Radioactive materials underground slowly decaying. (There may be some left over heat from the formation of the planet and/or that collision that resulted in the formation of the moon - but its minor.)
No it doesn't because geothermal energy originally comes from the ground!
Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.Ireland does have some geothermal energy reserves.
Geothermal energy is energy from earth's heat. This energy can be seen in geysers and volcanoes.
it comes from earths interior heat
steam in the earth
The molten core of planet Earth is the source of heat for geothermal energy. from underground from steam directly from the earth
Geothermal energy is NOT from the sun. Geothermal energy is from heat inside the earth!
Geothermal energy comes from power plants that pump water underground near magma. Iceland uses a lot of geothermal energy as there is an abundance of geological activity near the surface.
my answer is the heat energy is magmaThe heat energy in earths crust is geothermal energy
Geothermal energy can reduce emissions of greenhouse gases by replacing energy that would have come from burning fossil fuels. It is basically a fairly clean energy source
No. It comes from the Earth's internal heat sources. The "geo" part of geothermal means Earth.
Geothermal heat energy from inside the earth is caused by the radioactive decay of Uranium in the mantle.