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Biden-Harris Administration Announces $14.2 Million to Advance Enhanced Geothermal Systems

WASHINGTON, DC— Today, the US Department of Energy (DOE) released the second-round funding opportunity in the Geothermal Technologies Office’s (GTO) Enhanced Geothermal Systems Pilot Demonstrations initiative, providing up to $14.2 million for projects to test the effectiveness and scalability of enhanced geothermal systems (EGS). Directed by the Biden-Harris Administration’s landmark Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, these pilot projects will use innovative technologies and development techniques to capture Earth’s abundant subsurface heat resources in the eastern United States. Through these new pilots and those selected in the first-round funding opportunityDOE intends to demonstrate the potential for EGS to provide clean, reliable energy to Americans nationwide.

Geothermal energy currently generates about 4 gigawatts (GW) of electricity in the United States, but a DOE analysis shows it could provide at least 90 GW of firms, flexible power to the US grid by 2050, as well as heating and cooling solutions nationwide. Reaching this potential will require innovative technologies. The use of geothermal energy for power requires three elements: heat, fluid, and the ability for fluid to flow in the subsurface (permeability). While heat exists naturally everywhere underground, many locations lack these conditions. By creating humanmade underground reservoirs to enable fluid flow and draw geothermal energy to the surface, EGS expands the opportunity to tap the heat beneath our feet nationwide.

This second-round funding opportunity focuses on Topic Area 4 authorized under BIL: EGS pilot demonstrations in the eastern United States. Second-round Letters of Intent are required and due July 18, 2024, and second-round applications are due September 25, 2024. Learn more and read the full Funding Opportunity Announcement.