Record Details

Title The Estimated Costs as a Function of Depth of Geothermal Development Wells Drilled in Nevada
Authors Shevenell, Lisa
Year 2012
Conference Geothermal Resources Council Transactions
Keywords Geothermal; Nevada; production wells; power plants; drilling costs; well depths; cost per MW
Abstract Expected well costs can be a major factor in whether companies obtain financing due to expense and moderate success rates of drilling. Well permitting records are reported by state agencies, and well production from individual wells within producing areas are reported monthly (in NV) so that one can determine, in retrospect, which of the permitted wells actually led to geothermal production and power generation. A companion paper (Shevenell, 2012, this volume) compiles and evaluates geothermal well records submitted to the Nevada Division of Minerals, and estimates the success rates of geothermal wells drilled in Nevada since the early stages of exploration in the 1970s and 1980s, through construction of the power plants currently in existence in northern Nevada. This paper uses that information to estimate the minimum expected costs associated with drilled wells and production per MW, assuming well depths are a dominant factor in determining costs. Because depths are not the only factor determining power plant costs, costs noted here are likely minima.
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