That is interesting Billy.  It didn’t say if there was any sulfur-rich 
component of the superheated gas.  That is true of many traditional geothermal 
wells.  Maybe magma is cleaner.

Chris

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2014 3:01 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Volcano-Powered Electricity -not any time soon, but very possible 
in future

 

Real Clear Politics

Real Clear Energy

 

January 30, 2014 


Drill Opens Door to Volcano-Powered Electricity


By  <http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/michael_parker/> Michael Parker

Editor's Note: This article was provided by The Conversation UK 
<http://theconversation.com/uk> .Can enormous heat deep in the earth be 
harnessed to provide energy for us on the surface? A promising report from a 
geothermal borehole project that accidentally struck magma – the same fiery, 
molten rock that spews from volcanoes – suggests it could.

The Icelandic Deep Drilling Project, IDDP <http://iddp.is/> , has been drilling 
shafts up to 5km deep in an attempt to harness the heat in the volcanic bedrock 
far below the surface of Iceland.

But in 2009 their borehole at Krafla, northeast Iceland, reached only 2,100m 
deep before unexpectedly striking a pocket of magma intruding into the Earth’s 
upper crust from below, at searing temperatures of 900-1000°C.

This borehole, IDDP-1, was the first in a series of wells drilled by the IDDP 
in Iceland looking for usable geothermal resources. The special report 
<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03756505/49/supp/C>  in this 
month’s Geothermics journal details the engineering feats and scientific 
results that came from the decision not to the plug the hole with concrete, as 
in a previous case in Hawaii in 2007, but instead attempt to harness the 
incredible geothermal heat.

Wilfred Elders <http://earthsciences.ucr.edu/elders.html> , professor emeritus 
of geology at the University of California, Riverside, co-authored three of the 
research papers in the Geothermics special issue with Icelandic colleagues.

“Drilling into magma is a very rare occurrence, and this is only the second 
known instance anywhere in the world,“ Elders said. The IDDP and Iceland’s 
National Power Company, which operates the Krafla geothermal power plant 
<http://www.mannvit.com/GeothermalEnergy/GeothermalPowerPlants/GeothermalProjectKrafla/>
  nearby, decided to make a substantial investment to investigate the hole 
further.

This meant cementing a steel casing into the well, leaving a perforated section 
at the bottom closest to the magma. Heat was allowed to slowly build in the 
borehole, and eventually superheated steam flowed up through the well for the 
next two years.

Elders said that the success of the drilling was “amazing, to say the least”, 
adding: “This could lead to a revolution in the energy efficiency of 
high-temperature geothermal projects in the future.”

The well funnelled superheated, high-pressure steam for months at temperatures 
of over 450°C – a world record. In comparison, geothermal resources in the UK 
<https://theconversation.com/tapping-into-the-energy-that-lies-deep-underground-16495>
  rarely reach higher than around 60-80°C.

The magma-heated steam was measured to be capable of generating 36MW of 
electrical power. While relatively modest compared to a typical 660MW 
coal-fired power station, this is considerably more than the 1-3MW of an 
average wind turbine, and more than half of the Krafla plant’s current 60MW 
output.

Most importantly it demonstrated that it could be done. “Essentially, IDDP-1 is 
the world’s first magma-enhanced geothermal system, the first to supply heat 
directly from molten magma,” Elders said. The borehole was being set up to 
deliver steam directly into the Krafla power plant when a valve failed which 
required the borehole to be stoppered. Elders added that although the borehole 
had to plugged, the aim is to repair it or drill another well nearby.

Gillian Foulger <https://www.dur.ac.uk/earth.sciences/staff/?id=369> , 
professor of geophysics at Durham University, worked at the Kravla site in the 
1980s during a period of volcanic activity. “A well at this depth can’t have 
been expected to hit magma, but at the same time it can’t have been that 
surprising,” she said. “At one point when I was there we had magma gushing out 
of one of the boreholes,” she recalled.

Volcanic regions such as Iceland are not active most of the time, but can 
suddenly be activated by movement in the earth tens of kilometres below that 
fill chambers above with magma. “They can become very dynamic, raised in 
pressure, and even force magma to the surface. But if it’s not activated, then 
there’s no reason to expect a violent eruption, even if you drill into it,” she 
said.

“Having said that, with only one experimental account to go on, it wouldn’t be 
a good idea to drill like this in a volcanic region anywhere near a city,” she 
added.

The team, she said, deserved credit for using the opportunity to do research. 
“Most people faced with tapping into a magma chamber would pack their bags and 
leave,” she said. “But when life gives you lemons, you make lemonade.”

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