With clean energy a central component of the Biden Administration’s climate strategy, any divestment from existing oil and gas projects should go hand in hand with exploring geothermal energy, a largely untapped renewable resource, argues a new report from the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI)’s Innovation Frontier Project.
The report, authored by Daniel Oberhaus and Caleb Watney and titled “Geothermal Everywhere: A New Path for American Renewable Energy Leadership,” identifies the technological, political, and economic reasons that the U.S. has failed to utilize its valuable geothermal resources, along with actionable policy recommendations to lay a new foundation for green energy and international geothermal expansion.
“The far-reaching potential of geothermal energy provides a rare opportunity for the United States to capitalize upon a new renewable energy pathway, not just for domestic production but sustainable development globally. With strong leadership and smart policy–as Oberhaus and Watney identify–we can rapidly accelerate the development of geothermal projects, leading the world on climate while encouraging innovation and creating jobs,” said Jack Karsten, Managing Director of the Innovation Frontier Project at PPI.
Oberhaus and Watney argue that while less than 0.5% of U.S. electricity generation is derived from geothermal resources, our abundant hot rock resources and deep talent pool in the oil and gas sector uniquely prepare us to lead on that technology. They conclude that with the right policy implementations, geothermal energy production could increase 26-fold by 2050.
The report makes the following recommendations for incentivizing geothermal investment and expanding production capacity:
Streamline the federal permitting process for geothermal projects.
Increase the federal budget for large scale geothermal R&D projects, particularly those led by public-private partnerships.
Create incentives for geothermal generation in state electricity markets.
Establish federal innovation prizes, or related mechanisms, for the development of key geothermal technologies.
Reskill oil and gas workers for geothermal projects through federal jobs programs and private investment.
Read the report and expanded policy recommendations here:
Based in Washington, D.C., and housed in the Progressive Policy Institute, the Innovation Frontier Project explores the role of public policy in science, technology and innovation. The project is managed by Jack Karsten. Learn more by visiting innovationfrontier.org.
The Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) is a catalyst for policy innovation and political reform based in Washington, D.C. Its mission is to create radically pragmatic ideas for moving America beyond ideological and partisan deadlock. Learn more about PPI by visiting progressivepolicy.org.
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Media Contact: Aaron White; awhite@ppionline.org