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No. Geothermal energy plants can only be built at or near thermal vents.
Geothermal power plants could be constructed anywhere there is an active thermal vent, or one near the surface. There are a number of places around the world where plants can be (or are) constructed. Iceland has geothermal power plants. Additionally, these plants could be built along the so-called "ring of fire." That's the great arc of interfaces between tectonic plates along the western Americas, up through Alaska. The arc continues on down through Japan and the Philippines, and further into the area around Indonesia. We know that Hawaii and New Zealand have active geothermal vents, too. It is possible to put in a plant in a few places in Europe and Africa as well. Anywhere that there is an active volcano, there is an active geothermal vent. Use the link below to see a map and the other one to learn more.
countries cannot rely on geothermal energy because there are not many suitable places for building a geothermal energy station. This is because you need hot rocks of a certain type and depth. Also a geothermal power station must be built in volcanically active places such as Ireland and New Zealand.
The future of geothermal energy looks promising as many homes are heated using this type of venting in areas of Europe. Many plants are being built in order to gather the energy and conserve it.
If the location is suitable for geothermal energy use, that is, if there are hot rocks not too far below the surface of the earth, then a power plant can be built. This will generate clean electricity which can be fed into the grid and so to homes. Geothermal power plants mean that polluting fossil fuel (coal, oil and natural gas) power plants can be phased out.
No. Geothermal energy plants can only be built at or near thermal vents.
Geothermal power plants could be constructed anywhere there is an active thermal vent, or one near the surface. There are a number of places around the world where plants can be (or are) constructed. Iceland has geothermal power plants. Additionally, these plants could be built along the so-called "ring of fire." That's the great arc of interfaces between tectonic plates along the western Americas, up through Alaska. The arc continues on down through Japan and the Philippines, and further into the area around Indonesia. We know that Hawaii and New Zealand have active geothermal vents, too. It is possible to put in a plant in a few places in Europe and Africa as well. Anywhere that there is an active volcano, there is an active geothermal vent. Use the link below to see a map and the other one to learn more.
countries cannot rely on geothermal energy because there are not many suitable places for building a geothermal energy station. This is because you need hot rocks of a certain type and depth. Also a geothermal power station must be built in volcanically active places such as Ireland and New Zealand.
The Geysers built In 1960 In Northern California remain as geothermal power plants. In 1960, it was the first commercial enterprise in producing geothermal electricity in the Western world.
Geothermal plants must be built where hot rocks are found at reasonably shallow depths so it is possible to drill down to them and pump water through them to make steam. Hydroelectric plants must be built where the land form will contain the reservoir which will form behind the dam, where the contained reservoir will be large enough to manage power production in spite of the natural variations in the volume of water flowing in the dammed river, and, of course, they must be built where there is a river. It also has to be possible to build the dam high enough to produce adequate pressure for operation of the turbines which will turn the generators that will produce the electricity.
This is a type of geothermal power. There are a number of power plants built on this principle. The Related Links below can take you to a Wikipedia article on geothermal power.
The future of geothermal energy looks promising as many homes are heated using this type of venting in areas of Europe. Many plants are being built in order to gather the energy and conserve it.
Geysers are not built. They develop as a matter of geothermal activity.
If the location is suitable for geothermal energy use, that is, if there are hot rocks not too far below the surface of the earth, then a power plant can be built. This will generate clean electricity which can be fed into the grid and so to homes. Geothermal power plants mean that polluting fossil fuel (coal, oil and natural gas) power plants can be phased out.
1960
Power plants using dry steam systems were the first type of geothermal power generation plants built. They use steam from the geothermal reservoir as it comes from wells and route it directly through turbine/generator units to produce electricity. An example of a dry steam generation operation is at the Geysers Region in northern California.The Kawerau Power Station is a 100-megawatt geothermal power plant located just outside the town of Kawerau in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand.
Geothermal energy, such as hot springs, is used to heat home and factories so in this sense geothermal energy is fuel. However to create a system that uses geothermal needs an infrastucture which needs to be designed and built, in this sense geothermal energy needs an energy input.