|
Utah startup hits geothermal jackpot
By PAUL FOY,
Associated Press
PROVO, Utah (AP) — Within six months of
discovering a massive geothermal field, a
small Utah company had erected and fired up
a power plant — just one example of the
speed with which companies are capitalizing
on state mandates for alternative energy.
Anticipation of new energy policies has
sparked a rush on land leases as companies
like Raser Technologies Inc., based
in Provo, lock up property that hold
geothermal fields and potentially huge
profits.
Raser's find, about 155 miles southwest of
Provo, could eventually power 200,000 homes.
The company said it will begin routing
electricity to Anaheim, Calif. within weeks.
Earlier this month, California adopted the
nation's most sweeping plan to cut
greenhouse gas emissions.
"We made a pleasant discovery, let's put it
that way," said Brent M. Cook, the company's
chief executive.
The number of government land leases and
drilling permits have risen quickly, said
Kermit Witherbee, who heads up the leasing
program for the U.S. Bureau of Land
Management, with more than two dozen
companies now trying to make a score like
Raser.
Two years ago, the U.S. Bureau of Land
Management approved 18 geothermal drilling
permits. That number more than doubled in
2007 and has nearly quadrupled this year.
The government leased a staggering 244,000
acres for geothermal development in the past
18 months. Another 146,339 acres went up for
bid Friday in Utah, Oregon and Idaho.All of
it was claimed.
Raser's find "has the potential to become
one of the more important geothermal energy
developments of the last quarter century,"
said Greg Nash, a professor of geothermal
exploration at the University of Utah.
The company quickly redrew its business
plan, bumping up its planned development of
10 megawatts of power to 230 megawatts. That
is in line with the field's power potential
according to calculations by GeothermEX
Inc., a consulting firm.
By comparison, the largest group of
geothermal plants in the world are The
Geysers, about 60 miles northeast of San
Francisco. The Geysers geothermal basin
produces about 900 megawatts of energy,
enough to power the city, said Ann
Robertson-Tait, a senior geologist and vice
president of business development for
GeothermEX.
Geothermal technology creates energy using
heat that is stored in the earth. But
geothermal still generates less than 1
percent of the world's energy, according to
the Paris-based International Energy Agency.
"The outlook for geothermal is great," said
Brian Yerger, an energy analyst for New
York-based Jesup & Lamont.
Geothermal companies are relatively small
players in the energy market and have had to
scramble to lock up financing, particularly
during a recession.
Merrill Lynch & Co. has pledged to fund
Raser's first 100 megawatts of projects and
says it is staying in the game.
"We've done a lot with Raser," said Merrill
Lynch spokeswoman Danielle Robinson. "We're
very committed to the company."
Cook said his company can raise additional
money from joint ventures and stock sales.
"This is where the money flows, to
alternative energy projects that pencil
out," he said. The company made its first
major stock sale Nov. 14 to Fletcher Asset
Management of New York.
"We are enthusiastic about our investment,"
said Kell Benson, Fletcher's vice chairman.
The firm bought $10 million in stock at $5 a
share, with an option to double the stake.
Raser and its supplier, UTC Power, plan to
build another seven geothermal energy plants
across the western United States by the end
of 2009 and 10 plants a year for the next
decade.
The push for geothermal power has been
accelerated by state mandates like those in
California, which this month said utilities
must obtain a third of their electricity
from renewable sources by 2020.
Raser, which specializes in low-boil
geothermal sites, started buying leases five
years ago on hundreds of thousands of acres
that had been passed over because of their
lower heat potential.
New technology, however, has made low-boil
water useable for geothermal power. Raser
buys 250-kilowatt power units from UTC
Power, a subsidiary of United Technologies
Corp.
Geothermal is also being used on a smaller
scale.
"These things are slot machines. They make
money," said Bernie Karl, owner of Chena Hot
Springs Resort, off the grid 60 miles
northeast of Fairbanks, Alaska.
On geothermal energy from early UTC
prototypes, Karl powers light bulbs, heats
lodges and rooms for 210 guests, warms a
greenhouse that grows food and spices, keeps
an ice house frozen and makes hydrogen for
resort vehicles.
Raser hit hot water at a few thousand feet
below the surface circulating inside a zone
of porous limestone a mile deep. The
underground "lake" cycles hot water
endlessly under the power of the Earth's
internal heat like a steam engine, throwing
up loops of hot water intersected by wells
that return it to the system.
The company holds rights to 78 square miles
of land in the area and believes it has
barely tapped the full potential. |