Entries Tagged as 'WA State'

Seattle June 3rd, GEA Finance Workshop

GEA U.S. Technology, Finance, and Development Workshop Agenda has finally been released.  Mayor Greg Nickels of Seattle will open the conference.  State Senator Adam Kline will also talk about recent legislative activities. DOE will be represented by Ed Wall, Director of Geothermal Energy

8:00 am Opening Keynote presentations, Karl Gawell, GEA, Moderator
Greg Nickels, Mayor of Seattle, WA, confirmed
Senator Adam Kline, State of Washington, confirmed
Representatives of Federal and State officials, invited
8:25 am Geothermal 101: Understanding geothermal resources and technology
Susan Petty, AltaRock Energy, confirmed
8:45 am Washington State Geothermal Status and Roadmap
Dave Norman, Washington State Geologist, confirmed
Dave Sjoding, Washington State University, confirmed
9:15 am BREAK
9:30 am Ormat, Gold Level Sponsor, Morning Keynote
9:45 am New Geothermal Projects Under Development: Leading Project Developers Discuss the Status of
Their New Geothermal Projects and Keys to Successful Project Development
Ken MacLeod, Western GeoPower, confirmed
Michael Hayter, Raser Technologies, confirmed
Dan Schochet, Ram Power, confirmed
Hank Sennott, Enel NA, tentative
Phil Messer, PBS&J, tentative
Saf Dhilon, U.S Geothermal, tentative
10:45 am New Geothermal Technology Panel: New and future developments in geothermal technology are
described and discussed
Ed Wall, DOE, Panel Chair:
13
Paul Thomsen, Ormat, confirmed
Halley Dickey, TAS, confirmed
Lou Capuano, ThermaSource, confirmed
Charles Baron, Google, confirmed
Kevin Wallace, Power Engineers, confirmed
David Paul, UTC power, tentative
11:45 LUNCH 
12:30 pm Community/Environmental/Tribal: Invite environmental leader to speak on role of geothermal
and environmental issues; invite community official where geothermal is used or being developed to
discuss local issues/benefits
Panel Chair: Karl Gawell, GEA
Ross Macfarlane, Climate Solutions, confirmed
Laurie McClenahan Hietter, RMT, confirmed
Roger Taylor, State, Local & Tribal Deployment, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,
confirmed
Michael O?Connell, Stoel Rives, LLP, confirmed
Additional environmental, community or tribal views (lRachel Shimshak, Renewable NW
Projects, Nancy Hirsch, NW Energy Coalition, Tony Usibelli, WA State Energy Office, Dan
Ritzman, Sierra Club, Becky Kelly, Washington Environmental Council, Diana Enright, Oregon
Department of Energy, Shoshone Tribe, invited)
1:20 pm Transmission: Status and Outlook for Federal and State Actions to Ensure Adequate Transmission
for New Renewable Power Projects
Jonathan Weisgall, MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company, confirmed
1:40 pm Federal Stimulus and Other Support
Ed Wall, Geothermal Technologies Program Director, U.S Department of Energy,
confirmed
2:00 pm UTC Power, Gold Level Sponsor, Afternoon Keynote
2:15 pm BREAK
2:30 pm Financing Geothermal Projects: Status of Federal and State Incentives, Approaches to
Project Financing, and More…
Mark Taylor, New Energy Finance, confirmed
Tom King, U.S Renewables Group, confirmed
CJ Arrigo, Glacier Capital Partners, confirmed
John McIlveen, Jacobs and Company Securities, Inc., confirmed
3:30 pm Overcoming the legal/regulatory hurdles to new geothermal development
Jerry Fish, Stoel Rives, confirmed
John Pierce, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich Rosati, confirmed
Kermit Witherbee, BLM Geothermal Program Manager, confirmed
Bob Fujimoto, U.S Forest Service, to be invited
4:30pm Geothermal Energy from a Utility/Power Company Perspective
Chad Teply or Mark Tallman, PacifiCorp, confirmed
Craig Collar, Snohomish PUD, confirmed
Steve Ponder, NV Energy, confirmed
Additional Representative (Ben Farrow, Puget Sound Energy, Murray Grande, NCPA, and John
Pease, Bonneville Power Administration, invited)

Washington State Job Generation – 444 Permanent Jobs

The Federal EIS predicts that 1,860 temporary construction jobs will be generated to develop 600 MWe within the State.  That would result in 444 permanent maintenance jobs and almost $40 Million dollars salaries per annum.

 

The analysis is located on page 487 of the third appendix.  The link is here.

Lease application analysis in Mt. Baker Snoqualamie Forest

The Programmatic EIS looks at 9,000 plus acres requested for development in an area proximal to the North Cascades National Park.  This project is a development proposed by Vulcan Power.  The analysis begins on page 351

The pending noncompetitive lease applications were filed by Vulcan Power Corporation in 2000. It is expected that issuing all of the leases in this area would result in two binary power plants at capacities of 30 and 20 megawatts. It is expected that a 30 megawatt plant would result in 15 acres of land disturbance, and a 20 megawatt plant would result in 10 acres of land disturbance for a total disturbance of 25 acres. Existing Forest Service roads would be used to access the sites.  Exploration activities for a 20 megawatt plant and a 30 megawatt plant is expected to involve approximately 12 temperature gradient holes, disturbing approximately 0.15 acre each, for a total disturbance of approximately 2 acres.

Four pending lease applications are included within this area:
• WAOR 056025 – 2,403 acres comprise portions of three adjacent sections of land and a full fourth section 0.25 mile to the west. The legal description of this land is (1) T38N R8E S36; (2) T38N R9E S19, “part so of wilderness”; (3) T38N R9E S30, parts E2, E2W2,Lots 1-4; (4) T38N R9E S31, parts E2, E2W2, Lots 1-4.

• WAOR 056027 – 2,560 acres comprised of four contiguous sections of land. The legal description of this land is (1) T37N R8E S11; (2) T1S T37N R8E S13; (3) T37N R8E S14; (4) T37N R8E S24.

• WAOR 056028 – 2,544.970 acres comprised of four contiguous sections of land. The legal description of this land is (1) T37N R8E S10, “pt outside NRA”; (2) T37N R8E S15; (3) T37N R8E S22; (4) T37N R8E S23.

* WAOR 056029 – 1,941.920 acres comprised of four contiguous sections of land with a portion of each excluded due to the excluded land being a National Recreation Area. The legal description of this land is (1) T37N R8E S16, “pt outside NRA”; (2) T37N R8E S17, “pt outside NRA”; (3) T37N R8E S20, “pt outside NRA”; (4) T37N R8E S21, “pt outside NRA”.

The lease sites range in elevation from 800 feet to 3,400 feet above mean sea level and are traversed by several creeks, roads and trails. Other land uses include several gravel pits and quarries. There are no known buildings within the lease sites or within 0.5 mile of any of the lease sites.

USGS issues new Geothermal Assessment – Washington State has 30,000 MW potential of EGS

In the first comprehensive assessment since 1978, the US Geologic Survey has issued a new survey of the hydrothermal and EGS potential of the Western United States.  Building from recent assessments by the Western Governors Association, State Geologic Surveys, private data and federal assessment they issue conservative, mean and low probability estimates.  The study included resources greater than 90 degrees C and up to a depth of 6km.  Pristine lands and lands proximal to National Parks were excluded.  A total of 241 geothermal sites were identified.

 

Washington State’s identified resources are 0.25% of the national assessment and expand to 1.25% of the potential when EGS is included.

Alta-Rock acquires exclusive geothermal rights to 263,000 acres in Western Washington

In an agreement with a major timber company, Alta-Rock has acquired the geothermal rights to 263,000 acres in Western Washington.  While the full geothermal potential of these resources is not known, their proximity to the I-5 transmission corridor greatly favors their development compared to Eastern Washington geothermal resources.  The full scope of lease rights extend to 650,000 plus acres in several western states.

The press release via EarthTimes is here

SNOPUD Geothermal Activities

Snohomish Pubic Utility District, the 12th largest in the nation has embarked on an aggressive geothermal development strategy within their service area.  With a goal of 90 MW by 2020, they are well on their way with significant early milestones in 2007 and 2008.  From a presentation by SNOPUD’s Craig Collar

    • Updated GIS database utilizing data from historical BPA studies
    • Existing data review
    • Temperature with depth maps
    • Geochemistry
    • Geology
    • Fracture/fault mapping
    • Seismic data
    • Stress/tectonic regime
    • Transmission lines
    • Access/land availability
    • Gathered new geochemistry data from springs and wells
    • Preliminary costs: exploration, wells, plant
    • Potential exploration/development options

SnoPud Geothermal Workshop a Success

Over 65 participants attended the Geothermal Workshop for utilities hosted by Snohomish PUD in Everett last week.  During the day and a half event on both power generation and ground source heat pumps the focus was on the state of the industry and the opportunities now for advancing geothermal in Washington State.

The two most important Washington State specific geothermal findings were SnoPud’s  goal of 90 MW from Geothermal in the Cascades by 2020 and the estimate by the National Geothermal Resources Council that Washington State’s geothermal potential could be double previous estimates and exceed 600 MW.

The event was opened by SnoPud Director Steve Klein and Congressman Jay Inslee (via recorded video).  Congressman Inslee, whose district includes part of the service district of SnoPud, talked about making Washington State a geothermal leader and was looking forward to "cut(ting) the ribbon on the first plant" .  Congressman Inslee has also arranged for $500K in funding to assist SnoPud in developing their geothermal plan.

However, the state faces a significant challenge as resource estimates are from a 1979 study.  "Comprehensive research and exploration have not been done (in Washington State)" according to GRC Executive Director Curt Robinson.  And yet, he felt confident enough to cast an estimate of 600 MW, primarily in the Cascades and Central Washington. 

Western Washington’s geothermal potential remains unknown and is largely masked by the rainfall on the western slopes of the Cascades.  Experts still feel that several sites may exist along the I-5 transmission corridor, a critical factor in the siting of any geothermal plant.

Development costs have soared in recent months as capital, material and exploration costs have significantly spiked. Guy Nelson with the Geothermal Working Group stated that the current rule of thumb is now $4 Million per MW.  Geothermal power can range from 6.6 to 11.6 cents per kiloWatt hour.

Rural PUD’s also learned about the new loan assistance program by the USDA for ground source heat pumps.  This program offers a great opportunity for Eastern Washington utilities to help homeowners install and finance home heat pumps that are critical for utilities interested in peak shaving, and homeowners interested in significantly reducing their home heating and cooling costs.

Representatives from Seattle City Light, Tacoma Power and Skamania PUD were in attendance, as was State Senator Adam Kline.  Senator Kline is talking to Senate leadership about introducing the Geothermal Study Bill again this year.   He is confident that a straight forward study bill (no policy, regulations, funding or taxes) that explores both power generation and heat pumps will garner strong interest by legislators throughout the state. 

2008 GEA Report; Washington State – 1 unspecified project

The GEA has released its latest production and development report.  Nationally, growth is project at ~20% since the beginning of 2008.  Washington State garners a reference to one project around Mt. Baker.  No MW power output is assigned.

Geothermal_Update_August_7_2008

SnoPud to hold Geothermal Workshop August 11 & 12 in Everett

 

The first Geothermal workshop in Washington State will take place August 11 and 12 in Everett.  Coordinated by Snohomish Public Utility District, hosts include the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, American Public Power Association and the Western Area Power Administration.

The cost of the workshop is $125.

The target audiences for this workshop is utility staff who are interested in learning about geothermal technologies – including geothermal heat pumps (GHP) and geothermal power production – and who want to compare them with other resource options, or who want to learn how to improve on existing programs. Through presentations, case histories, and demonstrations, attendees will learn:

- New drilling and installation techniques

- Cost comparisons of geothermal power and other resource options

- Cost effectiveness tests of GHP from the utility and customer perspectives

- Case histories of GHP systems energy savings over conventional HVAC systems

 

To learn more about the event contact – Guy Nelson, UGWG (541) 994-4670 energyguy@utilityforum.com

Geothermal EIS Public Meeting in Seattle July 28th, 5:30 – 7:30

The BLM and Forest Service will hold one of 13 public meetings in Seattle on July 28, 2008 at the University Branch of the Seattle Public Library, (5009 Roosevelt Way, N.E. – just north of the University of Washington).

The preferred Alternative in the Draft PEIS considers all public lands and National Forest System lands with potential for geothermal development available for leasing except those that are withdrawn or administratively closed to geothermal leasing. The Draft PEIS also evaluates another alternative based on public input gained during scoping that would limit geothermal leasing for electrical generation to areas near transmission lines.

Written comments on the Draft PEIS may be submitted by any of three methods:
- e-mail – geothermal_EIS@blm.gov
- fax – 1-866-625-0707
- US Mail – Geothermal Programmatic EIS, c/o EMPSi, 182 Howard Street, Suite 110, San Francisco, California 94105

Geothermal Washington – an update

Geothermal Washington is a short and focused programmatic effort by Climate Solutions to advance geothermal power in Washington State.  The Pacific Northwest is experiencing a renewed push in geothermal — except in Washington State.  The Cascade Range is a known volcanic region and has strong geothermal potential. 

Starting in August of 2007, Lawrence Molloy began a dedicated effort on advancing geothermal. The focus was on three areas: 1) public awareness and acceptance, 2) technology development and 3) power purchase agreements. The logic was that work in these three areas would collectively advance the cause of geothermal.

Central to this effort is a blog “North of the Hot Zone” that discusses the geothermal potential in Washington State. The name refers to Washington State’s location relative to the vast geothermal reserves of Nevada, California and Oregon.

Progress has been modest. Public awareness in Washington State has been made through an op/ed, several articles and a blog. Decision makers are now aware of Washington State’s geothermal potential and development activity in proximal states and provinces. High-level discussions are taking place about direct geothermal investment in the central Cascades, and there is serious consideration of a geothermal study bill by the State legislature.

A proposed geothermal technology prize has been developed. It has been vetted by both geothermal experts and prize consultants. A proper high-temperature pump is seen as the technological gap hindering broader use of geothermal in 49 states according to MIT’s landmark Geothermal Study. Funding for the prize has been considered by high net worth individuals but not yet accepted. Next steps include a one-day design meeting currently scheduled for February 2009, and to be co-hosted by Stanford University’s Geothermal Program.

An effort to increase actual development and purchase of geothermal has focused on direct development or purchase by Seattle City Light. This effort has met with little interest on the part of the utility. A larger effort with a collective purchase of geothermal by 100 major cities was proposed to the Clinton Foundation and the National Conference of Mayors through staff of the Seattle Mayor’s office. Conceptually robust, it has lacked interest by critical players to warrant further development.

Activity 1: Public Awareness

This activity focused on building awareness in Washington State to both the general public and decision makers.

Actions

· A basic blog discussing the geothermal potential of Washington State was created. Titled “North of the Hot Zone,” it covered geology, projects, market potential and legislation. It linked to press coverage and had an excellent map compilation.

· A geothermal brownbag was hosted by Northwest Energy Coalition and Washington Environmental Council. 25 attendees heard from geothermal expert Susan Petty on the geothermal potential in the Pacific Northwest.

· Op/Ed; written by Lawrence Molloy and titled “Sitting on a Hot Energy Source.” It was run by the Seattle Times on January 4, 2008 The op/ed did inspire Dave Gehring of the Manufacturing Industrial Council, which is now planning an October meeting on geothermal.

· McClatchy Newspapers picked up the topic following the op/ed, and the article by Les Blumenthal was run in the Tacoma Tribune, Bellingham Herald, the Wenatchee World and the Seattle Times. The Columbian had an editorial that was picked up in the State Editorial coverage by the Seattle Times. Seattle-based Real Change covered the brownbag in January. There were also articles in GoSkagit. Several blogs have picked up on the coverage. Media Exposure: Total circulation for all newspapers is ~300,000. Blog hits barely exceeded 1,000.

· State Senator Adam Kline (D-37) introduced a study bill which failed to leave committee. He has signaled that he will run the bill again in the 2009 session. Discussions have begun with WEC and WCV for possible support of the bill.

Activity 2; Increasing Development of Geothermal

Though a mature technology (since 1913), geothermal development has not been commercially standardized. Increased site development would lead to standardization of technology, processes and components resulting in a lower delivered cost. To that end. an effort was made to increase investment in geothermal locally and nationally.

Actions

· Seattle City Light was approached to discuss geothermal within the context of the resource development plans. Progress was very limited due to the utilities reluctance to explore any new source supply other than hydro.

· A national concept for a bulk geothermal purchase managed through a collective renewable energy credit (REC) was conceived and scoped out with Bonneville Environmental Foundation. Conceptually robust, the idea garnered little interest. It has not been pursued. The concept was as follows:

· An effort coordinated by the National Conference of Mayors, Clinton Climate Initiative, and the Bonneville Environmental Foundation to arrange for the formation and execution of a national utility buyers’ consortia on geothermal energy. An initial group of 100 cities would purchase 2,000 MW of electricity that would come on line starting in 2015. This effort would increase geothermal capacity in the United States by 25% and provide technological standardization to reduce the cost of producing geothermal energy by 1/2 cent per kW hour. The project would be built on the current philanthropic model of the Clinton Foundation and their Clinton Climate Initiative. The National Conference of Mayors would execute the project as part of their Climate program. If it was successful, the project would have had some ambitious outcomes:

o $6 Billion investment over the next 15 years in geothermal energy

o A clearer understanding of geothermal development in the United States

o A national increase of 25% of the geothermal capacity

o Standardization of surface technology – reducing production costs by 1/2 cent per kWe

o Better understanding of geothermal reservoir dynamics

Activity 3: Technology Development

Critical to the broader use of geothermal is commercial standardization of related power technologies. Through lower development costs, geothermal would become more competitive with fossil fuel and other renewable energy resources. A thorough technological assessment was conducted of surface and subsurface challenges were conducted.

The absence of a robust down hole electrical, submersible pump was identified as a major technological gap. The introduction of such a pump to the market would significantly broaden the development range of geothermal, as well as allow for the study of geothermal reservoir mechanics, a process and art that needs to be refined before EGS can be nationally applied.

Working with a prize expert and consulting geothermal experts a prize concept was developed (see attached pdf).

The applicability of a prize concept for a down hole pump is excellent because of its discrete focus, engineering reality and technology multiplier. The metaphorical equivalent of such a pump is the development of the hypodermic needle. Once available, it would be possible to withdraw fluids for use and evaluation, as well as deliver drugs.

Though no major donor has been identified, we have engaged in initial discussions with staff representing several high net-worth individuals interested in technology prizes.

Development of actual pump specifications (diameter, temperature range, power rating, pumping capacity, sensors, etc) is an important next step. A one-day design meeting has been proposed. Stanford University’s geothermal program has agreed to co-host the meeting with its annual workshop, to be held in Palo Alto, CA in February, 2009. (see attached pdf)

Outcomes

· Public awareness has been increased (marginally). Critical decision makers are aware and actively exploring the development of geothermal in Washington State.

· State agencies have signaled their interest in a study bill for development of the resource at some point in the future.

Future (likely) Outcomes

· A one-day Geothermal Manufacturing Meeting in Seattle, October, 2008

· A one-day City Government Meeting on Geothermal, Seattle, October, 2008

· Introduction of a Geothermal Study Bill in the State Legislature

· Possible development of 15 to 50 MW of baseload electricity in the Cedar River

Resources

Most of this work has been conducted pro-bono by Lawrence Molloy. External media assistance in blog development, economists, organizers and public affairs has been largely paid out-of-pocket by Lawrence Molloy. He is not seeking re-imbursement for his time or funds.

Additional programmatic work and consultants have been put under contract for a program administration handled by Climate Solutions.

Initial support has been provided by the Tagney Jones Family Fund and Alta-Rock Energy. Tenprivate individuals have donated an additional 1,000.00.

Next Steps

· Identify a high net worth individual, foundation or corporate interest willing to fund the geothermal prize.

· Raise $60K for the Prize Design Meeting at Stanford University (see attached “Geothermal Next Steps” pdf)

· Retire remaining Geothermal Washington Programmatic debt of $4,100

Real Change covers the brownbag – talks job generation in Southeast Washington

Seattle-based Real Change covered the brownbag in January.

The benefits are very much the same as with conventional geothermal, said Petty; it’s reliable, leaves a small footprint, poses almost no risk to finite natural resources, and can be scaled to local needs.

An extra benefit is geothermal’s potential to create jobs in southeastern Washington, an area of high unemployment with known geothermal potential.

Eastern Washington; Walla Walla Job Generation

Developing the Walla Walla Geothermal Field could produce 212 jobs over 30 years according to Geothermal Energy Association Estimates.  Taxes of $5.46 Million to the County would be well recieved.

GEA Walla Walla Job Generation Estimate

Wenatchee World carries Blumenthal Article

With slow precision all the major State papers are picking up the Cascade covereage by Les Blumenthal.  The link to the article is here.

A diagram of a geothermal power plant included in the article is below:

Wenatchee World Geothermal Power Plant Diagram

Geothermal Bill does not get a hearing

Senator Adam Kline acknowledged today that the Geothermal Study Bill would not be getting a hearing this session.  Though some interest had been garnered from other members of the legislature, the timing was too short for this already short session.  However, State Agencies are now interested in the dialogue and an elevated discussion on geothermal is happening.

Thanks to Senator Kline for showing leadership.  2009 should be a bigger year for Climate and geothermal in the state government.  Objectively, this bill was highly optimistic. 

Skagit Paper covers Vulcan Power’s interest in Mt. Baker

Jan 26th, 2008, GoSkagit discussed Vulcan’s interest in Mt. Baker .  The Article notes that Vulcan is speculating and that no development rights have been issued.

While no plants yet reside on public lands in Oregon or Washington, there are a dozen pending geothermal lease applications on national forest lands within the two states.

….Vulcan’s plant designs call for minimal lighting, along with natural rock, soil and vegetation on the sides and roof of each facility to blend it with the surrounding landscape.

If Vulcan’s Baker Lake lease is approved this year, further drilling and exploratory work could start soon after, with test wells drilled by 2009.

Of course, drilling geothermal test wells carries a lot of risk.


Test wells are needed to determine underground water temperatures and reservoir depths. Wells can range from 1,000 to 10,000 feet deep.

Geothermal Study Bill – Washington State Legislature

Senator Adam Kline (D, 37th District South Seattle) has introduced a study bill on geothermal.  The bill has not received a hearing at this time.

AN ACT Relating to assessing the state’s geothermal resources for electrical power production; and creating new sections.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

NEW SECTION. Sec. 1) (1) The legislature finds that the Pacific Northwest has unique geological features that include significant geothermal resources, and that other states and provinces in this region are actively exploring and developing these resources for energy production purposes. The legislature further finds that existing data and analyses of these resources is now largely outdated and that advances in technology, increased energy prices, and increased interest in low-carbon energy sources has increased interest by electric utilities and independent power producers in the state’s geothermal resources.

(2) The legislature therefore intends to authorize a comprehensive review of the state’s geothermal resources and make recommendations regarding policy measures to facilitate environmentally responsible development of these resources for electric generation and concentrated heating purposes.

NEW SECTION. Sec. 2) (1) The geothermal resource assessment committee is created.

(2) The committee is composed of the following members:

(a) The commissioner of public lands, or the commissioner’s designee;

(b) The energy policy division of the department of community, trade, and economic development;

(c) The chair of the energy facility site evaluation council;

(d) The state geologist within the department of natural resources;

(e) The chair of the utilities and transportation commission;

(f) Representatives of publicly owned and privately owned utilities;

(g) Representatives of independent power producers;

(h) Representatives of geologists from academic, research, and private sectors;

(i) Representatives of other interested sectors, including agriculture, forestry, and environmental;

(j) Representatives of tribal governments with significant geothermal resource interests; and

(k) Representatives of federal agencies with regulatory or land management responsibilities relating to the development of geothermal interests.

(3) The commissioner of public lands, or the commissioner’s designee, shall chair the committee. The commissioner of public lands shall select the committee members described in subsection (2)(f) through (k) of this section.

(4) The department of natural resources shall provide necessary staff and administrative support to the committee.

(5) The committee shall conduct a comprehensive assessment of the geothermal resources in the state and their potential for environmentally responsible development for power production purposes. The assessment must include at least the following:

(a) A characterization of the geothermal resources in the state and the potential for development for electrical generation and concentrated heating purposes based upon currently employed and projected technologies;

(b) The economic implications of this development potential, including community economic development, job creation, and state and local revenue benefits, including an assessment for each county in the state;

(c) A review of current lease payments on federal lands in the state for geothermal leasing, described by county;

(d) A review of state lands with geothermal development potential;

(e) A review of the effect of the state’s water resource laws and policies on the development of geothermal resources; and

(f) Recommendations for legislative and administrative actions based upon this assessment to encourage environmentally responsible geothermal resource development in the state.

(6) The committee shall provide the assessment and recommendations to the energy and fiscal committees of the senate and house of representatives by December 1, 2008.

Blumenthal Article gets picked up nationally and on local blogs

The South, whose EGS geothermal potential extends to most of the region (except Florida), saw the Blumenthal article picked up in the Charlotte Newspaper.  link is here  The WSU Energy Blog also picked up the article as did the blog Cascadia Rising The iconic steaming Mt. St. Helens is a great surface indicator of our regions geothermal potential.  Just ten to twenty miles away from this volcano and National Park, along the eastern and western ridges of the Cascades lie hundreds of MW of electricity. 

image

Yakima’s 4-H Club considers geothermal in their energy resolution

The language is simple and straightforward.  They recognize the value in Yakima and statewide.  The link is here

BE IT RESOLVED, further research and development of geothermal energy should be implemented.

Columbian Editorial on Geothermal in Washington State

This week saw the Seattle Times, the Tacoma Tribune and the Bellingham Herald to run an article by Les Blumenthal about Geothermal along the Cascades.  The Columbian even delivered an even handed editorial that was also picked up by the Seattle Times.  The Columbian Editorial talks to the challenge around accessing U.S. Forest Service Land, the richest in geothermal potential as well as being codified in federal law as available for possible development.

Could geothermal energy production gain traction in or near Clark County? Chris Strebig, spokesman for Gifford Pinchot National Forest, told us on Tuesday that forest officials are not aware of any lease applications or other interest expressed by geothermal power companies. But the federal Bureau of Land Management last summer announced its increased attention to geothermal leasing throughout the West. And USDA Forest Service Chief Gail Kimbell said the agency will cooperate with the BLM. "Enhancing our nation’s energy needs through safe and clean energy is an important focus of the Department of Agriculture and a proper use of our public lands," Kimbell said.

Geothermal power is considered by most scientists to be relatively safe and clean, and virtually renewable, although some experts say not as renewable as hydropower. California and Nevada produce much of the nation’s geothermal power, but the Northwest, Utah and New Mexico are also believed to have vast resources of untapped heat. Energy independence can and should be pursued in concert with respect for the environment.