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PSWestern Australia’s Geothermal Resources*
Western Australia commenced a new era in the search
of energy from geothermal resources to broaden State’s energy base by the first
acreage release for geothermal exploration in the Perth Basin on 22 January 2008
(Figure 1). Coincidently, the first Australian geothermal production well
reached its target depth of 4221 m in Geodynamics Habanero 3 (Figure 2). The
geothermal acreage release followed the amendments to the State’s
Petroleum
Act
1967 that was proclaimed in January 2008,
Petroleum
and Geothermal Resources Act
1967.
South Australia was the first State to develop legislation for geothermal exploration and granted the first Australian Geothermal Exploration Licence (GEL) in 2001. Since then about 12 geothermal wells have been drilled in South Australia by the following companies: Geodynamics, Petratherm, Green Rock Energy, Scopenergy, and Geothermal Resources (Figure 2). There is an increasing trend with exponential increase in interest, companies, and investment for exploring and developing geothermal energy. The investment totalling $686 million has been proposed for five-year work program by 27 companies in 166 licences.
The majority of current and forecast investment to
explore for, and demonstrate the potential of, geothermal energy in Australia
focused on hot rock enhanced geothermal systems (EGS). The most promising
Australian
basins
include: Cooper Basin in the south-west corner of Queensland
and South Australia, the Hunter Valley, New South Wale, and the Perth Basin,
Western Australia.
For this century, energy outlook indicates that there will be significant energy supply from geothermal, solar, wind, and hydro resources. Of these, geothermal energy from hot rocks shows the greatest potential for long-term, continuous electricity supply and Australia leading way in EGS technology. The trend in EGS technological advances indicate, within decades, the cost for electricity generation from EGS will be competitive with conventional energy generation from coal and natural gas, and lower than any other form of renewable energy (solar, wind, wave, tidal).
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Geothermal energy includes thermal or electrical power produced from the heat contained in the Earth. There are two basic types of energy that can be sourced from Earth’s heat — that from hydrothermal systems (hot geofluids) and from hot rocks (hot dry rocks, HDR). Geothermal energy from hot rocks differs from the conventional hydrothermal energy process that produces power commercially in geologically active areas. Since 1970 research has been undertaken worldwide aimed at commercial utilization of the Earth’s heat from hot rocks, using technology referred to as EGS (enhanced geothermal systems) that is applied to HDR sources so that energy can be extracted. To utilize hot dry rocks, EGS technology is used to pump water down an injection well to hot basement rocks that may be insulated by a thick cover of sedimentary rocks. A connection is established between injection and withdrawal wells by means of hydraulic fracturing to develop a closed water-circulation system for extracting and transferring heat from hot rocks at depth to the surface. The available heat cannot be increased, but the permeability and water content can be enhanced. The extracted hot fluids are used at the surface for generating electricity.
For electricity generation, suitable
temperatures for hot water and steam range from 120 to 370°C. In
contrast, shallower reservoirs of lower temperature (21-149°C) can be
used directly in health spas, greenhouses, fish farms and other
industries, and in space-heating systems for homes, schools, and
offices. Most sedimentary Direct use of low-temperature hydrothermal resources (~50°C) in Australia include swimming pool heating at Perth’s Challenge Stadium, Victoria’s spa developments at Mornington Peninsula and Mataranka, New South Wales’s artesian baths at Moore, Lighting Ridge, and Pilliga. For heating and cooling, heat source pump are in use at the Canberra’s Geoscience Australia building, Hobart’s Integrated Energy Management Centre, Antarctic Centre, and the Aquatic Centre as well as at the Perth’s Melville Aquatic Centre. Medium-temperature hydrothermal resources (50-100°C) are in use in many places in the world, including Birdsville in Queensland. These hydrothermal resources are in use for both direct heating and cooling and electricity production, with a potential to increase the direct use of geothermal energy significantly in Australia. Conversion of geothermal energy into power is economically feasible only when three factors can be satisfied: 1) the resource is located at shallow depths, usually less than 3 km, but possibly as deep as 7 km; 2) porosity and fracture permeability are sufficient to produce large quantities of thermal water, either naturally or by enhanced geothermal system technologies; and 3) the hot geothermal fluids can be efficiently transported (typically less than a few tens of kilometres) to a power-generating facility.
Geological, hydrogeological, electrical,
magnetic, geochemical, and seismic data are used to locate potential
geothermal resources for exploratory drilling. Exploration for
geothermal energy has some similarities to
Australia is tectonically stable and does not have geologically active areas characterized by volcanism, crustal rifting, and recent mountain building that typically host high-temperature hydrothermal provinces. However, there is potential for geothermal energy from known high heat-producing granites, usually referred to as hot dry rock (HDR) or hot fractured rocks (HFR) sources. Australia is at the forefront of testing the commercial viability of extracting heat energy by EGS — at the Habanero project in the Cooper Basin, South Australia. The objective of the Habanero project is to develop Australia’s first commercial-scale power plant from geothermal resources in stages. A 50 MW power plant is planned for development by mid 2011, which could gradually be expanded to 100s of MW for commercial base-load power plants. The completion of Habanero 3 at target depth of 4221 m is a significant milestone toward commercialization of the HFR geothermal well (Figure 2).
At present, the only geothermal energy
being used for electricity generation in Australia is from a 120 kW
geothermal energy plant located in Birdsville, Queensland. In the last
few years, investment into exploration for geothermal energy sources
and into technologies for producing geothermal energy from hot rocks
and young (about 4000-5000 years old) hot hydrothermal water has
increased dramatically, partially stimulated by a Commonwealth
Government subsidy scheme. Australia’s most significant geothermal
resources suitable for electricity generation appear to be from hot
rocks, with the highest potential in the Cooper Basin followed by the
McArthur, Otway, Carnarvon, Murray, Perth, Canning, East Queensland,
and Sydney
Australian and Western Australian geothermal resources have been discussed by: Sass (1964), Sass et al. (1976), Cull (1977, 1979, and 1982), Cull and Denham (1978), Narayan et al. (1998b), Chopra (2005), Chopra and Holgate (2007), and Ghori (2007 and 2008).
First study, specifically to evaluate
geothermal energy, for Western Australia, was initiated in the 1980s
from hydrothermal resources and recognised low temperature reservoirs
(65-85oC) at greater depths (2-3.5 km), with the best
economic potential in the Perth Basin (Bestow, 1982). The high
temperature hydrothermal resources that are attractive geothermal
energy targets in geologically active areas are not found in currently
tectonically stable Western Australia, thus further evaluation of
geothermal resources were not pursued till 2006. The second study in
2006 targeted hot rock resources that are currently economic, where
the depth to 200oC is less than five km.
The first study by Bestow (1982), mainly
focused on low-temperature geothermal reservoirs up to 100oC,
applying the available data on heat flow, geothermal gradient, and
hydrogeology to the geological framework of the Yilgarn Craton, and
the Eucla, Officer, Canning, Carnarvon, and Perth
The second study by Chopra and Holgate
(2007) was on high-temperature geothermal reservoirs up to 200oC.
The aim of the study was to map and identify the most suitable areas
within the Canning, Carnarvon, and Perth
The Chopra and Holgate (2007) study has
evaluated the quality and quantity of available subsurface temperature
data from 273
The most prospective basin for geothermal
energy appears to be the Carnarvon Basin, followed by the Canning and
Perth Geochemical analyses of basement rocks are required to assess the heat-generation capacity of rocks, as small differences in the concentrations of thorium and uranium can have quite significant impacts on heat-generation capacity, whereas large variations in potassium concentration have only a second order effect on the heat-generation capacity.
The stress conditions are best known for
the Perth Basin where the predominant orientation of the maximum
horizontal stress is east-west, with similar conditions inferred for
the Canning and Carnarvon The extent and economic feasibility of hydrothermal and hot rock geothermal resources are presently unknown because studies were qualitative, rather than quantitative, and based on limited datasets. Data gathering, validating, and interpretation of greater than 900 wells is underway for a quantitative assessment that requires systematic geological, hydrogeological, geophysical, and geochemical evaluation to further delineate and prove these resources.
This north-south elongated trough in the
southwest of Western Australia (Figure 1) contains mostly a Permian to
Lower Cretaceous succession under a thin cover of Tertiary. The
eastern boundary is the Darling Fault and the basin extends offshore
to the continental-oceanic boundary. The Perth Basin has been studied
since the early 1900s for geological mapping and evaluation of coal,
water, mineral, and
Figure 6 shows generalised stratigraphy of
the Perth Basin and distribution of water aquifers, The salinity of the groundwater in the youngest Quaternary-Neogene aquifers ranges from about 130 to 12,000 mg/L TDS (total dissolve solids), temperature at the water table ranges from 19 to 24oC, averaging about 21oC (Davidson 1995), and the age of water ranges from present to about 2000 years at the base (Thorpe and Davidson, 1991). Within the Cretaceous Leederville aquifer, the salinity ranges from 176 to 2511 mg/L TDS, and temperature from 20 to 39oC. The average geothermal gradient is about 25oC/km. The oldest Yarragadee aquifer is a major confined aquifer underlying the entire Perth region and extending to the north and south within the Perth Basin. It is a multi-layer aquifer, more than 2 km thick. The salinity of groundwater ranges from 140 to more than 10,000 mg/L TDS, and temperature ranges from 28 to 45oC and averages about 39oC. The geothermal gradient is about 25oC/km. The maximum depth to the base of the aquifer is about 3 km; this indicates temperature of 90oC (using 20oC at the water table). This is comparable to the finding of Bestow (1982): low temperature reservoir ranging from 65oC to 85oC at a depth range of 2 to 3.5 km. The highest temperature groundwater lies beneath the Kings Park Formation in the central Perth region (Davidson, 1995). Figure 7 shows the distribution of: geothermal gradients, and Figure 8 shows the temperature versus depth. These figures are based on data available from 145 artesian monitoring bores. Of these, 47 were used to analyse the subsurface temperatures in which temperature logs were recorded. For each of these wells, temperatures at different depths were compiled and geothermal gradients were computed. The recorded gradients are ranging from the lowest 1.1oC to the highest 4.4oC, to a depth less than one km. These plots indicate the recorded highest as well as the lowest subsurface temperatures are around the Wanneroo area. The lower temperatures are extending towards the north and the higher towards the south of the Wanneroo area. These temperatures indicate low temperature resources up to 50oC at a depth less than one km in areas of high geothermal gradients. Regenauer-Lieb and Horowitz (2007) discussed and encourages the direct use of low hydrothermal resources of the Perth Basin.
For the Perth Basin, the estimated geothermal gradients in 83 wells by Chopra and Holgate (2007) indicate the presence of wells with very high to normal gradients, ranging from 90oC/km to 20oC/km (Figure 3). Gradients in wells deeper than 2 km are considered more reliable and representative for hot dry rock resources.
Conceptual models for
For the Perth region as a whole, stress
data collected in situ are available from 43 locations at different
depths and from different sources, but for the Perth Basin portion,
the data are exclusively from borehole breakouts recorded in 20
First acreage release in Western Australia
is the beginning of a major expansion in exploration for hot dry rock
geothermal resources. Amendments to the
Pre-competitive geoscience information
relevant to hot rock geothermal exploration largely comes from
Bestow, T.T, 1982, The potential for geothermal energy development in Western Australia: Geological Survey of Western Australia, Record 1982/6, 67p.
Chopra,
P.N, 2005, Status of the geothermal industry in Australia, 2000-2005:
Proceedings, World Geothermal Congress 2005, Antalya,
Chopra,
P.N, and F. Holgate, 2005, A GIS analysis of temperature in the
Australian crust: Proceedings, World Geothermal Congress 2005, Antalya,
Chopra,
P.N, and F. Holgate, 2007, Geothermal energy potential in selected
areas of Western Australia; a consultancy report by Earthinsite.com
Pty Ltd for Geological Survey of Western Australia: Geological Survey
of Western Australia, Statutory
Cull, J.P, 1977, Geothermal energy prospects in Australia: Search, v. 8, no. 4, p. 117-121.
Cull, J.P, 1979, Regional variations in Australian heat flow: Australia BMR, Journal of Australian Geology and Geophysics, v. 4, no. 1, p. 1-13.
Cull, J.P, 1982, An appraisal of Australian heat flow data: Australia BMR, Journal of Australian Geology and Geophysics, v. 7, p. 11-21.
Cull, J. P, and D. Denham, 1978, A case for research and development on geothermal energy in Australia: Australia Bureau of Mineral Resources, Record 1978/58, p. 7.
Crostella, A., 1995, An evaluation of the hydrocarbon potential of the onshore Perth Basin: Western Australian Geological Survey, Report 43, 67 p.
Crostella,
A., and J. Backhouse, Geology and
Davidson, W.A., 1995, Hydrogeology and groundwater resources of the Perth Region, Western Australia: Western Australia Geological Survey, Bulletin 142, 257p.
Ghori,
K.A.R., 2007, Search for energy from geothermal resources in Western
Australia: September 2007
Ghori, K.A.R, 2008, The search for Western Australia’s geothermal resources: Geological Survey of Western Australia Annual Review 2006-07, p. 25-31.
Hillis, R. R., and S. D. Reynolds, 2000, The Australian Stress Map: Journal of the Geological Society, London, v. 157, p. 915-921.
Mory, A.J., and R.P. Iasky, 1996, Stratigraphy and structure of the onshore northern Perth Basin, Western Australian Geological Survey, Report 436, 102 p.
Narayan,
S.P., D. Naseby, Z. Yang, and S.S. Rahman, 1998a,
Narayan, S.P., D. Naseby, Z. Yang, and S.S. Rahman, 1998b, Creation of HDR reservoirs under Australian in-situ stress conditions, in Proceedings of Twenty-third Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering: Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA, January 1998, p. 322-329.
Owad-Jones,
D., and G. Ellis, 2000, Western Australia atlas of
Regenauer-Lieb, K., and F. Horowitz, 2007, The Perth Basin geothermal
opportunity: September 2007
Reinecker, J., O. Heidbach, M. Tingay, B. Sperner, and B. Müller, 2005, The release of the 2005 World Stress Map: World Stress Map Project, Geophysical Institute, Karlsruhe University (http://www.world-stress-map.org).
Sass, J.H, 1964, Heat-flow values from the Precambrian of Western Australia: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 69, no. 2, p. 299-308.
Sass, J.H., J.C. Jaeger, and R.J. Munroe, 1976, Heat flow and near-surface radioactivity in the Australian continental crust: United States Geological Survey, Open-File Report 76-250, 91p.
Somerville, M., D. Wyborn, P. Chopra, S. Rahman, D. Estrella, and V.D.M. Theo, 1994, Hot dry rock feasibility study, a report compiled for the Energy Research and Development Corporation: Canberra, Australia, Energy Research and Development Corporation, ERDC 94/243, 133p.
Thorpe,
P.M., and W.A. Davidson, 1991, Groundwater age and hydrodynamics of
the confined aquifers, Perth, Western Australia, in Proceedings of the
International Conference on Groundwater in Large Sedimentary |
