best argument
    Jonathan in fever of jeal energy as a
    renewable
    source I think um
    when we look at the range of renewable
    options that we
    have um they tend to all have their own
    disadvantages and the the ones that we
    use most commonly um like solar and wind
    are intermittent so when it’s windy um
    I’m here I’m here in the UK it’s a very
    windy country we have um a lot of wind
    potential but sometimes there’s no wind
    um and then the the wind turbines don’t
    produce anything you know if you’re in
    Turkey maybe solar is better than it is
    in the UK but it’s there’s no solar at
    night um and even in Sunny countries you
    get days that are overcast and there’s
    no um generation from solar the beauty
    of geothermal is that it can be Basel
    loaded so the heat is there all the time
    you can run it 24 hours a day 365 days a
    year um at whatever um load capacity you
    need you know given the demand at that
    particular time so it’s much more um
    reliable than some of the other more
    common um renewable energy
    sources these geothermal sources cool
    down over
    time um over geological time yes um but
    they’re not going to cool down because
    we’re using them um the the amount of
    heat there is is um so vast we can’t com
    size of it and it’s not going to be used
    up because we’re producing electricity
    from
    it um during human extraction understand
    their environmental concerns about the
    release of greenhouse gas emissions like
    hydrogen sulfide carbon dioxide methane
    um are these emissions you think
    significant when compared to oil and
    gas well there are there are
    environmental issues around um J thermal
    and I think the emissions of of gases
    are probably less of an issue generally
    the number one environmental concern
    around geothermal usage is actually the
    water so in a traditional geothermal um
    Power Generation you have a hot spring
    and up comes the water and then you have
    to dispose of the water and the water
    May well have um contaminants it may
    well have water even though it’s super
    heated it’s
    unusable um well it’s super heated you
    it it comes up you you use it to to heat
    turbines and produce electricity and
    then you have to get rid of that water
    somehow um and water that comes up from
    the ground has minerals in it and
    sometimes those minerals are are are
    ones that we don’t want to uh have to
    deal with so um disposing of that water
    is traditionally being the biggest
    environmental concern when it comes to
    geothermal
    what’s preventing everyone from
    installing a geothermal system say at
    their
    homes it’s it’s basically cost um so to
    have a an effective geothermal system
    that produces Heat at a high enough
    temperature to say produce electricity
    means you have to drill extremely deep
    um into the ground deeper than we we
    generally do for um oil and gas and so
    the uh and once you’ve drilled a hole
    that deep once you’ve drilled a well
    that deep the capital cost of that well
    means that you need to produce a lot of
    energy to to pay that back um also the
    the level of geothermal potential varies
    from different places so we all know
    about Iceland Iceland you know it’s
    active volcano area they have lots of
    very hot hot springs and for them
    Drilling in into the Earth and and
    producing geothermal energy is
    relatively cheap but there’s lots of
    places in the world where the the active
    hot rock that you need is much further
    below the ground um so with the current
    geothermal that we use there’s only
    certain areas where um this technology
    can be used that’s not necessarily going
    to stay the same there’s developments
    going on that may make this a much more
    widespread source of energy but that’s
    traditionally been the way it has been
    yes just about to ask you if you think
    the costs are worth it um compared to
    the devastation and destruction and harm
    that other Duty forms of energy um cost
    us on a human level on an environment
    level ecosystem level is the cost worth
    it should we invest these billions or
    trillions of dollars um to um install
    these systems in a way that everyone has
    assets I think one of the difficulties
    with investing in in in these
    Technologies is that um if we take solar
    for examp as an example if you look at
    how much it cost a panel cost say 20
    years ago compared to how much it costs
    today um spending that money in a panic
    20 years ago would have got us a lot
    less clean energy than spending the same
    money today um so that there has to be a
    balance between you know it it has to be
    cost effective and in in the sense of um
    when we look at geothermal there’s a
    number of companies that have some very
    interesting new
    technologies and and we see lots of
    these Technologies they never work in
    commercial uh we we read about lots of
    wonderful new green technologies they
    don’t commercial successes but if we
    assume that some of these Technologies
    May well U make big breakthroughs then
    perhaps 10 years from now now we’ll have
    much cheaper ways of of producing
    geothermal energy than we do today
    that’s not an argument to say we don’t
    do
    anything um that we don’t use the good
    resources that we have the most
    cost-effective resources that we have
    now but it is an argument to say that we
    don’t necessarily need to um spend vast
    sums of money in a in a panic on
    technology that might actually be
    outdated um just a few years down the
    road to uh to give an example of one
    company that I I I know of it’s a
    Canadian company called
    Evo and they’ve developed a closed loop
    um geothermal system where effectively
    they have wells drilled down um at
    either end and the water flows down
    along a grid underneath the ground heats
    up comes up the other end goes through a
    heating system and then they use the
    same water and it goes back down again
    so you don’t have the um the water waste
    problem um and you don’t even have to
    have pumps because everything works on
    on on heat convection you know heat
    rises and it pulls the colder water back
    down the other side um and there’s some
    interesting projects in Germany and in
    Austria using this technology at the
    moment um
    and one of the uh you remember I said I
    was talking about drilling deep enough
    to get water that’s hot enough to create
    steam to produce electricity
    um they’re actually focusing at the
    moment on Central Heating plants so in
    lots of places in Europe they have these
    central heating plants and hot water is
    piped to the homes and traditionally
    they’ve been coal or gas um some of them
    are changing to biofuels but if they can
    use geothermal in this instead of fossil
    fuels
    um immediately you wipe out the carbon
    emissions for the heating of the homes
    in the region where this this thing
    exists and it’s much easier to get 70
    degree 80
    degree um water than it is to get 200
    300 degree you don’t have to drill so so
    deep um so they’re kind of looking at
    lwh hanging fruit that’s cheaper to do
    um and at the moment it’s just a few
    projects to see whether it really works
    and whe they can get the the economics
    working
    um Jonathan um weathers at some future
    time um decades multiple DEC decades
    centuries from now yes or no answer can
    geothermal energy save us I think so I
    think so it’s um it’s continuous base
    load um it’s completely green it it
    basically has um unlimited potential it
    can go on for centuries um it it’s not
    going to run out um so I I think from a
    from a heating electricity point of view
    if we can get the costs to work um it
    could become the the default form of
    energy but it’s always if we can get the
    cost to
    work in a first for climate Justice a
    European court has ruled that EU member
    states must protect their citizens from
    the dangers of climate change the court
    condemned the Swiss government for
    violating elderly women’s human rights
    by failing to meet its own climate goals
    and establish a common budget the
    organization called senior women for
    climate protection represents over 2500
    women who are mostly in their 70s
    lawyers argued age and gender makes them
    more at risk uh to the effects of heat
    waves observers believe the case would
    could have an impact across Europe and
    Beyond Dr St this is an amazing um
    victory for your group CLA soran uh for
    your First Reactions how do you
    feel oh God right now I feel incredibly
    tired I haven’t had enough sleep I gave
    about a 100
    interviews and despite all this I feel
    absolutely great when you wait for
    something for 8 years and then you get a
    yes you actually won it’s like Christmas
    and Easter and New Year’s and whatever
    you celebrate all together in
    one yeah so it does feel great let’s go
    back to the beginning based on what your
    lawyers argued that age and gender makes
    people over a certain age more at risk
    of heat waves it kind of suggests that
    there was something that pre
    precipitated uh everything that took
    place an individual event maybe that
    started the spite for climate Justice I
    I keep imagining someone from your group
    uh suffering a heat stroke exactly how
    did all this start so how did all this
    start if you know it actually started
    with a young man
    it started yes it started with a young
    man who worked as a environmental
    scientist at Green Peace and he heard
    about this case in the Netherlands this
    urenda case I don’t know whether you
    heard of that and urgenda was a group of
    people and they took their government to
    court for an inadequate climate policy
    and they won so the state of the
    Netherlands had to improve their um
    climate
    policy and then this young men who
    worked at Green pece thought that’s what
    we want to do but how can we do it in
    Switzerland you can only do it when you
    are personally affected who is affected
    the most out of all the PO the segments
    of population elderly women and that’s
    then why he contacted an elderly women’s
    Association and I said would you take
    this on and they did and out of a
    thousand there were about 150 when the
    association was founded and now we are
    two and a half
    thousand oh fantastic well you guys came
    together built a case that basically
    said the Swiss government had violated
    its citizens human rights by not doing
    enough to fight climate change the court
    agreed but what exactly does that mean
    is Switzerland way behind on its targets
    yes Switzerland is extremely behind on
    its targets like most countries give me
    a country that is not behind its
    Target uh it’s behind its Target and
    specifically it’s
    not the track we are on together with
    several other countries we are way above
    the
    1.5 that we should not get over
    according to the Paris agreement which
    our country has signed many other
    countries have signed
    so that is a fact we are not online
    because the track we are on is more on
    three degrees global warming now
    worldwide on the average we already have
    1.2 and we see the damage that is being
    done I think so we definitely have to be
    Beyond 1.5 which we are not plus we do
    not have a real budget in terms of how
    many emissions are we still allowed to
    let out into the into the air we don’t
    know that what many people here in
    Switzerland says oh come on we such a
    small country forget it you know we
    contribute only 0 point I don’t know 0
    four% to the worldwide gas emissions but
    that’s unfair you know every single
    country and there are many small
    countries in this world if they would
    all say the same then that would in
    itself add up to
    40% of global misss so we have to do our
    share that’s only fair and we are not
    because we do not know how much is it
    exactly that would be the first thing
    that practically the government would
    have to
    do on that note I’d love to get your
    comment your reaction to certain
    criticism so the court said uh that
    ordered Switzerland to address its uh
    climate shortcomings and pay your group
    80,000 so but what do you say to people
    who argue um that Switzerland should not
    have to pay uh for warming temperatures
    which of course it’s a global issue and
    not caused solely by the Swiss
    government no of course it’s not caused
    solely by the Swiss government that’s
    what everybody every country says that
    you know they look at their
    own it’s like I would say you know the
    amount of taxes I pay to the state is so
    many skill I’m not going to pay it okay
    okay I mean that’s not fair right
    because many people have only a a little
    budget that they or a little amount of
    money they have to pay to the state so
    when people say they should not pay
    80,000 what do they pay that for it’s
    not for us it’s not because we we were
    we didn’t ask for any money zero so it’s
    not for
    damages it is actually for some of the
    cost okay and now yes Switzerland is
    near is I mean 80,000 in this whole game
    of cleaning up the air and cleaning up
    the planet is again a minuscule amount
    the court considers it clear that future
    Generations are likely to Bear an
    increasingly severe burden of the
    consequences of present failures and
    omissions to combat climate change the
    court holds that the special features of
    of climate change as a common concern of
    humankind and the need to promote
    intergenerational burden sharing renders
    it appropriate to make allowance for
    recourse to legal action by associations
    in the context of climate change it was
    worthwhile fighting because now we have
    880,000
    Swiss Franks or Euros no that’s not it
    and if we are on this line I first of
    all yes we were we were fighting for
    ourselves we said uh during heat waves
    our health is high at risk the highest
    of all the population
    segments but we know I mean I’m now
    76 and now I know my daughter doesn’t
    like me to say this but statistically
    speaking in 10 years I’m gone so it’s
    not I and my generation that profits
    from what we gained today the Next
    Generation and that’s very important for
    us it is it
    is wow that that those statements uh
    gives me a lot more perspective in terms
    of why you’re fighting for this um so
    the Court’s decision is legally binding
    but do you think the Swiss government
    will
    comply well they have to because we are
    a member of the European Council you
    know this whole thing has nothing to do
    with the European Union what some people
    still confuse
    so we are an official member state of
    the Council of Europe now the court that
    belongs to the Council of Europe is the
    European Court of human rights in
    Strasburg many people confus that also
    with Brussels and then the EU again so
    the government better accept it and they
    have made a first statement and they
    said yes we will honor this statement we
    will live up to
    it and I love to hear that but we all
    know how
    much how many words are spent out into
    and they fly somewhere around but they
    don’t go where they actually should so
    we make sure that they
    keep that they increase the speed of
    coming up with a climate policy that
    really deserves its name and
    protects the population from
    these terrible and increasing heat waves
    and we are not going back to the rocking
    chair I can tell you that we will watch
    out that the government does its job we
    don’t know exactly how we can oversee
    that because first of all it’s the job
    of the the Ministers of the European
    Union so there will be one or two I
    don’t know how many person be assigned
    and S
    now has to give evidence of what they
    are doing at the beginning now four
    times a year that’s a lot and we will we
    will definitely look at
    that necessar speed up the heat you know
    we all have to give a little bit of a
    kick in the behind of these slow acting
    governments and
    Poli got it do

    Geothermal is heating up in the US state of Texas, also known as the HQ for major oil companies. Does the green technology have a chance? And drought has forced Colombia’s capital to ration water. Elsewhere, whales get legal person hood, in order to protect their rights.

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