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posted by Fnord666 on Friday November 03 2017, @09:35AM   Printer-friendly
from the yum-lava-cake dept.

Could the Horn of Africa one day be powered by volcanoes?

Ethiopia tends to conjure images of sprawling dusty deserts, bustling streets in Addis Ababa or the precipitous cliffs of the Simien Mountains – possibly with a distance runner bounding along in the background. Yet the country is also one of the most volcanically active on Earth, thanks to Africa's Great Rift Valley, which runs right through its heart.

Rifting is the geological process that rips tectonic plates apart, roughly at the speed your fingernails grow. In Ethiopia this has enabled magma to force its way to the surface, and there are over 60 known volcanoes. Many have undergone colossal eruptions in the past, leaving behind immense craters that pepper the rift floor. Some volcanoes are still active today. Visit them and you find bubbling mud ponds, hot springs and scores of steaming vents.

This steam has been used by locals for washing and bathing, but underlying this is a much bigger opportunity. The surface activity suggests extremely hot fluids deep below, perhaps up to 300°C–400°C. Drill down and it should be possible access this high temperature steam, which could drive large turbines and produce huge amounts of power. This matters greatly in a country where 77% of the population has no access to electricity, one of the lowest levels in Africa.

Geothermal power has recently become a serious proposition thanks to geophysical surveys suggesting that some volcanoes could yield a gigawatt of power. That's the equivalent of several million solar panels or 500 wind turbines from each. The total untapped resource is estimated to be in the region of 10GW.

Why not? It works great for Iceland.


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  • (Score: 2) by LVDOVICVS on Friday November 03 2017, @01:47PM (6 children)

    by LVDOVICVS (6131) on Friday November 03 2017, @01:47PM (#591660)

    < fable > Mankind finds crap in ground useful and so starts using it as fast as possible without considering whether there might be ramifications. < /fable >

    Where have I heard this story before?

    I haven't got a clue about the numbers, but has there ever been an environmental impact study done in relation to taking this energy out of the geothermal system? It would appear this is a very closed system in that what's taken out cannot ever be regenerated. Could this pose problems in the future? I'd like to know before we turn the planet into an ice cube if possible.

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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by arcz on Friday November 03 2017, @02:46PM

    by arcz (4501) on Friday November 03 2017, @02:46PM (#591685) Journal

    While that's sort of true it's not like it's all leftover heat from earth's formation. Relatively speaking, the earth's crust isn't a particularly good insulator. Most of the heat is lost over time. However, the earth's core is constantly heated by radioactive decay. They balance out to the current state of affairs, and it's actually warming the planet. (global warming? it's a contributing factor to planetary thermal energy anyway.)

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 03 2017, @02:56PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 03 2017, @02:56PM (#591691)

    My hunch is that it's going to be orders of magnitude less than anything that could make a difference.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 03 2017, @05:56PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 03 2017, @05:56PM (#591776)

      That is the way oil extraction started. Then we got better at it, exported it to other countries, and now we are extracting oil much faster than it is being produced.

  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Friday November 03 2017, @08:48PM (1 child)

    by frojack (1554) on Friday November 03 2017, @08:48PM (#591871) Journal

    Well, Iceland, [scientificamerican.com]and Hawaii [hawaiianelectric.com], and a few other places are using geothermal for power a long, and so far neither has frozen up.

    There is nothing new here other than the location. That heat was escaping to the atmosphere anyway, and having it run a toaster, a factory, or a light-bulb along the way adds no net change to the system. The heat was coming out of the ground anyway.

    Ethiopia is also ideally located for Solar Power, and, I suspect you would have no problem with that. The great sandy regions bake in it every day.

    --
    No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04 2017, @10:37AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04 2017, @10:37AM (#592129)

      Africa could be the richest continent on the planet, but I guess the people aren't interested. They'd rather fight wars and kill each other off, making the white man rich in the process. Do they know what they are doing to themselves?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04 2017, @09:26AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04 2017, @09:26AM (#592118)
    If they somehow can extract huge amounts of heat from a volcano that might make it less likely to erupt.

    To me the greater danger is not the heat extraction itself but the drilling and water/liquid pumping to extract the heat... Stuff could go wrong and make volcanoes more likely to erupt or increase the odds of earthquakes.