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Posted inResearch & Developments

What’s Next on the Chopping Block?

Geothermal energy abounds in Iceland, the North Atlantic island nation with regular, high-profile volcanic eruptions. The island’s active magmatism and volcanism support six geothermal plants, which account for more than 25% of the country’s overall electricity needs. Geothermal energy heats nearly 85% of the homes on the island.

Krafla, in the northern part of the island, is one of Iceland’s active geothermal-producing regions. Krafla’s high-temperature geothermal system sits in a volcanic caldera and has produced energy for more than 40 years. However, despite this intensive energy production, a reservoir model of the Krafla geothermal system has not been published in peer-reviewed literature since the 1980s, leaving a data void and potentially untapped resources.

Posted inResearch & Developments

Research On the Line

The renewable energy sector is booming, and as demand for clean energy rises, so too does demand for the metals it relies on—copper and nickel chief among them. As the world continues scaling up renewables to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement, demand will almost certainly top supply in the coming decades. To address this future gap, an international group of researchers and the mining giant BHP teamed up to identify the processes that determine whether or not these metals make it into accessible deposits in the crust.

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