XmisterIS
Purveyor of fine nonsense
CAVEAT: I may have my prices completely wrong here, it's only what (I think) I heard on the telly box the other night.
Manchester Uni are drilling a 2km hole to tap water at 80 degrees C to provide water heating for a new complex that's being built there.
Now then, the reporter said (I think - and this is where I may have it completely wrong), that to drill a hole to proved heating for 10,000 houses would cost £10million. That works out at £1000 per house, which is dirt cheap and would provide limitless free hot water, except for the cost of maintaining the equipment, which wouldn't be pricey.
So ... if it costs £10M to drill a hole for 10,000 houses, then it would cost £1Bn to drill a hole for 1 million houses - which is the size of a city - again, this seems a cheap investment, compared, for example, to the sorts of figures that we see flying around in the world of banking.
Presumably, you could also hook some electricity-generating equipment up to the flow of hot water and provide light and cooking facilities for those houses too, again, all for free except for the cost of maintenance.
So ... if it's so cheap to extract (almost) limitless, free, green energy from the Earth for a relatively low price, why isn't this technology being used all over the UK? Or have I got the cost figures wrong?
Manchester Uni are drilling a 2km hole to tap water at 80 degrees C to provide water heating for a new complex that's being built there.
Now then, the reporter said (I think - and this is where I may have it completely wrong), that to drill a hole to proved heating for 10,000 houses would cost £10million. That works out at £1000 per house, which is dirt cheap and would provide limitless free hot water, except for the cost of maintaining the equipment, which wouldn't be pricey.
So ... if it costs £10M to drill a hole for 10,000 houses, then it would cost £1Bn to drill a hole for 1 million houses - which is the size of a city - again, this seems a cheap investment, compared, for example, to the sorts of figures that we see flying around in the world of banking.
Presumably, you could also hook some electricity-generating equipment up to the flow of hot water and provide light and cooking facilities for those houses too, again, all for free except for the cost of maintenance.
So ... if it's so cheap to extract (almost) limitless, free, green energy from the Earth for a relatively low price, why isn't this technology being used all over the UK? Or have I got the cost figures wrong?