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Geothermal energy projects awarded quarter million

Hartwood Farm (c) James Hutton Institute
"These five projects demonstrate how the Scottish Government is supporting the geothermal industry to make the most of this largely untapped resource and to develop a delivery model which reduces carbon emissions, is self-sustaining and is economically viable.

Almost a quarter of a million pounds of funding has been awarded to five feasibility projects across Scotland, including the James Hutton Institute's Hartwood Research Farm in Lanarkshire, to investigate how thermal energy in the ground can be used to heat homes and businesses.

Besides Hartwood Research Farm, the £234,025 award also includes projects targeting sites in Fife, West Lothian  and Aberdeenshire that will explore the technical feasibility, economic viability and environmental sustainability of the emerging technology.

The awards have been made from the Scottish Government’s Geothermal Energy Challenge Fund, supported by the Low Carbon Infrastructure Fund, the first strategic intervention established under the new European Structural Funds Programme. They are the first support for geothermal projects in Scotland following a 2012-2013 study which identified significant potential for geothermal heat as a renewable heat source.

Heat is estimated to account for over half of Scotland’s total energy use and responsible for nearly half of Scotland’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The projects are an important step towards demonstrating how geothermal energy could cut the estimated £2.6 billion a year spent on heating by householders and the non-domestic sector.

The project at Hartwood will look into developing a fully operational minewater geothermal district heating system which could act as an exemplar of how to transform farm economics and transfer benefits to local communities.

Energy Minister Fergus Ewing said: “As set out in the Heat Policy Statement published last week, heat is estimated to account for over half of Scotland’s total energy use and is responsible for nearly half of Scotland’s greenhouse gas emissions, so it makes sense that we explore and grow technologies such as geothermal energy. These projects will help improve our understanding of this renewable energy source and the contribution it can make to helping Scotland reduce its carbon emissions.

“These five projects demonstrate how the Scottish Government is supporting the geothermal industry to make the most of this largely untapped resource and to develop a delivery model which reduces carbon emissions, is self-sustaining and is economically viable.

“The announcement of the geothermal feasibility projects follows the publication of the Heat Policy Statement (HPS) on Thursday, June 11. This is part of the wider approach to support the development of a resilient heat system that enables households, organisations and industry to transition to an affordable low carbon heat system and seize the economic opportunities that this transformation offers.

“The HPS sets out the support being provided to reduce the need for heat, supply heat efficiently and at lowest cost to consumers and to generate low carbon and renewable heat.”

Professor Russel Griggs, Chair of the Geothermal Energy Expert Group, said: “The most recent research suggests that geothermal energy offers a genuine opportunity for Scotland to develop a new industry sector, one that will allow homes and businesses to reduce heating bills while generating a sustainable cut in Scotland’s carbon footprint. The technology still requires further development, but these five feasibility projects, which trial new ideas and build on more established techniques, are a vital step along the road to fully utilising this potentially extremely valuable resource.”

Stephanie Clark, Scottish Renewables, Policy Manager, said: “To meet Scotland’s ambitious renewable heat target we will need to see geothermal projects, biomass boilers, solar thermal systems, heat pumps and other renewable technology become much more commonplace across the country.

“Our geothermal resource remains largely untapped, and we welcome developments which could see this green energy source harnessed to bring affordable warmth to Scotland’s homes and businesses.

“These five projects show the huge variety of potential uses for our underground heat. This is an industry at its early stages in the UK, but Scotland’s history of innovation and engineering excellence mean that if geothermal will succeed anywhere, it will succeed here.”

Notes to editors:

The Geothermal Energy Challenge Fund was launched in March in response to a recommendation from the Geothermal Energy Expert Group. The Challenge Fund is the first project being delivered as part of the Low Carbon Infrastructure Transition Programme (LCITP). More information about the Challenge Fund and the LCITP is available here.  

The findings of a study commissioned by the Scottish Government highlight that, within Scotland, there may be significant potential for geothermal energy in naturally occurring groundwater and in minewater. See more information on the Scottish Government website.  

Last autumn, the Minister for Business, Energy and Tourism convened a group of experts to produce a viable proposal within which geothermal heat or heat and power can be encouraged and developed in a Scottish context, and its implementation accelerated with a view to reducing Scotland’s carbon footprint while providing additional security of energy supplies.  

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Printed from /news/geothermal-energy-projects-awarded-quarter-million on 28/03/24 07:34:06 PM

The James Hutton Research Institute is the result of the merger in April 2011 of MLURI and SCRI. This merger formed a new powerhouse for research into food, land use, and climate change.